The rules of pleading in admiralty must be strictly complied
with. The evidence and arguments confined to the points put in
issue by the allegations of the libel and denial of the answer.
Where the allegation of a libel was that a cargo of soap had
been injured by bad stowage, and by negligence of the captain that
he had allowed the seams of the deck to be in an open and leaking
condition, by which water had passed through them upon the soap,
the evidence shows that the cargo was not injured by bad stowage or
leaking from the deck.
The injury to the cargo was caused by the sweat of the ship, her
rocking, the nature of the compound of soap, and its long agitation
in the boxes, to which it had been subjected in a boisterous
passage.
The rule is well established that a consignee may sue in a court
of admiralty, either in his own name, as agent, or in the name of
his principal, as he thinks best.
Page 62 U. S. 344
The facts of the case are stated in the opinion of the
Court.
Page 62 U. S. 345
MR. JUSTICE WAYNE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is the case of a foreign vessel having been libeled in a
port of the United States when about to leave it, her master having
refused to pay for the damage said to have been sustained on a
shipment of soap, made at Liverpool, to be carried to San
Francisco, California, via Honolulu. The shipment was made by
Matthew Steele & Son. It was said in the bill of lading to be
in good order and condition, and the undertaking was to deliver it
so to Messrs. McKinlay, Garriock & Co., or to their
assigns.
The consignees libeled the ship, alleging that though they were
always willing to receive the shipment in good order, the master of
the ship had not made it, and that they had refused to receive it
on account of the injury it had sustained from a want of proper
care in loading, storing, landing, re-landing, and re-storing the
soap, and owing to the careless, negligent, and improper manner of
storing it under the deck of the ship, which was open and leaky,
through which water passed, and damaged it to the amount of nine
thousand five hundred dollars.
The respondent meets the charges by a direct denial of them,
averring if the soap had been in any way injured, it may have been
from causes beyond his control by any care whatever, and should be
attributed to causes or perils excepted to, as they were expressed
in the bill of lading,
viz., "all and every danger and
accident of the seas and navigation of whatsoever nature." The
respondent also declares that his ship was, at the time of her
sailing from Liverpool, in good, tight, and strong condition, well
manned, and that her cargo was well dunnaged and stowed; but that,
in the course of the passage to Honolulu, she encountered heavy
storms and gales, which strained and caused her to leak, and had
compelled him to throw overboard a part of the cargo, for the
preservation of the rest of it, and of the vessel; and that during
the passage
Page 62 U. S. 346
he had used every precaution to preserve the cargo that was
within
his power and that of his officers and crew.
The libel and answer are directly at issue, and no answer can be
made more responsively to the charges in a bill than this is.
Accordingly, then, to the rules of pleading in admiralty, there
is no necessity for doing so; nor are we permitted to consider much
of the testimony in this record. When litigants make their case in
express allegations and by express denials of them, and then
introduce testimony inapplicable to the issues they have made, it
is not a part of the case unless as it shall inferentially bear
upon other evidence properly in it, upon which the parties rely for
the determination of their controversy. This case furnishes as apt
an illustration of the rule just mentioned as can be given. The
libellants put their case upon bad and careless stowage &c., of
the soap, and upon leaks in the deck of the ship, through which
water passed and damaged it. The respondent denies both, but he
goes on to state that his ship was tight and strong for the voyage
when he left Liverpool, and both parties question the witnesses as
to that fact, though the libellants had not charged that their
goods had been injured from that cause and had not put in issue at
all the soundness and seaworthiness of the ship for the voyage she
was about to make. This same point of pleading was before this
Court in the case of
Lawrence v.
Minturn, 17 How. 100,
58 U. S.
110-111, which was as learnedly argued, and as
deliberately decided, as any other case in admiralty has been in
our time. This Court then said:
"We find the conduct of the master in making the jettison to
have been lawful, and the remaining inquiry is whether the
necessity for it is to be attributed to any fault on the part of
the master or owners. The libel alleges the loss of the goods to
have been through the mere carelessness, just as the libel in this
case does, and misconduct of the master and mariners. We were at
first inclined to the opinion that this allegation is not broad
enough to put in issue what the libellants have at the hearing so
much insisted upon, and what we think is the main question in this
part of the case,
the sufficiency of the ship to carry the
cargo. It
Page 62 U. S. 347
is no doubt the general rule that the owner warrants his ship to
be seaworthy for the voyage with the cargo contracted for. But a
breach of this implied contract of the owner does not amount to
negligence or want of skill of the master and mariners. There would
be much difficulty, therefore, in maintaining as a general
proposition that an allegation of negligence of the master would
let in the libellant to prove unseaworthiness of the vessel."
