Where the charter party of a vessel bound with a cargo of sugar
from Java to a port in the United States provides that the vessel
should discharge at New York, Boston, Philadelphia or Baltimore
"or so near the port of discharge as she may safely get and
deliver the same, always afloat, in a customary place, and manner,
in such dock, as directed by charterers, agreeably to bills of
lading,"
and also provides
"all goods to be brought to and taken from alongside of the ship
always afloat at said charterers' risk and expense, who may direct
the same at the most convenient anchorage; lighterage, if any, to
reach the port of destination, or deliver
Page 187 U. S. 249
the cargo at port of destination, remains for account of
receivers, any custom of the port to the contrary
notwithstanding,"
and the vessel has three steel masts built up solidly from the
bottom to the top and so riveted there is no way of taking them
down and the mainmast requires one hundred and forty-five feet of
clear space to pass under any obstruction, which is more than the
height at dead low water of the Brooklyn Bridge over the East
River, charterers have no right to order the vessel to discharge at
a dock above the Brooklyn Bridge, and if the vessel discharges by
lighterage from the most convenient place below the bridge, the
charterers must pay the expense of lighterage from the vessel to
the dock. Under the above conditions, it is not a just exercise of
the right given to the charterers by the charter party to select a
dock in getting to which the vessel could not always be afloat or
to which she could not safely get.
Under such circumstances, the vessel is not obliged to sail
around Long Island, and thus reach the dock above the bridge by
coming through Long Island Sound and Hell Gate.
This action was begun by the filing, on May 27, 1899, of a libel
in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New
York, by Anton Mencke, the master of the British ship
Benlarig, against a cargo of sugar that had just been
delivered from the vessel, to recover an unpaid balance of freight
due for conveying the sugar from Java to New York. The receivers of
the cargo, the claimants in the action, had deducted from the
freight the cost of lightering the cargo from the dock where it had
been discharged to the claimants' refinery, which was above the
Brooklyn Bridge. The ship had been ordered by the claimants to
proceed directly to the refinery, but was unable to do so because
the height of her masts was such that she could not pass under the
bridge.
The district court, per Judge Thomas, entered a decree in favor
of the libellant January 18, 1900. 99 F. 298. The claimants
appealed to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit, and that court, on April 16, 1901, reversed the
decree of the district court, and remanded the cause with
directions to dismiss the libel. 108 F. 89.
On May 13, 1901, a writ of certiorari was granted, and the cause
was brought to this Court. 181 U.S. 620.
Page 187 U. S. 250
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Concerning the facts of the case, there is no controversy.
The ship
Benlarig was chartered under a charter party
dated London, July 1, 1898, between Watson Brothers, her owners,
and Erdmann & Sielcken, merchants of Batavia.
The vessel duly loaded a full cargo of sugar at Java, and then
proceeded to Barbadoes. There she received orders to proceed
directly to New York. This she did, arriving on or about April 14,
1899. Before or about the time of the arrival of the
Benlarig at the port of New York, the cargo of sugar was
sold and transferred, with the accompanying bills of lading, by the
owners and consignees thereof, to Arbuckle Brothers, sugar
refiners. The agents of the vessel gave notice to Arbuckle
Brothers, on April 15, of the arrival of the vessel, and asked for
orders for a discharging berth, mentioning that the vessel's mast,
being in one piece, would not admit of her going under the Brooklyn
Bridge. Arbuckle Brothers ordered the vessel to discharge at their
refinery at the foot of Pearl Street above the bridge. Subsequently
it was agreed that the cargo should be discharged at the West
Central pier, Atlantic dock, below the bridge, into lighters
provided by Arbuckle Brothers, without prejudice to the rights of
either party in respect to the payment of the cost of lighterage.
This cost amounted to $1,466.12, which was paid by Arbuckle
Brothers and deducted by them from the freight, and this suit is to
recover the balance of the freight so deducted.
The clear height of the highest span of the Brooklyn Bridge
above mean high water is 135 feet. At dead low water, there were
not more than one hundred and forty feet in the clear at the
highest point.
