1. In order that a shipowner may be relieved by the Harter Act
of liability for damage resulting from negligent operation or
management of the ship and be entitled to general average under
shippers' agreements (Jason clause) based on that statute, it is
necessary that he shall have exercised due diligence to make the
vessel seaworthy, not only at the beginning of the voyage, but at
any intermediate stage of it (preceding the loss or damage) at
which he took control. P.
290 U. S.
342.
Page 290 U. S. 334
So
held where the purpose of taking control was to
inspect the ship after an accident and to determine whether she was
in condition to proceed.
2. His ship having been injured
en voyage, the master
put into a port of call and notified the owner, a corporation. The
owner dispatched its marine superintendent to inspect the ship and
determine what to do, who, after consulting with the master and
others, ordered her sent on with tugs.
Held that, the
owner having thus intervened and taken over the management, the
continuity of the voyage was interrupted, and the owner was under a
renewed obligation of diligence to make the ship seaworthy then. P.
290 U. S.
345.
3. A shipowner who would claim the exemption of § 3 of the
Harter Act has the burden of proving that he exercised due
diligence to make his vessel seaworthy. P.
290 U. S.
346.
4. The ship, assumed to have been seaworthy when she left the
United States, damaged her rudder stock and bent her rudder blade
five degrees by an accident on her way up the Weser River, below
Bremen, her first port of discharge. On arriving at that port with
the aid of tugs, she was inspected by the owner through its marine
superintendent, but, owing to negligence, the bend in the blade was
not discovered. The whole damage could have been repaired at
Bremen, but, apparently to save time and expense, the owner decided
to send her on to Hamburg, her next port of discharge, 70 miles
away. While proceeding down the Weser with the aid of three tugs,
she was grounded by bad seamanship in an attempt to pass another
vessel, and it became necessary to lighter and transship her cargo
and to return her to Bremen for repairs.
Held (considering
evidence as to the effect on navigation of the disablement of the
rudder and the bend in its blade) that the owner had failed to
sustain the burden of establishing due diligence in making the ship
seaworthy for the voyage down the Weser. P.
290 U. S.
346.
5. A shipowner who has failed to comply with the condition laid
down in the Harter Act (§ 3) and in shippers' agreements for
general average (Jason clause) by not exercising due diligence to
make his vessel seaworthy remains liable to cargo for damage caused
by faulty navigation, and cannot claim contribution under the
agreements, and this without regard to whether there was a causal
relation between the defects of the vessel and the disaster in
question. P.
290 U. S.
350.
63 F.2d 248 reversed.
Page 290 U. S. 335
Certiorari to review the affirmance of a decree in admiralty, 57
F.2d 265, which dismissed five consolidated libels against the
respondent ship company. The libels were filed by May, as assignee
of numerous consignees of cargo, who had been required by the
respondent to deposit money as security for general average
contributions. The object of the libels was to recover the moneys
upon the ground that they were exacted without right as a condition
to delivery of the goods.
Page 290 U. S. 339
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO delivered the opinion of the Court.
The assignee of cargo owners filed libels against the
respondent, the owner of the
Isis, to recover moneys
deposited as security for general average contributions, the
deposit being exacted by the respondent as a condition of
delivery.
The
Isis, a vessel of about 7,000 tons, sailed from
loading ports on the Pacific Coast with cargo destined for Bremen,
Hamburg, and Antwerp. She was then seaworthy in hull and gear, and
fitted in all respects for the intended voyage. In the Weser River
not far from Bremen, Germany, her first port of discharge, she
stranded by reason of negligent
Page 290 U. S. 340
navigation, with damage to her rudder stock and also to the
rudder blade. Aided by tugs, she continued up the river to Bremen,
disclosing, as she moved, a tendency to sheer to starboard. On
arrival at that port, she discharged her Bremen cargo, and there
was then an inspection of the damage. The rudder stock had been
twisted about 45 degrees. To ascertain the condition of the blade,
the vessel was put in a drydock and kept there a few hours. The
examiners reported that the blade was intact. In fact, the lower
part of it was bent to starboard to the extent of about five
degrees. The inspection was after dark, with the bottom of the
rudder still under water. The two courts below have concurred in a
finding that the use of reasonable care would have caused the bend
to be discovered.