And in the next paragraph of that opinion,
58 U.
S. it will be seen that the rule of pleading in such
cases was not enforced only upon the ground that the inquiry in
that case necessarily led to an examination whether the
jettison was occasioned by the negligence of the master in
overloading the ship.
It was a nice distinction, but a true one, and it will have its
influence hereafter upon other cases having the same difficulties
as that had. It has been adverted to, to warn the profession that
the irregularities of pleading in admiralty, now too frequently
occurring, have attracted our attention, and will be treated
hereafter according to the rules and practice for pleadings and
proofs in admiralty cases. Without doing so, the jurisdiction of
admiralty may often be practically extended to controversies not
belonging to it, and though that may be inadvertently done, it will
not be the less mischievous.
With this rule in view, we will not examine much of the
testimony in the case before us, though it was made much of the
argument of the respective counsel representing the parties. It
excludes from the merits of the case all in the record relating to
the storm in the Bay of Biscay, the leak which it caused, and the
repair of it. Both parties have treated it, by their pleadings, as
having in no way caused any damage to the soap; also, the storm
which afterwards tried the seaworthiness of the ship to the utmost
when she was weathering Cape Horn, without any diminution of it
except so far as to inquire if it could have been that the seas
which she then shipped had damaged the soap, by the water passing
through the seams of a deck imperfectly caulked. And we exclude
also all that testimony made up of the opinions of supposed experts
in regard to the causes of the alteration in the quality of the
soap, excepting
Page 62 U. S. 348
such of them as are sustained by facts which have the character
of legal proof.
By treating the case in this way, the controversy becomes
exclusively one upon the alleged want of proper care in stowing
&c., the soap, and upon the charge made against the captain of
the ship that he had negligently allowed the seams of her deck to
be in an open and leaking condition, by which water had passed
through them upon the soap.
Our examination of the case has been made accordingly. It will
be found to coincide with the admissions made in his argument by
the learned counsel of the appellants. Two of his points were that
the injury or change in the quality of the soap was not owing to
the effects of the gale occurring in the Bay of Biscay shortly
after the ship left Liverpool, though it had produced a leak; next,
that the heavy weather on the passage around Cape Horn did not
produce any leak nor do any injury to the tightness of the ship,
reserving, however, the charge that the water which she then
shipped had passed through the leaks in her deck, and damaged the
soap. Then, after stating other propositions of obligation upon the
ship, before she could be released from liability, and omissions of
duty by the captain, and the proofs which were necessary to excuse
them, which he contended had not been made, the case was put
altogether upon bad stowage, and the leaks in the deck, as both had
been alleged in the libel.
First as to the stowage. Two witnesses were examined, both of
them professing to know how soap in boxes should be stowed for a
long passage. They say that the stowage was improper on account of
the boxes' having been placed or piled in tiers in one part of the
ship, and that they were stowed up to the main deck, and not
chocked. One of them added that regard should be had, in stowing,
to the nature of the goods to be stowed; that soap should not be
stowed in so solid a bulk as this was, but should have been
distributed more over the ship. Waterman, another witness, who had
never seen the ship, and of course knew nothing of the stowage,
merely said that soap stowed twenty-five tiers deep, he should
think was badly stowed, and would be apt to be injured. Such is
the
Page 62 U. S. 349
whole of the testimony to prove bad stowage in this case, unless
the opinions of other witnesses, expressed in the course of their
examination, without any facts having been given by them to sustain
their opinions, are taken as evidence. On the other hand,
Nicholson, a man of more than thirty years' experience as a
nautical man, who visited the ship by the invitation of the port
warden to examine the soap and who went into the hold for that
purpose, says, in answer to the question,
"How was the cargo stowed? Some of the boxes appears to me to be
re-stowed. I do not think the upper part was the original stowage.
There were a great number of them in sight, and the cargo seemed to
me to be very well stowed."