The
Benlarig has three steel masts, built up solid from
the bottom to the top, and constructed of cylindrical steel plates,
riveted together with internal angle iron braces. There was no way
of taking any part of the masts down. The mainmast was one hundred
and thirty-nine feet ten inches above the deck;
Page 187 U. S. 251
the foremast one hundred and thirty-six feet eight inches above
the deck, and the mizzenmast was one hundred and twenty-nine feet
above the deck, and the deck was from seven to eight feet above the
load line of the vessel. The ship therefore required one hundred
and forty-five feet of clear space in order to pass underneath the
bridge. This was more than five feet in the clear of the highest
point of the bridge when the tide was at the lowest point of the
ebb. An additional margin of several feet would have to be allowed
for safe passageway, and at the lowest water the
Benlarig
could not pass under the bridge without cutting off some eight to
ten feet of her steel masts.
The charter party provided that the
Benlarig should
load at Java and should proceed to Barbadoes,
"thence to Queenstown or Falmouth (as directed by charterers or
their agents), for orders to discharge, always afloat, either at a
safe port in the United Kingdom or on the continent of Europe
between Havre and Hamburg (both included), Rouen excepted, or at
option of charterers to order vessel from Barbadoes to proceed to
Delaware breakwater for orders to discharge at New York or Boston
or Philadelphia or Baltimore, or so near the port of discharge as
she may safely get and deliver the same, always afloat, in a
customary place and manner, in such dock, as directed by
charterers, agreeably to bills of lading."
Section 4 of the charter party further provided that
"all goods to be brought to and taken from alongside of the
ship, always afloat at the said charterers' risk and expense, who
may direct the same at the most convenient anchorage, lighterage,
if any, to reach the port of destination, or deliver the cargo at
port of destination, remains for account of receivers, any custom
of the port to the contrary notwithstanding."
Four bills of lading were issued at the ports of loading,
reciting the
"shipment of the sugar, and containing the identical conditions
that the sugar was to be delivered in the like order and condition
at the port of discharge as per charter party dated London, 1st
July, 1898 (the dangers of the sea excepted), unto Messrs. Winter
& Smillie as agents, or to their assigns, he or they paying
freight for the said sugar as per charter party.
Page 187 U. S. 252
General average, if any, to be settled according to York-Antwerp
rules, 1890. All other conditions and exceptions, negligence and
Harter Act clauses included, as per charter party above referred
to, with average accustomed."
The positions of the respective parties may be briefly stated
thus:
The libellant's contention is that, under clause 1 of the
charter party, the right of the charterers or their assigns to
select the dock for the discharge of cargo was subject to the
limitation that such dock must be one that was safe and suitable
for the ship as well as for the cargo, and one to which the ship
could proceed without hindrance by permanent obstacles, which she
could not pass without being mutilated, crippled, or dismantled,
and that, under clause 4 of the charter party, any lighterage
necessary to deliver the cargo at the port of destination must be
paid by the charterers.
The claimants contend that the discharging berth to which the
Benlarig was ordered was safe for vessels of her class,
and a customary place of discharge, and she should have proceeded
there, or should have delivered her cargo there otherwise at her
own expense, and that the lighterage clause of the charter party
does not relieve the owners of the ship from their obligation to
proceed to a designated dock above the bridge, and to there deliver
the cargo.
Another suggestion made on behalf of the claimants, namely, that
the
Benlarig, though unable to pass under the bridge,
might have reached the Arbuckle dock by sailing around Long Island,
and then through the sound and Hell Gate to Brooklyn, should be
first disposed of. It is, perhaps, sufficient to say that no such
allegation appears in the claimants' answer. Nor did the claimants'
assignments of error to the judgment of the district court raise
any such question. Neither did the claimants, during the
negotiations, make any such suggestion. Moreover, the district
court and the circuit court of appeals agreed in the statement
that
"all shipping experts called by the claimants testified that
they never had heard of a ship from Java pursuing that course. It
may therefore be concluded that such alternative was contrary to
the expectations and understanding
Page 187 U. S. 253
of all parties to this contract, or of any other contract for
the carriage of sugar from Java."
The question that remains is, upon which of the parties the
expense of the lighterage should fall. The answer, we think, must
be found in a proper construction of the contract between them.
