In the bill of lading of a quantity of cases and bales of goods
delivered to the National Steamship Company at Liverpool, and
addressed and consigned to C. in New York, it was provided as
follows:
"Shipped in good order and well conditioned . . . in and upon
the steamship called the
Egypt . . . bound for New York .
. . forty-three cases merchandise . . . being marked and numbered
as in the margin, and to be delivered subject to the following
exceptions and conditions: . . . The National Steamship Company or
its agents or any of its servants are not to be liable for any
damage to any goods which is capable of being covered by insurance
. . . nor for any claims for loss . . . where the loss occurs while
the goods are not actually in the possession of the company. . . .
The goods to be taken alongside by the consignee immediately the
vessel is ready to discharge, or otherwise they will be landed by
the master and deposited at the expense of the consignee, and at
his risk of fire, loss, or injury in the warehouse provided for
that purpose, or in the public store, as the collector of the port
of New York shall direct. . . . The United States Treasury having
given permission for goods to remain forty-eight hours on wharf
Page 154 U. S. 52
at New York, any goods so left by consignee will be at his or
their risk of fire, loss, or injury."
The
Egypt arrived January 31, 1883, was entered at the
customhouse at 1:45 p.m. of that day, and, there being no room for
her at the pier of the National Company, where the vessels of that
company were usually unladen, was taken to the pier of the Inman
Company. A collector's permit was given to unload the steamer and
to allow the unpermitted cargo to remain on the wharf for
forty-eight hours, upon an agreement by the steamship company,
which was given, that the goods should be at the sole risk of that
company, who would pay to the consignee or owner the value of such
cargo respectively as might be stolen, burned, or otherwise lost.
Notice of the time and place of the discharge was then posted upon
the bulletin board of the customhouse, in accordance with custom,
but no notice was sent to C., nor did he have any notice. The cases
and bales consigned to him were on the same day landed on the Inman
pier, but he had no knowledge of it, and had no opportunity to
remove the goods on that day, and, if he had had such knowledge,
there was not sufficient time for him to have entered, paid the
duties, obtained the permits for their removal, and removed them.
On the night of that day, the goods were destroyed by fire, without
any imputed negligence to the National Steamship Company.
Held:
(1) That the stipulation in the bill of lading that respondent
should not be liable for a fire happening after unloading the cargo
was reasonable and valid.
(2) That the discharge of the cargo at the Inman pier was not in
the eye of the law a deviation such as to render the carrier an
insurer of the goods so unladen.
(3) That if any notice of such unloading was required at all,
the bulletin posted in the customhouse was sufficient under the
practice and usages of the port of New York.
(4) That libellants, having taken no steps upon the faith of the
cargo's being unladen at respondent's pier, were not prejudiced by
the change.
(5) That the agreement of the respondent with the collector of
customs to pay the consignee the value of the goods was not one of
which the libellants could avail themselves as adding to the
obligations of their contract with respondent.
This was a libel in admiralty by the firm of Arnold, Constable
& Co. against the National Steamship Company, owner of the
British steamship
Egypt, to recover the value of
thirty-six cases of merchandise carried by this steamer from
Liverpool to New York, delivered on the pier of the Inman Steamship
Company on January 31, 1883, and upon the same night destroyed by
fire through the alleged negligence of the respondent. The answer
admitted most of the material
Page 154 U. S. 53
allegations of the libel, but denied all charges of negligence,
and also of liability for the loss of the merchandise. Upon a
hearing upon pleadings and proofs in the district court, the libel
was dismissed (29 F. 184), and, upon appeal to the circuit court,
the decree was affirmed. Libellants thereupon appealed to this
Court.
The following is an abstract of the facts found by the circuit
court, so far as the same are material to the questions
involved:
"2. The
Egypt was one of a line of steamers owned by
the respondent, and plying regularly between Liverpool and New York
as common carriers. The steamers of this line arrived as often as
from three to eight times per month."
"3. Respondent has run a line of such steamers for over twenty
years, and during that time has docked them at a dozen different
piers in the City of New York. From 1872 to 1878, it leased the
pier No. 36 (old No. 44), North River, and usually docked its
vessels there. Subsequently it leased pier No. 39, North River,
about six hundred feet north of pier No. 36, and has since usually
docked its vessels there, and not elsewhere. The piers between Nos.
35 and 41, North River (excluding pier No. 37) were, in 1883, all
used by regular English steamship lines. These lines usually dock
at their own piers, but not always, and in case of any emergency,
dock elsewhere and permit each other, when the necessity arises, to
use the exclusive dock of each."
"4. That said goods were shipped at the port of Liverpool on
board the
Egypt, and were consigned to the libellants at
New York under a bill of lading, the material portions of which are
cited in the opinion. (A copy is also given in the margin.*) The
Egypt also carried as a considerable portion
Page 154 U. S. 54
of her cargo goods shipped by the Inman Company, which had given
respondent the option of discharging at its pier, No. 36. "
Page 154 U. S. 55
"5. The
Egypt arrived on January 31, 1883, and was
entered at the customhouse at 1:45 o'clock in the afternoon. "
Page 154 U. S. 56
"7. For a month or more, respondent had been blocked at its own
pier, No. 39, in consequence of heavy cargoes, delays of its
vessels by westerly winds and ice in the slips, and had been
obliged in consequence to discharge two of its vessels at outside
uncovered piers."
"8. Respondent's manager had arranged to send the
Holland, another ship of respondent's line, and due before
the
Egypt, to its own pier, No. 39, and to send the
Egypt to the Inman pier, No. 36. This arrangement was
carried out, the
Holland sent to No. 39, and the
Egypt to No. 36, there being no room for her at No.
39."
"9. Steamers of regular lines, on their arrival at New York, if
their docks are blocked, are not kept in the stream longer than to
enable them to get berthed elsewhere. If kept in the stream, the
consignees make great complaint. It was more costly to dock the
Egypt at No. 36, but this was done to secure to the
consignees a more prompt discharge and delivery of their
goods."
"10. That the
Egypt began at about 4:30 o'clock in the
evening of said 31st of January, 1883, to discharge her cargo upon
the dock, and the thirty-six cases of merchandise belonging to the
libellants were landed and discharged there prior to the fire.
"
Page 154 U. S. 57
"11. Upon the entry at the customhouse of the
Egypt,
there was granted by the collector of customs a general order to
unload the steamer and to send packages to the public store. An
application was also immediately made to the collector to allow the
unpermitted cargo to remain upon the wharf for forty-eight hours
from the time of the granting of the general order. This
application was in the following form:"
" To W. H. Robertson, Esq.,
Collector of Customs."
" Request is hereby made to allow the cargo of the steamer
Egypt, Summer, from Liverpool, England, unladen, but not
permitted to remain upon the wharf for forty-eight hours from the
time of granting general order at the sole risk of the owners of
said steamer, who will pay to the consignee or owner the value of
the such cargo, respectively, as may be stolen, burned, or
otherwise lost, and who will also pay all duties which may be in
any way lost by so remaining."
"F. J. W. Hurst,
Owner"
"Per J. C. Ryor,
Attorney"
"Such application was in the form required by the collector,
without which permit would not be granted, and the entire cargo
would be sent to public store. A permit was granted by the
collector upon this application. A special license was also granted
to unload the steamship after sunset, and a bond in $20,000 was
given for such license, as required by law."
"12. The general order above stated, the special license, the
applications and permits, and the agreements and engagements
therein contained were the usual and customary ones ordinarily made
and granted in such cases, and were made under and by the authority
in the bill of lading conferred upon the respondent and upon the
collector of the port, and in accordance with the provisions of law
and the regulations of the Treasury Department in that behalf."
"14. Under these several orders and permits, a portion of the
cargo of the
Egypt, including libellants' merchandise, was
discharged and landed upon the Inman dock, where the same was
destroyed by fire about two o'clock the next morning. That said
cargo, including said merchandise belonging to
Page 154 U. S. 58
libellants, was at the time of its destruction aforesaid in the
possession of the respondent, and had never been taken into the
possession of the collector of the said port of New York. That said
fire broke out without any imputed negligence, and that by it the
steamer was also somewhat burned."
"15. That between the arrival of the steamer and the destruction
of the merchandise, there was not sufficient time in which to enter
libellants' goods at the customhouse, pay the duties thereon, and
obtain the requisite permits for the removal of the same. That in
fact no duties were paid upon libellants' goods, and no permits
obtained prior to the destruction of the goods by fire. That said
goods were at the time of their destruction 'unpermitted'
goods."
"16. That upon obtaining the permits referred to, the
respondent's customhouse broker caused a notice of the time and
place of discharge to be posted on the bulletin board of the
customhouse. It is usual to so post such notices. It is not usual
to publish them in the newspapers."
"17. No notice was ever sent to or received by the libellants,
nor did they have any actual knowledge of the readiness to
discharge or of the time or place of discharge of the
Egypt upon her arrival."
"18. Libellants never knew that the merchandise had been landed
and deposited upon the Inman dock, and never had an opportunity of
removing such merchandise."
The other facts, so far as they are material, are stated in the
opinion of the Court.
Upon such facts, the circuit court found as conclusions of law
that respondent had the right to dock and discharge the
Egypt at the Inman pier, that it was exempt from liability
for the goods destroyed by fire on such pier, and that there was,
by reason of the application to the collector to allow the
unpermitted cargo to remain on the wharf, no valid agreement or
binding obligation to pay the libellants the value of the goods
burned.
Page 154 U. S. 59
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case involves the liability of a steamship company for the
loss by fire of a consignment of goods unloaded without personal
notice to the consignee upon the wharf of a company other than the
one owning the vessel.
By the Limited Liability Act (Rev.Stat. section 4282), no ship
owner is liable to answer for the loss of any merchandise shipped
upon his vessel by reason of any fire "happening to or on board the
vessel unless such fire is caused by the design or neglect of such
owner," and in the case of
The Scotland, 105 U. S.
24, the exemptions and limitations of this act were held
to apply to foreign as well as domestic vessels. A similar
exemption from fire happening without the "fault or privity" of the
owner is contained in the British Merchants' Shipping Act of 1854,
section 503. The bill of lading in this case also contains an
exemption of liability from loss caused by fire "before loading in
the ship or after unloading." There is no comma after the word
"loading" or "ship," but obviously it should be read as if there
were. In view of the fact that under no aspect of the case would
the owner of the vessel be liable for the consequences of any fire
occurring on board of such vessel without his fault, and that an
attempt is made in this case to impose the liability not of a
warehouseman, but of a common carrier and insurer against fire,
after the contract of carriage had been fully performed, it would
seem that such liability ought not to be raised out of the contract
in this case except upon clear evidence, and for the most cogent
reasons. The liability of the company for the goods while upon the
wharf is a mere incident to its liability for them while upon the
ship, and if the liability is more extensive under the incidental
contract of storage than it was under the principal contract of
carriage, it is an exception to the general rule that the
incidental liability of a contracting party is not broader than his
liability upon the principal contract.
Page 154 U. S. 60
Two facts are mainly relied upon in this case for holding the
respondent company to the liabilities of an insurer:
1. That the
Egypt did not unload at her usual wharf,
but at what is known as the "Inman Pier," and that no actual notice
was given to the libellants of such unloading.
2. In the application to the collector to allow the unpermitted
cargo of the steamer to remain upon the wharf for forty-eight
hours, there was a stipulation that it should be "at the sole risk
of owners of said steamer."
We shall proceed to dispose of these questions in their
order.
1. As bearing upon the liability of the vessel after the cargo
is unladen, the following exemptions in the bill of lading are
pertinent and necessary to be considered:
(1) "Fire before loading, in the ship, or after loading."
(2) "The National Steamship Company, Limited, or its agents or
any of its servants, are not to be liable for any damage to any
goods which is capable of being covered by insurance."