The head office of the owner at Hamburg was notified of the
mishap to the vessel before she landed at Bremen, and the marine
superintendent was sent to meet her. The superintendent,
Reichenbacher, and the master of the vessel, Krueger, consulted,
along with others, as to what ought to be done. Bremen had adequate
facilities for the making of complete repairs, but it would have
taken about two weeks to make them. To save time and expense to the
vessel and her cargo, the decision was made to send her to Hamburg,
about seventy miles away, the cargo still aboard. Before a start
was made, the rudder was lashed amidships so as to be incapable of
motion. The vessel then set forth in the towage of three tugs, one
of them in front and one on either side. No harm befell for a
distance of about six miles. Then, at or near the junction of the
Weser and Lesum Rivers, the pilot in control changed her course to
starboard in order to pass a vessel coming up. There is a finding
that her navigation at this point was unskillful and negligent in
that she was driven at too high a speed and too close to the edge
of the channel. At all events, in passing, she made a sheer to
starboard
Page 290 U. S. 341
which the tugs and her engines were unable to control. She was
stranded hard and fast amidships on a sand spit near the bank.
With the aid of tugs and lighters, the vessel and the cargo were
brought back to Bremen, where the new damage was repaired. It was
in the course of these repairs that the bend in the rudder was
observed. [
Footnote 1] In the
meantime, the entire cargo was transshipped to Antwerp. Before
delivery at destination, the respondent made demand of the
consignees that they deposit sums of cash as security for the
payment of general average contributions to the sacrifices and
expenses due to the two strandings. The bills of lading contain
what is known as the Jason clause (
The Jason, 225 U. S.
32,
225 U. S. 49)
whereby the consignees agree that, if the shipowner has used due
diligence to make the ship seaworthy, the cargo is to be liable in
general average when the sacrifice or expense results from
negligent navigation. The form of the clause applicable to nearly
all the shipments is stated in the margin. [
Footnote 2] For a small part of the shipments, the form
is slightly different, but no point is made that there is any
difference of meaning.
Page 290 U. S. 342
Under these clauses, the consignees do not dispute the liability
of the cargo for general average contributions in respect of the
first standing. They do dispute the liability in respect of the
second. To recover their deposits to the amount of that excess,
they transferred their claims to an assignee by whom five libels,
afterwards consolidated, were filed against the owner. The District
Court, confirming the report of a Commissioner, gave judgment for
the defendant. 57 F.2d 265. The Court of Appeals for the Second
Circuit affirmed, 63 F.2d 248, though, in so doing, it did not
agree with all the findings below. The libelant, May, joined the
stipulators for costs (Indemnity Insurance Company of North America
and Royal Indemnity Company) in a petition to review the decree of
affirmance. A writ of certiorari brings the case here.
1. The first question to be determined is whether the cargo must
contribute to the sacrifices and expenses resulting from the second
stranding if there was a negligent failure by the shipowner to make
the ship seaworthy when she left her dock at Bremen.
Until the enactment of the Harter Act (February 13, 1893, c.
105, § 3, 27 Stat. 445, 46 U.S.C. § 192), a shipowner was
not at liberty by any contract with the shipper to rid himself of
liability to the owners of the cargo for damages resulting from the
negligence of the master or the crew.
Liverpool
& G. W. Steam Co. v. Phenix Insurance Co.,
Page 290 U. S. 343
129 U. S. 397,
129 U. S. 438;
The Delaware, 161 U. S. 459,
161 U. S. 471;
The Jason, supra, p.
225 U. S. 49;
The Willdomino, 300 F. 5, 9. Section 3 of the Harter Act
[
Footnote 3] was the grant of a
new immunity. Neither the vessel nor her owner was to be liable
thereafter for damage or loss resulting from faults or errors in
navigation or in management if the owner had complied with a
prescribed condition. The condition was that he must have exercised
due diligence to make the vessel in all respects seaworthy and
properly manned, equipped, and supplied. If that condition was not
fulfilled, there was liability for negligence in accordance with
the ancient rule. Release from liability for negligence when
effected by the act did not mean, however, that an obligation was
laid upon the cargo to contribute to general average.
The
Irrawaddy, 171 U. S. 187. To
create that obligation, there was need of an agreement. For a time,
there was doubt whether such an agreement, if made, would be
consistent with public policy. The doubt was dispelled by the
decision in
The Jason, supra.
