1. A bill of lading in which the carrier acknowledges that the
goods have been received by him in good order is
prima
facie evidence of that fact, but if a loss occurs, he is not
precluded from showing that it proceeded from some cause which was
not apparent at the time he received them.
2. When goods in the custody of a common carrier are lost or
damaged, the presumption of law is that it was occasioned by his
default, and the burden is upon him to prove that it arose from a
cause for which he is not responsible.
3. The carrier is not responsible for leakage of a liquid
occasioned by the peculiar nature of the article itself or by
secret defects which existed in the casks but were unknown when
they were shipped.
4. Nor is he answerable for diminution or leakage from barrels,
though they be such as are commonly used for similar purposes, if
the barrels become unfitted to hold their contents by causes
connected with the nature and condition of the article which the
carrier could not control.
5. Hog's lard having certain qualities which make its leakage
from ordinary barrels or wooden casks unavoidable in hot weather, a
person who ships it in that condition from a southern port for a
long voyage, through low latitudes in midsummer, takes upon himself
the risk of all loss necessarily proceeding from that cause.
6. In an admiralty suit, an objection to the deposition of a
witness on the ground of incompetency from interest, must be made
at the hearing; it comes too late if it be deferred until the
argument.
7. Where a deposition was taken by a person who was both
commissioner and clerk of the court, and the proctor of the
opposing party knew that the deposition had been taken, it cannot
be ruled out on the ground that it was not sealed up, that the
preliminary proof of materiality was not made, or that notice of
its being filed was not given.
These suits were brought in the District Court for the Southern
District of New York. They were cross-libels
in personam
on the same maritime contract, and the evidence was
Page 66 U. S. 157
identical in both cases. Nelson and his associates were the
owners of the ship
Maid of Orleans, on board of which a
cargo of lard in barrels and tierces was shipped at New Orleans for
New York in July, 1854, consigned to Woodruff & Co. at New
York. The ship owners demanded the freight according to the bills
of lading, and the consignees claimed damages for the nondelivery
of a large part of the lard, which, they alleged, was lost by
leakage during the voyage. The question of law raised was whether
the contract of affreightment, under the circumstances, made the
ship owners responsible for the loss.
On the hearing in the district court, the deposition of the
master of the ship was offered by the owners and objected to by the
counsel of the consignees on the ground 1. that no preliminary
proof had been made of the witness' materiality; 2. that it was not
sealed up, and 3. that no notice was given of its being filed; but
the commissioner who took the deposition being the clerk of the
court, and the consignees' proctor knowing that the deposition had
been taken, the court (Betts, J.) overruled the objections. At the
argument, another objection was taken to the same deposition that
the witness was interested. The court held that it was too late; it
should have been made on the hearing.
After argument and consideration of the whole evidence in both
cases, the district court dismissed the libel of the consignees and
decreed in favor of the ship owners for the freight, and these
decrees being afterwards affirmed by the circuit court, the
consignees took appeals to the supreme court,
Page 66 U. S. 158
MR. JUSTICE WAYNE.
We are now about to decide two appeals in admiralty from the
Circuit Court of the Southern District of New York.
They are substantially cross-actions, and the testimony is the
same in both. They have been fully argued, and shall be discussed
by us with reference to the rights and liabilities of the parties
growing out of their pleadings, and the bills of lading upon which
they rely.
William Nelson and others are the owners of the ship
Maid of
Orleans, and they have filed their libel to recover from John
O. Woodruff and Robt. M. Henning, survivors of the firm of James E.
Woodruff & Co., eighteen hundred and thirty-eight dollars
eleven cents, with interest from the fourteenth of August, eighteen
hundred and fifty-four, for the freight, with primage and average
accustomed, of a large quantity of lard which was carried in their
ship, in barrels and tierces, from New Orleans to New York, for
which the master of the ship had affirmed for the shippers in two
bills of lading; that they had been shipped in good order and
condition &c., and were to be delivered in like good order at
New York, the dangers of the sea and fire only excepted, to James
E. Woodruff & Co., or to their assigns, freight to be paid by
him or them at the rate of $1.15 per barrel, and $1.50 per tierce,
with five percent primage and average accustomed, and the
libellants declare that the lard, upon the arrival of the ship, had
been delivered to the consignees, and was accepted by them.