(3) "The goods to be taken from alongside by the consignee
immediately the vessel is ready to discharge, or otherwise they
will be landed by the master and deposited at the expense of the
consignee, and at his risk of fire, loss, or injury, in the
warehouse provided for that purpose, or in the public store, as the
collector of the port of New York shall direct, and, when deposited
in the warehouse or store, to be subject to storage, the collector
of the port being hereby authorized to grant a general order for
discharge immediately after entry of the ship."
It is admitted that under what may be termed the "common law of
the sea," a delivery of the cargo, to discharge the carrier from
his liability, must be made upon the usual wharf of the vessel, and
actual notice be given to the consignee, if he be known. This was
the ruling of this Court in the case of
64 U.
S. Goddard), 23 How. 28,
64 U. S. 39, and
The Eddy, 5
Wall. 481, and is in conformity with the great weight of English
and American authority.
Hyde v. Trent & Mersey Navigation
Co., 5 T.R. 389;
Gibson v. Culver, 17 Wend. 305; 1
Parsons on Shipping 222.
Page 154 U. S. 61
This rule, however, originated prior to the era of steam
navigation, when a voyage from Liverpool to New York rarely
consumed less than three weeks, when the time of the arrival of the
vessel could not be forecast with any accuracy, when crews were
discharged immediately upon her arrival and the vessel was usually
detained several weeks in the slow and laborious process of
unloading taking on cargo, and refitting before setting out upon
another voyage. Such methods of delivery were found wholly
inadequate to the necessities of modern commerce, and particularly
to the comparatively short voyages of the large transatlantic
passenger steamers, which are kept permanently equipped with large
and expensive crews at a cost of several hundred dollars per day,
and, in order to be profitably employed, must be kept in almost
constant motion. In such cases, the consignees of the cargo may be
numbered by the hundreds, and a requirement that each consignee
shall have a personal notice of the unloading of the cargo in order
to relieve the carrier from responsibility would necessitate delays
which might consume the entire profits of the voyage. It is of the
utmost importance that the discharge of the cargo shall begin as
soon as possible after the vessel arrives at her wharf, and if the
consignee may sometimes be spurred to greater diligence or put to
some inconvenience in removing his consignments, he receives a
compensation in the lower rate of freight the vessel is thereby
enabled to charge.
To obviate the difficulties attendant upon the ancient method of
discharging, the regular steamship lines are in the habit of
providing themselves with wharves having covered warehouses, into
which the cargo is discharged, and of inserting in their bills of
lading stipulations similar to those found in this case,
viz., that the responsibility of the vessel shall cease
after the goods are discharged, and thus of extending their
statutory exemption from fire to such as may occur before loading
or after unloading. In view of the fact that the piers of the
regular steamship lines are well known to every importer, and the
day of arrival of each steamer may be predicted almost to a
certainty, we perceive nothing unreasonable in this stipulation. An
importer having reason to anticipate
Page 154 U. S. 62
the arrival of goods by a certain steamer, by putting himself in
communication with the office of the company may usually secure a
notice of several hours of the actual arrival of the vessel at her
wharf. It seems, too, by the sixteenth finding in this case, that
in lieu of a personal notice to each consignee or of publication
through the papers, a custom has grown up in the port of New York
of posting on a bulletin board in the customhouse a notice of the
time and place of discharge. Taking all these facts into
consideration, we see no impropriety in the company's limiting
itself to the liability of a warehouseman with respect to the goods
so discharged into its own warehouse. Indeed, as applied to the
usual wharf of the steamer, we do not understand it to be seriously
questioned in this case. In fact, an argument appears to have been
made in the district court to the effect that the limited liability
act applied to this fire to exonerate the company; but the court
held (and doubtless properly) that a fire originating upon the dock
could not be said to have "happened to the ship" within the meaning
of section 4282, even though the fire extended to and did some
damage to the vessel.
Morewood v. Pollok, 1 El. & Bl.
743. No good reason, however, is perceived why, if a wise policy
requires the exemption of the carrier from a fire occurring without
his fault, such exemption should not extend to any such fire while
the goods are in his possession and under his control, or at any
time before actual delivery to the consignee. But however this may
be, there can be no question of the power or the carrier to extend
his statutory exemption from fire to such as occurs after the
discharge of the cargo, by special stipulation to that effect in
the bill of lading. Thus, in
York Co. v. Central
Railroad, 3 Wall. 107, it was held that the common
law liability of a carrier might be limited by special contract
with the owner, and that the exemption in a bill of lading from
losses by fire was sufficient to protect the carrier if the fire
were not occasioned by any want of due care on his part.
See
also 47 U. S. Co. v.
Merchants' Bank), 6 How. 344,
47 U. S. 382;
Railroad Co. v. Manufacturing
Co., 16 Wall. 318;
Phoenix
Ins. Co. v. Erie Transportation Co., 117 U.S.
Page 154 U. S. 63
312. Indeed, a general exemption from the consequences of fire
has been held to extend not only to fires happening on board the
vessel, but to fires occurring to the goods while on the wharf
awaiting transportation.
Scott v. Baltimore &c. Steamboat
Co., 19 F. 56.
No rule is better settled than that the delivery must be
according to the custom and usage of the port, and such delivery
will discharge the carrier of his responsibility. Thus, in
Dixon v. Dunham, 14 Ill. 324, it was said that
"it was competent for the defendant [the carrier] to set up a
custom or usage in the port of Chicago that goods should be
delivered at the wharf selected by the master of the vessel, and
that consignees should receive their goods there, with the averment
of knowledge of such a custom in the plaintiff, and that this
contract was made in accordance with it."
So also, in
Gatliffe v. Bourne, 4 Bing. (N.C.) 314,
Chief Justice Tindall said:
"We know of no general rule of law which governs the delivery of
a bill of goods under a bill of lading, where such delivery is not
expressly according to the terms of the bill of lading, except that
it must be a delivery according to the practice and custom usually
observed in the port or place of delivery."
See also Farmers' & Mechanics' Bank v. Champlain
Transportation Co., 23 Vt. 312;
The Tangier, 1 Cliff.
396;
Richmond v. Union Steamboat Co., 87 N.Y. 240;
Gibson v. Culver, 17 Wend. 305;
The Boston, 1
Lowell 464. In
The Sultana v. Chapman, 5 Wis. 454, there
was a delivery at a place where the court held the boat had no
right to leave the goods, and they were there destroyed. Under such
circumstances, notwithstanding the exception in the bill of lading,
the carrier was held not to be exempted from liability for the
loss. "He had no right," said the court,
"to place these goods where he did, and having done so, and a
loss having ensued, he must be held responsible for it as being
occasioned by his own negligence or misconduct."
While there is no express provision in the bill of lading in
this case dispensing with notice to the consignee, the provision
that the goods shall be taken from alongside by the consignee
immediately the vessel is ready to discharge is inconsistent
Page 154 U. S. 64
with the idea of personal notice, since such a notice would
necessitate a delay of one or two days in the discharge of the
cargo, while the notices were being given. If the goods were not
taken by the consignee, the carrier was authorized to deposit them
at the risk of the consignee "in the warehouse provided for that
purpose," meaning, of course, the warehouse upon the pier. His
obligation to give notice, if any such existed, must, under the
terms of the bill of lading allowing an immediate discharge of the
cargo, be contemporaneous with such discharge, and too late to be
of any avail to the consignee. Such notice appears to have been
given in this case, as the libellants' broker in his testimony, to
which we have been referred, says:
"The invoice and bills of lading were sent down to me on the
31st of January, and the entries made out . . . and lodged in the
customhouse at twenty-five minutes past two."
In
Gleadlee v. Thompson, 56 N.Y. 194, it was said of a
similar stipulation in a bill of lading that the goods should be
taken from alongside by the consignee immediately the vessel is
ready to discharge:
"The landing of the goods upon the pier of the plaintiff, under
the circumstances of this case, did not, we think, change his
relation to the goods and divest him of his custody of them as a
carrier. The privilege to make this disposition of them was secured
to him by the bill of lading, unless the consignee was ready to
take the goods from the ship whenever it was ready to discharge. It
was not incumbent upon the plaintiff to give notice of a readiness
to discharge the goods as a condition of his exercising the
privilege of depositing them upon the pier. They, however,
remained, after such deposit, in his custody as carrier, subject to
the modified responsibility created by the contract until after
notice had been given to the consignees of their arrival and a
reasonable time had elapsed for their removal. Meanwhile the
defendants assumed the risk of 'fire, loss, or injury' to the
goods, according to the contract, but the language used did not
exempt the plaintiff from liability for an injury resulting from
his own negligence."
The cases relied upon by the libellants do not support their
contention. In the case of
The Santee, 7 Blatchford 186,
a
Page 154 U. S. 65
bill of lading covering a shipment of cotton contained a clause
that the cotton should be at the risk of the consignee as soon as
delivered from the tackles of the vessel at the port of
destination. It appeared that the consignee had proper notice of
the arrival of the vessel and of her discharge, and an opportunity,
by reasonable diligence, to identify his cotton and receive it. The
cotton was placed safely on the wharf when discharged, and a
portion of it, belonging to the libellants, was removed by some
other person, but was not actually delivered by the agents of the
vessel to such other party. It was held that the vessel was not
liable for the loss. It is true that in delivering the opinion, it
was said the carrier was still bound to give suitable information
to the consignees to enable them to attend and receive the goods,
and themselves assume and exercise that care and responsibility of
which the carrier was to be relieved. But notice in this case was
admitted to have been given, and the only question was whether,
under the bill of lading, the carrier was liable after the cotton
was discharged, and it was held that he was not, nor was he
"bound to watch the property after it passed beyond the vessel's
tackles to see that it was kept safe or protected from removal,
through mistake or design, by third persons."
In
Collins v. Burns, 63 N.Y. 1, the bill of lading
contained a stipulation much like the one under consideration, and
it was held that the clause providing for immediate discharge into
the warehouse at the risk of the consignee of fire, loss, or injury
did not exonerate the carrier for delivering goods to the wrong
party, or to a drayman who was not authorized to receive them. The
court of appeals, however, held expressly that the liability of
defendants was that of warehousemen, and therefore that they were
responsible only for negligence.
So in
Tarbell v. Royal Exchange Shipping Co., 110 N.Y.
170, the goods were discharged from the ship and deposited on a
proper wharf, and after the consignees had had three full days to
remove them, it was discovered that a part had been removed from
the wharf by someone without the authority of the consignees. It
was held that as the loss occurred after the lapse of a reasonable
time for removal of
Page 154 U. S. 66
the goods by the consignees after notice of arrival, defendant
was not liable as a common carrier, but that the defendant was
negligent in omitting to take ordinary care of the goods, and
allowing them to be removed without taking receipts. It was
expressly held, however, that the liability of defendant as carrier
terminated with the delivery of the goods upon the wharf, and that
its liability arose from its negligence in delivering them to the
wrong person.
It is claimed, however, that the berthing of this ship at a pier
other than her own was in legal effect a deviation which rendered
the company an insurer of the cargo discharged at such pier without
notice until its actual delivery to the consignee. In the law
maritime, a deviation is defined as a "voluntary departure without
necessity, or any reasonable cause, from the regular and usual
course of the ship insured." 1 Bouvier's Law Dict. 417;
Hostetter v. Park, 137 U. S. 30,
137 U. S. 40;
Davis v. Garrett, 6 Bing. 716;
Williams v. Grant,
1 Conn. 487, as, for instance, where a ship bound from New York to
Norwich, Conn., went outside of Long Island and lost her cargo in a
storm,
Crosby v. Fitch, 12 Conn. 410, or where a carrier
is guilty of unnecessary delay in pursuing a voyage, or in the
transportation of goods by rail,
Michaels v. N.Y. Central
Railroad, 30 N.Y. 564. But, if such deviation be a customary
incident of the voyage and according to the known usage of trade,
it neither avoids a policy of insurance nor subjects the carrier to
the responsibility of an insurer.
