United States v. Middleton

3 F.2d 384, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2457, 1925 A.M.C. 85
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 19, 1924
Docket2179
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 3 F.2d 384 (United States v. Middleton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Middleton, 3 F.2d 384, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2457, 1925 A.M.C. 85 (4th Cir. 1924).

Opinions

ROSE, Circuit Judge.

A Japanese corporation by cable bought cotton in this country, and through American agents bargained to have its purchase carried to one of its own cities. The transportation was delayed, and both the shipper and its agents sought to avail themselves of the Suits in Admiralty Act to recover what they said were their respective losses from the United States, whose ships had undertaken the carriage. It is scarcely denied that there was tardiness and resulting injury, but the United States, in addition to raising a question of jurisdiction, or perhaps it would be more accurate to say of venue, says that it cannot be held responsible for the harm that was done, and adds that, even if it could be, there are others who are answerable over to it. These it has attempted to bring into the case, invoking to that end the fifty-sixth admiralty rule. To the claim of the agents it replies that under settled principles of law no recovery can be had for such an injury as that of which complaint is made. It asserts that the owner of the cotton may not measure its damages by the standard it would use, and in any event is not entitled to a decree for such portion of its loss as was covered by insurance and was made good by the underwriter, because, as the United States contends, if the owner of the cotton was awarded anything for such part of its loss, it would be put in a position to secure double payment for some of the injury done it. The United States further argues that the underwriter may not recover what it has paid, either in the name of the insured or in its own, because it did not file its petition of intervention within two years after the cause of action arose.

The learned court below sustained its right to hear and determine the cause. It held that the United States was responsible for some, but not for all, of the delay, and must answer to the owner of the cotton, but not to the latter’s agents in their individual capacity; that the United States could not call on any one else to reimburse it for what it was required to pay to the owner of the cotton; and that the underwriter had not lost its right to demand indemnity from the government. The United States, the Japanese corporation, and the latter’s agents have severally appealed; the first because it was required to pay anything, and because it was not allowed to recover over from those it had brought in, the second because it was not awarded all it thinks it should have, and the third because they were given nothing.

In the discussion of the law and of the facts, it will be necessary to refer rather frequently, not only to the parties to the cause and to certain agencies through which the United States acted, but to one other body corporate as well. Those which or who will be the most often spoken of are (1) Teikoku Menkwa Kabushiki Kaisha, a Japanese corporation, located at Osaka, Japan; (2) a copartnership, made up of three citizens of South Carolina, viz. Charles F. Middleton, Charles F. Middleton, Jr., and G. Abbott Middleton, resident at Charleston, in that state, and doing business as Middleton & Co.; (3) the Carolina Company, a body corporate having its office in the same city of Charleston; (4) the American Shipping Corporation, with headquarters at Jacksonville, Fla.; (5) the United States, acting through the United States Shipping Board and/or the United States Shipping Board Emergency Meet Corporation (as in this case there will be no occasion to distinguish among the three, they will be consid-[386]*386Bred as one); and- (6) the Standard Marine Insurance Company, Limited, a British corporation, of Liverpool, England. Por brevity these six -will be herein designated as (1) the Shipper; (2) the Agents; (3) the Broker; (4) the Operator; (5) the Owner; and (6) the Underwriter, respectively.

On March 2, 1920, by cable the Shipper bought from the Agents 500 bales of cotton for March-April shipment to Kobe, Japan. The understanding was that the Agents were to arrange for the transportation, for which the Shipper was to pay. The Broker carried on the business of freight broker and forwarding agent, and by the custom of the trade received its compensation from the shipowners or operators for whom it secured goods for carnage. The Agents applied to it for freight space for the 500 bales from Charleston to Kobe. The Operator was managing for the Owner a number of the latter’s vessels. A week or two earlier one of the officers of the Broker had had a conversation with an official of the Operator, in the course of which he had been asked to aid the Operator in getting a cargo for one of these, which as a general ship it was about-to send from Jacksonville to the Par East. The Broker knew that the West View, another of the Owner’s vessels and also under the management of the Operator, was in Charleston and about to go to Jacksonville. The Broker thought it might be good'business for the Operator to carry the 500 bales on the West View to Jacksonville and thence on' its other ship to Kobe, and thereby earn a freight óf nearly $5,000. The Broker accordingly inquired of the Operator whether it was willing to undertake the carriage, and, if so, at what rate of freight. On the 12th of April) 1920, the Operator answered, telling the Broker to put the cotton on the West View, which would carry it to Jacksonville, where it would be transhipped to the Deer Lodge, and by the latter would be taken to Kobe. It said that it would charge $2 per 100 pounds to carry the cotton from Charleston to Kobe, in addition to which the Shipper would have to pay the actual cost of transhipping the cotton at Jacksonville, not, however, to exceed -80 to 90 cents a -bale;' that is to say, 16 to 18 cents a hundred;

Upon the receipt of this letter the Broker at once got into touch with the Agents, who without further ado accepted the proposed terms as and for a through shipment from Charleston to Kobe. One of the Agents testified that at that time he under-; stood that they would have to act promptly if the cotton was to reach Jacksonville in time to connect with the ship about to cross the Pacific. On the very next day, the 14th of April, the Broker and Agents began to load the cotton on the West View. On the last-named day, the Broker inclosed to the Operator a so-called shipper’s guaranty, hereinafter more particularly described, the receipts of the mate of the West View showing that the cotton was on board his ship, and the Agents’ check for $4,946, the freight from Charleston to Kobe, at $2 per 100 pounds. The Broker, in its covering letter, called attention to the fact that the rate on cotton from Savannah to the Orient was only $1.75 per.100 pounds, and asked whether Charleston was not entitled to as favorable terms. Six days later,1 on the 21st, the Operator acknowledged the receipt of the Broker’s letter and its inelosures, and said that it could not give a lower rate than $2, because the Owner was inquiring whether the cotton was being carried free from Charleston' to, Jacksonville. It sent with its letter a bill of lading for the cotton, underdertaking thereby to carry the bales by the West View from Charleston to Jacksonville, and by the Deer Lodge or substitute to Kobe, via the customary coal and cargo ports. The bill was dated Charleston, April 15. Upon its receipt by the Broker it was delivered to the Agents, who- thereupon drew upon the Shipper for tlie purchase price, freight, and insurance premiums, and attached to the draft the bill of lading and the other customary documents, and' sent them forward through the usual banking channels. The Shipper, upon presentation of the draft, duly honored and paid it.

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United States v. Middleton
3 F.2d 384 (Fourth Circuit, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 F.2d 384, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2457, 1925 A.M.C. 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-middleton-ca4-1924.