Noyes, who was called upon as port warden to survey the ship and
two days afterwards to survey the cargo, says the soap was stowed
in the after part of the ship, abaft the after hatch. It was all
stowed together, and well stowed. Then Lowry, the stevedore who
discharged the cargo of the ship, who saw her hatches opened, says
the soap was well stowed.
There are differences between the witnesses as to the stowage of
the soap, but not contradictory assertions. As to credit, they
stand alike. But there is a distinction in their declarations
which, with us, is conclusive. The three first named speak of the
manner of stowage, with reference to the effect which might be
produced upon soap in boxes, stowed in a vessel in tiers, as these
boxes were. Without a word of proof from themselves, or from anyone
else, or from Mr. McCulloch, the chemist, who was called upon by
the libellants to analyze the soap as it them was, to show the
correctness of the apprehension or opinion of the witnesses, that,
from the composition of soap, it was liable to deterioration from
being stowed in a mass in the hold of a vessel, and without any
evidence that it was customary to stow soap, in boxes, differently.
The other three witnesses speak of it as a nautical stowage, and,
without any qualification, say that the soap was well stowed. Our
conclusion is that the soap was not injured as a consequence from
having been stowed as it was.
We proceed to the consideration of the second charge in the
libel. It is also an imputation of negligence upon the captain
Page 62 U. S. 350
of the ship. It is that the soap had been injured by the deck
having been allowed by him to remain in an open and leaking
condition, whereby the water thrown or falling on it passed through
upon the soap beneath. It is indefinite as to the time when the
leaking of the deck occurred, and uncertain as to the extent of it,
but determinate enough to suggest the kind and quantity of
testimony which is necessary to sustain such charge in the
circumstances under which it has been made. The seaworthiness of
the ship when she began the voyage not having been questioned in
the libel, it must be taken that she was tight in her deck when she
left Liverpool, and if she became otherwise afterwards, that it
must have occurred when she was at sea. There is no direct proof of
it in the record, nor any cause, from tempest or storm, from which
such an injury to the ship can be presumed. The burden of proof of
such an allegation is upon the libellants, and the testimony to
sustain it must be positive, or so violently presumptive as to be
sufficient, by the rules of evidence, to supply the want of direct
proof. Here there is no proof, positive or presumptive, when,
where, or from what cause the leaking of the deck happened or had
been made. None that it had been or might have been occasioned by
any straining of the ship from the storms which she had encountered
on her passage. Indeed, that is disclaimed. None that the oakum
with which her decks were caulked had washed out of the seams of
it, or that it had shrunk so as to leave them open. And it was only
suggested that they were opened by the heat of a long summer
passage, and that they could have been recaulked after.
The suggestion is in opposition to the proofs in the case. The
ship sailed from Liverpool on the 26th of September, stanch and
tight, and arrived at Valparaiso on the 26th or the 27th of January
following, just four months and a day from the time of her sailing.
The slight injuries which she suffered from the storm in the Bay of
Biscay and those encountered off Cape Horn were repaired at
Valparaiso. Thence she went to Honolulu, on the 28th of February,
where she was twenty-four days, and caulked there her topsides and
waterways, and she arrived at San Francisco on the 7th June, having
had fine
Page 62 U. S. 351
weather all the way from Valparaiso. But it is proved that the
soap could not have been injured from any leaks in her topsides or
waterways, as the tiers of boxes next to them on either side were
in a better condition than those which had been piled further off.
These dates show that the ship had not a longer passage to
Valparaiso than is usual at the time of year when she was making
it; also that it had been made through different latitudes without
encountering any great continuous heats -- certainly not such as
could have had the effect to displace or shrink the caulking of the
deck into leaking, which is not denied to have been good and tight
when the ship left Liverpool. It is not probable that such an
exposure for so short a time had forced her deck seams. Besides, it
has not been shown by any reliable testimony that there had been,
at any time when the ship was on her way to Valparaiso, any leaking
from her deck, or any such afterwards until her arrival in San
Francisco, from which by any possibility the soap could have been
injured in the way and to the extent it was represented to have
been by some of the witnesses, who expressed the opinion that there
had been leaks in the deck of the ship, through which salt water
had leaked upon the soap. Indeed, it appears to us that all of the
witnesses who said so, did it rather by way of inference from the
caulking which another witness said had been done to the ship, and
from the condition in which the soap was, than from an examination
of the ship. The witness Goodsell, more relied upon than any other
witness to prove the leaks in the deck, does not do so
satisfactorily from the usual examination made by shipwrights when
they are called upon to ascertain such a fact. He says:
"I found the poop-deck, lately caulked, leaking on larboard side
-- six on starboard and one seam about half on the starboard side,
to main deck. I
should think that the waterway seams,
plank-shear seams, and one or two seams inside to main deck, or
main deck,
looked as if water had run down into the hold
of the ship on both sides."