Oliver v.
Maryland Ins. Co., 7 Cranch 487;
Columbian
Ins. Co. v. Catlett, 12 Wheat. 383. In
Hostetter v. Park, 137 U. S. 30, it
was held to be no deviation, in the Pittsburgh and New Orleans
barge trade, to land and tie up a tow of barges, and detach from
the tow such barge or barges as were designated to take on cargo en
route, and to tow the same to the several points where the cargo
might be stored, it having been shown that such delays were within
the general and established usage of the trade. So, in
Gracie v. Marine Ins.
Co., 8 Cranch 75, it was held to be no deviation to
land goods at a lazaretto or quarantine station if the usage of the
trade permitted it, though by the bill of lading the goods were "to
be safely
Page 154 U. S. 67
landed at Leghorn."
See also Phelps v. Hill (1891), 1
Q.B. 605.
In this connection the findings are:
"(3) That the regular English steamship lines usually dock at
their own piers, but not always, and, in case of any emergency,
dock elsewhere, and permit each other, when the necessity arises,
to use the exclusive dock of each. . . ."
"(7) That for a month or more before January 31, 1883,
respondent had been blocked up at its own pier, No. 39, in
consequence of heavy cargoes, delays of its vessels by westerly
winds and ice in the slips, and had, in consequence, been obliged
to discharge two of its vessels at outside uncovered piers. . .
."
"(9) That steamers of regular lines, on their arrival at the
port of New York, if their docks are blocked, are not kept in the
stream longer than to enable them to berth elsewhere. If kept in
the stream, consignees make great complaint. It was more costly to
dock the
Egypt at pier No. 36, but it was done to secure
to the consignees a more prompt discharge and delivery of their
goods. . . ."
"(26) That pier No. 36, North River, was a fit and proper place
to discharge the steamship
Egypt at the time in question
and to discharge from her libellants' goods."
If it be true that the pier of the respondent company was so
blocked that the
Egypt could not obtain access to it to
discharge her cargo, it was, so far from being a deviation, a
matter of ordinary prudence to select a neighboring pier for that
purpose. Had this cargo been discharged at a remote, unusual, or
inaccessible spot, or upon an uncovered pier, so that it was
exposed to the weather or to any unusual hazard, and a loss had
been incurred, we should not have hesitated to hold the carrier
liable notwithstanding the stipulation against the consequence of
negligence in its bill of lading.
Railroad Co. v.
Lockwood, 17 Wall. 359;
The Aline, 19 F.
875;
The Boskenna Bay, 22 F. 662. No such question,
however, is presented here. While the libel alleges that the loss
occurred through the negligence of the respondent, no effort was
made to prove this, and there is no finding that such was the case.
Indeed, there is nothing to indicate that the Inman pier was not a
perfectly proper place to
Page 154 U. S. 68
discharge a cargo, or that it was not equipped with the usual
appliances for the extinguishment of fires.
It is insisted, however, that libellants had a right to suppose
that the
Egypt would discharge her cargo at her regular
pier, and that, while they might be bound to take notice of that
fact, they were entitled, if she selected another pier, to a
personal notice of the time and place of delivery, that an
opportunity might be given them to be present and receive their
consignments. But if, under the usages of trade or the necessities
of the particular case, it was allowable and proper for the
respondent to select another pier for the discharge of its cargo,
we do not understand that its obligation to its consignees was
thereby increased or modified, at least unless the libellants can
show that they were actually prejudiced by such change. Practically
the same questions are involved,
viz., whether, if she had
discharged at her own wharf, the company was bound to give notice
before it could relieve itself of its responsibility. The real
question still is whether, if she had gone to her own wharf and the
fire had occurred under the same circumstances, the vessel would
have been liable for the loss. It was for the mutual advantage of
the ship and the consignees that the cargo should be unloaded at
the earliest possible moment -- the ship that she might discharge
herself of responsibility and take on her return cargo, the
consignees that they might secure their goods as soon as possible.
The North River piers in that neighborhood were all used by
steamers engaged in the Liverpool trade. The pier selected was only
six hundred feet from the regular pier of the line, and inquiry at
that pier would doubtless have apprised libellants or their agent
where the
Egypt was actually discharging her cargo.
In addition to this, there is a finding that upon obtaining the
permits for the immediate unloading of the cargo, the respondent's
customhouse broker caused a notice of the time and place of
discharge to be posted on a bulletin board in the customhouse; that
it is usual to post such notices, and is not usual to publish them
in the newspapers. It is true there was an exception taken to this
finding upon the ground that there
Page 154 U. S. 69
was no evidence in support of it. The testimony, however, of the
witness Ryer, the customhouse broker, was to the effect that he
attended to getting out the usual papers for the respondent company
to allow the discharge and to passing all their steamers through
the customhouse; that, on the arrival of the
Egypt, the
captain brought the manifest, took the usual oath, and made out
applications for the usual permits to land goods, discharge at
night, and to allow the goods to remain on the wharf.
"We get the permit taken out, signed by the naval officer and
collector, and, after the permits are all taken out, we usually
post a notice where the vessel will discharge [giving copy of
notice]. I have no reason to suppose the notice was not posted in
this case. It is done in every case. I am not positive whether it
was done in this case, but it is a part of the routine of entering
a vessel to do so. I have no doubt it was done."
The witness evidently had no definite recollection of this
particular notice, but he had no doubt that he pursued his usual
course in posting it. Respondent's agent also testifies that it was
always usual to put up such notice at the customhouse. The
customhouse broker for the libellants, Arnold, Constable & Co.,
testified in this connection that the invoice and bills of lading
of the
Egypt were sent down to him on January 31; that the
entries were made and lodged in the customhouse at twenty-five
minutes past 2.
"I know where the board is where they put up notices of arrivals
and the steamer's discharge. . . . That is around the corner going
into the cashier's office. . . . It isn't any great distance. . . .
I never look at that unless I want to find out where a vessel was
discharged, a strange vessel. Possibly I might look then. I have
not looked there for years."
While this testimony is not direct and positive to the fact
sought to be proven, it creates, when aided by the ordinary
presumption arising from the course of business, a strong
probability that the notice was posted. The practice, even of a
private office, if well established, is presumed to have been
followed in individual cases, and is accepted as sufficient proof
of the fact in question when primary evidence of such fact is
wanting. 1 Greenl. Ev.
Page 154 U. S. 70
section 40;
Nicholls v.
Webb, 8 Wheat. 326;
Price v. Torrington, 1
Salk. 285;
Champneys v. Peck, 1 Starkie 404;
Pritt v.
Fairclough, 3 Camp. 305;
Doe v. Turford, 3 B. &
Ad. 890, 895;
Dana v. Kemble, 19 Pick. 112. We think the
conclusion of the court was justified by the evidence in this
particular.
But, even supposing that actual notice had been given, it could
not have been given before the arrival of the ship and the names of
the consignees were known, and it would then have been too late for
the libellants to take their goods away. The findings are that the
Egypt was entered at the customhouse at forty-five minutes
past one in the afternoon, that she began to discharge her cargo at
half past four, and that libellants' merchandise was discharged
prior to the fire, (15), and that between the time of the arrival
of the steamer and the destruction of the merchandise there was not
sufficient time in which to enter the libellants' goods at the
customhouse, pay the duties thereon, and obtain the requisite
permits for the removal of the same. If, then, it be true that
libellants could not have removed their goods before the fire, it
is difficult to see how the want of a notice could have contributed
to the loss. We are clearly of the opinion that, under the custom
of the port and exigencies of the service, there was no obligation
to delay the discharge of the cargo until notice could be given,
and a reasonable time had elapsed before the goods could be taken
away. While the nineteenth finding is to the effect that libellants
had, before this consignment, received from the respondent company
six other consignments under bills of lading in the same form, all
of which were landed and discharged on their own pier, there is
nothing to indicate that libellants took any steps whatever upon
the faith of such previous practice or made any inquiries as to
when the
Egypt was expected, or at what pier she would
discharge her cargo. Indeed, while their own broker was at the
customhouse attending to the entry of these goods, he did not even
take the trouble to look at the bulletin to see where the
Egypt was being discharged. If libellants had shown that,
relying upon the previous practice, they were ready at pier No. 36
to receive the cargo, or were misled by
Page 154 U. S. 71
the discharge at pier No. 39, they would have shown a much
stronger title to recover. The inference is irresistible that, even
if the
Egypt had discharged at her own wharf, they would
not have been there to receive, and could not have received, their
consignments, which would have been stored in the company's
warehouse, and exposed to the same danger of fire -- in other
words, the delivery at the Inman dock did not in any legal sense
contribute to the loss. There was no stipulation in the bill of
lading that the
Egypt would unload at No. 36, from which a
duty to give notice might be implied, if she were compelled to
select another pier.
Upon the facts of this case exhibiting a necessity for a
discharge elsewhere than at her own pier, and in the absence of any
evidence that libellants were prejudiced by the failure of the
Egypt to discharge at her usual wharf, we think there was
no breach of duty on the part of respondent in this particular.
2. Another serious question, however, is presented by the
proviso in the application to allow the unpermitted cargo to remain
upon the wharf,
viz., that it should remain
"at the sole risk of owners of said steamer, who will pay the
consignee or owner the value of such cargo, respectively, as may be
stolen, burned, or otherwise lost, and will also pay all duties on
cargo which may be in any way lost by so remaining."
It seems that, upon the arrival of a transatlantic steamer, it
is usual to apply for and obtain a general order to allow to be
landed and sent to the public store (not the warehouse on the
wharf) all packages for which no special permit or order shall have
been received; also, a permit to allow such portion of the cargo as
in unladen, but not permitted, to remain upon the wharf for
forty-eight hours from the time of the granting of the above
general order at the expiration of which time they are sent to the
proper general order store, and also a special license to permit
the cargo to be unladen at night. These orders, licenses, and
permits are granted in pursuance of the general regulations of the
Treasury Department.
Granting that the request made by the company is, upon
Page 154 U. S. 72
its face, broad enough to impose upon the company the
responsibility for goods lost by fire, it must be construed in
connection with the following stipulation upon the same subject in
the bill of lading,
viz.:
"The goods to be taken from alongside by the consignee
immediately the vessel is ready to discharge, . . . the collector
of the port being hereby authorized to grant a general order for
discharge immediately after entry of the ship. The United States
Treasury having given permission for goods to remain forty-eight
hours on wharf at New York, any goods so left by consignee will be
at his or their risk of fire, loss, or injury."
Some criticism is made upon the words "so left by consignee,"
libellants insisting that the word "left" implies a voluntary
leaving of the cargo upon the wharf after notice of the discharge
of the same has been received by the consignee. We are not
inclined, however, to affix to it such a technical meaning. In view
of the fact that the object of the stipulation was evidently to
exempt the carrier from responsibility for the occurring at any
time after the discharge of the cargo, and particularly during the
forty-eight hours it was permitted to remain upon the wharf, which
forty-eight hours, under the terms of the permit, began to run from
the time the general order to unload was granted, we think it clear
that it was intended to apply during this time, whether the goods
were technically "left" by the consignee or not, and that the
proviso should be interpreted as if it read:
"The United States Treasury having given permission for goods to
remain forty-eight hours on wharf at New York, any goods so
remaining will be at consignee's risk of fire, loss, or
injury."
This permission, though granted at the request of the shipowner
and primarily for his benefit, is really of more value to the
consignees, since a convenient opportunity is there afforded them
to examine their goods, and they are saved the expense of cartage
to a bonded warehouse, and storage therein.
The question presented, then, is substantially this: A. and B.
agree that, in a certain contingency, A. shall assume the risk of
the loss of his goods by fire. Subsequently B. agrees with C.
Page 154 U. S. 73
that, in precisely the same contingency, he shall be responsible
to A. for the loss of the same goods. Waiving the question whether
this means any more than that he shall be responsible so far as C.
is concerned, does the latter contract supersede the earlier?
