Liability over is the reason for a bailee's right to recover the
full value of the goods -- a reason which, whatever its inadequacy
in history or theory as applied to torts, applies with real force
to contract relations like those in this case.
A transportation company, holding itself out as a common carrier
by sea, received consignments of goods, fixed and collected the
freight, loaded the goods on a vessel which it chartered for their
carriage, and issued bills of lading to the shippers signed by the
master or agents of the vessel. The vessel proved unseaworthy, and
the cargo was lost.
Held that the company was liable over
to the owners of the cargo, and, by subrogation, to the insurers,
and could recover its full value from the vessel owners under their
express warranty of seaworthiness, in the charter party, even if
technically the possession of the cargo was with the vessel
owners.
The Act of June 26, 1884, c. 121, 23 Stat. 57, does not limit
the liability of a shipowner upon his personal warranty of
seaworthiness.
A charter party, containing a warranty of seaworthiness,
purported to be entered into by a firm as agents of the vessel, but
was signed in the firm name by one of its members who was part
owner.
Held that the warranty was his personal
contract.
An owner is liable on his express warranty of seaworthiness
whether to blame for the breach or not.
217 F. 497 affirmed.
Page 246 U. S. 354
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a libel brought by the Benner Line against the Pendleton
brothers upon a charter party purporting to be made between
"Pendleton Bros., agents of the schooner,
Edith Olcott'" and
the libelant, and signed "Pendleton Brothers." The ground of the
suit is that the vessel was unseaworthy at the beginning of the
voyage and that, by reason thereof, she sank, and her entire cargo
was lost. Both courts below held that the unseaworthiness was
proved, and on the evidence that question may be laid on one side.
As one of the Pendleton brothers was not interested in the vessel,
he was dismissed from the suit without objection. The other, the
petitioner, who signed the firm name, being a part owner, was held
by the district court to be bound by the warranty of seaworthiness
contained in the contract, but entitled to the statutory limitation
of liability. Act of June 26, 1884, c. 121, § 18, 23 Stat. 57;
210 F. 67. The circuit court of appeals held that the statute did
not cover the case. 217 F. 497. A decree was entered against the
petitioner for the total loss. Both courts agreed that the Benner
Line, although owning none of the cargo, was entitled to sue for
the loss of it, and this proposition and the matter of the
applicability of the Act of 1884 are the two questions argued
here.
The ground on which the right of the Benner Line to
Page 246 U. S. 355
recover the value of the cargo is denied is that the anomalous
doctrine by which a bailee can recover the value of goods that he
does not own (
The Beaconsfield, 158
U. S. 503,
158 U. S. 507)
stands on the bailment, and that here there was no bailment to the
Benner Line. The charter party provides that bills of lading be
signed without prejudice to the charter. The bills of lading were
signed by the master or agents of the vessel (the Benner Line),
and, it is contended, bound only the vessel. The charter was not a
demise of the ship, and it may be assumed, as the bill of lading
seems to assume, that the technical possession of the goods was in
the shipowners, since they remained in possession of the ship. The
Benner Line has not paid or been called upon to pay anything to the
owners of the cargo, but brings this suit at the request of the
underwriters on the same, who have paid for the loss.
But, as was observed by the courts below, the Benner Line held
itself out to the public as a common carrier, solicited and
received the merchandise that it offered to transport by acceptance
of such merchandise contracted to be answerable for the
transportation, chartered the vessels to carry what it received,
employed the stevedores who put it aboard, fixed and received the
freight, and signed or had the bills of lading signed in its
office. It determined the vessel on which the cargo should go, as
against the owners of it or of the ship. The cargo went in the
space it had hired. We agree with the lower courts that the Benner
Line did not disappear from its contract to carry the goods when
the bills of lading were signed, and that it would have been
answerable to the owners, or to the insurance companies when they
became subrogated to the owners rights, if they had elected to sue
it. The owners of the vessel had warranted the seaworthiness of the
ship to the charterer, of course, in contemplation that a cargo
would be shipped as to which they would be liable in some form.
Wherever in theory of law the technical
Page 246 U. S. 356
possession may have been, we do not perceive why the charterer
should be denied full damages upon the express contract when its
liability over also was determined by contract exactly as was
expected. The ground upon which bailees have been allowed to
recover the full value of goods from wrongdoers has been stated for
centuries to be their liability over. Y. B. 9 ed. IV, 34, pl. 9, is
an example of what has been repeated from that day to this.
See
Brewster v. Warner, 136 Mass. 57, 59. Whatever may be the
inadequacy, in history or theory, of the reason as applied to
torts, it applies with real force to contract relations like those
in this case. The whole question is hardly more than technical, as
there is no doubt that this suit really represents the owners'
interests, since it is brought at the request of the insurers who
have paid the loss.
On the proposition that the petitioner is entitled to limit his
liability under the Act of 1884, it is urged that the act is an
absolute limit, irrespective of privity or knowledge, in regard to
contracts as well as torts, and that this contract, if it bound the
petitioner at all, did so only as an indirect result of its
execution. The last point hardly is intelligible. The petitioner
signed the charter with the name Pendleton Brothers, which included
himself, and apart from the fact that, although described as
agents. the Pendleton brothers purport to be contracting parties,
if we look only to the principals the petitioner was one of them as
part owner of the vessel. The contract was between human beings,
and the petitioner, by his own act, knowingly made himself a party
to an express undertaking for the seaworthiness of the ship. That
the statute does not limit liability for the personal acts of the
owners done with knowledge is established by
Richardson v.
Harmon, 222 U. S. 96. It
was said in that case, p.
222 U. S. 106,
that § 18 leaves the owner "liable for his own fault, neglect
and contracts." The principle was held to
Page 246 U. S. 357
apply to contracts less personal than this in
Great Lakes
Towing Co. v. Mill Transportation Co., 155 F. 11, and in
The Loyal, 204 F. 930. We are not disposed to disturb the
very strong and deliberate intimations of
Richardson v.
Harmon in their application to the present case. It is said
that the owners did their best to make the vessel seaworthy and
that, if it was not so, the failure was wholly without the privity
or knowledge of the petitioner. But that is not the material
question in the case of a warranty. Unless the petitioner can be
discharged from his contract, altogether he must answer for the
breach whether he was to blame for it or not.
Decree affirmed.