He adds he went into the hold of the ship and examined the under
part of the deck.
"I saw
indications of the deck's having leaked in the
wake of the seams I have been speaking of;
they looked as
if they had leaked
Page 62 U. S. 352
all along, but more abaft than forward of the main deck."
This is very uncertain testimony -- more of opinion than fact in
it, even as to the caulking of which he speaks, and the result of
all that he says concerning the seams below the deck, has more of
inspection in it than of examination. The difference between them
will readily be recognized from the positive language of two other
witnesses, who say they examined the seams of the deck below with
their knives and found them hard, one of them adding it is
impossible for a man to tell, after two or three weeks, whether a
vessel is newly caulked, without trying her seams. Lowry, the
stevedore who discharged the cargo, upon being asked if he had seen
any traces of salt water in the top of the boxes of the soap or on
the ceiling of the deck, answers that he had not, but that he saw
some places marked with chalk by some persons; that he tried them
with his knife, and found them perfectly tight. Such is the
testimony in the case, concerning the charge in the libel that the
soap had been damaged by leaks in the deck of the ship, which her
captain had neglected to have caulked. In our opinion it is
altogether insufficient. Noyes, the port warden, who surveyed the
ship, says he could find no leaks over or above where the soap was
that he could discover. He also saw no traces of the deck's having
been recently caulked. Indeed there is not a witness who has said
that there were leaks in the deck. Several express the opinion that
there were, from the discoloration of the boxes on them outside and
from that of the soap in them. Goodsell ventures further than any
other witness to cause such an impression, but his language is, "I
should think," and it "looked" to him as if water had run down into
the hold from the waterway seams, the plank-shear seams, and one or
two seams inside, to deck or main deck. This conjectural way of
speaking by a witness must yield to the positive declarations of
Nicholson, Lowry, and Noyes.
Having determined that the soap had not been injured by bad
stowage or leaking from the deck, we will now briefly state to what
causes its altered condition should be attributed. We have
concluded that its discoloration and dampness are to be found in
the acknowledged facts and proofs in the cause. The
Page 62 U. S. 353
shipment was made at Liverpool on the 21st June, and was on
board of the ship for a year, less fourteen days. After the
shipment and stowage, the ship remained all of the summer at the
dock in Liverpool. She sailed on the 26th of September. From that
time, the ship's hatches were closed until her arrival at Honolulu
in February. They were then opened for the purpose of discharging a
part of the cargo which had been shipped for Honolulu. To do that,
it was necessary to remove about three hundred boxes of the soap
from their stowage and to land them. They were taken to the ship,
re-stowed as they had been at first, and it does not appear by any
evidence that it had been perceived at Honolulu by anyone that this
upper tier so removed had been injured or that the boxes had then
any appearance of water having leaked upon them. The ship sailed
from Honolulu and arrived at San Francisco on the 7th June. From
the day of her sailing, the 26th September, she was at no time
within such a temperature of heat as would of itself have impaired
the quality of the soap. From England, in 10� north of the
equator, the average temperature from the time of her sailing is
62�. Ten degrees north and south of the equator, the average
temperature for the months of September and October is
81�.
