The Venice Maru

39 F. Supp. 349, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3210
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 31, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 39 F. Supp. 349 (The Venice Maru) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Venice Maru, 39 F. Supp. 349, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3210 (S.D.N.Y. 1941).

Opinion

BONDY, District Judge.

The petitioners Kabushiki Kaisha Kawasaki Zosenjo, owner, and Kawasaki Kisen Kabushiki Kaisha, hereinafter referred to as the K Line, bareboat charterer of the steamship “Venice Maru”, seek exoneration from or limitation of liability for cargo loss and damage arising out of a fire aboard the “Venice Maru”.

July 5th, 1934, the “Venice Maru” with some general cargo aboard arrived at Kobe where the main offices of the petitioners were located. At Kobe more general cargo and 1,900 tons of sardine meal in 38,000 bags were taken aboard, to be carried to Atlantic Coast ports in the United States via Panama Canal. Of the 38,000 bags, 13,312 were stowed in No. 1 lower hold, 11,884 in No. 3 lower hold, 6,735 in No. 6 lower hold, and 6,069 in No. 3 ‘tween deck.

1,087 cases of porcelain goods were thereafter loaded on the weather-deck at Nagoya and about 595 additional cases of porcelain goods were transferred from the ship’s hold to the weather-deck at Yokohama, from which the “Venice Maru” sailed July 13th, with all holds full and with 1,682 cases on the weather-deck covering most of the free deck space and the after two-thirds of No. 1 weather-deck hatch. After encountering heavy rains which prevented as much ventilation as was anticipated to under deck cargo, the “Venice Maru” arrived at Los Angeles July 29th, where 91 tons of cargo were discharged.

The “Venice Maru” left Los Angeles July 30th for Balboa with her weather-deck and the after two-thirds of No. 1 weather-deck hatch still covered by cargo. She encountered fine but hot weather.

Early in the morning of August 6th, smoke was observed coming out of the ventilators leading into No. 1 lower hold. Some of the bags of sardine meal stowed therein were found to be heating and giving off smoke. Notwithstanding efforts to control the situation fire broke out, resulting in damage to and destruction of cargo by fire and water used to extinguish it.

The petitioners contend that the fire was caused solely by the inherent nature of the meal which rendered it unfit for transportation to the United States. The claimants contend that the fire was caused by negligent stowage of meal in too large a quantity in No. 1 lower hold without adequate means of ventilation for the long voyage from Kobe via Panama to New York and other Atlantic Coast ports of the United States.

The record discloses that the meal shipped in the “Venice Maru” consisted of Japanese sardine meal manufactured in Japan in the usual manner and that it was merchantable and fit for transportation by sea from Kobe to New York if properly stowed and ventilated. All analyses excepting only the analysis made by one of the shipper’s competitors disclose that the moisture content of samples of the meal varied between 7.87% and 9.28%, and the oil content between 6.84% and 8.54%, well within the range of high grade Japanese sardine meal.

The meal was packed, as was usually done, in second-hand bags. Even assuming there was grain dust on some of the bags, the risk of spontaneous combustion was not thereby increased.

No. 1 lower hold, in which 13,312 bags were stowed, was a large cargo compartment, about 60 feet long, aboút 46 feet wide and from 20 to 23% feet deep, with a ’tween deck compartment 9% feet deep and a shelter-deck compartment 8 feet deep above it. The meal was stowed in a substantially solid mass and occupied substantially the entire hold except a foot or two along the bulkheads and sides, and between the top of the cargo and overhead deck beams and a channel about one foot wide running athwartships through the middle of the stow. Five rows of rice ventilators extended fore and aft in the 5th, 10th and 16th tiers of bags and six rows of such ventilators extended athwartships in the 6th, 11th and 17th tiers of the stow. These were connected with vertical rice ventilators placed at the four corners of the hatchway.

[352]*352The permanent ventilating system of the “Venice Maru” was sufficient for the carriage of general ■ cargo. Sardine meal, however, has been recognized as an hazardous cargo subject to heating and to spontaneous combustion. Properly stowed in small lots adequately ventilated it had been frequently carried safely by sea from Japan to the United States in ’tween decks and in holds, notwithstanding its well-known propensity to spontaneous combustion. Only a small quantity of the meal so shipped to the United States was better in quality than that shipped on the “Venice Maru”. The variations that must have existed in the moisture and fat contents of the meal in the' bags did not interfere with its safe transportation.

The K Line before the shipment in question had experience in the carriage of Japanese sardine meal from Japan to the Pacific Coast of the United States and to a lesser extent to the Atlantic Coast ports of the United States. It, however, experienced trouble from overheating of sardine meal on five of its vessels commencing with the voyage of the “Montreal Maru’’ sailing from Yokohama, September, 1933. In each case the overheating occurred after the vessels had left Los Angeles on their way to the Atlantic Coast notwithstanding that rice ventilators had been used on two of these ships, the “Nichiyo Maru” and the “Tohsei Maru”, both of which arrived in New York in May, 1934, before the “Venice Maru” had sailed from Japan.

The effect of the use of rice ventilators placed throughout the stow was unknown, uncertain and speculative. It may be of interest to note that some of the- meal which was discharged at Balboa for ventilation was restowed on the “Venice Maru” and divided into small lots with channels between them in accordance with the block and channel method which came into general use in 1935, when it was realized that the experiments with rice ventilators proved unsatisfactory.

The evidence does not establish any custom or usage in the carriage of fish meal from Japan to Atlantic Coast ports which justified the stowing of 665.6 tons of fish meal, with or without rice ventilators, in a substantially solid mass so as almost to fill a lower hold.

I believe that the stowage of 665.6 tons of sardine meal in a substantially solid mass in the lower hold for the long voyage from Kobe to Atlantic Coast ports via the Panama Canal, constituted negligence and was a proximate cause of the fire, in that, even assuming that the rice ventilators were used in the manner claimed by the K Line, insufficient ventilation was provided. See The Nichiyo Maru, D.C., 14 F.Supp. .727, affirmed 4 Cir., 89 F.2d 539; Cf. The Willfaro, D.C., 9 F.2d 940, affirmed 9 Cir., 9 F.2d 622; and see The Ferncliff, D.C., 22 F.Supp. 728, in which a better-system of rice ventilators apparently was resorted to.

The nature of sardine meal and the necessity of exposing a sufficiently large part thereof to circulating air have been so thoroughly considered by Judge Chesnut in The Nichiyo Maru, supra, and The Fern-cliff supra, that further reference thereto would not serve any useful purpose.

The K Line contends that it is exonerated from all liability because the loss and damage resulted from fire not caused by its design or neglect. See Fire Statute — 46 U.S.C.A. § 182.

The duty to stow cargo properly is considered delegable in determining whether there was design or neglect of the ship-owner personally within the provisions of the fire statute. See Earle & Stoddart v.

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39 F. Supp. 349, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-venice-maru-nysd-1941.