"In our opinion, so far as the Harter act has relieved the
shipowner from responsibility for the negligence of his master and
crew, it is no longer against the policy of the law for
Page 290 U. S. 344
him to contract with the cargo owners for a participation in
general average contribution growing out of such negligence, and,
since the clause contained in the bills of lading of the
Jason's cargo admits the shipowner to share in the general
average only under circumstances where, by the act, he is relieved
from responsibility, the provision in question is valid, and
entitles him to contribution under the circumstances stated."
Ibid., p.
225 U. S.
55.
The
Isis being seaworthy when she broke ground in the
Pacific, the cargo was under a duty to contribute to the expenses
of the first stranding, which occurred as the result of faulty
navigation before the arrival of the ship at Bremen. Neither here
nor it the courts below has there been any contention to the
contrary. Whether a like duty existed in respect of the expenses of
the second stranding is not so easily determined. The only
negligence for which immunity is given by § 3 of the Harter
Act is negligence in the navigation or management of the ship.
The Carib Prince, 170 U. S. 655,
170 U. S.
661-662;
International Navigation Co. v. Farr &
Bailey Mfg. Co., 181 U. S. 218. If
the master of the
Isis had acted on his own responsibility
at Bremen in sending the vessel on, the fault would have been
negligence in management, or so we may assume. But that is not what
happened. The owner intervened by its marine superintendent, who
was sent from Hamburg to Bremen to inspect the disabled vessel and
determine what to do. He consulted with the master and others. The
decision in the end was his. This he tells us very frankly. If
reasonable diligence would have shown that the vessel was
unseaworthy when he sent her on her way, there was something more
than an error in navigation or management on the part of master or
of crew. There was a failure by an owner to fulfill the condition
on which immunity depended.
We do not forget that seaworthiness is determined, for many
purposes, according to the state of things existing at
Page 290 U. S. 345
the beginning of the voyage. This is true of a warranty of
seaworthiness in charter parties or in contracts of affreightment.
The Edwin I. Morrison, 153 U. S. 199,
153 U. S. 210;
The Caledonia, 43 F. 681, 685;
157 U. S. 157 U.S.
124,
157 U. S. 130;
Earle & Stoddart v. Ellerman's Wilson Line,
287 U. S. 420,
287 U. S. 426;
McFadden v. Blue Star Line, [1905] 1 K.B. 697, 703. It is
true of the like warranty in contracts of marine insurance.
Union Ins. Co. v. Smith, 124 U. S. 405,
124 U. S. 427;
Smith v. Northwestern Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 246 N.Y.
349, 359, 363-364, 159 N.E. 87. But the provisions of the Harter
Act relieving an owner from liability to the cargo for errors of
management of navigation do not charge him with a warranty. What
they say to him is this -- that, if he wishes the immunity, he may
have it, but only upon terms. He must do what in him lies by the
exertion of due diligence to make the vessel safe and sound. If the
management of the ship is in the hands of master and crew, he will
be relieved of liability for supervening losses, provided only that
his own duty has been fulfilled at the beginning. If the term of
management is over, and the ship is in his hands again, the duty is
renewed.
The question, then, is when management begins and ends. Iron
shutters are left open through the negligence of the crew while the
ship is in a heavy sea. Liability for the damage will not be
chargeable to the owner, for this is a fault of management.
The
Silvia, 171 U. S. 462.
Upon arrival at a port of call, the master is negligent in his
inspection of the ship or its equipment. Liability for the damage
will not be chargeable to the owner, for this again is a fault of
management.
The Steel Navigator, 23 F.2d 590;
The
Milwaukee Bridge, 26 F.2d 327, 330;
United States v. New
York & O. S.S. Co., 216 F. 61, 71;
Jay Wai Nam v.
Anglo-American Oil Co., 202 F. 822;
The Guadeloupe,
92 F. 670.
Cf. Carver on Carriage by Sea, 7th ed., §
103e, collating the decisions. Arrived at destination, the engineer
omits to close a valve, with resulting
Page 290 U. S. 346
damage to the cargo. Once more, liability for the damage will
not be chargeable to the owner, for this again is management.
The Wilderoft, 201 U. S. 378. One
has only to sketch these situations in order to perceive the gap
dividing them from that before us here. Here is a case where master
and crew have surrendered their management, and have made appeal to
the owner to resume control himself. Response to that appeal
destroys the continuity of the voyage, as if it were broken into
stages.
