At Mobile, it is necessary for a vessel drawing much water to
lie outside of the bar and have her cargo brought to her by
lighters.
The usage is for the lighterman to be engaged and paid by the
captain of the vessel, to give his receipt to the factor for the
cotton, and to take a receipt from the captain when he delivers it
on board of the vessel.
Where a lighterman, thus employed, was conveying bales of cotton
to a vessel lying outside of the bar, but before they were put on
board, an explosion of the boiler threw the bales into the water,
by which the cotton was damaged; the vessel was held responsible
for the loss upon being libeled in a court of admiralty, the master
having included these bales in the bills of lading which he
signed.
The delivery of the cotton to the lighterman was a delivery to
the master, and the transportation by the lighter to the vessel the
commencement of the voyage, in execution of the contract by which
the master had engaged to carry the cotton to Boston. When
delivered by the shipper and accepted by the master at the place of
shipment, the rights and obligations of both parties became
fixed.
The cases in this Court and in England examined.
The facts of the case are stated in the opinion of the
Court.
Page 65 U. S. 389
MR. JUSTICE NELSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The libel in the court below was against the barque
Edwin to recover damages for the nondelivery of a portion
of a shipment of cotton from the port of Mobile to Boston. The
facts upon which the question in this case depends are found in the
record as agreed upon by the proctors, both in the district and
circuit courts, and upon which both courts decreed for the
libellant.
From this agreed state of facts, it appears that the master of
the vessel, which was then lying at the port of Mobile, agreed to
carry for the libellant 707 bales of cotton from that port to
Boston for certain freight mentioned in the bills of lading.
The condition of the Bay of Mobile, which is somewhat peculiar,
becomes material to a proper understanding of the question in this
case.
Page 65 U. S. 390
Vessels of a large size and drawing over a given depth of water
cannot pass the bar in the bay, which is situate a considerable
distance below the city. Their cargo is brought to them in lighters
from the city over the bar, and then laden on board the vessels.
Vessels which, from their light draft, can pass the bar in ballast,
go up to the city and take on board as much of their cargoes as is
practicable and at the same time allow them to repass it on their
return, and are then towed below the bar, and the residue of their
load is brought down by lighters and put on board.
In either case, when the vessel is ready to receive cargo below
the bar, the master gives notice of the fact to the consignor or
broker through whom the freight is engaged, and provides, at the
expense of the ship, a lighter for the conveyance of the goods. The
lighterman applies to the consignor or broker, and takes an order
for the cargo to be delivered, receives it, and gives his own
receipt for the same. On delivering the cargo on board the vessel
below the bar, he takes a receipt from the mate or proper officer
in charge.
The usual bills of lading are subsequently signed by the master
and delivered.
In the present case, the barque
Edwin received the
principal part of her cargo at the city and was then towed down
below the bar to receive the residue. The master employed the
steamer
M. Streck for this purpose, and 100 bales were
laden on board of her at the city to be taken down to complete her
load, and for which the master of the lighter gave a receipt; after
she had passed the bar and had arrived at the side of the barque,
but before any part of the 100 bales was taken out, her boiler
exploded, in consequence of which the 100 bales were thrown into
the water and the lighter sunk. Fourteen of the bales were picked
up by the crew of the vessel, and brought to Boston with the 607
bales on board. Eighty bales were also picked up by other persons,
wet and damaged, and were surveyed and sold; four remain in the
hands of the ship broker at Mobile for account of whom it may
concern; two were lost.
The master of the barque signed bills of lading, including
Page 65 U. S. 391
the 100 bales, being advised that he was bound to do so and that
if he refused, his vessel would be arrested and detained. On her
arrival at Boston, the master delivered the 607 bales to the
consignees and tendered the fourteen, which were refused.
A question has been made on the argument whether or not the
libellant could recover upon the undertaking in the bills of
lading, they having been signed under the circumstances stated, or
must resort to the original contract of affreightment between the
master and the shipper. The articles in the libel place the right
to damages upon both grounds. The view the Court has taken of the
case supersedes the necessity of noticing this distinction.
The Court is of opinion that the vessel was bound for the safe
shipment of the whole of the 707 bales of cotton, the quantity
contracted to be carried, from the time of their delivery by the
shipper at the City of Mobile and acceptance by the master, and
that the delivery of the hundred bales to the lighterman was a
delivery to the master, and the transportation by the lighter to
the vessel the commencement of the voyage in execution of the
contract, the same, in judgment of law, as if the hundred bales had
been placed on board of the vessel at the city instead of the
lighter. The lighter was simply a substitute for the barque for
this portion of the service. The contract of affreightment of the
cotton was a contract for its transportation from the City of
Mobile to Boston, covering a voyage between these termini, and when
delivered by the shipper and accepted by the master at the place of
shipment, the rights and obligations of both parties became fixed
-- the one entitled to all the privileges secured to the owner of
cargo for its safe transportation and delivery; the other, the
right to his freight on the completion of the voyage, as recognized
by principles and usages of the maritime law.