To this the respondents filed a joint answer, admitting the
shipment, claiming that they had been made in conformity
Page 66 U. S. 159
with the bills of lading, affirming the arrival of the ship in
New York, and averring that only a part of the lard had been
delivered, and allege that the agents of the libellants had taken
so little care in receiving the casks and tierces on board of the
ship, and in the stowing and conveyance of them, and in the
discharge of them at New York, that a large quantity had been lost,
about sixty thousand pounds, of the value of six thousand dollars
and upwards, and that the loss of diminution in its weight had not
been lost by the perils of the sea or from fire. They further
answer that, relying upon the bills of lading, the consignees,
James E. Woodruff & Co., had made large advances upon them to
the shippers of the lard. They then declare that, for cause stated
by them, they were not liable to pay the freight and primage, but
that the owners of the ship were answerable for the loss of the
lard and liable to pay them more than six thousand dollars, and
claim to recoup against the freight and primage so much of the
damage as they may have sustained as will be sufficient to
liquidate and discharge the amount claimed for freight. When they
answered the respondents, they at the same time filed a libel
against the owners of the ship, propounding substantially the
particulars of what was in their answer to the libel -- so much so
that we will not repeat them; indeed, there is no addition to it,
nor will it be necessary to set out again the articles of their
answer to the libel filed against them, for they are a repetition
of their own original libel, except in one particular, upon which
the controversy was made exclusively to turn by the counsel on both
sides in the argument of the case before us. That was that the
lard, as such, had not been in good order for shipping when put on
board of the ship, inasmuch as it was then in a liquid state, and
had in that condition been put into barrels and tierces, which,
with the heat of the weather then and during the passage to New
York, had started them, and had caused the leakage complained of
before and during its transportation, and that the leakage had not
been caused by any neglect or want of care of them either in
shipping the lard at New Orleans or on the passage thence to New
York or in stowing it in the ship or in the discharge of it in New
York. There is
Page 66 U. S. 160
much testimony in the record in respect to the effect of heat
and barreling of lard in a liquid state in producing more than
usual leakage, but it was urged in the argument that such proofs
were inapplicable to this case, as the bills of lading affirmed
that the lard, when shipped, was in good order and condition, and
were conclusive against the allowance of any inquiry being made or
to any other causes of loss or damage than such as may have been
caused by the dangers of the sea and fire.
Such is not our view of the effect of the bills of lading we
have now to consider.
We proceed to state what we believe to be the law, and will then
apply the evidence to it to determine if this case is not within
it.
We think that the law is more accurately and compendiously given
by Chief Justice Shaw than we have met with it elsewhere. In the
case of
Hastings v. Pepper, 11 Pickering 43, that learned
judge said:
"It may be taken to be perfectly well established that the
signing of a bill of lading, acknowledging to have received the
goods in question in good order and well conditioned, is
prima
facie evidence that, as to all circumstances which were open
to inspection and visible, the goods were in good order; but it
does not preclude the carrier from showing, in case of loss or
damage, that the loss proceeded from some cause which existed, but
was not apparent, when he received the goods, and which, if shown
satisfactorily, will discharge the carrier form liability. But in
case of such loss or damage, the presumption of law is that it was
occasioned by the act or default of the carrier, and of course the
burden of proof is upon him to show that it arose from a cause
existing before his receipt of the goods for carriage and for which
he is not responsible."
The same has been decided by this Court in two cases as to the
burden of proof, where the goods shipped were said to have been
impaired in quality by the dampness of the vessel during passage to
her port of delivery.
Clark v.
Barnwell, 12 How. 272;
Rich v.
