LUMBERMAN'S MIN. CO. V. GILCHRIST.
6bl
been completed if each trip had been made in 26i days. Gilchrist says that in the first part of August he went to Pollock, who represented the libelant, and asked to have the privilege of putting in some other tonnage for the Bruce, but Pollock would not permit it, because, he said, they were carrying their ore as fast as they were entitled to it. 'When the conversation with Pollock was had, therefore, there had been no such falling behind that libelant could then be required to accept extra tonnage. The fourth trip was completed on the 24th of August, or nine days after it should have been completed to make the trips exactly equal. This certainly gave no right to Gilchrist to put in another cargo in August, as he wished to do. His defaults were later,-at a time when freights were higher. Gilchrist did not propose to put in new tonnage for September, October, or November, and the August tender did not relieve him from the obligation he was under of making the other four trips after the 13th of August at periods as nearly equal as possible. There is no attempt to show that at the time when Pollock might reasonably have anticipated a failure on Gilchrist's part to make the eight trips he could then have obtained tonnage at a less rate than he did afterwards obtain it to be put in during the months of October and November,-the months in which the delinquencies occurred. Finally, as to damages, the same question is raised that has already been considered in the case of 'l'he Or'egan Y. Iron Co., 55 Fed. Rep. 666, (decided at this term.) "Gnder the circumstances here the proDel' measure of damages was the difference between the freight as fixed in the contract and the ft-Pight actually paid on the cargoes which were shipped to take the place of the two cargoes which the Bruce failed to carry. The district court adopted this measure of damages, and its decree was affirmed by the circuit court. The decree of the circuit court is therefore affirmed, with interest, at the cost of the appellant. LUl\IBERMAN'S MIN. CO. v. GILCHHIST et a!. (Circuit Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit. No. 36. SJIIPPING-CHARTER
May 1, 1893.)
A vessel was chartered to carry eight cargoes of iron ore from Escanaba, Mich., to Lake Erie ports, during a b'iven season of lake navigation. Her seventh voyage was completed late in the season, but she was then requestL-'d, late in November, to go to Escanaba for the eighth cargo, and proceeded thither on the promise of the charterer's agent that she would be loaded. The charterer four days for loading, and if she had been loaded in that time she could have completed the trip, but, owing to the fact that the ore was frozen, her loading was not in fact completed until the next spring. Held, that her owners not liable for advanced freight paid by the charterer for the transportation of another cargo dUring that season, for the vessel's breach of the charter party was caused by the charterer's default in loading. 50 Fed. Rep. 124, reversed.
P AUTY -
BREAon-DEFENSES.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Ohio.
682
nDERAr.ngPOkTER,
vol. 55.
In Admiralty. Libel lnpersonam by the Lumberman's Mining Company against J. C. Gilchrist to recover damages for breach of a party. The district court entered a decree for libelant in the sum of $477.70, which, on appeal to the circuit court, was reduced 00$407.40, and affirmed as thus modified. See 50 Fed. Rep. 124. Respondents appeal. Reversed. Harvey D. Goulder, (F. H. Canfield, of counsel,) for appellants. Henry S. Sherm'an, for appellee. Before TAFT, Circuit Judge, and SAGE and SWAN, District Judges. TAFT, Circuit Judge. 'l'his is a libel in personam against the same respondents as in the last case, (Lumberman's Min. Co. v. Gilchrist, 55 Fed Rep. 677,) for the breach of a charter party which J. C. Gilchrist, as managing owner of the schooner S. H. Foster, entered into with the Lumberman's Mining Company, to carry eight cargoes of iron are during the season of navigation of 1886, from Escanaba, in Michigan, to ports on Lake Erie, not east of Erie; said cargoes to be distributed through said season as equally as possible, and the schooner to be constantly towed by some steamer. 'l'his charter was entered into under exactly the same circumstances as those stated with respect to the Bruce in the previous case, and contained substantially similar terms. The eight cargoes to be carried were to form part of the 30,000 tons mentioned in the original contract of February 4, 1890. The breach claimed was! a failure to make the eighth trip. The other seven were either made or performance of them was waived. The maater in the district court found that the trip had not been made through def.ault of respondents, and that other tonnage had been chartered in the month of November at an increased cost of 81 cents per ton, for which respondents were liable. This finding, which was approved by the district court, was not sustained by the circuit judge, 101' the reason that the other tonnage obtained by the libelant between the 1st and 16th of November could not properly be said to have been secured in consequence of the Foster's default, be'Cause an agent of libelant had requested the Foster to go to Es·canaba for her last cargo after the time of procuring such other tonnage. The Foster reached Escanaba late in the season, and the libelant coDlIilenced loading her under the contract, but did not finish loading her until the next spring. When she came down to Cleveland, Gilchrist says he offered to put her cargo in under the contract, and thus make the eighth trip, but that the libelant refused to accept the offer, and paid $1.35 per ton, which was the going rate of freight in the spring. of 1887. The circuit judge held that the trip completed in the spring of 1887 ought to be counted under the contract, and therefore that the libelant should be allowed to recover the difference between the contract price, $1 per ton, ahd the $1.35 per ton which was actually paid, for which he entered a decree.