Cf. Arnould, Marine Insurance, 11th ed., vol. 2,
§§ 699-701;
Greenock S.S. Co. v. Maritime Ins.,
[1903] 2 K.B. 657. An owner intervening in such circumstances must
be diligent in inspection or forfeit his immunity. Negligence at
such a time is not the fault of servants employed to take the
owner's place for the period of a voyage. It is the fault of the
owner personally, exercising his own judgment to determine whether
the voyage shall go on.
The Waalhaven, 36 F.2d 706,
709.
2. Due diligence being necessary to make the ship seaworthy at
Bremen as well as at the Pacific ports, the second question to be
determined is whether due diligence was used.
The District Court and the Commissioner found that the
Isis, though crippled when she left the dock at Bremen,
was seaworthy with the aid of tugs for the voyage then before her.
Seaworthiness, it is well known, is a relative term.
The
Sagamore, 300 F. 701, 704; Carver, Carriage by Sea, 7th ed.,
§ 18, and cases cited; Arnould, Marine Insurance, 11th ed.,
§ 710. The Court of Appeals held the view, according to our
reading of the opinion, that the vessel with her rudder disabled
and defective was not so fitted for her voyage as to cast upon the
cargo the risk of faults of navigation.
The respondent, claiming the benefit of a conditional exemption,
has the burden of proof that the condition was fulfilled.
The
Southwark, 191 U. S. 1,
191 U. S. 12;
The Wildecroft,
Page 290 U. S. 347
supra, at
201 U. S. 386.
We are unwilling to say, in opposition to the finding of the Court
of Appeals, that the burden has been borne. The fact is undisputed
that the rudder, being disabled, was useless as an instrument to
control the movement of the vessel. There is evidence that, in
addition to being useless, it was positively harmful by reason of a
bend to starboard. These two defects together defeat the carrier's
endeavor to shift the risk upon the cargo.
The respondent insists that a vessel may be seaworthy though she
is navigated by tugs. No doubt that is true where the rudder is
capable of use. This is far from saying that the risk to the cargo
is not appreciably increased if the rudder is out of commission,
and so incapable of giving aid when an emergency arises. There is
no need to go beyond the pages of this record for proof that this
is so. Witnesses for the respondent tell us that a vessel with her
rudder lashed may be towed without risk if the speed of the tugs is
slow, less than seven kilometers an hour. They admit that useless
rudder becomes a source of danger if the speed of the tugs is
higher, seven kilometers or more. We turn to the findings of the
Commissioner approved by the District Court. From these it appears
that the
Isis was proceeding, when she sighted the
up-bound steamer, at a speed of more than eight kilometers an hour.
Not only that, but the Commissioner has found that she was
navigated at too high a speed and too close to the edge of the
channel, and that, because of these errors, she stranded a second
time. The speed and the place would in all likelihood have been
harmless if she had been navigating the river with her steering
gear in order. The carrier sent her forward with her steering gear
crippled when there was opportunity to make it sound. No doubt
there are occasions when owner and master are left without a
choice. The vessel may be disabled at a place where the making of
repairs is impossible or unreasonably difficult.
Page 290 U. S. 348
In such circumstances, she must go her way with such help as can
be gathered. Here, no emergency was present to excuse the decision
that was made. The carrier would have had no difficulty in making
the repairs at Bremen. The risks of navigation that are cast by
statute upon the owners of the cargo are those that remain after
the carrier has done his duty . They do not include risks that
would have been avoided or diminished if the vessel had gone out
with her equipment staunch and sound. A carrier who chooses for his
own purposes to send out a crippled ship, with needless enlargement
of the perils of navigation, will not receive exemption at the cost
of the owners of the cargo if the perils thus enlarged have brought
the ship upon the sands.
"When the owner accepts cargo in an unseaworthy ship, though the
defect be such as may be neutralized by care, he imposes on the
shipper an added risk -- not merely that his servants may fail,
insofar as she is sound and fit, but that they may neglect those
added precautions which her condition demands. That risk the
statute does not impose upon the shipper; he bears no loss until
the owner has done his best to remove all risks except those
inevitable upon the seas."
Learned Hand, J., in
The Elkton, 49 F.2d 700, 701.