Lambert, 12 How. 347
The rule having been given, our inquiry now will be whether or
not the owners of the
Maid of Orleans have brought
themselves
Page 66 U. S. 161
within its operation, so as to be exempted from all liability
for the loss of the lard by having proved satisfactorily that it
had been occasioned by causes existing in the lard but not apparent
when it was shipped, to the extent of the injury which those causes
would produce upon the barrels and tierces which contained it; or
in other words that the causes of the loss were incident to lard
when operated upon by a heated temperature of the sun acting
directly upon it, or when it shall be stored, and an excessive
natural temperature has occasioned its liquefaction. It is alleged
that the loss of this shipment was sixty thousand pounds less that
the quantity shipped. It must be admitted to be too large for it to
be brought under the rule which exempts the carrier from liability
for the ordinary evaporation of liquids or for leakage from casks
occurring in the course of transportation. The implied obligation
of the carrier does not extend to such cases, any more than it does
to a case when the liquid being carried, if it shall be conveyed
with care, is entirely lost from its intrinsic acidity and
fermentation, and bursting the vessel which contains it; as it was
adjudged that the carrier was not liable when a pipe of wine during
its fermentation burst and was lost, it being proved that at the
time it was being carried carefully in a wagon commonly used for
such a purpose.
Farra v. Adams, Bull.N.P. 69
We do not know where an adjudged case can be found illustrating
more fully the exemption of a carrier from responsibility for loss
or leakage from the peculiar and intrinsic qualities of an article,
and the inquiries which may be made upon the trial in respect to
them and into the causes of a loss from effervescence and leakage,
and we may say for its discriminating rulings, than that of
Warden v. Greer in 6 Watt's Penn. 424. Mr. Angel has made
all of us familiar with it in his Treatise on the law of Carriers,
ch. 6, 215. The action was brought against the owners of a steamer
on account of loss on a cargo of two hundred barrels of molasses,
which was affirmed in the bill of lading had been received in good
order and well conditioned. Witnesses were examined as to the trade
in that article on the western waters; the nature of molasses
Page 66 U. S. 162
and the trade in it; as to its fermentation in warm weather; the
effect upon it by heat in its removal and carriage in a dray; also
as to the means usually taken to prevent loss of it, and injury to
the barrels from the expansive force of fermentation; and as to the
loss of it from those means and causes on a passage from New
Orleans to Pittsburgh; and as to the loss by leakage or warm
weather, according to the condition of the barrels in which in
might be shipped. It was determined in that case that the
defendants were not answerable for loss occasioned by the peculiar
nature of the article carried at that season of the year, nor for
leakage arising from secret defects in the casks, which existed,
but were not apparent, when they were received on board of the
steamer.
Nor is a carrier responsible for diminution or leakage of
liquids from barrels in the course of transportation, though they
are such as are commonly used for that purpose, if it shall be
satisfactorily proved that the barrels had become disqualified from
containing their contents by causes connected with the nature and
condition of the article, which the carrier could not control.
Having stated the law as we think it to be, that a bill of
lading for articles shipped, affirmed to be in good order and
condition, is but
prima facie evidence of that
declaration, and does not preclude the carrier from showing that
the loss proceeded from causes which existed, but were not
apparent, we will not examine the testimony to determine if such
was not the fact in this case.
The lard was taken from the warehouse, to be put on board of the
ship, in a liquid state in the month of July, during hotter weather
-- much hotter, all the witnesses say -- than is usually felt in
New Orleans at that time. This was known to the shippers, to their
agent, who made the freight by contract, and to the captain of the
Maid of Orleans. They also knew that the lard was in such
barrels and tierces commonly used for the shipment of lard. All the
barrels and tierces were put on board of the ship according to
contract as soon as it could be done after they were carted to the
levee where the ship was, except a few barrels, not more than 20
barrels, which
Page 66 U. S. 163
needed cooperage, and they were left on the levee from Saturday
evening until Monday morning.
