In the Second Circuit, the practice is well established that an
appeal from the decree of the district court to the circuit court
of appeals in an admiralty case by one of the parties opens the
case for a trial
de novo. Irvine v. The Hesper,
122 U. S. 256.
The owner of an automobile delivered it to an express company in
London to forward to New York, declaring its value to be far in
excess of $100; the express company boxed it and delivered it to a
carrier and accepted a bill of lading with a limitation of $100
liability; on arrival at destination, a stevedore discharged the
cargo and the rope by which the automobile was being hoisted broke
and the automobile was seriously damaged; in a suit
in
personam in admiralty against the express company and to which
the carrier and the stevedore had been made parties,
held
that:
The breaking of the rope in this case illustrates, as by
analogy, the rule of
res ipsa loquitur, and throws the
responsibility on the stevedore furnishing the rope and handling
the article unless such breaking can be explained as resulting from
a hidden defect, which in this case is without support in the
evidence.
The breaking of the rope appearing from the evidence to have
probably resulted from straining and cutting, the stevedore was
responsible for the damage, and the decree should be against him
primarily.
In case of failure to collect from the stevedore, the carrier is
responsible to the extent of the limited amount stated in the bill
of lading, and in case there is still a deficiency, the express
company, even though only a forwarder, is liable by reason of
having, without the authority of the shipper and with knowledge of
the value of the article entrusted to it, accepted from the carrier
a bill of lading limiting its liability.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction and power of the
circuit court of appeals on appeal from the district
Page 241 U. S. 545
court in admiralty and the liability of forwarders, carriers and
stevedores in connection with the shipment and delivery of an
automobile, are stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This controversy thus arose: in December, 1910, Reid, the
petitioner, delivered in London to the American Express Company an
automobile, to be carried to New York. The Express Company, in a
communication concerning the shipment, was informed that the car
was worth about $3,900. The car was boxed by the Express Company
and by it delivered to the
Minnewaska, a steamship
belonging to the International Mercantile Marine Company, bound for
New York. The Express Company shipped the car in its own name as
consignor, to itself in New York as consignee, and no express
notice was given to the ship of the real value of the package and
its contents. The bill of lading issued by the steamship company
expressly limited the liability to $100, and contained the
following clause:
"It is also mutually agreed that the value of each package
shipped hereunder does not exceed $100, or its equivalent in
English currency on which basis the freight is adjusted, and the
carrier's liability shall in no case exceed that sum unless a
value
Page 241 U. S. 546
in excess thereof be specially declared, and stated herein, and
extra freight as may be agreed on paid."
On the arrival of the ship at New York, T. Hogan & Sons,
Incorporated, stevedores, were employed to discharge the cargo. A
sling was placed around the box containing the car, and a fall,
with a hook attached to it, was affixed to the sling, and by a
winch the car was lifted up from the hold, through the hatchway.
When it had passed above the hatchway, a hook attached to another
tackle was fastened to the sling, this second tackle being used to
swing the package toward and over the side of the ship, to land it
on the pier. This was not accomplished, however, because, as the
package swung over the side of the ship, toward the pier, the sling
broke, and the car fell into the water, and was seriously
damaged.
In November, 1911, Reid filed his libel in the District Court of
the United States for the Southern District of New York against the
Express Company to recover from it the amount of damage caused to
the automobile. Before answering, the Express Company, in
conformity to Admiralty Rule 59, of this Court, and with Rule 15 in
Admiralty for the Southern District of New York, filed two
petitions, one against the steamship company and the other against
Hogan & Sons, to make them parties defendant on the ground
that, if there was any liability on the part of the Express
Company
Page 241 U. S. 547
on the libel of Reid, both the steamship company and Hogan &
Sons were responsible therefor, and asking a decree over against
each of them separately in case there was any decree against the
Express Company. Thereupon the Express Company answered the
original libel, denying responsibility on the ground, among others,
that it was a mere forwarder. Subsequently both Hogan & Sons
and the steamship company answered not only the petitions of the
Express Company, making them parties defendant, but also the
original libel, traversing the alleged liability on various
grounds. The latter company, however, referring to the limitation
of liability to $100 in the bill of lading which it had issued,
admitted its responsibility to that extent, and alleged that the
sum thereof had been offered and declined.
In March, 1913, an interlocutory decree was entered holding that
Hogan & Sons were primarily responsible, and that the Express
Company was secondarily so, and that, when the amount of the loss
was ascertained, Reid would therefore have the right to recover the
amount from Hogan & Sons, and in addition to recover from the
Express Company any part of the sum which he was unable to collect
under execution from Hogan & Sons. The final decree, which
thereafter fixed the amount at $2,724.40, carried out the
interlocutory decree. Nobody appealed from the interlocutory
decree, and the Express Company did not appeal from the final
decree fixing its secondary liability. Hogan & Sons, however,
did appeal. The court below, considering that, on the appeal, the
case was before it for a trial
de novo, and therefore that
the rights and liabilities of all the parties must be considered
from that point of view, reversed the decree below, and held that
error had been committed in the decree rendered against Hogan &
Sons, because the proof did not establish that they had been
negligent. As to the Express Company, it was also held that error
had been
Page 241 U. S. 548
committed in decreeing it to be liable secondarily because, in
receiving the automobile, it had acted in the capacity of a mere
forwarder, and had discharged its obligations in that respect. As
to the decree which dismissed the steamship company, it was held
that error had been committed because that company, as an insurer,
was liable, not, however, exceeding the amount of $100, the
limitation stated in the bill of lading. As the result of the
allowance of a petition for certiorari, the correctness of these
conclusions is now before us for decision.
