Thompson v. The Nith

36 F. 86, 13 Sawy. 368, 1888 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 157
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedAugust 30, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 36 F. 86 (Thompson v. The Nith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. The Nith, 36 F. 86, 13 Sawy. 368, 1888 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 157 (D. Or. 1888).

Opinion

Deady, J.

The libelants, Edward J. De Hart and William Honey-man, doing business as partners under the firm name and style of Thompson, De Hart & Co., bring this suit against the British bark Kith on a contract of affreightment to recover damages in the sum of $3,700.17 for a violation thereof.

It is alleged in the libel that in February, 1887, the libelants shipped on the bark, then lying at the port of Liverpool, England, and bound on a voyage to the port of Portland, about 24 tons of Swedish iron, and 52 anvils, weighing about 7,017 pounds, in good order and condition, and worth at this port $3,700.17, upon a contract with the master thereof that, in consideration of certain freight then paid by the libelants, he would deliver said iron and anvils to them at this port in like order and condition, loss and damage from the perils of .the sea only excepted; that. [87]*87said iron and anvils were not so delivered, but by the misconduct of the master and his servants the same “became wetted and damaged to such an extent as to be a total loss to the libelants,” whereby they are damaged in the said sum of $3,700.17, for which they pray a decree, with costs, and the arrest and sale of the vessel to satisfy the same.

On the arrest of the bark, the master, John Adair, filed a claim of ownership on behalf of Bramwell and Gardiner, and the same was delivered to him on the stipulation of John A. Brown and Thomas ITislop in the sum of $8,000.

In his answer, the master admits the receipt of the iron and anvils on January 20, 1887, at Liverpool, and the contract to carry and deliver the same at this port, and alleges generally that said articles were properly stowed and cared for during the voyage.

As to the iron, he also alleges (1) that it was damaged by rust when received on the Nith, and that the bill of lading was given therefor accordingly; and (2) that the damage was caused during the voyage by a peril of the sea, to-wit, the carrying away of the mainmast coat on April 20, 1887, “by reason of the heavy rolling and straining of the bark” in a severe storm, whereby “some water was unavoidably precipitated into the hold.” As to the anvils, he admits they were “apparently in good condition,” but alleges they were so encased as not to be open to inspection; that they were stowed in tire hold around the mainmast, and that probably “'some of the water that entered the hold” when “the seam of the mainmast coat was carried away fell upon or reached said anvils, ” and caused the rust, if atiy; which is a peril of the sea. lie also alleges that the anvils are only slightly rusty, and that such rust is “the inevitable result” of the “straining of the bark on the voyage,” and “the large quantities of water shipped during” the same.

The iron, which is in bundles and bars, when it reached this port was very badly damaged with rust. It is in the condition known to the trade as “froze;” that is, stuck or run together. No use can be made of it unless it is rerolled. The anvils are more or less rusty on the face, and cannot be used unless the rust is ground off. Neither is in a merchantable condition, and the carrier is liable for their value at this port, unless they were in the same condition when received, or the injury occurred during the voyage by a peril of the sea, to which the negligence or misconduct of the owner or his servants did not contribute.

The bill of lading acknowledges that the anvils were “shipped in good order and condition,” to be delivered at this port in like order and condition. But the faces of the anvils were covered with canvas. The admission as to their condition is qualified by this circumstance, and, if the fact was otherwise, the carrier may show it. The words “in good order and condition,” in a bill of lading, are, like the admission of any other fact in an ordinary receipt for money, open to explanation or contradiction. They do not constitute an agreement, though contained in one. The Pacific, Deady, 21. The admission establishes the fact, prima facie, that the anvils were' in good order when shipped, and the burden of proof is on the claimant to show the contrary. The bill of lad[88]*88ing for the iron, consisting of 700 bars and 777 bundles of Swedish rolled iron, weighing 24 tons and 908 pounds, admits in the printed formula that it was also “shipped in good order and condition,” which admission is qualified by the addition in writing of these words, “Bars and bundles rusty. ”

The Nith is an iron vessel, built at Glasgow in 1860, and was once known as the “City of Shanghai.” Her length is 212.5 feet, beam 32.3 feet, and depth 21.5 feet. Her registered tonnage is 990 tons, while she will Carry 1,400 tons. She is divided into three compartments. The between-decks in the middle compartment is not floored over. Pier cargo on this occasion consisted of 1,052 tons of “factory filled” salt in 50 and 100-pound sacks, 100 tons of coke, 2,540 boxes of tin, some crystals of soda, and the iron and anvils in question. She left Liverpool on February 7, 1887, and the voyage occupied 182 days to Astoria, and 191 to Portland. She drew 20 feet aft and 19.8 forward.

The defenses are inconsistent and hypothetical: The iron was_ damaged when it was shipped; but if it occurred on the voyage it was caused by a peril of the sea; which peril was also the cause of the injury to the anvils, if they were injured.

The disputed questions in the case are: (1) What was the condition of the iron when it was shij>ped? (2) was it rusted on the voyage, and, if so, from what cause? and (3) what caused the anvils to rust on the voyage?

And, first, the words in the bill of lading, “Bars and bundles rusty,” like the words, “in good order and condition,”-are a mere statement of fact that is open to explanation or contradiction.

The evidence shows that this iron was brought by the steamer Sliepner from Gothenberg. Sweden, to Liverpool, and that such iron, owing, I suppose, to the humidity of the climate, is always more or less, and generally more than less, covered with a slight atmospheric rust; and that it is the usage in signing bills of lading at Liverpool for such iron destined to this port to insert therein the word “rusty.” A bundle of five bars taken from a shipment of 520 bundles and bars of Swedish rolled iron, lately brought from Liverpool to this port in the vessel Ros-crana, was produced in court. It is somewhat affected or colored by this thin atmospheric rust, but yet good, merchantable iron. The bill of lading given by the carrier is also produced, which first admits the iron is shipped in good order and condition, and then, referring to the whole shipment, the words, in writing, are added, “All more or less rusty.”

Under the circumstances, the bill of lading must be taken and construed as meaning nothing more than that the iron was more or less covered with the atmospheric rust common to Swedish iron in that port, which did not, however, affect its commercial value. Nor does it seem ■reasonable or probable that a master -would sign a clean bill of lading for iron in the condition which this now is, or-even a much better condition, only, qualified by the addition of the mild and uncertain term “ rusty.” The most natural thing in the world would have been to write, “very rusty;” “badly rusted.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 F. 86, 13 Sawy. 368, 1888 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-the-nith-ord-1888.