Two Hundred & Sixty Hogsheads of Molasses

24 F. Cas. 445, 1 Hask. 24
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedOctober 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 F. Cas. 445 (Two Hundred & Sixty Hogsheads of Molasses) 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
Two Hundred & Sixty Hogsheads of Molasses, 24 F. Cas. 445, 1 Hask. 24 (D. Me. 1866).

Opinion

- FOX, District Judge.

By the terms of. the charter-party in this case, the master was bound to receive on board his vessel a full and complete cargo of molasses in hogsheads, under and on deck, with sufficient small stowage, the captain to sign bills of lading as presented without prejudice to the charter-party. The cargo was put on board by Ferrin, forty-five casks being on deck, and the master signed bills of lading for the full cargo without any exception or statement that any .part was on deck, Ferrin being named as consign- or, and Churchill, Browns & Manson consignees. . The deck-load being totally lost by the perils of the sea, would Ferrin if he were the claimant have the right under the circumstances of the case to offset, or recoup the claim for freight by the value of the deck-load ? I apprehend not. Ferrin is the person named in the charter party as charterer of the brig, and if he should be deemed the owner of the cargo, the charter-party is as between him and the ship-owner the instrument and evidence of the contract for the conveyance of the property, and the bill of lading is as between these parties only evidence of the shipping of the particular merchandise to be conveyed in pursuance of the contract. Any terms therefore incorporated by the charterer into the bill of lading, either accidentally or by design, which are in conflict with the terms of the charter-party, could not control the contract as evidenced by the charter-party. Parsons, in his treatise on Maritime Law (volume 1, p. 240), says, “It is usual for the master to sign and give bills of lading in like manner as if there were no charter-party. But nevertheless, they are little more than evidence of the delivery and receipt and shipping of the merchandise, for the charter-party is the controlling contract as to all the terms and provisions which it expresses.”

This charter-party authorized the master to take as a part of the cargo a reasonable deck-load. This was done with the knowledge and consent of Ferrin, and the fact, that the bills of lading which appear to have been made out by one of Feran’s clerks- make no mention of a part being on deck, would not render the ship-owner responsible to Ferrin for the value of the deck-load if lost. Such was not the bargain and intention of. the parties; it was on the contrary expressly agreed and understood, that a portion of the cargo should be taken on deck. It was placed there by the consent of Ferrin. No new agreement was ever made respecting it,, requiring it to be under deck, and the omission of the fact in the bill of lading will not prevent the ship-owner from falling back on the terms of the charter-party, which it is admitted was the only agreement ever made respecting the way and manner of loading the cargo.

But if there bad not been a charter-party, the result would “have been the same, if Fer-rin were the áaimant. The bill of lading it will be observed is in the usual form, and does not in terms state where the cargo is stowed, whether under, or on deck. It is silent as to the place of stowage, and from this silence a presumption arises that the goods are to be stowed under deck, that being ■ the usual and ordinary method of stowage. But if the contract or bill of lading is not express on this point, the shipowner is then at liberty to rebut this pre-' sumption, and prove that the shipper agreed to the stowage of his goods on deck. This question has been examined very carefully by Judge Story in Vernard v. Hudson [Case No. 16,921]. In delivering the opinion of the court the learned -judge -said, “I take it to be very clear, that where goods are shipped under the common bill of lading, it is presumed that they are shipped to be put under deck as the ordinary mode of stowing cargo. This presumption may be rebutted by showing a positive agreement between the parties that the goods are to be carried on deck, or it may be deduced from other circumstances, such for example as the goods paying the deck-freight only. The admission of proof to this effect is perfectly consistent with the rules of law, for it neither contradicts nor varies anything contained in the bill of lading, but it simply rebuts a presumption arising from the ordinary course of business.” A ship-owner, therefore, as against a shipper, would certainly under this authority be at liberty to show what was the agreement in this respect, and there is no dispute in the present case, that the agreement was, that a portion of the cargo should be placed on deck. Ferrin, therefore, could not hold the ship-owner responsible for the deck-load when lost.

[447]*447The claimants contend that they stand in -a very different relation to this cargo, and that' they are in no way or manner compromised by the doings of Ferrin. In fact, they claim to be the owners of the cargo "by virtue of the bills of lading of the cargo ■consigned to them by Ferrin, upon the faith ■of which they have accepted Ferrin’s drafts for a large amount, and have procured insurance which did not cover the deck-load. It therefore becomes necessary to determine their true relations to Ferrin and the cargo, -and how far they are affected by Ferrin’s •doings and his consent, to a portion being placed on deck.

It .appears that Mr. Manson agreed with Ferrin t.o purchase of him in behalf of the “firm one half of a thousand hogsheads of molasses, of which this cargo is a portion, delivered on shipboard in the harbor of Cardenas at a fixed price, and that the same •should be forwarded to the claimants at Portland on their -joint account and risk. Under this agreement this cargo was laden; and in my opinion the parties became jointly interested in this adventure, and their relations to each other in respect to'Tt were those of copartners. The court is not''bound by the goods being consigned to the claimants, but is at liberty to go behind the documents and ■ascertain the true relations of the parties. The fact, that Ferrin once owned the whole of the cargo, does not vary the relations of the parties from what they would have been, if he had purchased of a planter this cargo upon joint account, and afterwards shipped it in his own name to the claimants, drawing on them in payment therefor. When the -cargo was laden and Ferrin’s drafts were ■drawn on the claimants for their proportion • of the cost under the above agreement, the ■claimants became jointly interested in the adventure, with all the conditions of an ordinary partnership affecting it. The freight, with all other expenses and charges, was to be borne by the common and joint interest, and the property, from the moment of its -shipment, "was at the joint risk for profit or loss. There can be-no doubt, that under this agreement between these parties, if this cargo had been lost on the voyage without insurance. the claimants would, notwithstanding the loss, have been accountable to Ferrin for one half of the amount of the invoice, or 'if it had arrived, and a loss had been sustained in the adventure, it must have been ►shared alike between the parties. I think all the elements of a partnership are to be found in the agreement and proceedings touching this adventure, and it is common learning, that a partnership may exist in a ■single shipment or adventure, as well as in the most complicated and extended undertakings.

Pothier tells us. “When two persons contract a partnership between themselves, to sell in common certain goods which belong .in common to one of them, and to share the proceeds, it is necessary to examine carefully what is their intention. If the intention is to put the very goods into partnership, the partnership will extend to the same, and if a part of the goods perish before the sale proposed by the parties is made, the loss will be.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 445, 1 Hask. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/two-hundred-sixty-hogsheads-of-molasses-med-1866.