It cannot be fairly claimed under the evidence that the expense
that would have been occasioned to the owners of the vessel, if
they had removed or taken down the mast, would have been trifling
or inconsiderable. There was some evidence that, in a few
instances, the topmasts of vessels had been taken down in order to
permit them to pass under the bridge, and that the expense in each
case was small. But those were cases of vessels with wooden masts,
so constructed as to permit the topmast to be lowered. The
Benlarig's masts were wholly of steel, and the testimony
of her master was that, if it became absolutely necessary to make
the vessel pass beneath some obstruction lower than the top of the
masts, the masts would either have to be cut or removed wholly out
of the ship. What cost would have been caused by cutting or
removing the steel mast does not appear. But the courts below
concurred in regarding the mutilation or destruction of the ship's
masts as a serious affair.
In such a condition of affairs, we think that resort to
lighterage was natural and reasonable, and within the obvious and
fair import of the terms of the charter party. The clause, which is
claimed to give the charterers or their assigns the right to
appoint the dock in which to discharge cargo contains conditions
that the port must be safe, and that the vessel must discharge,
always afloat, either at a safe port or so near the port of
discharge as she can safely get. It would not be a just exercise of
the right to select a dock in getting to which the vessel could not
always be afloat or to which she could not safely get. A ship could
not be said to be afloat, whether the obstacle encountered was a
shoal or bar in the port over which she could not proceed, or a
bridge under or through which she could not pass, nor could she be
said to have safely reached a dock if required to mutilate her hull
or her permanent masts.
Page 187 U. S. 254
Any doubt that might be felt as to this construction of the
clause will be relieved by the express language of section 4:
"All goods to be brought to and taken from alongside of the
ship, always afloat at the said charterers' risk and expense, who
may direct the same to the most convenient anchorage; lighterage,
if any, to reach the port of destination, or deliver the cargo at
port of destination, remains for account of receivers, any custom
of the port to the contrary notwithstanding."
Here again is recognized the right of the ship to be "always
afloat." The anchorage directed must be the "most convenient;"
which must mean convenient as well for the ship as for the
consignees; and, finally, if lighterage is necessary, either to
reach the port or to deliver the cargo, the expense thereof is
chargeable to the receivers of the goods, regardless of any local
port customs.
We do not feel constrained to go into an extended consideration
of the authorities cited in the briefs of counsel, but shall refer
to two or three cases which, in some of their features, seem to be
applicable.
The case of
The Alhambra, L.R. 6 P.Div. 68, was where
the charter party provided that the vessel should go
"to a safe port in the United Kingdom, . . . or as near
thereunto as she could safely get, and always lay and discharge
afloat. . . . lighterage (if any) always at the risk and expense of
the cargo."
The charterers gave orders to the vessel to proceed to
Lowestoft, and there discharge the cargo. The average high water in
that harbor was about sixteen feet, and average low water about
eleven feet. The master objected to discharging in Lowestoft
Harbor, notwithstanding that the purchasers of the cargo gave him
notice that they were prepared at their own expense to lighter the
vessel in Lowestoft Roads sufficiently to enable her to lie always
afloat in Lowestoft Harbor, if necessary, should her draft of water
so require. The vessel went to Harwich as the nearest safe port,
and there discharged the cargo. The owners of the cargo brought
suit for breach of contract, and offered evidence to show that it
was the custom of vessels which were too deep to enter the port of
Lowestoft to discharge
Page 187 U. S. 255
a portion of their cargo in the roads outside, and that it could
be done with reasonable safety. The cargo owners recovered a
judgment, but the Court of Appeals reversed, that court holding
that Lowestoft was not a safe port for the vessel within the
meaning of the charter party, and that the custom shown by the
charterers was inadmissible.
This case was cited with approval by this Court in
The
Gazelle, 128 U. S. 474,
where the charter party provided that the vessel should proceed
from Baltimore
"to a safe, direct Norwegian or Danish port, as ordered on
signing bills of lading, or as near thereunto as she can safely
get, and always lie and discharge afloat."
