Summary
In Rosenstein v. Vogemann (102 App. Div. 39) this court held that under a charter party precisely similar to the one at bar, the defendants, who were the charterers, and not the owners, were liable for the consequences of a negligent selection of a place to unload and deposit the cargo.
Summary of this case from Callahan v. Munson Steamship LineOpinion
February, 1905.
John Notman, for the appellants.
H. Aplington [ Charles R. Barge with him on the brief], for the respondent.
In this action the plaintiff sought to charge the defendants, as common carriers, with liability for their failure to fulfill a contract for the transportation of 700 bags of hemp seed from the port of Hamburg, in Germany, to the port of New York. The hemp seed was shipped upon a steamer known as the Louise, which was controlled and run by the defendants under a time charter party originally made by the owners to the Hudspeth Transatlantic line, and subsequently assigned to the defendants. The bill of lading was signed "For the Captain, H. Vogemann" (the name H. Vogemann being that under which the defendants did business as copartners). Upon the arrival of the Louise at New York, on May 8, 1901, notice was sent to the plaintiff that, owing to the lack of pier room, the steamer had been berthed at pier 4, American Dock Stores, at Staten Island. The plaintiff admits having been informed, sometime between two and three o'clock on the same day, of the fact that the vessel was there. On the afternoon of the following day, at about five o'clock, after the hemp seed had been unloaded onto one of the piers of the American Dock Company, the pier collapsed under the weight, owing to the worm-eaten condition of the piles by which the wharf was supported, and by its precipitation into the water the hemp seed was rendered valueless.
In his complaint the plaintiff set out two causes of action, the first based on the alleged violation of the defendants' contract as common carriers arising out of their failure to deliver the goods, and the second founded upon an allegation of negligence in having failed to exercise reasonable care and diligence in selecting a suitable place upon which to deposit the hemp seed when unladen. The defendants' plea was in effect a denial of any such ownership or interest in the vessel as would render them liable as common carriers, contending that they acted merely as agents for the owners of the steamer. They furthermore alleged in substance that the contract as contained in the bill of lading had been fully performed, and they denied the charge of negligence growing out of the collapse of the pier.
At the close of the evidence on both sides, after the defendants had moved to dismiss the complaint and such motion was denied, motions were made to direct a verdict by both parties, and the court granted the plaintiff's motion and directed a verdict in his favor for the whole amount of his claim. After the defendants had moved for the direction of a verdict, they made no request to have any issues submitted to the jury, and under the authorities the action of both parties constituted an election or consent that the trial judge should decide any questions of fact which there might be in the case. Under these circumstances the direction of a verdict for the plaintiff implies that the trial judge had found favorably to the plaintiff on all issues of fact essential to be determined in order to justify the direction of a verdict in his favor. In the present case, however, the record shows that there was one issue of fact upon which the judge decided against the plaintiff; that was the issue relating to the defendants' alleged negligence in unloading the hemp seed upon the wharf which subsequently broke down. The plaintiff had contended that the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur applied, and that the wharf having broken down after the hemp seed was placed upon it, the defendants were liable for negligence resulting in the loss of the seed unless they furnished a satisfactory explanation of the accident which would absolve them from carelessness. The learned trial judge evidently thought that they had succeeded in rebutting the presumption of negligence, for in directing a verdict he said: "As far as the falling of the dock itself is concerned, the maxim that the thing speaks for itself, I think, is fully rebutted by the evidence given here, but on the other questions in the case I direct a verdict for the plaintiff for $3,954.04."
These facts make it plain that the plaintiff prevailed in the court below upon some other ground than that of the alleged negligence of the defendants. In other words, he must have prevailed upon the ground that the defendants had failed to fulfill their contract with the plaintiff in regard to the transportation and delivery of the hemp seed in question.