There is no proof of leakage or loss from them by that exposure,
than there would have been if those barrels had been put on board
of the ship in the bad condition in which they were sent to the
levee. Dix, who made freight engagement in behalf of the shippers,
says it was expressly agreed that the lard should be taken on board
of the ship as soon as the same was sent to the vessel, to avoid
exposure to the sun, and he testifies that the casks containing it
were in good order when they were delivered; but anticipating that
some of them might not be, a cooper was sent for the purpose of
packing such of them as might not be in good shipping condition,
and the witness Shinkle, the stevedore employed to load the ship,
says the lard was promptly taken on board as soon as it was taken
from the drays, but that there were about fifteen or twenty barrels
leaking, which he caused to be rolled aside, and he put them under
tarpaulins, to be coopered, and, as soon as they were coopered by
the shipper's employees, it was taken. This is the lard, as we
learn from another witness, which had been on the levee from
Saturday night until Monday morning. Besides, from answers of Mr.
Dix to the cross-interrogatories put to him, we learn that he knew
nothing of the good order and condition of the casks of lard, as to
its cooperage, when they were carried to the levee to be received
for shipment, except from the report of those who had done the
work. Under such circumstances, the casks put aside on the levee
for cooperage, before they could be shipped, on account of their
leaking, were not received by the stevedore, to be put on board,
until they were put in a fit condition to be shipped. Until that
was done, they were at the shipper's risk. We cannot, therefore,
allow the fact of the exposure of these twenty barrels to charge
the ship with any loss, or to lessen the weight of the testimony
that, in receiving and putting the casks into the vessel, it had
been done in conformity, as to time, with the engagement made with
the agent of the shippers.
The proof is ample that it was put on board with care, and in
the manner and with all the appliances for doing so most
Page 66 U. S. 164
readily. It is in proof also that the stowage on the ship was
good both as to position and as to its support and steadiness, by
dunnage and cantling, and that there had been no disarrangement of
the casks, either by storm or rough seas, on the passage of the
ship to New York, although she did encounter some heavy weather.
Nevertheless, upon the discharge of the lard in New York, the
barrels and tierces were found to be in a worse condition, and
leaking more, than had ever been seen by either of the witnesses,
whose habit and business had made them familiar with such
shipments. It appears that the barrels containing the lard were of
the same materials, and coopered with hoop-poles, as barrels for
such a purpose are usually made.
When the contents of such barrels are solidified, the leakage
will be small; when liquefied, larger. All of the witnesses, who
know how such barrels are coopered, say so, particularly as to lard
in a liquid state, and as to its effect upon the staves and hoops
of such barrels when acted upon by the heat or rays of the sun.
They know it from observation and experience; science confirms it
from the composition of the article. This lard was of a secondary
kind, or, as the witness Magrath says, it was a fair lard -- not
pure at all, but a good average lot, not a first-rate article. The
differences in the qualities of lard may arise from a deficiency of
oxygen or from the inferior quality of the fat of the animal from
which it is tried, and not unfrequently from a careless and
insufficient melting and expression of the best of the animal fat
from its membranous parts. Oils, whether animal or vegetable, are
either solid or liquid, and when in the first condition are
frequently termed fats. These fats are more abundant in the animal
than in the vegetable kingdom. But whether liquid or solid, they
usually consist of three substances, two of which (the
stearine-suit and the margarine-pearl) are solid, and the other
(elane or oleine) is liquid at ordinary temperatures. They are all
from 6� to 9� lighter than water, and their liquid or
solid condition depends upon the proportion in which their
component parts are mixed. Thus, in the fats, the oleine exists in
small quantities, and in the liquid oils it is the chief
constituent. A certain degree of
Page 66 U. S. 165
heat is necessary to the mixture, for at low temperatures there
is a tendency to separation; the stearine and margarine are
precipitated or solidified, and if pressed can be entirely freed
from the oleine. The stearine from the lard of swine is easily
separable from the oleine, and it is used in the manufacture of
candles. The liquid stearine, known in commerce as lard-oil, is
used for the finer parts of machinery; but all of the animal fats
-- such as those from the hog, the ox, the sheep, and horse -- have
not a like consistency or proportion of stearine in them; when
deficient in either, or comparatively small, and tried into lard,
they have not that tendency at low temperatures to precipitate and
solidify as the stearine and margarine of the fat of the hog has,
and being extremely penetrating from liquidity, there has always
been a greater loss from evaporation and leakage from the barrels
in which they are ordinarily put for transportation than there
would be from hogs' lard under the same temperature; in other
words, hogs' lard will solidify at a temperature at which those
animal fats will not, and, from their liquidity, they escape from
the barrels containing them in larger quantity; and that fact has
been remarkably verified by the returns of English commerce with
Buenos Ayres and Monte Video, in the importation from them of what
is known there as horse or mare's grease, tried from the fat of the
horse.