The rudder, however, was not merely useless and disabled. By
reason of the bend of five degrees, it was positively harmful, at
least to some extent. Reichenbacher, the marine superintendent,
stated in his testimony that he would never have let the vessel
leave the dock at Bremen if he had known of the bend. Krueger, the
master, testified to the same effect. The Commissioner put aside
these admissions with the remark that the witnesses "overdid an
effort to establish a character for caution." He preferred to
accept the testimony of Capt. Davis, a tried and efficient wreck
master in the harbor of New York, who testified as an expert
without personal experience of the navigation of the Weser. Capt.
Davis
Page 290 U. S. 349
stated that a bend of fifteen degrees would surely have been
dangerous, that there would probably have been danger in a bend of
ten degrees, but that a bend of five degrees would not prevent the
ship from being under command, particularly if the ship was going
at a low speed. At the same time, he admitted that even a
five-degree bend would affected the ship to some extent, and that
it would be very important and valuable to know of its existence.
Such testimony is far from convincing in the face of the admissions
of the superintendent and the master, who had every motive to
present the case in the way most helpful to the owner. The argument
is pressed that, if the bend of five degrees had a tendency to
sheer the ship to starboard, the movement should have been felt
during the six miles traveled before the second stranding. We
follow the courts below in their finding that the sheering was not
observed, though there is evidence to the contrary. Even so, the
movement may have been so counteracted by the engines of the vessel
and the tugs that little heed was given it. In any event, the
significant fact remains that there is no finding by any court that
the bend in the rudder did not affect the steering of the
Isis at the moment of the stranding. The Commissioner
found that the vessel did not have any "marked tendency to sheer,"
and that, if such a tendency existed, the power of her engines and
the tugs was adequate to correct it. The Circuit Court of Appeals
held that the bend would not affect the steering "except to a
slight extent."
We think the cumulative effect of the evidence that the rudder
was disabled and that there was a bend of five degrees is to exact
of us a holding that the respondent has failed to sustain the
burden of establishing due diligence in making the ship seaworthy
for her voyage down the Weser.
3. If due diligence was not used in creating a seaworthy
condition, the third question to be determined is the need
Page 290 U. S. 350
of a causal relation between the defect and the ensuing
loss.
The District Court and the Court of Appeals, though at odds with
each other as to the seaworthy condition of the vessel when it left
the dock at Bremen, are at one in finding that the cause of the
stranding was faulty navigation.
Cf. Orient Mut. Ins. Co. v.
Adams, 123 U. S. 67,
123 U. S. 72;
Queen Ins. Co. v. Globe & Rutgers Fire Ins. Co.,
263 U. S. 487,
263 U. S. 492;
The Manitoba, 104 F. 145, 154-155.
Whether a shipowner who negligently omits to make his vessel
seaworthy may have the benefit, nonetheless, of § 3 of the
Harter Act if there is no causal relation between the defect and
the disaster is a question as to which the Circuit Courts of Appeal
in different circuits, and even at times in the same circuit, are
divided into opposing camps, though the discord in many instances
is the outcome of dicta, rather than decisions.
Favoring the view that the benefit of the act is lost without
reference to any causal relation between the defect and the
disaster are
The Elkton, supra, p. 701;
Louis-Dreyfus
& Co. v. Paterson Steamships, Ltd., 67 F.2d 331;
The
Willdomino, 300 F. 5, 10-11,
aff'd on other grounds
in
272 U. S. 272 U.S.
718;
The R. P. Fitzgerald, 212 F. 678; also the following
decisions of District Courts:
The River Meander, 209 F.
931, 937;
Merklen v. Johnson & Higgins, 3 F. Supp.
897;
The Indien, 1933 American Maritime Cases 1342.
Favoring the other view are
The Spartan, 47 F.2d 189, 192;
Rosenberg Bros. & Co. v. Atlantic Transport Co., 25
F.2d 739,
and cf. The Turret Crown, 284 F. 439, 444, 44;
The Thessaloniki, 267 F. 67, 70.
Page 290 U. S. 351
We think the rulings and dicta of the cases in the first group
are supported by the better reasons.
The statute, aided by the contract, gives the shipowner a
privilege upon his compliance with a condition. If he would have
the benefit of the privilege, he must taken it with the attendant
burden. There would be no end to complications and embarrassments
if the courts were to embark upon an inquiry as to the tendency of
an unseaworthy defect to aggravate the risk of careless navigation.