In directing a verdict for the plaintiff upon these grounds, the learned trial judge must have held:
(1) That under the charter party and bill of lading the defendants were the parties who contracted to carry the plaintiff's goods and hence became bound by the obligations of common carriers;
(2) That, therefore, before unlading the goods it was the duty of the defendants to give the consignee due notice of their arrival and unlading, and yield him a reasonable time after notice given to take charge of and secure them. ( McAndrew v. Whitlock, 52 N.Y. 40);
(3) That the carriers did not give the consignee such reasonable notice in the present case;
(4) That until the giving of such reasonable notice the defendants remained liable as common carriers; and
(5) That inasmuch as the goods were destroyed before such reasonable notice and, therefore, could not be delivered, the carriers were responsible for the non-delivery, and, hence, were liable in damages for the loss of the goods.
The learned counsel for the appellants has failed to satisfy us that the trial court was wrong in these conclusions. It seems to us that the terms of the charter party were such as to make it a contract for the lease of the vessel for a period of twelve months, and that the charterers became subject to the duties and responsibilities of ownership. "The question as to the character in which the charterer is to be treated is, in all cases, one of construction. If the charter party let the entire vessel to the charterer with a transfer to him of its command and possession and consequent control over its navigation, he will generally be considered as owner for the voyage or service stipulated." ( Leary v. United States, 81 U.S. [14 Wall.] 607.) Here the charter party even goes so far as to provide that the captain, although appointed by the owners, shall be under the orders and direction of the charterers as regards employment, agency or other arrangements; and the charterers agree "to indemnify the owners from all consequences or liabilities that may arise from the Captain signing Bills of Lading or otherwise complying with the same."
The conclusion that the consignee had not been furnished a reasonable time before the loss of the goods to take charge of and secure them, seems also to have been justified by the evidence. Unless, therefore, there was some express provision in the bill of lading which relieved the carrier from the general rule laid down in McAndrew v. Whitlock ( supra), the trial judge was right in holding that the plaintiff was entitled to prevail.
It is argued that under the provisions of the bill of lading the carrier's liability ceased upon the arrival of the ship and the discharge of the cargo, package by package, as the goods left the ship's deck or tackle. This contention is based upon a clause in these words: "Goods to be taken from the ship by the consignees directly they come to hand in discharging the ship, and the carrier's responsibility to cease package by package immediately the goods leave the ship's deck or tackle. If not taken from alongside by the consignees, they will be landed and deposited at the expense of the consignee and at his risk of fire, loss or injury on the dock or in warehouse or in craft." A similar clause was before the Supreme Court of the United States for consideration in the case of Constable v. National Steamship Co. ( 154 U.S. 51), where it was held that it might reasonably be stipulated in a bill of lading that the responsibility of the vessel should cease after the goods were discharged. This view, however, was expressed in reference to a steamer belonging to one of the great transatlantic passenger lines and was based, in the opinion of the court delivered by Mr. Justice BROWN, upon the view "that the piers of the regular steamship lines are well known to every importer, and the day of arrival of each steamer may be predicted almost to a certainty." He states the general rule to be that a delivery of the cargo, to discharge the carrier from his liability, must be made upon the usual wharf of the vessel and actual notice be given to the consignee, if he be known. In the present case, the vessel upon which the plaintiff's goods were shipped does not appear to have had any usual wharf in New York, or, if she had, such wharf was unavailable for use at the time of her arrival.
It is furthermore argued that by virtue of the clause above quoted from the bill of lading the carriers were in no event liable for goods discharged over the ship's side and deposited on the wharf except as warehousemen, inasmuch as the trial court has found that there was no negligence. In the absence of reasonable notice to the consignee, however, it cannot be held that the liability of the defendants as common carriers had been transformed into a liability as warehousemen at the time of the collapse of the wharf on the very day when the goods were discharged from the steamer.
The judgment should be affirmed.
HIRSCHBERG, P.J., WOODWARD and JENKS, JJ., concurred; HOOKER, J., not voting.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.