From its liquidity, the ordinary barrels for the transportation
of tallow and grease were found to be insufficient, as the casks
were frequently half empty on their arrival. The commerce in it was
checked for some years, and not resumed until the shippers put it
into square boxes, lined with tin, and the article is now carried
without loss. And here we will remark that a distinguished
gentleman, thoroughly acquainted with the commerce of our country
and its productions and with its great lard production from the fat
of the hog, has made a calculation of the deterioration of the
article and the loss of it by leakage from the barrels and casks in
which it is now shipped, and his result is, if we would change it
for square boxes, lined with tin, that the cost of them would be a
saving of the loss now sustained by barreling it.
We have now shown that the cause of the leakage of lard is
Page 66 U. S. 166
its liquefaction under temperatures higher than those at which
it will solidity when not deficient in stearine. One legal
consequence from that fact is that shippers of that article should
be considered as doing so very much as to leakage at their own risk
when it is in a liquid state, however that may have been caused,
whether from fire or the heat of the sun, and knowing, too, that it
was to be carried by sea at a time from places where there was the
higher ranges of heat, through latitudes where the heat would not
be less until the ship had made more than three-fourths of her
passage. Such was the case in this instance. When the lard was
shipped, the thermometer had indicated for several days, and
continued until the ship sailed, a heat of 97�; the ship
itself had become heated by it. Her passage was made in the heat of
the Gulf Stream until she made the capes of the Delaware, and the
witnesses describe the heat of the hold as unendurable upon her
arrival in New York.
We have still to show what were the effects of the liquid lard
upon the barrels in which it was, and that we shall do briefly by
the testimony of several witnesses, and from what we all know to be
the additional pressure of an article upon a barrel when liquefied
by heat. The pressure from liquid lard is an expansion of its
component constituents by heat into a larger bulk than it occupies
when solidified, and its elastic pressure distends or swells the
barrel which contains it until the hoops which bind it are
slackened and its staves are started; just as it would be in a
barrel containing any other fluid expanded by heat or fermentation.
The consequences must be a diminution of the liquid by an increased
leakage and evaporation. Now it so happens that the scientific
explanation of the loss of the lard in this instance is verified by
the experience of the libellants' and respondents' witnesses.
Benzell, a cooper of forty years' experience in New York, in
coopering casks of lard from New Orleans to New York, and who
coopered this cargo upon its arrival, says the casks were of a good
quality, except being slack -- that is, hoops started; hoops were
loose upon the casks; does not think there is any quality in lard
to injury casks except it will, when liquid, tend
Page 66 U. S. 167
to shrink them; it requires a great deal of care in such a case;
pressure increases the difficulty from heat, conduces to press upon
the joints, and produces leakage; these casks were fully
wooden-bound, but saw them leaking at bilge and at head; coopered
four hundred of them. Ward, the city weigher, and who weighed
several hundred casks of this shipment, says that they leaked
largely; leakage was from loose hoops. Dibble, another weigher of
twelve years' experience in the article of lard, says the lard was
in a liquid state, like oil. Wright who was present all the time
when the ship was discharging, gives an account of the stowing of
the shipment; says the packages or barrels were slack. Samuel
Candler, marine surveyor, surveyed the cargo in August, 1854; made
seven surveys on cargo and one on hatch; saw the lard when on board
of the ship; says it was stowed in the after lower hold in four or
five tiers on bilge, and cantling in ordinary way and best; bilge
and bilge stowing not so well; went below; it was very hot there;
barrels looked fair, but slack; the staves were shrunk; looked all
alike; top casks leaked as well as those on the bottom tier;
attributes the great loss to great heat and shrinking of the
barrels; has surveyed a great many ships laden with lard in hot
weather, this cargo could not have been stowed better; recollects
more of this cargo because there was so much leakage; nothing stood
on the casks, or on the top tier of them, as is afterwards
explained; surveyed ship; she had the appearance of having