Little can be added on this point to what has been said so well by
Learned Hand, J., in a case already cited.
The Elkton,
supra. The barrier of the statute would be sufficient, if it
stood alone, to overcome the claim of privilege. It is reinforced,
however, by the barrier of contract. The Harter Act, as we have
seen, would not impose upon the cargo a duty to share in general
average contribution if the Jason clause or an equivalent were not
embodied in the bill of lading or contract of affreightment. The
owners of this cargo have stated the conditions on which they are
willing to come in and pay their share of the expenses. A court
should be very sure that the literal meaning is not the true one
before subtracting from conditions that are clear upon their
face.
We are told that the provisions of the Harter Act will lead to
absurdity and hardship if an unseaworthy condition is to take away
from the carrier an exemption from liability for the negligence of
its servants in the management of the vessel without a causal
relation between the defect and the disaster. Extreme illustrations
are set before us, as where there is a loose rivet in the deck, or
a crack in a hatch cover, or one less messboy than required.
Seaworthiness of the vessel becomes, it is said, a whimsical
condition if exemption is lost through defects so unsubstantial. We
assume for present purposes that the nature of the defects brought
forward as illustrations is
Page 290 U. S. 352
sufficient to condemn a vessel as unfitted for her voyage. Even
if that be so, the argument for the respondent loses sight of the
value of a uniform rule that will put an end to controversy where
the causal relation is uncertain or disputed. Particularly is there
need of such a test where the carrier asks to be relieved from
liability for conduct which, without the benefit of the statute,
would be an actionable wrong. The maritime law abounds in
illustrations of the forfeiture of a right or the loss of a
contract by reason of the unseaworthiness of a vessel, though the
unseaworthy feature is unrelated to the loss. The law reads into a
voyage policy of insurance a warranty that the vessel shall be
seaworthy for the purpose of the voyage. There are many cases to
the effect that, irrespective of any relation of cause and effect,
the breach of the warranty will vitiate the policy. What is implied
is a condition, and not merely a covenant, just as here there is
not a covenant, but a condition of exemption.
See Smith v.
Northwestern Fire & Marine Insurance Co., supra, at p.
363, summarizing the following decisions. Thus, in
DeHahn v.
Hartley (1786, 1 T.R. 343,
aff'd, 1787, 2 T.R. 186,
n), a vessel was insured on a slaving voyage, "at and from Africa
to her port or ports of discharge in the British West Indies," and
a memorandum was inserted in the margin of the policy that the
vessel had "sailed from Liverpool with fourteen six-pounders,
swivels, small arms and fifty hands or upwards copper-sheathed." It
appeared that the ship had actually sailed from Liverpool with only
forty-six men instead of fifty, but that, within twelve hours of
leaving Liverpool, she had taken on board at Beaumaris six
additional hands, and evidence was also given that the ship between
Liverpool and Beaumaris was quite as safe with forty-six men as she
would have been with fifty. The court unanimously held that the
policy was void
in toto. Arnould, Marine Ins. § 633.
Again. in
Forshaw v. Chabert (1821, 3 Brod. & B.
158,)
Page 290 U. S. 353
a policy was effected on a voyage "at and from Cuba to
Liverpool." The captain having lost some of his outward crew by
sickness and desertion at Cuba, and finding it impossible there to
engage ten men, his proper complement for Liverpool, sailed from
Cuba with only eight men engaged for Liverpool, and two for Montego
Bay (Jamaica), where he touched and landed the two men, and whence,
having procured others to supply their place, he proceeded on his
voyage to Liverpool. The court held,
inter alia, that the
ship was not seaworthy when she sailed from Cuba for a voyage to
Liverpool, as she ought then to have had on board a full complement
of men engaged for the whole voyage. Arnould, Marine Ins. §
723. Again in
Queen Marine Ins. Co. v. Commercial Bank of
Canada (1870, L.R. 3 P.C. 234), a vessel, covered by a voyage
policy, left port with a defective boiler. She stopped at an
intermediate port, where the boiler was repaired. A loss occurred
thereafter. The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council held, after
a full review of the authorities, that the underwriters were
discharged by force of the breach of warranty at the inception of
the voyage. [
Footnote 4]
The distinction is apparent between suits such as this, where
the unseaworthiness of a vessel is merely a condition of exemption,
and suits where the unseaworthiness of a vessel is the basis of a
suit for damages. In cases of the latter order, there can be no
recovery of damages in the absence of a causal relation between the
loss and the defect.
