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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Thomas & Sons v. Harrowing Steamship Co. [1914] UKHL 649 (26 June 1914) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1914/52SLR0649.html Cite as: [1914] UKHL 649, 52 ScotLR 649 |
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Page: 649↓
(Before the
( On Appeal from the Court of Appeal in England.)
Subject_Ship — Charter-Party — Freight — Partial Loss of Cargo — Delivery by Floating off from Wreck.
Where by the charter-party a lump sum was due for freight upon delivery of the cargo at its destination, and the ship was wrecked just outside the port of delivery, held that floating off the cargo to the beach was equivalent to delivery by transhipment, and that loss of one quarter of it by “perils of the sea,” as provided for in the charter—party, did not affect the shipowners' right to the full freight.
Appeal from a judgment of the Court of Appeal ( Vaughan Williams, Farwell, and Kennedy, L.JJ.), reported [1913] 2 KB 171, affirming a judgment of Pickford, J., reported [1912] 3 KB 321, in favour of the respondents, the plaintiffs below.
The facts are stated by the Lord Chancellor.
Their Lordships gave judgment as follows:—
It arises between the owners of the ship “Ethel walda,” who are the respondents, which ship was chartered to the appellants. The charter-party was made on the 1st September 1911, and its bearing is this. The steamer was to carry a full and complete cargo and a full and safe deckload at the charterers' risk, not exceeding what she could reasonably stow and carry, and being so loaded was to proceed to Port Talbot or as near thereto as she could safely get, and deliver the same on being paid a lump sum freight of £1600, in consideration of which the owners placed the steamer at the charterers' disposal. There was the usual clause as to perils of the seas and so on, and the final clause that the freight should be paid in cash, less freight advanced on unloading and right delivery of the cargo.
What happened was this. The steamer sailed from the port of loading and proceeded to Port Talbot, where she arrived on the 29th October. She could not get into the dock on that day, and before she got into the dock her anchors dragged and the cables parted owing to perils of the seas and she went ashore. For the rest of what happened I turn to Pickford, J.'s account of the facts as agreed with by the Court of Appeal. Pickford, J., said that the cargo consisted partly of deck cargo which was swept off. Some of the cargo drifted on to the beach and some was not recovered, but the rest, which was partly washed out of the ship—and washed out because it was assisted by holes cut in the sides of the ship to enable the cargo to get out—was saved. There was a man named Jenkins, who appears to have acted first at the instigation of the Salvage Association and afterwards by arrangement with the captain of the vessel. Pickford, J., has found as a fact that the master of the ship promised that in consideration of Jenkins going on to perform the services he, the master, on behalf of the owners, would pay for the whole of what had been done and what would be done. The fact of it was that with the assistance of Jenkins it became possible for the shipowners to see that the cargo got into the hands of the cargoowners,
Page: 650↓
The question which was argued, and the main question, is this—It was said that this was what is called a lump sum contract, and that as the ship did not arrive at Port Talbot and deliver in the ordinary way the freight is not payable. The shipowners, who were the plaintiffs in the Court of Appeal, sued for the freight, and the answer was, “No, you have not performed your contract, which is an entire contract. You were to proceed to Port Talbot and your ship never got there, so that you never really performed your contract and are not entitled to the consideration stipulated for.” I do not think that the question whether the freight is a lump sum freight is in the least decisive of the character of the contract. There may be contracts, as the learned Judge said, in which the stipulation is simply for the use of the ship, which is to proceed to a certain port for a lump sum, and in that case it may be as was argued in this instance, but we have not to deal with such a contract but with this contract, and in regard to this contract I entirely concur with what the learned Judge says, that the meaning of the contract in this case is that it is an ordinary and regular charter for the services of the ship to carry a particular cargo to a particular port. The substance of the contract is to deliver the cargo, and the ship is the instrument in which the cargo is to be carried. In that state of facts the law which seems to me to apply is that laid down by Lord Ellenborough in the case of Hunter v. Prinsep, 10 East. 378, which is to this effect—The shipowners undertake that they will carry the goods to the place of destination unless prevented by dangers of the seas or other inevitable casualty, and the freighter undertakes that if the goods be delivered at the place of their destination he will pay the stipulated freight, but it is only in that event that he, the freighter, engages to pay anything. If the ship is disabled from completing her voyage the shipowner may still entitle himself to the whole freight by forwarding the goods by some other means to the place of destination. The Judge has held here what took place was equivalent to that transhipment of which Lord Ellenborough speaks. It does not matter that it was not done in lighters; it was done by cutting holes in the vessel and floating the cargo on to the beach. The point is that the cargo arrived there, and that the master was doing his best to secure that this took place. Under these circumstances the Judge has found that the facts are facts which amount to transhipment, that there was delivery of three-quarters of the cargo, and that the rest was lost by perils of the seas.
I entirely agree with that judgment of Pickford, J., confirmed as it was by the Court of Appeal, and therefore move that this appeal be dismissed with costs.
I am of opinion that under these circumstances the freight agreed upon was earned, and that there has been right and true delivery, taking into account that exception of perils of the seas which the contract itself contains. This appears to me to be in complete accord with the principles laid down by Lord Ellenborough. The dominant idea of the contract was delivery, and I venture to use the language of Pickford, J.—“I think if the whole of the cargo had been collected and delivered it is exactly as if the whole of the cargo had been transhipped and delivered in another ship.” That being the principle as regards the whole cargo, I think that the same principle should apply if there is, as here, a delivery of a substantial part of the cargo, the balance being undelivered owing to an excepted peril. In this instance we have a contract which covers the situation which has arisen. I have no doubt that the Courts below have reached a conclusion not only in accord with shipping law but in accordance with mercantile practice and precedent.
Judgment appealed from affirmed, and appeal dismissed with costs.
Counsel for the Appellants— Sir R. Finlay, K.C.— Leck, K.C.— Maurice Hill, K.C. Agents— Trinder, Capron, & Company, Solicitors.
Counsel for the Respondents— Adair Roche, K.C.— Robertson Dunlop. Agents— Holman, Birdwood, & Company, Solicitors.