The true meaning of the contract before us cannot be mistaken,
and is in perfect harmony with the acts of the master in
furtherance of its execution.
Both parties understood that the cotton was to be delivered to
the carrier for shipment at the wharf in the city and to be
transported thence to the port of discharge. After the delivery
Page 65 U. S. 392
and acceptance at the place of shipment, the shipper had no
longer any control over the property except as subject to the
stipulated freight.
The contract as thus explained being made by the master in the
course of the usual employment of the vessel, and in respect to
which he is the general agent of the owner, it would seem to
follow, upon the settled principles of admiralty law, which binds
the vessel to the cargo, and the cargo to the vessel, for the
performance of the undertaking, that the ship in the present case
is liable for the loss of the hundred bales the same as any other
portion of the cargo.
It is insisted, however, that the vessel is exempt from
responsibility upon the ground that the one hundred bales were
never laden on board of her, and we are referred to several cases
in this Court and in England in support of the position.
59 U. S. 18
How. 189;
60 U. S. 19 How.
90, and 2 Eng.L. and Eq. 337;
Grant v. Norway, 18 Eng.C.L.
& Eq. 561; 29
id. 323. But it will be seen on
reference to these cases the doctrine was applied or asserted upon
a state of facts wholly different from those in the present case.
In the cases where the point was ruled, the goods were not only not
laden on board the vessel, but they never had been delivered to the
master. There was no contract of affreightment binding between the
parties, as there had been no fulfillment on the part of the
shipper -- namely the delivery of the cargo.
It was conceded no suit could have been maintained upon the
original contract either against the owner or the vessel, but as
the bill of lading had been signed by the master in which he
admitted that the goods were on board, the question presented was
whether or not the admission was not conclusive against the owner
and the vessel, the bill of lading having passed into the hands of
a
bona fide holder for value.
The court, on looking into the nature and character of the
authority of the master and the limitations annexed to it by the
usages and principles of law and the general practice of
shipmasters, held that the master not only had no general authority
to sign the bill of lading and admit the goods on board when
contrary to the fact, but that a third party taking the
Page 65 U. S. 393
bill was chargeable with notice of the limitation and took it
subject to any infirmity in the contract growing out of it.
The first time the question arose in England and was determined
was in the case of
Grant v. Norway in the Common Pleas,
1851, and was in reference to the state of facts existing in this
and like cases, and in connection with the principles involved in
its determination, that the court said the master had no authority
to sign the bill of lading unless the goods had been shipped --
cases in which there had been no delivery of the goods to the
master, no contract binding upon the owner or the ship, no freight
to be carried, and, in truth, where the whole transaction rested
upon simulated bills of lading, signed by the master in fraud of
his owners.
In the present case, the cargo was delivered in pursuance of the
contract, the goods in the custody of the master, and subject to
his lien for freight, as effectually as if they had been upon the
deck of the ship, the contract confessedly binding both the owner
and the shipper, and unless it be held that the latter is entitled
to his lien upon the vessel also, he is deprived of one of the
privileges of the contract, when at the same time the owner is in
the full enjoyment of all those belonging to his side of it.
The argument urged against this lien of the shipper seems to go
the length of maintaining that in order to uphold it, there must be
a physical connection between the cargo and the vessel, and that
the form of expression in the cases referred to is not to be taken
in the connection and with reference to the facts of the particular
case, but in a general sense, and as applicable to every case
involving the liability of the ship for the safe transportation and
delivery of the cargo. But this is obviously too narrow and limited
a view of the liability of the vessel. There is no necessary
physical connection between the cargo and the ship, as a foundation
upon which to rest this liability. The unlading of the vessel at
the port of discharge, upon the wharf, or even the deposit of the
goods in the warehouse, does not discharge the lien, unless the
delivery is to the consignee of the cargo, within the meaning of
the bill of lading,
Page 65 U. S. 394
and we do not see why the lien may not attach, when the cargo is
delivered to the master for shipment before it reaches the hold of
the vessel, as consistently and with as much reason as the
continuance of it after separation from the vessel, and placed upon
the wharf, or within the warehouse. In both instances the cargo is
in the custody of the master, and in the act of conveyance in the
execution of the contract of affreightment. We must look to the
substance and good sense of the transaction; to the contract, as
understood and intended by the parties, and as explained by its
terms, and the attending circumstances out of which it arose, and
to the grounds and reasons of the rules of law upon the application
of which their duties and obligations are to be ascertained, in
order to determine the scope and extent of them; and, in this view,
we think no well founded distinction can be made, as to the
liability of the owner and vessel, between the case of the delivery
of the goods into the hands of the master at the wharf, for
transportation on board of a particular ship, in pursuance of the
contract of affreightment, and the case as made, after the lading
of the goods upon the deck of the vessel; the one a constructive,
the other an actual possession; the former, the same as if the
goods had been carried to the vessel by her boats, instead of the
vessel going herself to the wharf.
The decree of the could below affirmed.