Zack Metal Company v. Birmingham City

311 F.2d 334
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 12, 1962
Docket27741_1
StatusPublished

This text of 311 F.2d 334 (Zack Metal Company v. Birmingham City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zack Metal Company v. Birmingham City, 311 F.2d 334 (2d Cir. 1962).

Opinion

311 F.2d 334

M. W. ZACK METAL COMPANY, Libellant-Appellant
v.
S.S. BIRMINGHAM CITY, her engines, boilers, etc. and Bristol
City Line ofSteamships, Ltd.,
Claimant-Respondent-Appellee, and The
Jarka Corporation,
Respondent-Impleaded-Appellee.

No. 159, Docket 27741.

United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit.

Argued Nov. 7, 1962.
Decided Dec. 12, 1962.

Anthony B. Cataldo, New York City, for libellant-appellant.

Donald B. Allen, New York City (James E. Freehill and Hill, Betts, Yamaoka, Freehill & Longcope, New York City, on the brief), for claimant-respondent-appellaee.

Joseph E. Soffey, New York City, (George J. Conway, New York City, on the brief), for respondent-impleaded-appellee.

Before MEDINA, SMITH and KAUFMAN, Circuit Judges.

MEDINA, Circuit Judge.

M. W. Zack Metal Company appeals from a final decree in admiralty dismissing its libel to recover for cargo damage against the S.S. Birmingham City and her owner, Bristol City Line of Steamships, Ltd. The stevedore Jarka Corporation was impleaded, but we will give no separate consideration to the crossclaim against Jarka as we have decided to affirm the decree.

There have been two trials. We reversed the first decree against Zack because the findings were too fragmentary and inadequate to cover all points of substance raised by the evidence. M. W. Zack Metal Company v. The S.S. Birmingham City, 2 Cir., 1961, 291 F.2d 451. We also reversed the rulings favorable to the vessel and her owner that the cargo ownerhs proof of ownership of the goods was not satisfactory and that the claim was time barred for failure of Zack to give the notice required by 46 U.S.C. 1303(6). On the new trial Zack produced further proof and, after due consideration, new and detailed findings were made and the libel was again dismissed on the merits. The findings and conclusions of Judge Clancy are reported at 1962 Am.Mar.Cas. 925.

Zack's claim is for damage to 77 bundles of steel shipped on the Birmingham City at the port of Avonmouth, England. The vessel docked at Hoboken, New Jersey, where the steel was unloaded, lightered to Weehawken and there loaded into railroad gondolas and transported to Detroit, Michigan, where some of the steel was found to be rusted and otherwise damaged. The specific 77 bundles with respect to which damage is claimed were ultimately rejected by a purchaser.

After the style of the great epic poems of the ancient Greeks and Romans, the briefs on both sides plunge immediately in medias res, and then proliferate in all directions, without even the semblance of an attempt to treat the sequence of events, and the proofs relating to them in a chronological or any other rational manner. It seems to be assumed that we know all about the case, and counsel have belabored one another with charges and countercharges that serve only as far-from-diverting digressions and result in a general mass of confusion. Zack in effect tells us the critical findings are clearly erroneous, and that the trial judge not only misapplied the law applicable to this rather common type of case, but that he also failed to make the very findings directed to be made by the prior opinion of reversal.

Under these circumstances we have felt the ends of justice required a careful scutiny of the entire trial transcript and the exhibits. As a result of this we are convinced the trial judge did precisely what it was contemplated he should do and, with one exception that does not affect the outcome, to be discussed in due course, we hold the findings are decisive of the issues and are supported by substantial evidence. We affirm the decree dismissing the libel.

Zack's claim is for damage to 77 bundles of steel sheets marked 'MIE/D'. These 77 bundles were: shipped from a plant at Ebbw Vale, England, on April 16, 1953; loaded aboard the Birmingham City by the employees of the shipowner at Avonmouth, England, on April 21-4; transported to Hoboken, New Jersey, where they arrived on May 5; unloaded by Jarkahs longshoremen on May 5 and 6; loaded on May 8 and 11 aboard a lighter of the Erie R.R. Co. by employees of the railroad; taken to Weehawken, New Jersey, where, on May 12 and 13, they were placed in three Erie freight gondolas and conveyed by rail to Detroit, Michigan, where they arrived at some time between May 18 and May 25, 1953.

These 77 bundles were part of a lot of 127 bundles of similar 'MIE/D' steel sheets and 137 other bundles of steel sheets marked 'MPD/D'. Each of the 'MIE/D' bundles weighed about two tons and consisted of iled steel sheets enclosed in protective waterproof paper, and given added protection by being enveloped in metal waster sheets, consisting of trumpeting around the edges and a top and bottom waster sheet. Each such package was then secured by three metal cross straps and the package thus strapped was placed on two wooden skids to which it was attached by lengthwise metal straps running completely around both the package and the skids. Thus the combination of skids and package with the two sets of metal straps, one crosswise around the package of doubly protected oiled steel strips, and package lengthwise and around both the package and the skids, became what is called in this record a 'bundle' of 'MIE/D' steel. The marking 'MIE/D' was superimposed in white paint against a black background on the top waster sheets, and was plainly visible. The 'MPD/D' bundles in the same shipment were made up in a similar manner but with one most significant difference. The 'MPD/D' bundles had no separate metal cross-strapping around the package. From the above it may be deduced, and the facts are clearly established in the record, that rust could only be formed on the oiled steel strips if both the waster sheets and the waterproof coverings were torn or broken, so that humidity in the atmosphere, rain, sea water, ship or cargo sweat, or other moisture could reach the inner strips of steel. It is also apparent that once moisture had penetrated apertures both in the torn waterproof envelopes and broken waster sheets, any subsequent recovering and rebanding alone could scarcely be expected to stop the progress of the rust. Implicit also in this basic factual background, including a whole series of loading and unloading operations, is the likelihood that witnesses were confused by the similarity of the 'MPD/D' bundles, in which we are not intersted except tangentially, and the 'MIE/D' bundles, damage to which presents the sole issue to be decided. Also, it should not surprise us to find some of the entries or statements, in the multiplicity of documents in evidence, inconsistent, confusing and unreliable. Most of the testimony was by deposition, but several of the principal witnesses gave their versions of what they saw at various times and places in plain view of the trial judge in open court.

Accordingly, unless we find some misapplication of the rules of law governing cargo damage cases, our inquiry is likely to be focused upon the trial judgehs findings.

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