encountered bad weather. Francis J. Gerean, who has been accustomed
for thirty years with stowing cargoes, says: I coopered this cargo
for libellants, Woodruff & Henning; when the cargo was
discharging, two coopers under his direction, one at gangway on
deck, the other in the hold of the ship; he saw the lard in the
hold before delivered; the hoops were very loose, and the barrels
were leaking from sides and heads; intensely hot below;
considerably hotter than on deck; leakage from shrinking of
packages; the lard was liquid; that tends to shrink; staves and
hoops become loose; only chime hoops were nailed; barrels were well
stowed; does not think it possible to stow better; ground tier was
damaged, as well as he judged; bilge of barrels did not leak;
Page 66 U. S. 168
no barrel rested on a single barrel, but on others. Fisher, a
large dealer in lard, grease, and tallow, and who has received them
at all temperatures of weather, says lard brought in vessels in hot
weather will naturally leak ten pounds out of a package; lard of
reasonable quality, in good packages, will leak about the same as
oil; thinks putting liquid lard into barrels will not produce
leakage as much as pressure of the barrels upon each other, but
stores lard in cellar three to five tiers. Several other witnesses
in New Orleans concur in stating that it was very hot weather when
the lard was shipped, and that when shipped it was in a liquid
state. Others, uncontradicted, testify that it was liquid when the
vessel arrived in New York.
There is no testimony in the case impeaching the skill and
proper management of the ship on the passage to New York, or in the
delivery of the lard there, or that there was any part of her cargo
of a nature to increase the heat of the ship, or to liquefy the
lard, or to alter or shrink the barrels, though the ship's heat,
exposed as she had been to the rays of the sun in New Orleans, was
higher than that temperature at which lard will solidify, and it
consequently continued liquid from the time it was received on
board until its delivery in New York, as the ship, on her way to
it, was never in a temperature low enough to solidity it.
All the witnesses who were examined in respect to the shrunken
and slackened condition of the barrels when they were discharged in
New York agree. Two or three or them say they were in a worse
condition than they had ever seen or handled, and attribute the
loss to the agency of the melted lard upon the barrels.
The result of our examination of these cases is that though the
owners of the
Maid of Orleans could not controvert the
affirmance in these bills of lading, that the lard of the shippers
had been received on board of their ship in good order and
condition, that they have made out by sufficient and satisfactory
proofs that the leakage and diminution of the lard was owing to
existing but not apparent causes, in the condition of the lard,
acting upon the barrels in which it was, which are not
Page 66 U. S. 169
within the risks guaranteed against to the shippers by the bill
of lading. In conclusion, that the signing of a bill of lading,
acknowledging that merchandise had been received in good order and
condition, is
prima facie evidence that, as to all
circumstances which were open to inspection and visible, the goods
were in good order; but it does not preclude the carrier from
showing that the loss proceeded from some cause which existed but
was not apparent when he received the goods, and which, if shown
satisfactorily, will discharge the carrier from liability. In case
of such a loss or damage, the presumption of law is that it was
occasioned by the act or default of the carrier, and of course the
burden of proof is upon him to show that it arose from a cause
existing before his receipt of the goods for carriage, and for
which he is not responsible.
We, accordingly with this opinion, affirm the decree of the
district and circuit courts in all particulars, dismissing the
libel of Jno. O. Woodruff and Robert M. Henning, and also affirm
the decree of the circuit court, with costs, to the libellants and
appellees, Nelson, Dennison, in all things expressed in the
same.
We have not considered the point made in the argument, deeming
it to be unnecessary, relating to James E. Woodruff & Co.
having made advances, in a large sum of money, upon the faith of
the bill of lading, as they were not made with any intention of
acquiring property in or ownership of the lard.
We also concur entirely with the view taken by our brother
Betts, of the district court, upon the objections made to the
admission of the deposition of Capt. Dennis, taken
de bene
esse by the libellants.
Decrees of the circuit court affirmed.