When goods which were received in good order on board a vessel
under a bill of lading agreeing to deliver them at termination of
the voyage in like good order and condition are damaged on the
voyage, the burden is on the carrier to show that the damage was
occasioned by a peril for which he was not responsible.
Clark v.
Barnwell, 12 How. 272.
Merely proving that damage to cargo was by seawater does not
establish that such damage was caused by peril of the sea within
the exception of the bill of lading; in such a case, conjecture
cannot take the place of proof.
The G. R. Booth,
171 U. S. 450.
Where a certified question does not propound a distinct issue of
law,
Page 212 U. S. 355
but in effect calls for a decision of the whole case, this Court
need not, and in this case does not, answer it.
Chicago, B.
& Q. R. Co. v. Williams, 205 U. S. 444.
The question
"whether damage to the cargo of an apparently seaworthy ship,
through the unexplained admission of seawater, in the absence of
any proof of fault on the part of the officers or crew of the ship,
is of itself a sea peril within the meaning of an exception in a
bill of lading exempting the carrier from the act of God . . . loss
or damage from . . . explosion, heat or fire on board . . . risk of
craft or hulk or transshipment, and all and every the dangers and
accidents of the seas, rivers and canals and of navigation of
whatever nature and kind"
answered in the negative.
The question "whether the ship is relieved from liability in
consequence of said exception," not presenting a distinct issue of
law, not answered.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 212 U. S. 359
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Upon the hearing of an appeal from a decree of the District
Court, Eastern District of New York, dismissing a libel, the
Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit certified to this
Court for decision, pursuant to § 6 of the Judiciary Act of
1891, the following questions:
1. Whether damage to the cargo of an apparently seaworthy ship,
through the unexplained explained admission of seawater, in the
absence of any proof of fault on the part of the officers or crew
of the ship, is of itself a sea peril within the meaning of an
exception in a bill of lading exempting the carrier from
"the act of God . . . loss or damage from . . . explosion, heat
or fire on board . . . , risk of craft or hulk or transshipment,
and all and every the dangers and accidents of the seas, rivers,
and canals and of navigation of whatever nature or kind."
2. Whether the ship is relieved from liability in consequence of
said exception?
The facts upon which the questions arose were thus stated in the
certificate:
The steamship
Folmina sailed from Kobe, Japan, for New
York with a large shipment of rice on board in No. 3 hold under a
bill of lading which contained the exception set out in the first
of the foregoing questions, and also a provision that the ship "is
not liable for sweat, rust, decay, vermin, rain, or spray."
Page 212 U. S. 360
The rice was in good order when put on board, but, when
discharged in New York, a large part of it stowed on the starboard
side of the hold was found damaged. The area of injury was downward
from the first six tiers of bags to the bottom of the hold, which
was dry, forward from about the after end of the hatchway nearly to
the bulkhead, and inboard about three or four bags. The damage was
caused by water and consequent heat.
A majority of the Court are satisfied that the damage was caused
by seawater, and that it was not shown that the vessel encountered
sufficient stress of weather to warrant the inference that it came
in because of the action of external causes. There was no evidence
tending to show any negligence, fault, or error on the part of the
ship's officers or crew; the cargo was well stowed and
ventilated.
The
Folmina was a steel steamship of the highest class
in Lloyd's register. Before starting for Japan, she was in drydock
at New York, and was there surveyed by Lloyd's surveyor. Sometime
before, she had been in drydock at Cardiff, where some repairs were
made to the rudder, rudder quadrant, and a ventilator. The master
testified to the general good condition of the steamer at the time
she sailed from Kobe.
During and after the delivery of the cargo, the main deck, the
between deck, the pipes leading to or connected with No. 3 hold,
and the shell plating in the wing of No. 3 hold were carefully
examined by the officers of the ship, by surveyors representing the
libellants and their underwriters, and it was afterwards examined
by competent and experienced surveyors representing both parties.
The decks, hull, side plating, and rivets of the ship were found to
be sound, intact, and free from leaks. No evidence (other than the
mere circumstance that the damage was by seawater, if that be
considered evidence) was found that there had been leaks in part of
the frame, structure, side plating, riveting, pipes, or
appurtenances of the ship through which water might have reached
that part of No. 3 hold where the damage was done. No adequate
means of access of seawater
Page 212 U. S. 361
were found, nor any defect in the steamer, which then appeared
to be seaworthy.
The answer to be given to the first question will be fixed by
determining upon whom rests the burden of proof to show the cause
of the damage when goods which have been received by a carrier in
good order are by him delivered in a damaged condition.
As said in
Liverpool & Great Western S.S. Co. v. Phenix
Ins. Co., 129 U. S. 397,
129 U. S.
437:
"By the settled law, in the absence of some valid agreement to
the contrary, the owner of a general ship, carrying goods for hire,
whether employed in internal, in coasting, or in foreign commerce,
is a common carrier, with the liability of an insurer against all
losses except only such two irresistible causes as the act of God
and public enemies. Molloy, Bk. 2, c. 2, § 2; Bac.Abr.,
'
Carrier.' A;
Barclay v. Cuculla y Gana, 3 Dougl.