Page 290 U. S. 354
The Malcolm Baxter, Jr., 277 U.
S. 323,
277 U. S. 333;
The Francis Wright, 105 U. S. 381,
105 U. S. 387.
"If the unseaworthiness was not the proximate cause of the loss, it
is not contended the vessel can be charged with the damages."
The Francis Wright, supra. Unseaworthiness viewed as a
condition of exemption stands upon a different footing from
unseaworthiness viewed as the subject of a covenant.
We are thus brought to the conclusion that the shipowner was not
relieved by the Harter Act from the negligence of the pilot in the
navigation of the vessel, and that, for like reasons, the cargo
owners are not chargeable with general average contributions.
The decree is reversed, and the cause remanded for further
proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS and MR. JUSTICE BUTLER think that the
court below was right, and that its decree should be affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
We have assumed for present purposes that the bend was the
result of the first stranding, and not the second. This is in
accordance, it seems, with the opinion of the Court of Appeals. The
Commissioner who heard the witnesses found that the evidence was
too evenly balanced to enable him to make a finding either way.
Since the burden of proof was on the respondent to make out its
claim for exemption, the effect is the same as if the finding were
against it. The Commissioner did find that the bend, if it existed,
could have been discovered by the exercise of reasonable care.
[
Footnote 2]
"General Average shall be payable in accordance with
York-Antwerp Rules 1890 and at carrier's option as to matters not
therein provided for in accordance with the laws and customs of the
port of New York. All General Average statements shall be prepared
at the vessel's final port of discharge or elsewhere, at the
carrier's option. If the carrier shall have exercised due diligence
to make the vessel in all respects seaworthy and to have her
properly manned, equipped, and supplied, it is hereby agreed that,
in case of danger, damage, or disaster resulting from fault or
error in navigation or in the management of the vessel, or from any
latent or other defect in the vessel or machinery or appurtenances,
or from unseaworthiness, although existing at the time of shipment
or at the beginning of the voyage (provided the defect or
unseaworthiness was not discoverable by the exercise of due
diligence), the shippers, consignees, or owners of the cargo shall
nevertheless pay salvage and any special charges incurred in
respect to the cargo, and shall contribute with the carrier in
General Average to the payment of any sacrifices, losses, or
expenses of a General Average nature that may be made or incurred
for the common benefit or to relieve the adventure from any common
peril."
[
Footnote 3]
"Limitation of Liability for Errors of Navigation, Dangers of
the Sea and Acts of God. If the owner of any vessel transporting
merchandise or property to or from any port in the United States of
America shall exercise due diligence to make the said vessel in all
respects seaworthy and properly manned, equipped, and supplied,
neither the vessel, her owner or owners, agent, or charterers,
shall become or be held responsible for damage or loss resulting
from faults or errors in navigation or in the management of said
vessel, nor shall the vessel, her owner or owners, charterers,
agent, or master be held liable for losses arising from dangers of
the sea or other navigable waters, acts of God, or public enemies,
or the inherent defect, quality, or vice of the thing carried, or
from insufficiency of package, or seizure under legal process, or
for loss resulting from any act or omission of the shipper or owner
of the goods, his agent or representative, or from saving or
attempting to save life or property at sea, or from any deviation
in rendering such service."
[
Footnote 4]
Compare the decisions discharging insurers where there
has been a wrongful deviation, irrespective of resulting damage:
Fernandez v. Great Western Ins. Co., 48 N.Y. 571, 8 Am.Rep.
571; Snyder v. Atlantic Mut. Ins. Co., 95 N.Y. 196;
Burgess v. Equitable Marine Ins. Co., 126 Mass. 70, and
relieving cargo owners in like circumstances from exemptions in
bills of lading that would otherwise be binding:
Joseph
Thorley, Ltd. v. Orchis S.S. Co., Ltd., [1907] 1 K.B. 660;
Foscolo Mango & Co., Ltd. v. Stag Line, Ltd., [1931] 2
K.B. 48,
aff'd sub nom. Stag Line, Ltd. v. Foscolo, Mango &
Co., Ltd., [1932] A.C. 328.
The Malcolm Baxter, Jr.,
277 U. S. 323,
277 U. S.
332.