Woolonghan v. The Bristol

29 F. 867, 1887 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 194
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 26, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 F. 867 (Woolonghan v. The Bristol) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woolonghan v. The Bristol, 29 F. 867, 1887 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 194 (S.D.N.Y. 1887).

Opinion

Brown, J.

Upon the facts appearing in the commissioner’s report, the matters reserved for further hearing present some novel questions. These relate chiefly to the application of the law of limited liability, the extent to which the damages are to be offset, and the mode in which the balance is to be struck, in a case of mutual fault, where there is severe [870]*870damage to both-vessels, and to their cargoes, and where the owner of one of the vessels is also the owner of her cargo. The latter circumstance is the peculiar feature that distinguishes the present case from- any known adjudication. ,

The petitioners, insurers of the cargo of the Bessie Rogers, having paid the sum of $24,500 as for a total loss, claim that the Bristol must pay to them, as innocent third persons, the whole value of that cargo, amounting now, with interest, to $42,175.07; and that, in ascertaining the balance payable by the Bristol, no part of this loss on the cargo of the Bessie Rogers can be offset against the loss of $45,696.74 incurred by the Bristol. The owners of the two vessels contend that in no event can the insurers recover more than one-half the loss on Connolly’s cargo; and they further -claim that the true rule requires that the whole losses on each side, without making any distinction between the Bessie Rogers and her cargo, should be offset against each other, so far as they go, and the Bristol held for only one-half of the excess on the side of the Bessie Rogers and her cargo. The latter mode of adjustment would make the insurer’s claim about $7,000 less than the recovery of half the loss on cargo. Connolly, as owner of the Bessie Rogers, claims that the balance payable by the Bristol should be apportioned ratably between him and the insurers, as subrogated owners of her cargo, according to the respective values of vessel and cargo, viz., in about the ratio of three to four.

Before considering this question, however, the relations of the insurance company, as a claimant against the Bristol, should be defined.

1. Under the adjudication of the supreme court in the case of Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Erie Transp. Co., 117 U. S. 312, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 750, 1176, as well as under other decisions there cited, I .find it impossible to hold that the insurance company stands in any superior or essentially different relation to the Bristol from that of Connolly, the insured owner of the cargo. It was there determined that, in cases of this kind, the right of the insurer is a right of subrogation only to the claims of the assured; and that this right is affected by all the limitations and restrictions that attach to the claim for damages in his hands.

The case of Simpson v. Thomson, 3 App. Cas. 279, is cited with apparent approval, where all remedy was denied to the insurer because the assured, owning both vessels, could not have maintained any action against himself. The scope of the decision in the case of the Phoenix Insurance Company, and of other decisions of the supreme court, is such as to limit the insurers, in a case like the present, to what Connolly himself could have recovered.

2. The decision of the supreme court, also, in the case of The Juniata, 93 U. S. 337, in effect, determines that Connolly, and therefore the insurers of his cargo, could recover onlj'- one-half of the damage to the cargo, where both vessels are i-n fault. In that case the owner of one of the two vessels was on board his own ship at the time of the collision, and received severe personal injuries. He was held entitled to recover but half his damages. The principle there involved is equally applicable here, even though Connolly’s interests as owner of the ship and as owner [871]*871of tlie cargo arc treated as quite distinct; for that decision necessarily involved the principle that the owner’s pecuniary claims against the other vessel, for personal injuries even, was affected by the faults of his own master and seamen, as his agents in the navigation of Ids own ship. The same faults must equally affect his claim for injury to bis cargo; and, as the insurers arc limited to Connolly’s rights, they cannot recover, in any event, beyond half the loss on Connolly’s cargo, viz., §21,087.58. A somewhat similar application of the same principle was made by this court in the case of The, City of New York., 25 Fed. Rep. 149.

In contending that Connolly’s entire damages to ship and cargo must be consolidated, and then offset against the Bristol’s whole loss in hull and cargo, so far as the latter go, and that the Bristol is to he; hold liable for one-half the excess only, the counsel for the claimants cite, in the absence of any adjudications, the language of Mr. Justice Bradley in the case of The Alabama, 92 U. S. 696, whore ho says, in regard to the rule that each must bear half the damages:

"The rulo lias been thus applied when the ship'and her cargo constituted one opposing force, and a single ship the other; the entire damage to ships and cargo being equally divided between the two ships. Where both ship and cargo cut one side belong to the same owners, the case is no way different from that of the two ships alone being injured.”

Repeated perusal of this passage, with its context, persuades mo that no case like the present was in contemplation of the court. No question iu respect to the cargo was involved, nor any question as to the application of the statutes limiting the liability of ship-owners; whereas those are the distinguishing features of the present case. Where no question of limited liability arises, the language quoted is, doubtless, an exact statement of the law. In tins case Connolly, the owner of the Bessie Rogers, by an amendment of bis answer to the libel against him in 'personam,, has pleaded the statutes in limitation of liability, and has invoked tlieir benefit in his defense. Though a foreigner, he is entitled to the benefit of them. The, Scotland, 105 U. S. 24. I do not think the passage above quoted was designed as any expression of opinion on the question here involved.

The importance of the mode of offsetting the damages arises wholly from the limitation of the liability of ship-owners for losses without their personal fault. Aside from this limitation, it would be immaterial what method were applied, because the damages in the end must be equally divided. It is still of no consequence what method is pursued, if each vessel, with her ponding freight, is of sufficient value to respond for her one-half of the whole loss. But whenever one of the two vessels is sufficient, and the other is insufficient, the loss, under the law of limited liability, is not borne equally; and the method of offsetting damages mav then become material, making in this case a difference of nearly S5,500.

Our statute declares, in terms, that “the liability of the owner of any vessel for any loss, damage, or injury by collision, incurred without the privity or knowledge of such owner, shall in no case exceed the amount [872]*872or value' of the interest of such owner of such vessel, and her freight then pending.” Rev. St. U. S. § 4283. This is the general maritime law. Nothing could be more explicit than this language. It makes no distinction between a ship-owner carrying his own cargo and one carrying another’s cargo.

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Related

The Job T. Wilson
84 F. 204 (D. Maryland, 1897)
Narragansett Steamship Co. v. Connolly
4 F. Cas. 159 (S.D. New York, 1873)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 F. 867, 1887 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woolonghan-v-the-bristol-nysd-1887.