Unquestionably it would if it were between the same parties. In
this case, however, the first contract was made by B. (the
respondent) in full contemplation of the fact that it would be
obliged to enter into the second, and for the special purpose of
providing against it. Now to say that, having entered into the
first contract, knowing that it would have to enter into a second
one wholly inconsistent with the first and intending to be bound by
it, is scarcely creditable to the intelligence of its agent.
Libellants, too, though parties, or rather privies, to the first
contract, were not parties to the second, and, so far as it
appears, did not even know that it was or would be entered into
except as they may have known a general usage to protect officers
in this manner. The position of the parties had not changed in the
interval; no new consideration moved from the libellants; and,
while the contract was nominally made for their benefit, this gift
of the collector was purely a voluntary one. Indeed, the contract
seems really to have been for the protection of the collector
himself. Under these circumstances, it is clearly the duty of this
Court to harmonize these contracts if it be possible to do so. It
is by no means a universal rule that a person may sue upon a
contract made for his benefit to which he was not a party.
Hendricks v. Lindsay, 93 U. S. 143;
National Bank v. Grand Lodge, 98 U. S.
123;
Keller v. Ashford, 133 U.
S. 610;
Cragin v. Lovell, 109 U.
S. 194;
Willard v. Wood, 135 U.
S. 309. No case has gone so far as to hold that where
the person for whose benefit the contract is made has himself, or
by his privy in estate, entered into a contract inconsistent with
this, he may repudiate such prior contract and claim the benefit of
the second simply because it has become for his interest to do so.
We know of no principle which authorizes one party to an agreement
to vary it, even against his own interest, without the consent of
the other. As observed by the Court of Appeals of New York in
Simson v. Brown, 68 N.Y. 355:
"It is not
Page 154 U. S. 74
every promise made by one to another from the performance of
which a benefit may inure to a third which gives a right of action
to such third person, he being neither privy to the contract nor to
the consideration. The contract must be made for his benefit as its
object, and he must be the party intended to be benefited."
See also National Bank v. Grand Lodge, 98 U. S.
123;
Garnsey v. Rogers, 47 N.Y. 233.
The principle above announced was still further limited by the
Court of Appeals in
Vrooman v. Turner, 69 N.Y. 280, in
which it was said that to give a third party who may derive a
benefit from the performance of a promise an action, there must be
first an intent by the promisor to secure some benefit to the third
party, and second some privity between the two, the promisor and
the party to be benefited, and some obligation or duty owing from
the promisor to the latter which would give him a legal or
equitable claim to the benefit of the promise, or an equivalent to
him personally.
It is necessary to a correct understanding of this contract to
examine somewhat in detail the circumstances under which it was
entered into and the authority under which the collector acted in
prescribing its terms. By Rev.Stat. sections 2867, 2869, general
authority is given to the collector to authorize the unloading of
vessels arriving within the limits of his collection districts, and
to grant a permit to land the merchandise. By section 2966, the
collector is authorized to take possession of such merchandise, and
deposit the same in bonded warehouses, and by section 2969, all
merchandise of which the collector shall take possession under
these provisions shall be kept with due and reasonable care at the
charge and risk of the owner. By section 2871, the collector,
"upon or after the issuing of a general order [for the unloading
of the cargo], shall grant, upon proper application therefor, a
special license to unlade the cargo of said vessel at night, that
is to say, between sunset and sunrise,"
upon a bond of indemnity being given, etc.,
"and any liability of the master or owner of any such steamship
to the owner or consignee of any merchandise landed from her shall
not be affected by the granting of such special license or of any
general order, but such liability
Page 154 U. S. 75
shall continue until the merchandise is properly removed from
the dock whereon the same may be landed."
There is certainly nothing here which contemplates that the
owner of the vessel shall enter into any independent obligation,
assuming new liabilities or expanding in any way existing
liabilities to the consignee. The object of the statute is clearly
to preserve the
status quo, to continue such liability as
already exists, and to preclude the shipowner from claiming that,
by the action of the collector, his liability to the owner of the
merchandise is impaired or restricted. In the language of the
statute, any previous liability "shall not be affected, . . . but
such liability shall continue until the merchandise is properly
removed from the dock whereon the same may be landed." It is true
that no mention is here made of the power of the collector to allow
the unpermitted cargo to remain forty-eight hours upon the wharf,
and no such power is expressly given, but by section 2989,
"the Secretary of the Treasury may from time to time establish
such rules and regulations, not inconsistent with law, for the due
execution of the provisions of this chapter, and to secure a just
accountability under the same as he may deem to be expedient and
necessary."
While there is nothing in the statute allowing any fixed time to
elapse between the unlading of the goods and their removal to a
bonded warehouse, the statute does not prohibit such time's being
allowed, and as some interval must necessarily elapse for the
examination and appraisement of the goods designed for immediate
delivery to the importer, duties which can most readily be
performed while the goods are yet upon the wharf, and as it is for
the mutual benefit of the government and consignee to allow some
such interval of time to elapse, the Secretary of the Treasury is
doubtless vested with a certain discretion in that particular under
the power given him by section 2989, and also by section 251, which
authorizes him to make rules and regulations not inconsistent with
law in carrying out the provisions of law relating to raising
revenue from imports.
In pursuance of this authority, the Secretary of the Treasury,
on May 5, 1877, adopted certain regulations concerning the
discharge of steamships, of which the following only is
material:
Page 154 U. S. 76
"Goods will be delivered from the docks by the inspector as fast
as permits therefor are presented, and such as are discharged for
which no delivery permit has been received will be sent to the
general order store. The collector may, at the request of the
master, agent, or owner of the vessel, allow goods landed, but not
'permitted' to remain on the docks at the sole risk of the owner of
the vessel, not longer than forty-eight hours from the time of
their discharge, upon the production of evidence that the owner of
the vessel assumes the risk of the goods allowed to remain and
agrees to pay the duties on any goods which may be lost by so
remaining. This request must be made in writing to the collector,
and must state that if the permission is granted, the goods will be
at the risk of the owner of the vessel, that he will pay all duties
on goods that may be lost, and must be signed by the owner of the
vessel or his agent duly authorized. The consent of the collector
thereto must also be granted in writing. At the expiration of the
forty-eight hours, no permit having been received for their
delivery by the inspector, the collector shall send the goods to
the general order store to have the same weighed or gauged, if
required."
In this connection, it must be borne in mind that the Secretary
of the Treasury is an officer of the government; that his powers
are limited by law; that his duty is to protect the revenues of the
government, and to prevent smuggling or other illegal practices,
whereby the government may be defrauded of its revenue, and that he
owes no duty to individuals beyond seeing that their rights are not
prejudiced any further than is necessary by the action of the
customs officers. He is neither the agent of the vessel nor of the
importer, but stands between them, representing only the
government, and charged only with the collection of its revenue.
The above regulation, when carefully examined, is consistent with
this view. It requires the collector to allow the goods to remain
upon the docks "at the sole risk of the owner of the vessel," and
requires the latter to assume "the risk of the goods allowed to
remain," and to agree "to pay the duty on any goods which may be
lost by so remaining." It is obvious
Page 154 U. S. 77
from the context that the risk referred to is the risk as
between the owner of the vessel and the government,
viz.,
the risk of paying duties upon such goods as may be lost during the
forty-eight hours. The permit is granted primarily for the benefit
and at the request of the vessel, which retains its lien for
freight for the goods so long as they remain on the dock. The
government has as yet no claim for duties against the consignee of
the goods, and it is just that the owner of the vessel should
assume the liability for duties. There is nothing here indicating
an intention of imposing any liability upon the ship owner for the
goods themselves, except so far as to protect the government from
loss. The loss referred to is probably a loss by theft, to which
these warehouses are peculiarly subject, since, if the goods were
destroyed by fire, the consignee would, under section 2984, be
entitled to an abatement or refund of duties. This construction of
the ship owner's obligation is rather emphasized than otherwise by
the subsequent clause of the regulation:
"This request must be made in writing to the collector, and must
state that if the permission is granted, the goods will be at the
risk of the owner of the vessel, that he will pay all duties on
goods which may be lost,"
etc. The risk he thus assumes is the risk of paying the duties
upon goods which may be lost. There is nothing in these
instructions, interpreted in the light of the statute and of the
powers of the collector, to justify the inference that it was
intended to impose any new or different obligation upon the owner
of the vessel with respect to the consignees of the
merchandise.
In the forms prescribed, probably by the department, to carry
out these regulations, however, there is an apparent departure both
from the language of the statute and the Treasury regulations in
the obligation the owner of the vessel is required to assume:
"To pay to the consignee or owner the value of such cargo,
respectively, as may be stolen, burned, or
Page 154 U. S. 78
otherwise lost, and also pay all duties on cargo which may be in
any way lost by so remaining."
Here, the obligation to indemnify the consignee first appears,
and occupies the most prominent place, and is extended to goods
stolen, burned, or otherwise lost, while the obligation to pay
duties is mentioned rather incidentally than otherwise. Wherever or
by whomsoever these forms were prepared, we must, for the purposes
of this case, treat them as the act of the collector, who, if this
contract be construed as intended for the protection of anyone but
the collector himself, clearly exceeded his authority in requiring
the owner of the vessel to assume, as against the consignee, the
risk of their being burned while upon the wharf. As the circuit
court finds that
"such application was in the form required by said collector,
without which permit would not be granted, and the entire cargo
would be sent to the public store,"
it cannot be treated as the voluntary act of the ship owner any
further than this contract or obligation conformed to the
requirements of the statute or the Treasury regulations, which were
designed, as we have already stated, only to preserve the previous
rights of the consignee against the owner of the steamship,
unimpaired by the action of the collector. Beyond this, it must be
treated either as obtained by duress or so plainly inconsistent
with the previous agreement of the parties
inter sese as
to be of no avail to the consignee.
It is a familiar doctrine in this Court that a bond or other
obligation extorted by a public officer under color of his office
cannot be enforced, and the remarks of this Court in the case of
United States v.
Tingey, 5 Pet. 115, are pertinent in this
connection. In this case, the Navy Department caused a form of bond
not prescribed by law to be prepared and transmitted to one
Deblois, a person to whom the disbursement of public moneys was
entrusted as purser, to secure fidelity in his official duties,
with a condition that it should be executed by him with sufficient
sureties before he should be permitted to remain in office, or to
receive the pay or emoluments attached to the office. "The
substance of this plea," said the Court,
"is that the bond, with the above condition, variant from that
prescribed by law, was, under color of office, extorted from
Deblois and his sureties, contrary to the statute, by the then
Secretary of the Navy as the condition of his remaining in the
office of purser and receiving its
Page 154 U. S. 79
emoluments. There is no pretense, then, to say that it was a
bond voluntarily given, or that, though different from the form
prescribed by statute, it was received and executed without
objection. It was demanded of the party upon the peril of losing
his office; it was extorted under color of office, against the
requisitions of the statute. It was plainly, then, an illegal bond,
for no officer of the government has a right, by color of his
office, to require from any subordinate officer, as a condition of
holding office, that he should execute a bond with a condition
different from that prescribed by law. That would be not to
execute, but to supersede the requisitions of law."
A distinction is drawn in this class of cases between a bond
compulsorily executed, as in the case under consideration, and a
bond or other obligation voluntarily given to the government, for
which there is no statutory authority. In this latter case, the
bond has been held to be valid.
United
States v. Bradley, 10 Pet. 343,
35 U. S. 358;
United States v.
Hodson, 10 Wall. 395.
Upon the whole case we are of opinion:
1. That the stipulation in the bill of lading that respondent
should not be liable for a fire happening after unloading the cargo
was reasonable and valid.
2. That the discharge of the cargo at the Inman pier was not, in
the eye of the law, a deviation such as to render the carrier an
insurer of the goods so unladen.
