W. K. Niver Coal Co. v. Cheronea S. S. Co.

142 F. 402, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4118
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 7, 1905
DocketNos. 533, 534, 535, 536
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 142 F. 402 (W. K. Niver Coal Co. v. Cheronea S. S. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. K. Niver Coal Co. v. Cheronea S. S. Co., 142 F. 402, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4118 (1st Cir. 1905).

Opinions

PUTNAM, Circuit Judge.

These appeals relate to so-called demurrages. The W. K. Niver Coal Company, a corporation organized in Pennsylvania, was the owner of the cargoes aboard the several steamships concerned. The demurrages occurred in the harbor of Boston. The steamships were chartered at Cardiff, Wales, in October and November, 1902, during the well-known coal strike in Pennsylvania, to load Welsh anthracite coal for Boston, and there discharge it. Demurrage being demanded in behalf of each of the vessels, and the charters containing the usual cesser clause, the several cargoes became subject to these demands; and, as the coal was owned by the W. K. Niver Coal Company, that corporation claimed it, released it on admiralty stipulations, and answered the several libels now before us. In each case the decree of the District Court was in favor of the libelant, allowing demurrage, and the W. K. Niver Coal Company appealed.

The several charters were each entitled as follows: “Chamber of Shipping” Welsh Coal Charter, 1896.” Each was apparently of a [404]*404standard form, in which the expression “whether in berth or not” occurred, so far as we can discover, for the first time. Charters, like nearly all maritime documents, can be properly construed only when construed historically. The common practice when changes have been desired in charters, marine insurance policies, and other maritime documents, has been to insert into the old body a new clause supposed to have reference to the particular emergency which it concerned. Thus it follows that inconsistent expressions are found in such documents; and so it is in the present case. Scrutton’s Charter Parties and Bills of Lading (5th Ed., 1904) at page 22, pertinently says: “It is unnecessary to find a meaning in the particular charter for every word of a common printed form.” When a maritime document is studied historically, the necessity of complete reconcilement at times disappears, and what is .introduced as new matter masters the rest of the document, on the same principle that written words master the rest of a printed blank deed, or contract, into which they have been inserted.

We will commence with the Roath, chartered to load not exceeding 6,000 tons nor less than 5,800. She did, in fact, load 6,007 tons. No question is made in the assignment of errors as to the amount of demurrage allowed her; and the only issue is whether, under the circumstances, her cargo is liable for any. Her charter provided that she was to deliver her cargo alongside any wharf or vessel or craft as ordered, where she could safely deliver, always afloat; or she might be required to deliver a part at a wharf, and a part at other wharves, and a part into a vessel or other craft, or into other vessels or other crafts. The charter also provided that the cargo should be taken from alongside by the consignee at the average rate of 750 tons per day, “weather permitting, Sundays and holidays excepted,” and that, if longer detained, the consignees should pay demurrage. This followed :

“Time to commence when steamer is ready to unload, and written notice given,- whether in berth or not. In case of strikes, lockouts, civil commotions, or any other causes or accidents beyond the control of the consignees, which prevents or delays the discharging, such time is not to count, unless the steamer is already on demurrage.”

