The Wildcroft

201 U.S. 378, 26 S. Ct. 467, 50 L. Ed. 794, 1906 U.S. LEXIS 1798
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 2, 1906
Docket127
StatusPublished
Cited by92 cases

This text of 201 U.S. 378 (The Wildcroft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Wildcroft, 201 U.S. 378, 26 S. Ct. 467, 50 L. Ed. 794, 1906 U.S. LEXIS 1798 (1906).

Opinion

Me. Justice Day

delivered thé opinion of the court.

The original action was begun by the filing of a libel in the District Court of the. United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by the petitioner, with respect to a cargo of sugar of which it was the consignee, shipped upon the steamship Wildcroft ” from ports in Cuba to Philadelphia. The evidence showed that in the month of April, 1901, the “ Wildcroft,” having discharged a cargo of coal at the port of Havana, proceeded to Cardenas and Matanzas, where she took on the load of sugar, to be delivered to the petitioner in Philadelphia. This sugar was stored in bags in holds Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 4 of the ship. On the voyage a severe storm was encountered and some damage was done by salt water finding its way into hold No. 3 because of the tearing away of the tarpaulins over the hatches and the washing off of the starboard ventilator cover, At the *385 hearing in the District Court the claim for damage, because of injury alleged to have .been caused to the sugar in holds Nos. 1 and 2, was held to be waived by the libellant, who disclaimed damage on that account. And, the district judge added, we think correctly, as to the surface damage in hold No. 3, this damage was concededly caused by a peril of the seas.” There is nothing in the testimony to show that the injury to the cargo óf sugar in holds Nos. 3 and 4 of the vessel by means of fresh water was occasioned until' the ship arrived at Philadelphia.

A more distinct understanding of the construction of the vessel and the manner in which fresh water could be' communicated to hold No. 3, and from thence into hold No. 4, may be had by a perusal of the full finding of the facts made in the case in the District Court, 124 Fed. Rep. 631; S. C., 126 Fed. Rep. 229, approved by the Circuit Court of Appeals, 130 Fed. Rep. 521, which findings fully explain the situation and the method by which the injury was inflicted. It is enough for us to say that both courts unite in the conclusion that the cargo was injured on Monday, April 29, after the ship arrived at the dock in Philadelphia, when, because of the letting in of fresh water for the purpose of filling the engine-room tank, which was accomplished by opening a valve on the ship’s side which admits water from the river, and because of an open cock to a valve in the connection from the tank-filling pipe to the service or feed donkey, connecting with the distribution box, water was permitted to flow from the tank-filling pipe through this open cock to the distribution chest and down a pipe and through a valve, which must have also been held open in some way so that water flowed into this suction pipe leading into No. 3 hold, and flowing thence into No. 4 hold, damaged (the .cargo of sugar therein contained. It is evident frqm the testimony that if these cocks, and more particularly the one marked “D,” had been properly closed, the water could not have found its way into the holds and in-' flicted the damage. Of these findings the Circuit Court of *386 Appeals, adopting the conclusions of the court belów, said: “All of the testimony in this respect is uncontradicted, and no facts are shown from which any other conclusion can be drawn, than that the water which came into the bottom of these holds, to the depth of several feet, doing the damage in question, came in after the early morning of the twenty-ninth of April,, and before the close of that day, while the cargo was being discharged at the wharf in Philadelphia. It is not disputed that the water was fresh water, such as was the water in the Délaware river, in which she was lying. In connection with these facts, it was shown by the testimony that the sea-cock for filling the engine room tank was open at ten o’clock that morning, and kept open for a period of three hours, and that if two certain cocks, fully described in the evidence and pointed out by the learned judge of the court below, were left open by accident or. design, there would be a free flow of water from the open sea-cock into the bilges of hold No. 3. Directly after the filling of the tank and the closing of the sea-cock, water to a considerable' depth was reported in holds No. 3 and No. 4. This sea-cock had not been open from the time the cargo was put on' board in Cuba until, as just stated, on the morning of the twenty-ninth of April, at Philadelphia. We think the court below was fully justified in its finding, that the damage here in question was due to ‘the water that flowed into the hold through the pipe line on April twenty-ninth, in the manner just described,’ and that ‘it is impossible that the damage could have occurred in any other way.’ ”

In order to have the benefit of the exemptions provided in the Harter act, 27 Stat. 445, against errors of management or navigation by reason, of the third section, which was relied upon in the case, it was incumbent upon the shipowner to prove that the vessel was seaworthy at the time of beginning the voyage, or that due diligence had been used to make her so. . International Navigation Company v. Farr & Bailey Manufacturing Company, 181 U. S. 218; The Southwark, 191 *387 U. S. 1. It, therefore, became incumbent upon the shipowner to show that a due and proper inspection had been had and the vessel ascertained to be in all respects seaworthy and fit to carry the cargo which she had undertaken to transport, or that due diligence to that end had been used. As we understand the findings, of both the District Court and the Court of Appeals, the testimony in this regard introduced by the shipowner was sufficient, in the judgment of those courts, to establish that the vessel was seaworthy in the respects involved, and that an inspection had been had, and the valves and connections, the negligent use of which was productive of this injury, found in due order at the beginning of the voyage. This finding of two courts will ordinarily not be disturbed, and is usually accepted by this court as conclusive. The Carib Prince, 170 U. S. 655, 658. The only testimony directly upon the subject at the hearing was that of the master and the engineer, taken upon deposition in England, upon interrogatories filed. The charge in the libel was very broad and general, and the interrogatories were not as specific as they might have been, and no' cross-interrogatories were filed. While the testimony is not as specific as it might be, we still think it was sufficient to show that an inspection was had, and everything found in order at the beginning as well ast during the voyage, and from the record we reach the conclusion, sustained by the findings of the courts belo'w, thatJ the ship was seaworthy in all respects at the beginning of the voyage, and it was. a careless and recent opening of the valve or valves, shortly before the fresh water was let it, which resulted in the damage complained of. We are very clear that this is not a case where the findings of thé court below can be disturbed, as was our conclusion in the case of The Southwark, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
201 U.S. 378, 26 S. Ct. 467, 50 L. Ed. 794, 1906 U.S. LEXIS 1798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-wildcroft-scotus-1906.