Wellman v. Morse

76 F. 573, 22 C.C.A. 318, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2158
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 15, 1896
DocketNo. 151
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 76 F. 573 (Wellman v. Morse) 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
Wellman v. Morse, 76 F. 573, 22 C.C.A. 318, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2158 (1st Cir. 1896).

Opinion

PUTNAM, Circuit Judge.

There are only two substantial questions in this case. The others which have been presented so easily sift out, when understood with reference to settled maritime usages and fundamental principles of maritime law, that they do not require discussion by us. The court below allowed the schooner involved in this controversy the equivalent of six days’ demurrage on a cargo of cypress lumber, transported from Appalachicola to Lvnn, the claim having arisen through detention of the cargo aboard the schooner pending the improper refusal of its owners to sign a general average bond. Freight, as usual, was payable on proper de[574]*574livery of cargo. The charter party provided that the cargo should he "received and delivered alongside, within ' reach of the vessel’s tackles.” This fact it is necessary to note, because the charterers had the privilege of discharging at Providence, Boston, or Lynn, and at Lynn the vessel could only discharge into lighters, which was according to the custom of that port. By the effect of the charter the owners of the cargo were to furnish the lighters; and a discharge into them, without some reservation, would undoubtedly have released all liens for freight and general average. The bill of lading in no way departed from the charter party, but contained the usual provision that Wellman, Hall & Co., who were named in the bill of lading as the consignees, and were in fact the owners of the cargo, should pay freight “with primage and average accustomed.” They were the libelees against whom the owners of the schooner proceeded for demurrage in tibe court below, and they are the appellants in the record now before us.

Some controversy arises as to the meaning of the words “average accustomed” in‘the bill of lading, the owners of the schooner claiming it has no reference to any sums due for general average. Hopkins, Port of Refuge, 164; Carv. Carr. by Sea (2d Ed.) 597; and Kay, Shipm. (2d Ed.) 34. They follow this up by claiming that they would have been without remedy if they had delivered the cargo from their vessel without first obtaining a general average bond. They are clearly wrong in this proposition as a whole, because there can be no question that the owners of the cargo, against whom this libel was brought in the court below, would have been liable at common law, as owners, on an implied promise, for the general average. This is so well settled that it is not necessary to cite authorities in regard thereto; but we refer to Sturgis v. Cary, 2 Curt. 382, 384, Fed. Cas. No. 13,573 (cited in Ralli v. Troop, 157 U. S. 386, 409, 15 Sup. Ct. 657); Marwick v. Rogers, 163 Mass. 50, 39 N. E. 780 (especially to the cases cited at page 52, 163 Mass., and page 781, 39 N. E.); and Carv. Carr. by Sea (2d Ed.) 436. They also had a lien for their general average charges, which would not have been lost by a qualified discharge, promptly followed by legal proceedings if the amount due for average had not been promptly paid. That they had a lien of some sort is recognized everywhere. Kay, Shipm. (2d Ed.) 199; Carv. Carr. by Sea (2d Ed.) 434; and Abb. Shipp. (13th Ed.) 446. Indeed, Leggett on Charter Parties, at page 531, lays down the broad rule, whieh is undoubtedly correct, that, “where a master, in order to preserve his cargo, takes measures such as a wise and prudent man would think most conducive to the benefit of all concerned, he has a lien on it for the expenses so incurred.” This was doubted in Huth v. Lamport, 16 Q. B. Div. 442, but was held to be clear when the same case came before the court of appeal (16 Q. B. Div. 735, 736); and it was also so stated without hesitation in Svendsen v. Wallace, 10 App. Cas. 404, 409, 410. There is also no question that this lien has the advantages of a lien at common law; but, as it arises strictly out of maritime transactions, there is no reason why it should not also attach to itself some of the privileges of a maritime lien. Bags of Linseed, 1 Black, 108, settled the law to that effect in this country on a basis from [575]*575which there never has been any practical departure. The opinion of the court related directly to a question of freight. On page 112, Chief Justice Taney says that the lien for freight “is analogous to the lien given by the common law to the carrier on land.” He is careful not to confound it with the latter. On page 113 he cites Dupont v. Vance, 19 How. 162, 171, and, referring to the earlier case of Cutler v. Rae, 7 How. 729, he says:

“In the last-mentioned case, the court, speaking of the lien for general average, and referring to the decision of Cutler v. Rae on that point, said: ‘This admits the existence of a lien arising out of the admiralty law, hut puts it on the same footing as a maritime lien on cargo for the price of its transportation, which, as is well known, is waived by an authorized delivery without insisting on payment.’ ”

This supports the proposition that the lien for general average is one “arising out of the admiralty law,” “on the same footing as a maritime lien on cargo for the price of its transportation.” But in Bags of Linseed the court held, undoubtedly, that a lien for freight is waived by an unqualified delivery of the cargo. This has been ever since understood to be the law, based on a double proposition: First, that by an unqualified delivery the owner of the vessel impliedly waives his lien; and, second, that there is a necessity, in the interests of trade and of innocent purchasers, of relieving merchandise from secret incumbrances. Yet, at this point, the character of the lien for freight and of that for general average as having a maritime nature, is made to appear Toy what the chief justice says on page 114. His language is limited to amounts due for freight; but, having already put freight and general average on the same footing, it was not necessary for him to continue to restate the parallel in order to make it effectual. He says:

“But courts of admiralty, when carrying Into execution maritime contracts and liens, are not governed by the strict and technical rules of the common law, and deal with them upon equitable principles, and with reference to the usages and necessities of trade. And it often happens that the necessities and usages of trade require that the cargo shall pass into the hands of the consignee before he pays the freight. It is the interest of the shipowner that this vessel should discharge her cargo as speedily as possible after her arrival at the port of delivery. And it would be a serious sacrifice of his interests if the ship was compelled, in order to preserve the lien, to remain day after day with her cargo on board, waiting until the consignee found it convenient to pay the freight, or until the lien could be enforced in a court of admiraly. The consignee, too, in many instances, might desire to see the cargo unladen before he paid the freight, in order to ascertain whether all of the goods mentioned in the bill of lading were on board, and not damaged by the fault of the ship. It is his duty, and not that of the shipowner, to provide a suitable and safe place on shore in which they may be stored; and several days are often consumed in unloading and storing the cargo of a large merchant vessel. And if the cargo cannot be unladen and placed in the warehouse of the consignee, without waiving the lien, it would seriously embarrass the ordinary operations and convenience of commerce, both as to the shipowner and the merchant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 F. 573, 22 C.C.A. 318, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wellman-v-morse-ca1-1896.