3. That if any notice of such unloading was required at all, the
bulletin posted in the customhouse was sufficient, under the
practice and usages of the port of New York.
4. That libellants, having taken no steps upon the faith of the
cargo's being unladen at respondent's pier, were not prejudiced by
the change.
5. That the agreement of the respondent with the collector of
customs to pay the consignee the value of the goods was not one of
which the libellants could avail themselves as adding to the
obligations of their contract with respondent.
The decree of the circuit court is therefore
Affirmed.
Page 154 U. S. 80
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE FIELD and
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, dissenting.
I dissent from the judgment and opinion of the court in this
case.
The liability of the respondent is not relieved by the
provisions of section 4282 of the Revised Statutes reenacting the
first section of the Act of Congress of March 3, 1851, as the fire
by which the goods were destroyed did not happen "to or on board
the vessel."
Morewood v. Pollok, 1 El. & Bl. 743;
Salmon Falls Mfg. Co. v. The Tangier, 21 Law Reporter 6.
Nor is the question of the carrier's liability for loss of the
goods controlled by any supposed policy of that enactment.
The National Steamship Company, by the contract of affreightment
embodied in the bill of lading, undertook not merely to carry, but
to
deliver, the thirty-six cases of merchandise in
question at the port of New York
unto the libellants in
like good order and condition as received, subject to certain
exceptions and conditions designed to lessen or limit its liability
and modify its duty as a common carrier.
The goods were not delivered, either actually or constructively,
to the consignees, but were destroyed by fire while still in the
custody and possession of the steamship company as carrier, after
being landed and deposited on the Inman pier, No. 36, under a
special order or permit which the steamship company applied for and
obtained from the collector of the port, allowing the goods to
remain upon the wharf for forty-eight hours from the time of
granting the general order to discharge.
The steamship company, as a common carrier, is upon well settled
principles responsible for this loss unless it is relieved from
liability by some special exception or express stipulation in the
bill of lading or by reason of some established or known usage at
the port of New York.
The conditions and provisions contained in the bill of lading,
so far as the same are material to the present controversy, are as
follows:
1. "Fire before loading in the ship or after unloading."
Page 154 U. S. 81
2. "The National Steamship Company or its agents or any of its
servants are not to be liable for any damage to any goods which is
capable of being covered by insurance."
3. "The goods to be taken from alongside by the consignee
immediately the vessel is ready to discharge, or otherwise they
will be landed by the master, and deposited at the expense of the
consignee, and at his risk of fire, loss, or injury, in the
warehouse provided for that purpose, or in the public store, as the
collector of the port of New York shall direct, and, when deposited
in the warehouse or store, to be subject to storage, the collector
of the port being hereby authorized to grant a general order for
discharge immediately after entry of the ship."
4. "The United States Treasury having given permission for goods
to remain forty-eight hours on wharf at New York, any goods so left
by consignee will be at his of their risk of fire, loss, or
injury."
These provisions of the affreightment contract modifying and
qualifying the carrier's common law liability must, in accordance
with the well settled rule, be construed strictly. Their meaning is
not to be extended by presumption so as to give the carrier
protection beyond what has been stipulated for in clear and
unmistakable terms. Insofar as they are ambiguous or leave the
intention of the parties in doubt, they are to be construed against
the steamship company.
Edsall v. Camden & Amboy
Railroad, 50 N.Y. 661;
Taylor v. Liverpool & Gt.
Western Steam Co., L.R. 9 Q.B. 546; Bishop on Contracts 411;
Carver on Carriers § 77.
Now subjecting the terms and stipulations of the bill of lading
to the test of this established rule of construction, did they
clearly and expressly confer upon the steamship company the right
to discharge and deposit the goods upon the Inman wharf at the risk
of the consignees, without previous notice to them or any knowledge
on their part, as to when and where the steamer would be docked and
its cargo landed?
It is settled by the authorities that it is the duty of the
carrier, unless specially relieved from so doing by the contract of
affreightment, to give due and reasonable notice to the
Page 154 U. S. 82
consignee of the time and place of discharging the goods, and to
properly separate the different consignments so as to afford the
consignee a fair opportunity to remove the goods or to put them
under proper care and custody.
In
The Eddy, 5
Wall. 481,
72 U. S. 495,
the general rule is thus stated by this Court:
"Delivery on the wharf, in the case of goods transported by
ships, is sufficient under our law if due notice be given to the
consignees and the different consignments be properly separated so
as to be open to inspection and conveniently accessible to their
respective owners. Where the contract is to carry by water from
port to port, an actual delivery of the goods into the possession
of the owner or consignee, or at his warehouse, is not required in
order to discharge the carrier from his liability. He may deliver
them on the wharf, but to constitute a valid delivery there, the
master should give due and reasonable notice to the consignee, so
as to afford him a fair opportunity to remove the goods or put them
under proper care and custody. When the goods, after being so
discharged and the different consignments properly separated, are
not accepted by the consignee or owner of the cargo, the carrier
should not leave them exposed on the wharf, but should store them
in a place of safety, notifying the consignee or owner that they
are so stored, subject to the lien of the ship for the freight and
charges, and when he has done so he is no longer liable on his
contract of affreightment."
This statement of the law is reaffirmed in
Ex Parte
Easton, 95 U. S. 68,
95 U. S. 75, and
is fully supported by the authorities both in this country and in
England.
Thus, in
McAndrew v. Whitlock, 52 N.Y. 40, it was held
that a carrier of goods by water may land them at a wharf at the
port of destination, but not until after he has given the consignee
due notice of their arrival and unlading and afforded him a
reasonable time to take charge of and secure them. In the meantime,
instead of leaving them on the wharf, it is his duty to take care
of them for the owners.
See also, to the same effect,
Zinn v. N.J. Steamboat Co., 49 N.Y. 442;
The Mary
Washington, Chase 125;
The Santee, 7 Blatchford 186;
Kohn v. Packard, 3 La. 224;
The Tybee, 1
Woods
Page 154 U. S. 83
358, 361; Angell on Carriers § 310, and Redfield on Carriers §
129.
In the present case, as shown by the seventeenth and eighteenth
findings of fact, the carrier did not comply with the requirement
of the law in giving notice of the time and place the steamer would
discharge her cargo, nor did the consignees have any knowledge
either of the vessel's readiness to discharge or that their
merchandise would be, or had been, landed and deposited upon the
Inman dock, and the question is whether the special conditions and
stipulations of the bill of lading were intended to dispense with
such notice, or can be reasonably construed to mean that the
carrier was authorized to deposit the goods on the wharf at the
risk of the consignees without giving them previous notice and a
reasonable opportunity to take charge of the same.
The only clauses of the bill of lading bearing upon this
question are the first, third, and fourth, as above quoted.
The exemption from liability for loss by "fire after unloading"
does not, by its terms, confer any authority to deposit the goods
upon the wharf without notice to, and at the risk of, the
consignees. The words, "fire after unloading" must receive a
reasonable construction. They manifestly do not confer upon the
carrier an unqualified discretion as to when and where the cargo
may be unloaded. The steamship company could not, for instance,
under that provision of the bill of lading have discharged the
goods of the consignee at Brooklyn or Jersey City and claimed
exemption from liability in the event of their destruction by fire
while so landed. The clause clearly contemplates, and should be
confined to, a lawful unloading made in the proper execution of the
contract to deliver, such an unloading as will conform to the law
or usage of the port of destination, or to the special contract of
the parties. The generality of its language in this case is to be
restricted and interpreted by the subsequent and more particular
provision found in the third of the above clauses, directing the
disposition to be made of the goods if the same are not taken from
alongside of the vessel when it is ready to discharge. These
clauses do not operate to limit the carrier's
Page 154 U. S. 84
duty and obligation, as prescribed by law, beyond what is
clearly expressed in the terms thereof or may be fairly implied
therefrom. They do not, either singly or collectively, relieve the
carrier from its duty to notify the consignees of the time and
place of discharging the merchandise, nor do they authorize the
carrier to deposit the goods on the wharf at the risk of the
consignees without such notice.
In
The Santee, 7 Blatchford 186, the bill of lading
contained the special clause that the articles named therein should
be at the risk of the consignee or owner thereof, as soon as
delivered from the tackles of the steamer at her port of
destination, and that they should be received by the consignee,
package by package, as so delivered. If not taken away the same
day, they might be sent to a store or permitted to lie where landed
at the expense and risk of the owner or consignee. It was held by
the court that notwithstanding such special contract, it was the
duty of the carrier to give reasonable notice to the consignees of
the arrival and discharge of the vessel, so as to enable them to
attend and receive the goods, and themselves assume and exercise
that care and responsibility of which the carrier was to be
relieved. The same rule is laid down in
Collins v. Burns,
63 N.Y. 1;
Tarbell v. Royal Exchange Shipping Co., 110
N.Y. 170, and Wheeler on Carriers 333.
In
Tarbell v. Royal Exchange Shipping Co., 110 N.Y.
170, 180, the bill of lading on merchandise from a foreign port
contained the provision that the goods were to be delivered from
the ship's deck (when the ship owner's responsibility should cease)
at the port of New York, and
"were to be received by the consignees immediately the vessel is
ready to discharge, or otherwise they will be landed and stored at
the sole expense and risk of the consignees, in the warehouses
provided for that purpose, or in the public store, as the collector
of the port of New York shall direct."
The Court of Appeals of New York held that the carrier must, if
practicable, give notice to the consignee of the arrival of the
goods, and that when this had been done, and the goods had been
discharged in the usual and proper place, and reasonable
opportunity afforded to the consignee to remove them, the liability
of the
Page 154 U. S. 85
carrier as such would terminate, and in respect to the clauses
in question the court said:
"The general duty of a carrier to deliver, and of a consignee to
receive, as defined in the authorities to which we have referred,
is not, we think, essentially changed by the clause in the bill of
lading that the goods are to be delivered from the ship's deck
(when the ship owner's responsibility shall cease), or by the
clause that the goods are to be received by the consignee
'immediately the vessel is ready to discharge.'"
The position taken in the opinion of the court that the clauses
in the bill of lading under consideration are inconsistent with the
idea of personal notice to the consignees is not supported by the
authorities, but is in direct conflict therewith.
The case of
Gleadell v. Thompson, 56 N.Y. 194, cited in
the opinion, is, when analyzed, essentially different from the case
at bar. In that case, the bill of lading contained the provision
that the goods should be taken from alongside by the consignees
"immediately the vessel is ready to discharge, or otherwise the
privilege is reserved to the vessel to land them on the pier, or
put them into craft, or deposit them in the warehouse designated by
the collector of the port of New York, all at the expense of the
consignee, and at his risk of fire, loss, or injury."
It was held by the court that it was not incumbent on the
carrier to give notice of readiness to discharge the goods as a
condition of his exercising the privilege of depositing them upon
the pier, and that while so deposited they were, by the terms of
the contract at the consignee's risk of fire, loss, or injury.
This decision means nothing more than that under the alternative
privilege reserved to the vessel, the carrier had the right to land
the goods on the pier at the consignees' expense and risk of fire,
loss, or injury, without giving the consignees previous notice or
opportunity to take the goods from alongside the ship. The bill of
lading in the case at bar contains no stipulation reserving to the
vessel the privilege of landing the goods on the pier at the
expense and risk of the consignees, as in
Gleadell v.
Thompson. The provision of the bill of lading in the present
case is that the goods are to be taken from
Page 154 U. S. 86
alongside by the consignees
"immediately the vessel is ready to discharge, or otherwise they
will be landed by the master and deposited at the expense of the
consignees, and at their risk of fire, loss, or injury, in the
warehouse provided for that purpose, or in the public store, as the
collector of the port of New York shall direct,"
and, when deposited in the warehouse or store, to be subject to
storage.