The particular expressions, the construction of which is important, are the following: Eirst, “whether in berth or not,” and second, “in case of strikes,” “or any other' causes or accidents beyond the control of the consignees.” The W. K. Niver Coal Company claims that the words “whether in berth or not” do not reach this case; and it further claims that, if its position in that particular is not correct, it was relieved under the circumstances by strikes, or, certainly, by other causes beyond control. Its answer alleges that, while the Roath was in the port of Boston, the harbor was filled with an unusual and extraordinary amount of shipping; that shortly before her arrival a widespread and general strike had existed throughout the anthracite coal regions of the United States, and shipments of coal by rail from those regions to New England had practically ceased; that in consequence thereof, and as the result of the strike, large quantities of coal, shortly before [405]*405the arrival of the Roath, arrived in vessels at Boston from the bituminous coal regions of the United States, Wales, and other foreign parts; that, owing to the strike, there was an unusual amount of shipping in the harbor of Boston, chiefly vessels loaded with coal, waiting to discharge; that in consequence thereof it was impossible to obtain promptly a suitable dock, or to obtain lighters in sufficient number to discharge steamships rapidly; that it was impossible to obtain any suitable dock for the Roath sooner than was obtained for her, and impossible at any time during her discharge to provide more lighters than were provided; and that, if there was any unreasonable delay in beginning to discharge the Roath, it was due to the strike, and to causes and accidents beyond the control of the consignee’ occurring before the Roath was on demurrage. The answer further states that, when notified of the arrival of the Roath, the W. K. Niver Coal Company was advised by her agents that, on account of her draught, she could not be berthed at Mystic Wharf, being the dock where she discharged the bulk of her cargo, which it alleges was the only suitable dock, and the only dock at which railroad connections could be had whereby the coal could be transported to the several vendees of. the W. K. Niver Coal Company; that her agents, therefore, required the steámship to be lightened before being berthed at Mystic Wharf; that thereupon the W. K. Niver Coal Company secured a dock where a portion of her cargo was discharged, that is, the West India Fibre Company’s Wharf; that thereupon the Roath proceeded to that berth and unloaded 500 tons, more or less, of her cargo; that she then went to Mystic Wharf, where she discharged the remainder into railroad cars; that the facts already rehearsed resulted in an unprecedented congestion of railroad traffic and coal cars on all the railroads centering in the port of Boston, so that it was- impossible for the railroads to provide cars and locomotives in sufficient numbers, or with sufficient promptness, to unload the coal then being delivered at that port; and that the W. K. Niver Coal Company used every effort to procure necessary cars and locomotives from the Boston & Maine Railroad, which corporation controlled Mystic Wharf, to remove the coal discharged from the Roath, but that it was unable to do so; and, indeed, that the Boston & Maine Railroad was unable to provide sufficient cars and locomotives to receive the coal as it could have been discharged from the Roath. These allegations, except as we will otherwise state, and except as they involve propositions of law, are not controverted.

The charter of the Roath was effected on October 1, 1902, by Cory Bros., Limited, described by the W. K. Niver Coal Company as its agent ; she arrived at Boston on November 18th; written notice of her arrival was delivered to the consignee the same day at noon; the consignee thereupon ordered the vessel to Mystic Wharf; the agent of the steamer reported at Mystic Wharf on November 19th, when there were already in line ahead of her the following vessels, with the following tonnage: Ruth, 965 tons; Ropes, 485 tons; O’Teele, 1,672 tons; Manar, 1,185 tons; Nord Havet, 3,870 tons; Ursula Bright, 4,380 tons; Inch Keith, 4,733 tons; Chatfield, 3,275 tons; Lawrence,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Orient Shipping Rotterdam B.V. v. Hugo Neu & Sons, Inc.
918 F. Supp. 806 (S.D. New York, 1996)
CIA. Estrella Blanca, LTDA. v. S.S. NICTRIC
247 F. Supp. 161 (D. Oregon, 1965)
Pulp v. Republic Chemical Corp.
161 F. Supp. 726 (S.D. New York, 1958)
Dampskib Storfonds Aktiesekskap v. Whitney & Kemmerer
38 F.2d 874 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1930)
Yone Suzuki v. Central Argentine Ry., Ltd.
27 F.2d 795 (Second Circuit, 1928)
Yone Suzuki & Co. v. Central Argentine Ry. Ltd.
19 F.2d 645 (S.D. New York, 1927)
Jaramillo v. State Ex Rel. Board of County Com'rs
250 P. 729 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1926)
F. S. Royster Guano Co. v. United States
300 F. 47 (Fourth Circuit, 1924)
United States v. F. S. Royster Guano Co.
288 F. 92 (E.D. Virginia, 1923)
The Poznan
276 F. 418 (S.D. New York, 1921)
Hind, Rolph & Co. v. Ostrander
271 F. 406 (Ninth Circuit, 1920)
Anderson v. J. J. Moore & Co.
179 F. 68 (Ninth Circuit, 1910)
In re Cargo of 3,408 Tons of Pocahontas Coal
175 F. 548 (First Circuit, 1910)
Anderson v. J. J. Moore & Co.
173 F. 539 (N.D. California, 1909)
Gilbert Transp. Co. v. Borden
170 F. 706 (First Circuit, 1909)
Schwaner v. Kerr
170 F. 92 (D. Oregon, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 F. 402, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-k-niver-coal-co-v-cheronea-s-s-co-ca1-1905.