At the threshold, it is insisted that the court below had no
authority to consider the case as before it for a new trial -- that
is,
de novo -- and to award relief upon that theory, and
that consequently it erred in reviewing the interlocutory decree,
which was not appealed from, by which the steamship company was
dismissed, and allowing a recovery against that company, and also
in reviewing both the interlocutory and final decrees so far as it
was essential to grant relief to the Express Company, because that
company had not appealed. It is not denied that, in the Second
Circuit, the right to a
de novo trial was considered as
settled by
Munson S.S. Line v. Miramar S.S. Co., 167 F.
960, and that a well established practice to that effect obtained,
but it is insisted that a general review of the adjudged cases on
the subject will show the want of foundation for the rule and
practice. But we think this contention is plainly without merit,
and that the right to a
de novo trial in the court below
authoritatively resulted from the ruling in
Irvine v. The
Hesper, 122 U. S. 256 -- a
conclusion which is plainly demonstrated by the opinion in that
case and the authorities there cited, and the long continued
practice which has obtained since that case was decided, and the
full and convincing review of the authorities on the subject
contained in the opinion in the
Miramar case. Entertaining
this view, we do not stop to consider the various arguments
Page 241 U. S. 549
which are here pressed upon our attention tending at least
indirectly to establish the nonexistence of the right to the trial
de novo in the court below, or that this case, for reasons
which are wholly unsubstantial, may be distinguished and made an
exception to the general rule, because to do so would serve no
useful purpose, and would be at least impliedly to admit that there
was room to discuss a question concerning which there was no room
for discussion whatever.
It is conceded that, if the grounds relied upon to fix liability
as against the Express Company, the steamship company, and Hogan
& Sons are established, there is a right to an independent
recovery as to each, whatever may be the recourse of these parties
to recover over as against each other. Which of the defendants, if
any, was liable primarily for the loss is, then, to be considered.
We first approach this question from the point of view of Hogan
& Sons, because undoubtedly that company was in possession and
control of the car at the time it dropped into the river and was
damaged. While there is some confusion and various slight
contradictions in the testimony, we are of the opinion that the
trail court was right in holding that the loss occurred through the
fault of Hogan & Sons, and therefore that the court below erred
in reversing the decree against that company. And, without
undertaking to review the testimony, to all of which we have given
a careful consideration, we content ourselves with briefly pointing
out the general points of view which have led us to the conclusion
stated. Without saying that the mere fact of the dropping of the
automobile into the water in the course of delivery from the ship's
hold to the pier serves to speak for itself on the issue of
responsibility -- that is, to bring the case within the principle
of
res ipsa loquitur -- we are of the opinion that, by
analogy, the case well illustrates that rule for this reason: some
cause must be found for the dropping of the car into the river, and
only
Page 241 U. S. 550
two theories on this subject may be deduced from the proof:
either that the accident to the car occurred without fault, as the
result of the breaking of the rope composing the sling because of
some unseen and hidden defect in such rope, or that it was
occasioned by some act of negligence or want of care in handling
the car. The first, we are of opinion, is without any substantial
support in the proof; in fact, to accept it would conflict with
direct and positive proof to the contrary. That view therefore
could only be sustained by substituting imagination for proof. The
second, on the contrary, we are of opinion, finds cogent support
from the proof which could only be escaped by overthrowing it by
the process of imagination to which we have just referred. It is
unquestioned that, when the sling was put around the box containing
the car, preparatory to attaching the hook in order to hoist it, no
blocks or other means were used to prevent the rope from being worn
or cut by the edges of the box. The presumption that the rope was
strong and efficient, arising from the fact that it held the weight
of the box until it was lifted above the hatch, and until, by the
swinging motion, the danger of straining or cutting of the ropes
upon the edges was more likely to result, gives adequate ground for
the inference that such cutting and straining occurred and led to
the severance of the rope and the precipitation of the car into the
water. And this inference is supported by various other
circumstances which we do not stop to recapitulate.
Were the steamship company and the Express Company, in the order
stated, liable to Reid, the libellant, dependent upon his inability
to make under execution the amount of the decree from Hogan &
Sons, is, then, the only remaining question. In substance, this
question, however, is negligible since, in the argument at bar, it
was conceded that T. Hogan & Sons, Incorporated, were amply
solvent, and that there was no question of their ability
Page 241 U. S. 551
to respond to any decree which might be rendered against them.
To avoid, however, all miscarriage of right from any possible,
though improbable, change of conditions, without going into detail
or stating the considerations which control our conclusion on the
subject, we content ourselves with saying first that, as to the
steamship company, we are of the opinion that, on the failure to
make the amount of the decree against Hogan & Sons, the
libellant will be entitled to recover over against that company to
the amount of $100, to which its liability was limited, as stated
in the bill of lading under which the shipment was made; second,
that, even looking upon the Express Company as a forwarder, under
the circumstances of the case and the terms of the bill of lading
under which the car was shipped by that company, the trial court
rightly held it liable, and that recovery against it on failure to
enforce the decree against Hogan & Sons will also obtain.
It follows that the decree below must be reversed and the cause
remanded to the trial court, with directions to set aside its
decree insofar as it dismissed the steamship company from the case,
and to enter a decree in conformity with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.