If the rule laid down in
Gleadell v. Thompson is sound
and applicable to the case under consideration, then, upon its
failure or neglect to give the consignees notice of the time and
place of discharging the cargo, so as to enable them to take their
goods from alongside the vessel, the steamship company was bound to
land and deposit the goods in the warehouse provided for that
purpose, or in a public store, as the collector of the port of New
York might direct. If it failed to give the consignees proper
notice and opportunity to take the goods from alongside when the
vessel was ready to discharge, then the alternative obligation, by
the express terms of the contract, was that the master of the
steamer should land and deposit the goods in a warehouse or public
store, as the collector might direct. No right whatever was
reserved in this stipulation to deposit the merchandise upon the
pier at the risk of the consignees. On the contrary, the express
undertaking on the part of the carrier, by this provision of the
contract, was that if the goods were not taken from alongside, the
master should land and deposit them in one or the other of the
designated places.
The duty on the part of the consignees to take the goods from
alongside the vessel necessarily depended upon their having notice
of the time and place when and where the vessel would discharge her
cargo, and be ready to make delivery. When, therefore, the carrier
proceeded with the discharge without giving such notice, the
alternative stipulation of the contract, as well as its legal
obligation under the law, required that the goods should be "landed
and deposited" in the manner specified, and the fact that the place
for depositing the consignment was specially designated and
provided for in event it was not taken from alongside the
vessel
Page 154 U. S. 87
clearly negatives the right of the carrier to deposit it on the
wharf at the risk of the consignees. If the steamship company had,
without notice to the consignees, landed and deposited the goods in
a bonded warehouse, or, as directed by the general order of the
collector, in public store, 502-510 Washington Street, then the
case would have come within the rule laid down in
Gleadell v.
Thompson.
There is no finding of fact in this case supporting the
suggestion that the "warehouse" referred to in the third of the
above-quoted clauses of the bill of lading was the covered pier or
wharf on which the goods were landed. The word "warehouse,"
wherever used in the bill of lading, is coupled with the words
"public store," and it is plainly evident that they have the same
meaning. That these words are synonymous, and that "warehouse,"
when used alone, means a "bonded warehouse," clearly appears in the
sections of the Revised Statutes relating to the collection of
custom duties. Section 2954
et seq. That no different
meaning is given to the word "warehouse" when used in connection
with the customs laws further appears from the definition given it
in the standard dictionaries.
It appears by the sixteenth finding of fact that the respondent,
on the afternoon of January 31, 1883, soon after the entry of the
vessel, caused a notice of the time and place of discharge to be
posted on a bulletin board in the customhouse; that it was usual to
post such notice there, but that it was not usual to publish it in
the newspapers, and the conclusion reached by this Court is
"that, if any notice of such unloading was required at all, the
bulletin posted in the customhouse was sufficient, under the
practice and usage of the port of New York."
This conclusion of the court cannot, for several reasons, be
sustained. There is no finding of the court below of any practice
or usage at the port of New York dispensing with personal notice to
the consignees, nor that notice posted at the customhouse would, by
any well established or known usage, charge or affect the
consignees with notice. The authorities clearly establish that
notice such as that posted
Page 154 U. S. 88
upon the bulletin board must be shown to have come to the actual
knowledge of the consignees in order to bind them, or relieve the
carrier from the duty of giving personal notice.
In
The Middlesex, 21 Law Rep. 14, 15, Brunner 605, 606,
it was said by Curtis, J.:
"Mere knowledge that the vessel has arrived and is discharging
at a particular wharf, gained in some casual manner by the
consignee without any act on the part of the master to indicate a
readiness to deliver, is not within the usage, which is for the
master, or some agent for the vessel, to give notice to the
consignees. And I do not think such casual knowledge is sufficient
to impose on the consignee the duty of attending to the discharge
of the vessel, and being in readiness to receive his goods as soon
as they are ready for delivery. . . . It must be remembered that it
is not knowledge of the arrival of the vessel, and that she is
discharging, but notice of the readiness of the master to deliver,
which is the operative fact."
In
Kohn v. Packard, 3 La. 224, 229, the question
whether notice of the arrival of a vessel published in the
newspapers was binding upon the consignees was clearly and
convincingly treated by Porter, J., who said:
"If we understand correctly the usage as proved in evidence, it
is this: that notice in the newspapers of the time and place of the
landing goods from a vessel is such notice as places the goods at
the risk of the consignee; in other words, that constructive notice
binds the party as effectually as personal notice would. If this be
the custom, then it is one which this court is prepared to say it
cannot sanction. Authorities have been read to show that the goods
are to be delivered according to the usage of the port to which
they are shipped. The principle may be admitted without at all
affecting the conclusion to which we have come, for, though the
custom may regulate the delivery, it cannot dispense with it. Such
would be the effect, however, of the usage relied on in numerous
instances. We understand that it is of the essence of the contract
of affreightment that there be an engagement to deliver the goods
to the consignee.
Page 154 U. S. 89
He consequently must be informed of the time and place the
delivery is to be made, to enable him to receive them, and, if he
has not that information, the other party to the contract cannot
dissolve it. Yet the custom relied on assumes that he may, for if
notice in the newspapers is to bind the consignee of the goods,
though he never hears of it or sees it, and if such notice confers
on the master of the vessel the right to land the goods on the
levee, where they are destroyed or stolen, then it follows that the
custom dispenses with delivery or anything equivalent to it. This
we think custom cannot do. There must be the act of both parties to
terminate the contract, or the default of one of them to authorize
the other to do so."
In Parsons on Shipping, vol. 1, p. 224, it is laid down as a
general proposition that
"in all cases the master is required to give notice to the
consignee of the arrival of the vessel, and of his readiness to
discharge the cargo, and knowledge therefore acquired, that the
vessel has arrived and will discharge her cargo at a particular
wharf, is not enough. Generally, if a notice in the newspapers is
relied on, it must be shown that the consignee read the
notice."
This same rule is approved in Leggett on Bills of Lading, p.
279.
There is not only no finding by the court below that the deposit
of the goods on the Inman pier, No. 36, without previous notice to
the consignees, was in accordance with any general usage of the
port of New York, but, on the contrary, the court found a state of
facts which established a course of dealing between the parties
inconsistent with any such usage.
Thus, by the nineteenth finding, it appears that during the five
years preceding the consignment in question, the libellants had
received six consignments of merchandise in steamships belonging to
the respondent, under bills of lading substantially in the same
form as the bill of lading herein, all of which were landed and
discharged on pier No. 39; that during the same period, the freight
bills for these six consignments were sent to the libellants, each
containing a reference to that pier, and that pier only, as the
pier of the respondent company where the goods would be found upon
their arrival and discharge;
Page 154 U. S. 90
that this was true of the consignment to the libellants in this
case, the freight bill of which was the same in form as the
preceding six, and which was not received by the libellants until
February 1, 1883, the day after the goods had been destroyed by
fire.
It was further found by the court below:
"(20) That during the said five years preceding the time of the
arrival of the steamship
Egypt in this case, that being
the period during which the libellants had been receiving goods by
the respondent's line from time to time as aforesaid, there have
been two hundred and forty-one arrivals of the respondent's
steamships at said port of New York coming from said port of
Liverpool, and in only eight instances does it appear that the said
steamships, or any of them, discharged at any dock other than that
known as the 'National Dock,' exclusively occupied and controlled
by the respondent as aforesaid, and no evidence was offered with
reference to the circumstances attending the discharge of said
eight vessels. As to forty-one of said steamships, evidence of the
place of their discharge was not produced."
"(22) That prior to the arrival and discharge of said steamship
Egypt at said Inman dock as aforesaid, no steamship
belonging to the respondent, from said port of Liverpool or
elsewhere, had ever been discharged at said dock owned and
controlled by the Inman Steamship Company, Limited, as
aforesaid."
"(23) That said dock known as the 'National Dock,' being pier
No. 39, North River, in the City of New York, is, and was at the
time of the arrival of the steamship
Egypt as aforesaid,
the usual and a proper place at said port of New York for the
discharge of cargoes coming from said port of Liverpool in
steamships belonging to the respondent company, and is and was at
such time a proper place at said port of New York for the discharge
of the said thirty-six packages of merchandise belonging to the
libellants, and destroyed as aforesaid."
"(24) That said dock known as the 'National Dock,' being said
pier No. 39, North River, in the City of New York, was
Page 154 U. S. 91
the dock and place ordinarily and generally, but not invariably,
used at said port of New York for the discharge of cargoes coming
from said port of Liverpool in steamships belonging to the
respondent company."
"(25) That the National dock, being pier No. 39, North River, in
said City of New York, is, and was at the time of the discharge of
the steamship
Egypt as aforesaid, the dock or wharf to
which consignees of cargo coming from said port of Liverpool to
said port of New York in steamships belonging to the respondent
company would naturally and usually go for the purpose of caring
for and receiving a delivery of their consignments."
It is also admitted in the amended answer of the respondent
that
"there is nothing in the bills of lading which led the
libellants to believe that the goods in said bills of lading were
not to be landed on said National dock (No. 39), and there
delivered"
to the libellants.
It is not set up or claimed in the answer of the respondent that
in discharging and depositing the goods, without notice to the
consignees at a different pier from that at which it was in the
habit of landing and delivering other consignments to the
libellants, the carrier was acting in pursuance of any established
custom or usage of the port of New York. No such justification is
set up; on the contrary, the answer alleges that the consignees had
due and proper notice that the goods would be landed or discharged
at pier No. 36. It denied the libellants' allegation that they did
not have notice that the goods were not to be landed and delivered
at the National dock, No. 39, and averred that the libellants did
have notice that the goods carried by the
Egypt were to be
landed at pier No. 36 at which they were actually landed. The
seventeenth finding of fact contradicts this denial and averment of
the answer.
The carrier having landed and deposited the goods not at its
usual and customary place of discharge, where the consignees would
naturally expect to receive their consignment, as they had always
previously done, and there being an implied undertaking on the part
of the carriers to discharge
Page 154 U. S. 92
at the usual wharf according to the established course of
dealing between the parties, the duty of giving notice that the
discharge and delivery of the goods would be made at another and
different place became the more imperative upon the carrier.
In Story on Bailments § 545 it is said:
"In America, the rule adopted in regard to foreign voyages,
although it has been matter of some controversy, seems to be that
in such cases the carrier is not bound to make a personal delivery
of the goods to the consignee, but it will be sufficient that he
lands them at
the usual wharf or proper place of landing
and gives due and reasonable notice thereof to the consignee. . . .
But it is of the very essence of the rule that due and reasonable
notice should be given to the consignee before or at the time of
the landing, and that he should have a fair opportunity of
providing suitable means to take care of the goods and to carry
them away."
So, in Addison on Contracts § 961:
"If it is customary for the carrier by water to carry merely
from port to port, or from wharf to wharf, and for the owner or
consignee to fetch the goods from the vessel itself or from the
wharf as soon as the arrival of the ship has been reported, the
carrier must give such owner or consignee notice of the arrival of
the goods on board, or at the customary place of destination, in
order to discharge himself from further liability as a carrier. He
cannot at once discharge himself from further liability by
immediately landing the goods without any notice to the consignee,
but is bound to keep the goods on board or on the wharf at his own
risk, for a reasonable time, to enable the consignee or his assigns
to come and fetch them."
The rule thus laid down is supported by
Salmon Falls Mfg.
Co. v. Bark Tangier, 21 Law Rep. 6;
Gibson v. Culver,
17 Wend. 305; 2 Kent 604; Maclachan on Merchant Shipping (4th ed.)
453, 454;
Hyde v. Trent & Mersey Navigation Co., 5
T.R. 389;
Gatliffe v. Bourne, 4 Bing. N.C. 314.