389; 2 Kent, Com. 598-599; Story on Bailment, § 501;
The
Niagara, 21 How. 7,
62 U. S.
23;
The Lady Pike, 21 Wall. 1,
88
U. S. 14."
And as observed in the same case:
"Special contracts between the carrier and the customer, the
terms of which are just and reasonable, and not contrary to public
policy, are upheld; such as those exempting the carrier from
responsibility for losses happening from accident, or from dangers
of navigation that no human skill or diligence can guard
against."
It was long since settled in
Clark v.
Barnwell, 12 How. 272, that, where goods are
received in good order on board of a vessel under a bill of lading
agreeing to deliver them at the termination of the voyage in like
good order and condition, and the goods are damaged on the voyage,
in a proceeding to recover for the breach of the contract of
affreightment, after the amount of damage has been established, the
burden lies upon the carrier to show that it was occasioned by one
of the perils for which he was not responsible. But, as illustrated
in the case of
The G. R. Booth, 171 U.
S. 450, proof merely of damage to cargo by seawater does
not necessarily tend to establish that such damage
Page 212 U. S. 362
was caused by a peril or danger of the seas. In that case, the
facts were that the explosion of a case of detonators, which were
part of a cargo, burst open the side of the ship below the
waterline, and the seawater, rapidly flowing in through the opening
made by the explosion, injured the plaintiff's sugar. It was held
that, although the explosion and the inflow of the water were
concurrent causes of the damage, yet
"the explosion, and not the seawater, was the proximate cause of
damage, and that this damage was not occasioned by the perils of
the sea within the exceptions in the bill of lading."
As well observed by counsel in the argument at bar, the
efficient cause of the damage sustained by the rice on board the
Folmina must be sought in those conditions or events which
caused or permitted the entrance of seawater. It cannot, in reason,
be said that seawater was the efficient, the proximate, cause of
the cargo damage because no other cause for that damage has been
disclosed. As there must have been an efficient cause permitting
the seawater to enter, so long as that cause remains undisclosed,
it cannot be said that the damage has been shown to have resulted
from causes within the scope of a sea peril. Of course, where goods
are delivered in a damaged condition plainly caused by breakage,
rust, or decay, their condition brings them within an exception
exempting from that character of loss, as the very fact of the
nature of the injury shows the damage to be
prima facie
within the exception, and hence the burden is upon the shipper to
establish that the goods are removed from its operation because of
the negligence of the carrier. But, in a case like the one before
us, where showing an injury by seawater does not, in and of itself,
operate to bring the damage within the exception against dangers
and accidents of the sea, it follows that it is the duty of the
carrier to sustain the burden of proof by showing a connection
between damage by the seawater and the exception against sea
perils. For the distinction between the two,
see The Henry B.
Hyde, 90 F. 114, 116;
The Lennox, 90 F. 308, 309;
The Patria, 132 F. 971, 972.
Page 212 U. S. 363
The inability of the court below to determine the cause of the
entrance of the seawater would imply that the evidence did not
disclose in any manner how the seawater came into the ship. In
other words, while there was a certainty from the proof of a damage
by seawater, there was a failure of the proof to determine whether
the presence of the seawater in the ship was occasioned by an
accident of the sea, by negligence, or by any other cause.
Manifestly, however, the presence of the seawater must have
resulted from some cause, and it would be mere conjecture to assume
simply from the fact that damage was done by seawater that
therefore it was occasioned by a peril of the sea. As the burden of
showing that the damage arose from one of the excepted causes was
upon the carrier, and the evidence, although establishing the
damage, left its efficient cause wholly unascertained, it follows
that the doubt as to the cause of the entrance of the seawater must
be resolved against the carrier.
The Edwin I. Morrison,
153 U. S. 199,
153 U. S. 212.
And see further the following cases, applying the
principle just stated and holding that, because the damage to cargo
was shown to have been occasioned by seawater, without any
satisfactory proof as to the cause of its presence, in view of the
burden resting upon the carrier, conjecture would not be permitted
to take the place of proof:
The Sloga, 10 Ben. 315;
The Compta, 4 Sawyer 375;
Bearse v. Ropes, 1
Sprague 331;
The Zone, 2 Sprague 19;
The Svend, 1
F. 54;
The Centennial, 7 F. 601;
The Lydian
Monarch, 23 F. 298;
The Queen, 78 F. 155, 165, 168,
aff'd, 94 F. 180, 196;
The Phoenicia, 90 F. 116,
119,
s.c., 99 F. 1005;
Ins. Co. v. Easton & M.
Transp. Co., 97 F. 653;
The Presque Isle, 140 F. 202,
205.
So far as the second question is concerned, it does not propound
a distinct issue of law, but, in effect, calls for a decision of
the whole, case, and therefore need not be answered.
Chicago,
B. & Q. Ry. v. Williams, 205 U. S. 444,
205 U. S. 452,
and cases cited.
The first question is answered "No," and the second is not
answered.