The Waldo

28 F. Cas. 1356, 4 Law Rep. 382
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedDecember 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 F. Cas. 1356 (The Waldo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Waldo, 28 F. Cas. 1356, 4 Law Rep. 382 (D. Me. 1841).

Opinion

WARE, District Judge.

In a contract, by a bill of lading, for the transportation of merchandise, the master and owners of a vessel take upon themselves the responsibilities of common carriers. They can excuse themselves for the non-delivery of the goods, only by showing that it was prevented by some fatal accident, against which human prudence could not provide, by an act of the public ’ enemy, or by some event expressly excepted in the instrument itself. 3 Kent. Comm. 216. The master is bound to take the greatest care of the goods, so that they shall not be liable to injury by the motion or leakage of the vessel, or exposed to damage by the weather. Abb. Shipp. 224. In respect both to the lading and carriage of the goods, he is chargeable with the most exact diligence. In all cases he' is bound to have the cargo safely secured under deck, unless he is authorized by some local or particular usage, or by the consent of the shipper, to do otherwise. In all other cases, if he carries the goods on deck, he does it at his own risk, and he becomes an insurer against the usual perils excepted by the bill of lading.

If the goods of the shipper are lost, or receive any damage through the fault or neglect of the master or of the crew, his remedy is not confined to a personal action against the master or owners. The ship in specie stands as his security, and is by the maritime law hypothecated to him for his indemnity. But then it is not every wrongful act of the person who acts as master that will bind the owners, or will operate an hjpothecation of the ship. It is only those which fall within the legitimate range of his authority, as master, that have this effect. While acting within these limits he binds the owners, because he is their authorized agent, and he binds the ship directly, because the policy-of the maritime law has given to the shipper this additional security. The duties of the master as carrier extend to all that relates to the lading, transportation, and delivery of the goods. But when they are carried to the place, of destination and delivered, his duties and responsibilities as carrier terminate. His functions as master are then accomplished.

If the shipper consigns his goods to the master for sale and returns, in proceeding to dispose of them he does not act under any authority derived from his appointment as master, but in an entirely new character, that of supercargo or factor. And his duties and liabilities under these two characters are as distinct and independent as they would be if the trusts were confided to different persons. Story, Ag. § 36; 2 Liverm. Prin. & Ag. p. 215. In all that relates to the transportation of the goods and navigation of the ship, he acts as master, and all that he does in relation to the disposition of the merchandise, is referred to his character as factor. In these characters he is the agent of different principals; in the first he is the agent of the ship-owners, and his acts are imputable to them; in the second he is a stranger to them, and they are no more responsible for his acts than they would be for those of a third person, to whom the shipper should consign his goods. In the transaction of that business, he is the agent of the shipper.

In the present case the goods of the libel-lants were consigned to the master. Capt. Merrill. It is true that he was prevented from going the voyage by sickness; but that portion of the potatoes, which arrived at the port of destination in good condition, were sold by the new master, not by virtue of his general authority as master of the vessel, but under the authority of that consignment. In the sale, therefore, he acted as the agent of the libellants and not of the ship-owners. It is clear, then, upon principle, that the .owners cannot be chargeable for so many of the potatoes as were sold. With respect to them, all was done which the master had contracted to do, as master. They were carried to the [1358]*1358port of destination and delivered; that is, the master had transported them as the agent of the ship-owners, and he had sold them as the agent of the shippers. The precise question which arises in this part of the case, was presented in the case of Williams v. Nichols, 13 Wend. 58, and it was decided, on the grounds that have been stated, that when goods are consigned to the master for sale, and he sells them, and neglects to account for the proceeds, no action will lie against the ship-owners. It is an affair exclusively between the shipper and the master, to which they are strangers.

If no action will lie against the owners in personam, for an equally good reason none will lie in rem against the vessel. It is only those acts of the master which come within-the scope of his duty as master, that bind the vessel. When a new character is superin-duced on that of master, by his being made by the shippers the consignee of the cargo, his responsibilities in this capacity are entirely distinct from his obligations as master. In the latter case he is a common carrier, in the former a.factor. And for any want of fidelity in that trust, his employers have the same remedies against him that they would have against any other person, and no other. As consignee he neither represents the vessel nor its owners. Perhaps when by a known custom of a particular trade the master is intrusted with the disposal of the cargo, a different rule may apply. This was the case in Kemp v. Coughtry, 11 Johns. 107. That arose in the trade between New Torlc and Albany. It was proved to be the usual course of the trade, to send goods with orders to the master to sell either for cash or credit, and for him to return the proceeds to the shipper. No commissions were allowed the master for this service, nor to the owners, beyond what was involved in the freight. It was decided when the master had sold the goods, and failed to pay over the proceeds to the shipper, that the owners of the vessel were liable. The liability, in that case, was not founded on the general maritime law, but arose out of the particular custom. Under that custom the shipowners undertook to act in the character of factors, as well as carriers, and intrusting the whole business to the master as their servant, they would be answerable for him personally in one character or the other. It is another question, whether for his defaults in the character of factor the shippers would have a remedy against the vessel in rem, which it is unnecessary to consider in the present case, as in this trade no such custom is proved. The case of Emery v. Hersey, 4 Greenl. 407, turned upon the same principles, and was decided upon the ground of a similar custom prevailing in the trade between Saco and Newburyport. See, also, Emerigon, Contrats a la Grosse, c. 4, § 11, and Des Assurances, e. 12, § 3.

As to that portion of the potatoes which perished on the passage, the evidence leaves no room for doubt that the loss arose from the damage they received by exposure on deck. They appear to have been as faithfully secured in that place as they could be, but nothing ■ could protect them from wet, when the sea was breaking over the vessel. It appears probable, also, that they were injured by the frost. The double injury, of frost and wet, will in -a short time destroy so perishable an article as the potatoe. And it was accordingly found, when they were overhauled at ICey West, that out of 144 barrels examined, only 40 remained sound and fit for use; and when they arrived at Atakapas there were but 15 sound and merchantable barrels left out of the whole 144.

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Bluebook (online)
28 F. Cas. 1356, 4 Law Rep. 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-waldo-med-1841.