In
Gatliffe v. Bourne, to a declaration on a contract
by a master of a steam vessel to convey goods from Dublin to
London, and to deliver the same at the port of London to the
Page 154 U. S. 93
plaintiff or his assigns, a plea was filed to the effect that
after the arrival of the vessel at London, defendant caused the
goods to be unshipped, and safely and securely landed and deposited
in and upon a certain wharf, called "Fenning's Wharf," at the port
of London, there to remain until they could be delivered to the
plaintiff, said wharf being a place where goods from Dublin were
customarily landed and deposited for the use of consignees, and a
place fit and proper for such purposes; that while the goods were
thus deposited upon said wharf, and before a reasonable time for
delivery had elapsed, they were destroyed by an accidental fire.
This plea was held to be bad, and the carrier was charged with the
loss of the goods accidentally burned while deposited on the wharf.
This decision was affirmed in the Exchequer Chamber,
Bourne v.
Gatliffe, 3 Man. & Gr. 643l, and in the House of Lords, 11
Cl. & Fin. 45, 7 Man. & Gr. 850, and 8 Scot. (N.R.) 604. In
the report of the case before the House of Lords, it is stated that
no notice was given to the plaintiff that the goods were landed
upon the wharf.
This case, in principle, controls the present case, unless the
special clauses of the bill of lading authorize the deposit of the
goods upon the Inman wharf without notice to the consignees and at
their risk. The provisions of the bill of lading already considered
do not confer such authority, and, if it exists, it must be found
in the remaining clause,
viz.:
"The United States Treasury having given permission for goods to
remain forty-eight hours on wharf at New York, any goods so
left by consignee will be at his or their risk of fire,
loss, or injury."
This is the only clause in the bill of lading which in any way
refers to a deposit of the goods upon the wharf. The court, in its
opinion, construes this language to mean:
"The United States Treasury having given permission for goods to
remain forty-eight hours on wharf at New York, any goods so
remaining will be at the consignee's risk of fire, loss, or
injury."
This construction not only gives no effect to the words "left by
the consignee," but substitutes the act of the master for
Page 154 U. S. 94
that of the consignee. It makes the master's act of depositing a
leaving by the consignee. The words "left by the consignee" clearly
contemplate the voluntary leaving not by the master, but by the
consignee, which could only occur after due notice that the goods
were so deposited, and a reasonable opportunity afforded for
removing them. The words import a voluntary act of leaving on the
part of the consignee; that is to say, the consignee must suffer or
permit the goods to remain, or omit to remove them after it has
become his or their duty so to do. The consignees' duty of positive
and affirmative action is not called into exercise until after they
have had notice that their goods will be or have been deposited on
the wharf. Until such notice and an opportunity to take charge of
the goods is given to the consignees, it is a perversion of
language to say that the goods are
left by them.
Reading this clause in connection with the former, it clearly
appears that what the parties meant and provided for was that, if
the consignees were not ready to receive their goods immediately
upon their discharge from the vessel, the master was to deposit
them, not on the
dock or
wharf, but in the
warehouse or
public store at the expense and risk
of the consignees, but that, if the carrier availed itself of the
Treasury regulations, to deposit the goods on the wharf under the
forty-eight-hour clause, the consignees� risk and liability for
loss, while so deposited, would not commence until after they had
notice of such deposit, and a reasonable opportunity to remove the
goods. It cannot be properly said that there was or could be, on
their part, any leaving of the goods so deposited until the
consignees were put upon the duty of accepting delivery or taking
charge of the consignment, which would not arise until they had
received notice.
This interpretation of the clause is sustained by the well
considered case of
McKinney v. Jewett, 90 N.Y. 267,
270-272, where the contract provided that the carrier should not be
liable as such while the goods were "at any of their stations
awaiting delivery."
But, conceding that the clause it ambiguous, the settled rules
of construction do not sanction a liberal interpretation
thereof
Page 154 U. S. 95
in favor of the carrier, but directly the reverse. Especially is
this so when, as in the present case, the steamship company has, by
its action in procuring the forty-eight-hour permit, itself placed
a different construction upon the clause. It is well settled that
the practical construction placed by parties interested upon
doubtful or ambiguous terms in a contract will exercise great, and
sometimes controlling, influence in determining its proper meaning.
Topliff v. Topliff, 122 U. S. 121;
District of Columbia v. Gallaher, 124 U.
S. 505.
The general order for discharge, obtained upon the entry of the
vessel, directed that the cargo, except certain perishable
articles, gunpowder, neat cattle, etc., should be landed and sent
to public store 502-510 Washington Street. This general order was
not acted on by the steamship company, but, as shown by the
eleventh finding of fact, after securing the general order, the
respondent obtained from the collector of the port a special
license, under the provisions of section 2871 of the Revised
Statutes, to unload at night, and gave bond to indemnify and save
the collector harmless from any loss or liability which might occur
or be occasioned by reason of the granting of that special license.
The carrier furthermore voluntarily applied to the collector, and
obtained a permit for the goods to remain upon the wharf for
forty-eight hours from the time of granting the general order at
the risk of the owners of the steamer, and upon the agreement that
they would pay to the consignees or owners the value of such cargo,
respectively, as might be stolen, burned, or otherwise lost while
so deposited.
The permit to unload at night was manifestly for the benefit and
convenience of the carrier. The same is true in respect to the
permit for the goods to remain on the wharf for forty-eight hours.
The unloading commenced in the afternoon of January 31st, after
business hours, and was continued through the night, and, even if
notice had been given to the consignees, there was no reasonable
time and opportunity afforded them to remove or take charge of the
goods before they were destroyed by fire.
In the execution of its undertaking to deliver the goods to
Page 154 U. S. 96
the consignees at the port of New York, the carrier had no right
to change or increase the risk by any departure from the express
stipulations of the contract. In unloading at night for its own
benefit, and in depositing the goods upon the wharf for its own
convenience, the risk and liability of loss was manifestly
increased, and the goods having been destroyed while subjected, by
the voluntary act of the carrier, to this increased risk, it is
liable for the loss unless expressly exempted by some provision of
the affreightment contract. It must be borne in mind, as Lord
Lyndhurst expressed it in
Gatliffe v. Bourne, before House
of Lords, that the contract was "to deliver the goods to the
consignees" at the port of destination. Instead of making, or
attempting to make, such delivery, either actually or
constructively, the carrier, on a permit from the collector,
deposited the goods on the wharf, thereby changing, if not
increasing, the risk of loss in a way not provided for by any
stipulation of the contract.
Again, it was found by the circuit court (12)
"That said general order and special license, and said
applications and permits, and the agreements and engagements
therein contained, were the usual and customary ones ordinarily
made and granted in such cases, and that they were made and granted
under and by the authority in and by said bill of lading conferred
upon the respondent and upon said collector of the port of New York
by the libellants herein, and under and in accordance with the
provisions of law in that behalf and the regulations of the United
States Treasury Department on that subject."
and further (13)
"That said applications were made, and said general order and
special license and permits were obtained, on behalf of the
respondent under the instructions and by direction of the
respondent's agent in the City of New York, and all of the
agreements and engagements made and entered into therein or
thereby, and on behalf of the respondent or the libellants, were
made and entered into under and pursuant to the same instructions
and directions of said agent."
In the light of these findings, the contract of the parties
should be interpreted as though the clause in question had
Page 154 U. S. 97
read as follows:
"The United States Treasury having given permission for goods to
remain forty-eight hours on the wharf at New York at the sole risk
of the steamship company, and upon its undertaking to pay to the
consignee or owner the value of such cargo, respectively, as may be
stolen, burned, or otherwise lost while so remaining, now, it is
understood that if the steamship company avails itself of this
regulation and obtains permission for the consignment to remain on
the wharf for forty-eight hours upon said terms, its risk and
liability for losses shall only continue and remain in force until
the consignee has had due notice and opportunity to remove or take
charge of the goods, and if thereafter they are left by the
consignee, it will be at his risk of fire, loss, or injury."
This harmonizes all the clauses, and is alone consistent with
the correlative duties and obligations of the parties.
It is not material to the present case to determine whether the
regulations of the Treasury Department set out in the eleventh
finding of the court below have the force of law, and imposed upon
the steamship company the duty of entering into the stipulation to
pay the consignees for the loss of the goods deposited on the wharf
under the forty-eight-hour permit. That stipulation was entered
into voluntarily by the steamship company. There was no requirement
in the contract of affreightment that it should obtain any such
permit, and it cannot be properly said that the stipulation which
it entered into in order to secure permission for the goods to
remain forty-eight hours on the wharf was inconsistent with any
provision of the law or regulations of the Treasury Department. No
provision of the bill of lading exempted the carrier from liability
for loss by fire that might happen while the goods were deposited
on the wharf under the forty-eight-hour permit and no reason
appears why the carrier might on the wharf under the
forty-eight-hour permit, the law would otherwise impose upon it,
until, by proper notice, the duty of taking care of the goods was
shifted or transferred to the consignees.
But it is said the consignees cannot avail themselves of this
promise made be the steamship company to the collector,
Page 154 U. S. 98
because they are not privies thereto. This, however, ignores the
above findings of fact by the court, which make the consignees
parties to the arrangement. Aside from this, while it is
undoubtedly the general rule that a person who is not a party to a
simple contract cannot enforce such contract at law, and that a
promise made by one person to another for the benefit of a third,
who is a stranger to the consideration, will not support an action
by the latter,
National Bank v. Grand Lodge, 98 U. S.
123, there are many exceptions to the rule, one of
which, according to the New York decisions, is where the party
seeking to enforce the contract was intended to be the beneficiary
of the promise.
Lawrence v. Fox, 20 N.Y. 268;
Coster
v. Albany, 43 N.Y. 399, 410-412;
Garnsey v. Rogers,
47 N.Y. 233;
Vrooman v. Turner, 69 N.Y. 280.
The promise made by the steamship company in the present case
falls directly within the rule announced in
Vrooman v.
Turner, 69 N.Y. 280, there being first a clear intent by the
promisor to secure a benefit to the consignees; second, a privity
between the two in respect to the protection of the goods, the risk
of which the carrier assumed; and third, an obligation or duty
owing by the steamship company to the consignees to properly care
for the goods until delivery could be made, which gave to the
consignees a legal and equitable claim to the benefit of the
promise. The decisions in other states are conflicting on this
question.
But, if an action at law would not lie upon the promise made by
the respondent in obtaining the forty-eight-hour permit, it by no
means follows that the consignees could not successfully invoke the
aid of a court of equity in enforcing the agreement. The legal rule
invoked is not so rigidly or so strictly adhered to by courts of
equity as by courts of law. Thus, in
Keller v. Ashford,
133 U. S. 610,
133 U. S. 625,
the mortgagee was permitted to enforce in equity a contract between
the mortgagor and his grantee, by the terms of which the grantee
assumed the payment of the mortgaged debt.
See also Willard v.
Wood, 135 U. S. 309
135 U. S. 314;
Norwood v. De Hart, 30 N.J.Eq. 412.
Page 154 U. S. 99
Now the broad principles of equity are recognized and applied by
the admiralty courts, and the steamship company's agreement being,
as properly held by the court below, an admiralty contract, and the
consignees being the parties intended to be benefited thereby, and
it being one contemplated by the parties at the time of entering
into the contract of affreightment, no valid reason is seen why the
consignees should not have, by this libel, the right to enforce the
stipulation, voluntarily entered into by the steamship company,
which agreement is not in conflict with any provision in the bill
of lading.
It is true that the court below found (twenty-seventh finding)
that it was the intention of the parties to the bill of lading that
goods remaining for forty-eight hours on the wharf, under the
permit obtained on the application of the steamship company, should
be at the risk of the consignee of fire, notwithstanding the
agreement of the steamship wharf, under the permit obtained on the
application a good finding of fact, but is a mere conclusion of law
based upon the court's construction of the clauses of the contract,
above referred to, and is not binding upon this Court.