The average temperature is November is about 41�, and
that of Valparaiso is about 62�. These averages of
temperature are taken from the most approved charts, and are
decisive that the soap has not been injured by the temperatures
through which the ship passed on her passage to Valparaiso. From
that port the ship came to Honolulu, a distance not much short of
six thousand miles, in the most favorable weather, without
encountering heavy seas or headwinds. She made that distance in the
usual time, forty-five of fifty days. Honolulu is in the latitude
of 21�19' north, longitude 157�52' west. Nor are the
temperatures such between Valparaiso and Honolulu as could have
produced any change in the condition of the soap. From Honolulu,
the usual run to San Francisco is from fifteen to twenty days. As a
general rule, the course of ships bound from the first to San
Francisco would be to the northward of it, to be sure of good
winds. In the absence, then, of other
Page 62 U. S. 354
probable causes, to account for the change in the quality of the
soap, we must resort to the proofs on the record, and from them we
have concluded that the soap was injured by the temperature of the
ship's hold, or what is called the sweat of the ship, which no mode
of ventilation consistent with safe navigation has yet been thought
sufficient to prevent. In this particular the ship was not more
liable from defective construction to this vapor than merchant
vessels ordinarily are. Her hatchways were good, the covers for
them are not complained of, her hatch-bars and tarpaulins were
sufficient, or they are not denied to have been so; and it has not
been suggested that they were not all applied to cover the
hatchways, and to protect the cargo from sea water and rain. Nor is
this sweat in ships any mystery to practical seamen. They term it
to be vapor emitted from the mixed cargoes of ships by the heat of
the hold of a ship, cast off sometimes only in fumes, at other
times in steam, which shows itself in the latter case sometimes in
drops of water in the same way as rain is produced from vapor.
Several of the witnesses -- all of them were accustomed to the sea
-- say that the sweat of this vessel caused the discoloration of
this soap. Besides, it was a second-class article, differing
originally in color from a first-rate article of the same kind. It
is true that the chemist who analyzed it says that it had been made
of good materials, and was well saponified, and he says that sweat
is a mere evolution of water in a state of vapor, and that the
boxes could not have been stained in that way, and that they were
stained by some external means. But the proofs in the case show
that there was no leakage in the deck by which water could have
passed upon them; it must yield to the declarations of those
witnesses better acquainted than he is, from their professional
acquaintance with the effects of the sweat of the soap upon these
cases. We unhesitatingly ascribe the discoloration and dampness of
the soap to the rocking of the ship, the nature of the compound of
soap, and to the long agitation of the soap in the boxes to which
it had been subjected in a boisterous passage. The devaporation of
water from the vapor of the soap itself, with which it is cleansed
in the making, heated by the sweat of the ship, would be
concentrated
Page 62 U. S. 355
in the boxes upon the soap, and would discolor it and make it
damp without any sensible diminution of its weight, and we are
confirmed in this conclusion by the witnesses who examined and
weighed it, having testified that the boxes were of the same weight
marked upon them when they were shipped at Liverpool.
We feel bound to notice one point made in the argument of the
cause by the counsel of the appellees, which is not an open
question in this Court. It was that the appellants had no legal
title to maintain their libel. In the case of
Houseman
v. Schooner "North Carolina," 15 Pet. 49, the same
objection was made. This Court said:
"An objection has been taken to the right of the appellee to sue
in his own name, as agent for the consignees, or to sue at all, as
his power of attorney from them bears date after the libel was
filed, and it is also objected, that J. & C. Lawton, the
consignees, had no right to institute proceedings to recover more
than their proportion of the cargo shipped on their own account. No
authority has been produced in support of these objections, and we
consider it as well settled in admiralty proceedings that the agent
of absent owners may libel, either in his own name as agent or in
the name of his principals, as he thinks best; that the power of
attorney, subsequent to the libel, is a sufficient ratification of
what he had done in their behalf, and that the consignees have such
an interest in the whole cargo that they may proceed in this case
not only for what belonged to them and was shipped on their
account, but for that portion also which was shipped by Porter as
his own and consigned to them."
The same conclusion was repeated in 17 How.,
Lawrence and
Minturn, without any qualification, as we understand that
case. In the first as well as in the second of these cases, the
point was put on the interest which a consignee has in the
consignment, as consignee, and not as owner of any part of it;
that, from the nature of the contract of a bill of lading, the
consignee had a right to sue in a court of admiralty for any breach
of it. Whatever may be the uncertainty concerning the consignee's
right to sue in a court of law, from the conflicting decisions to
be found upon that right, there are none that he may sue in a court
of admiralty in the United States.
Page 62 U. S. 356
When that case, however, occurs in this Court, it will be
decided, and we now merely remark that from our examination of most
of the cases in the common law reports, upon the facts of those
cases, we have been brought to the conclusion that there is no rule
of general application as to when the consignor or consignee should
bring the suit at common law, but that it will always be important
to consider in whom the right of property, and sometimes in whom
the right of possession, was vested at the time of the breach of
the contract or neglect of duty which is complained of.
We direct the affirmance of the decree from which this
appeal was taken.
MR. JUSTICE NELSON dissented.