The charterers tendered to the master for signature bills of
lading, ordering the vessel to the port of Aalborg, in Denmark, as
the port of discharge, "to be landed at Aalborg, or as near thereto
as the vessel can safely get." The master refused to sign the bills
of lading for the reason that Aalborg was not a safe port. Aalborg
is situated in Denmark on the Limiford Inlet, about seventeen miles
from its mouth. Owing to a bar at the mouth of the inlet, there was
a depth of water of only ten or eleven feet. The draft of the
Gazelle loaded was about sixteen feet. The only place of
anchorage for a vessel that cannot cross the bar is off the mouth
of the inlet, where vessels were accustomed to discharge into
lighters. Thereafter the master filed a libel for demurrage in the
District Court of the United States for the district of Maryland,
whose judgment, sustaining the libel and dismissing the cross-libel
of the charterers, was affirmed by the circuit court. This Court
said, through Mr. Justice Gray:
"By the express terms of the charter party, the charterers were
bound to order the vessel 'to a safe, direct Norwegian or Danish
port, or as near thereunto as she can safely get and always lay and
discharge afloat.' The clear meaning of this is that she must be
ordered to a port which she can safely enter with her cargo, or
which at least has a safe anchorage outside, where she can lie and
discharge afloat.
Dahl v. Nelson, 6 App.Cas. 38;
The
Alhambra, L.R. 6 P.Div. 68. The charterers insisted upon
ordering her to the port of Aalborg. The circuit court
Page 187 U. S. 256
has found that Aalborg is in a fiord or inlet, having a bar
across its mouth, which it was impossible for the
Gazelle
to pass, either in ballast or with cargo, and that the only
anchorage outside the bar is not a reasonably safe anchorage, nor a
place where it is reasonably safe for a vessel to lie and
discharge."
The charterers offered evidence to show that, by the custom of
trade between Baltimore and the Atlantic ports and the ports of
Norway and Denmark, Aalborg was recognized as being, and understood
to be, a safe, direct port of Denmark within the meaning of the
charter party. In respect to which this Court said:
"Evidence of a custom to consider as safe a particular port,
which in fact is not reasonably safe, would directly contradict the
charter party, and would therefore be incompetent as matter of
law."
In
In re An Arbitration between Goodbody & Balfour,
Williamson & Co., 4 Com.Cas. 119, the facts were that a
cargo of wheat per the ship
Vanduara had been sold in a
contract containing the clause
"shipped . . . per
Vanduara, sailed, or about to sail,
as per bills of lading dated, etc., . . . to any safe port in the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, or to Havre, or to
Dunkirk, or to Antwerp, calling at Queenstown, Falmouth, or
Plymouth, for orders as per charter party, vessel to discharge
afloat."
The vendees declined to take the papers on the ground that, by
the bills of lading, the cargo was stated to have been shipped upon
the
Vanduara "to discharge at a safe port in the United
Kingdom, Manchester excepted," and that such bills of lading did
not comply with the contract for delivery in any safe port in the
United Kingdom. It was found in the special case stated for the
decision of the court that
"the Vanduara, when loaded with the said cargo, would have been
unable to go up the Manchester Ship Canal to the Manchester docks
because the heads of her lower main and mizzenmasts would have been
higher than the limit fixed by the canal company's regulations for
passing under the Runcorn Bridge."
The vendors argued that the addition to the bills of lading of
the words "Manchester excepted" was immaterial inasmuch as
Manchester, in any event, was not a "safe port" in the sense
Page 187 U. S. 257
of the bills of lading, as the ship could not reach it without
cutting off or taking down her masts, and of that opinion were the
divisional court and the Court of Appeal, 5 Com.Cas. 59, A. L.
Smith, L.J. in the latter court saying
"it is abundantly proved that Manchester, taken by itself, was
not a safe port for this vessel, because it was found as a fact . .
. that it would have been necessary to dismantle the ship to enable
her to get under Runcorn Bridge, which is the first bridge vessels
going up the canal to Manchester have to pass."
Collins, L.J. was of the same opinion. And Vaughn Williams, L.J.
said: "On the findings of the last award, it is perfectly plain
that, in a commercial sense, the port of Manchester was not a safe
port for the Vanduara to go to."
This case is pertinent as holding that an overhead bridge which
prevents access to the place designated for the discharge quite as
effectively renders it unsafe for the ship as a sandbar or other
obstacle under the water.
The view of the circuit court of appeals that the construction
put upon the charter party by the district court was within its
letter but not within its spirit, because "an application to novel
circumstances of clauses intended for a different set of
circumstances," we cannot accept. We are unable to see anything in
the undisputed facts of the case that warrants any other
construction of the language employed than that suggested by its
ordinary meaning.
The decree of the court of appeals is reversed, and the
decree of the district court is affirmed, with interest thereon
from the time of its entry.