The opinion of this Court seems to proceed largely upon the idea
that the consignees, if they had received notice, could not have
removed the goods before they were destroyed, and further that
inasmuch as they took no steps on the faith of the cargo being
discharged at the usual place, they were not prejudiced by the
change. These are considerations that do not control or change the
rights and liabilities of the parties. The real question in cases
like this is whether the carrier has brought itself within any
exemption from liability by showing that the loss was caused by the
act of God or by the public enemy or by the shipper, or was within
some excepted clause in the contract of affreightment. If this is
not shown, the carrier is liable for the loss.
Clark v.
Barnwell, 12 How. 272,
53 U. S.
280.
While not controverting the legal principles governing the
liabilities and duties of carriers, the opinion of the court seems
to imply that to some extent they should be modified
Page 154 U. S. 100
or suspended to meet the improved modern methods of rapid
transportation. But I submit that long established legal principles
founded upon a wise public policy are not to be either ignored or
disregarded to meet a supposed public convenience, especially in a
case like the present, where the resident managing agent of the
carrier knew for at least six days before the arrival of the vessel
that she would land and discharge her cargo, not at the usual
place, but at the Inman pier, and thus had ample opportunity to
give to the consignees, who were known to the steamship company,
notice of the change. The true rule on this question is well stated
by Judge Porter in
Kohn v. Packard, 3 La. 230, as
follows:
"There are inconveniences in whichever way the question is
viewed. On the part of the owners of the ship, that of giving such
notice of the time and place of discharge as will enable them to
bring knowledge of the fact home to the persons who are to receive
the goods, or, in default thereof, imposing on the former the
obligation of sending the merchandise to some place of safety. But
this inconvenience, we think, is not to be compared with that to
which the latter would be subject if their property could be landed
without their knowledge, and be thereby lost or damaged. On the one
side, there is additional trouble; on the other, probably, a total
loss. After the best consideration in our power, we think the
conclusion we have come to is most consonant to law, and will tend
to promote public convenience."
The opinion of the court does not deal with that clause in the
bill of lading which provides that the steamship company, or its
"agents, or any of its servants, are not to be liable for any
damage to any goods which is capable of being covered by
insurance." The court below held that this clause relieved the
steamship company from liability. This condition or provision of
the bill of lading is expressed in terms so general and
comprehensive as to require the shipper or consignee to insure not
only against the enumerated perils and exceptions, but against any
and all malfeasance or misfeasance on the part of the carrier. It
admits of grave doubt whether this provision is not so unreasonable
as to be void under the principle
Page 154 U. S. 101
laid down by this Court in
Railroad Co. v.
Lockwood, 17 Wall. 357,
84 U. S.
380-382;
Hart v. Pennsylvania Railroad,
112 U. S. 331;
Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Erie Transportation Co., 117 U.
S. 312,
117 U. S.
322-323;
Inman v. South Carolina Railway,
129 U. S. 128,
129 U. S. 139;
Liverpool Steam Co. v. Phenix Ins. Co., 129 U.
S. 397,
129 U. S. 455;
Carver on Carriers (2d ed.) § 110, and
Peek v. North
Staffordshire Railway, 10 H.L.Cas. 473. In this last case, the
condition was that the company "shall not be responsible for loss
of or injury to any marble . . . unless declared and insured
according to its value," and it was held, upon full consideration,
that the condition as a whole was unreasonable and void.
In the present case, it is not necessary to determine that this
clause is so unreasonable as to be void. So far as it has been
considered by the courts, it has been restricted in its
application. Thus, in
Taylor v. Liv. & Gt. Western Steam
Co., L.R. 9 Q.B. 546, it was held not to cover a loss of the
goods by theft, committed while they were on board, either during
the voyage or after arrival, and in
The Titania, 19 F.
101, while the provision was considered valid, it was held by the
court that it must be construed to refer to insurance which might
be obtained in the usual course of business from the ordinary
insurance companies, either in the usual form or in the customary
course of business upon special application. In that case, injury
from the breaking loose of a spare propeller was held not to be
within the exemption.
Giving to the clause this reasonable construction, the loss in
question would not have been covered by the ordinary marine policy
on the cargo, which generally covers the goods while being carried
abroad ship, during the voyage, and until safely landed, and no
longer. The clause did not impose upon the consignees the duty of
anticipating that the carrier would land the goods at an unusual
place, and it would have been out of the usual course of business
for the consignees to have sought to insure against what they did
not, and could not, know would take place.
So in reference to fire insurance. While it is shown by one of
the witnesses that fire insurance could have been
Page 154 U. S. 102
procured on "goods lying on the wharf by the side of the ship,
before they were actually taken away," the clause in question did
not require that the consignees should have anticipated that their
goods would be unloaded at night and deposited on the wharf. Aside
from this, it is ordinarily essential, in a fire insurance policy,
that the locality of the risk should be specified. The consignees
in the present case could not have complied with this general rule
without having some knowledge or information as to where their
goods would be landed. The local agent of the steamship company had
six days' notice of the fact that the cargo of the vessel would be
landed at the Inman pier, No. 36; but that fact was not
communicated to the consignees, and they had not therefore the data
to procure ordinary fire insurance upon the goods after being
landed.
It would be unreasonable and contrary to sound principle to
allow the carrier to assert exemption under such an insurance
clause without affording the consignees, by proper notice, an
opportunity to effect insurance in the usual way upon their goods
while deposited on the wharf. If, after being notified that their
goods were deposited on a particular wharf other than that at which
their consignments were usually received, the consignees had failed
and neglected to take out insurance, the clause, if valid, might
have been invoked for the protection of the carrier; but under the
facts of this case, to give the carrier the benefit of the clause
would be to allow it to take advantage of its own neglect of a
legal requirement.
I am of opinion that the decree appealed from should be
reversed, and the court below directed to enter a decree in favor
of the libellants, and I am authorized to state that MR. JUSTICE
FIELD and MR. JUSTICE GRAY concur in this opinion.
|1540051ast|
*
"
Copy of Bill of Lading"
"
National Steamship Company, Limited"
"
Head Office, 21 Water street, Liverpool; New York Office,
69 Broadway."
"
Liverpool to New York every Wednesday"
"[Stamp, six pence.]"
"Shipped in good order and well conditioned, by Moore &
Pringle, in and upon the steamship called the
Egypt,
whereof _____ _____ is master for the present voyage, or whoever
else may go as master in the said ship, and now lying in the port
of Liverpool and bound for New York via Queenstown, with liberty to
sail with or without pilots, and to tow and assist vessels in all
situations and to all ports --"
"Forty-three cases merchandise, (linens and cottons) three cases
and five bales (carpets and Dundees) being marked and numbered as
in the margin, and to be delivered subject to the following
exceptions and conditions,
viz.: the act of God, the
Queen's enemies, pirates, robbers, thieves by land or at sea,
barratry of master or mariners, restraint of princes, rulers, or
peoples, loss or damage resulting from vermin, rust, sweating,
wastage, leakage, breakage, or from rain, spray, coal, or coal
dust, insufficiency of strength of packages, inaccuracy,
indistinctness, illegibility or obliteration of marks, numbers,
brands, or addresses, or descriptions of goods, injury to wrappers,
however caused, or from corruption, frost, decay, stowage, or
contact with or smell or evaporation from other goods, or from loss
or damage caused by heavy weather or pitching or rolling of the
vessel, or from inherent deterioration, risk of lighterage to or
from the vessel, transshipment, jettison, explosion, spontaneous
combustion, fire before loading in the ship or after unloading,
heat, boilers, steam, or steam machinery, including consequences of
defects therein or damages thereto, collision, stranding,
straining, or other perils of the seas, rivers, steam and steam
navigation or land transit of whatsoever nature or kind, and all
damage, loss, or injury arising from the perils or matters above
mentioned, and whether such perils or matters arise from
negligence, default or error in judgment of the pilot, master,
mariners, engineers, stevedores, or other persons in the service of
the ship owner. Not accountable for weight, contents, value,
length, measure, or quantities or condition of contents, nor for
money, documents, gold, silver, bullion, specie, precious metals,
jewelry, precious stones, or other highly valued goods, or beyond
the amount of one hundred pounds sterling for any one package,
unless bills of lading are signed therefor and the value therein
expressed and freight paid accordingly. The National Steamship
Company (Limited) or its agents or any of servants are not to be
liable for any damage to any goods which is capable of being
covered by insurance, nor for any claim, notice of which is not
given before the removal of the goods, nor for any claims for loss,
damage, or detention to goods under through bill of lading where
the loss or detention occurs or damage is done whilst the goods are
not actually in the possession of the National Steamship Company
(Limited) or shipped on board the National Steamship Company's
(Limited) steamer, nor in any case for more than known or invoiced
value of the goods, whichever shall be least. Goods of an
inflammable, explosive, or otherwise dangerous character, shipped
without permission and full disclosure of their nature and
contents, may be seized and confiscated or destroyed by the ship
owner at any time before delivery without any compensation to the
shipper or consignee. In case any part of the within goods cannot
be found for delivery during the vessel's stay at the port of
destination they are, when found, to be sent back by first steamer
at ship's expense, the steamer not to be held liable for any claim
for delay or sea risk."
"The only condition upon which glass will be carried is that the
ship owner shall not be held liable for any breakage which may
occur from negligence or any other cause whatever."
"The goods to be taken from alongside by the consignee
immediately the vessel is ready to discharge, or otherwise they
will be landed by the master and deposited at the expense of the
consignee and at his risk of fire, loss, or injury in the warehouse
provided for that purpose or in the public store, as the collector
of the port of New York shall direct, and when deposited in the
warehouse or store, to be subject to storage, the collector of the
port being hereby authorized to grant a general order for discharge
immediately after entry of the ship."
"The United States Treasury having given permission for goods to
remain forty-eight hours on wharf at New York, any goods so left by
consignee will be at his or their risk of fire, loss, or
injury."
"In the event of the said steamer's being prevented from any
cause from commencing or pursuing this voyage or putting back to
Liverpool or into any port, or otherwise being prevented from any
cause from proceeding in the ordinary course of her voyage, to have
liberty to transship the goods by any other steamer to call at any
port or ports."
"All fines, expenses, losses, or damage which the ship or cargo
may incur or suffer on account of incorrect or insufficient marking
of the packages or description of their contents shall be paid by
the shippers or consignee, as may be required, and the ship owner
shall have a lien upon the goods for the payment hereof."
"In the case of all goods at through rates to the interior of
the United States or Canada, the shipper or consignee engages to
supply the agent of the steamer of Net York (F. W. J. Hurst) with
the necessary papers for passing the goods through the customhouse
by the time of steamer's arrival or to pay all extra expense
incurred in default thereof."
"Should any existing or future order or restriction of the
English Emigration Commissioners or of the English Board of Trade
authorities prevent the above goods from being conveyed in any
passenger vessel, the National Steamship Company (Limited) or any
of its servants or agents are to be free of any liability for
nonfulfillment of their portion of this contract. In accepting this
bill of lading, the shipper or other agent of the owner of the
property carried expressly accepts and agrees to all its
stipulations, exceptions, and conditions (whether written or
printed) in the like good order and well conditioned from the
ship's tackle, (where the ship's responsibility shall cease) at the
aforesaid port of New York, unto Messrs. Arnold, Constable &
Co. or to his or their assigns. Freight and primage for the said
goods to be paid at New York as per margin. General average, if
any, payable according to York and Antwerp rules. Freight, if
payable in Liverpool, to be paid on delivery of the bills of lading
in cash, without deduction, vessels lost or not lost. Freight, if
payable abroad, to be paid in currency or gold (at the current rate
of exchange for banker's sight bills on the day of the steamer's
arrival) at consignee's option and before delivery of any portion
of the goods specified."
"In witness whereof, the master or agent of the said ship hath
affirmed to two bills of lading, exclusive of the master's copy,
all of this tenor and date, one of which bills being accomplished
the other to stand void"
"A. Titherington"
"Dated in Liverpool, 18 January, 1883."
(In the margin of the bill of lading appear the numbers of the
various packages of merchandise.)