THE PERCY BIRDSALL V. THE INVERTROSSACKS, ETC.
683
We are of opinion that this decree must be reversed. We think the evidence is very clear that the Foster went to Escanaba late in November, at the request of the libelant, on the statement of its agent that when she got to Escanaba she would be loaded. She arrived at Escanaba on the 26th of November. Had the libelant then loaded her, she could have made the eighth trip that season, because her consort, the steamer Tuttle, who towed her to Escanaba, did load and take a cargo dmvn to Lake Erie. The libelant was bound by contract to load the Foster in four days. It did not do so. This was a breach of contract on its part for "\vhich it is no excuse now to say that performance was prevented by act of God. 'L'he agent of libelant knew, or ought to have known, that the ore was so frozen at Escanaba at the time he directed the Foster to go there that she could not load. Upon this point the evidence is clear. The libelant is, therefore, clearly estopped, having induced the Foster to go to Escanaba with the promise that she should have a load, to rely on the frozen condition of the ore as an excuse. The failure to make the eighth trip must be charged to the fault, not of the respondents, but of libelant. 'We do not think there is any sufficiently definite proof of damage caused by the laying up of the :Foster at Escanaba during the winter to warrant a decree in favor of the respondents on their cross bill. The judgment will be reversed, with instructions to dismiss both the libel and the cross libel, at the costs of the libelant. THE PERCY BIRDSALL v. THE INVERTR08SACKS AND THE JAMES McCAULLEY. THE INVERTROSSACKS v. THE JAMES McCAULLEY. (District Court, E. D. Pennsylvania. May 5, 1893.) Nos. 5 and 10. 1. COLLISTON-VESSEL AT ANCHOR-TUG AND Tow-NEGLIGENCE. A schooner lay at anchor, well over to the westeIn side of the Delaware river, where the channel was over a mile wide, with her sails taken in, her bow pointing 110wn the river, and her anchor properly set. A tug with a large and heavy iron ship in tow, at the end of a long hawser, came up the westerll side of the channel. The tug passed the schooner a short distance off :1le port side, but the ship collitled with the schooner's starboard bOWil, and inflicted considerable injury. Held, that both tho tug and the ship were at fauIt,-the tug, in nmning with her unwieldy tow so far westward in the channel, and in approaching so near the schooner before turning off; and the ship, in failing to change her cours,} and follow the tug until collision was inevitable. SAME-DUTY OF TUG AND Tow. The fact that the ship was heavy, and the tug's control of her at the end of a long hawser very imperfect, impos'2d on bath unusual vigilance, rendered imperati I'e the duty of keeping well to the eastward. 3. LIBEL IN ON BOND -Loss OF LIBELED VESSELLIMITATION OF LIABILITY. 'rhe fact that a ship, against which an action in rem is pending, after her release on bond, is lost in a subsequent venture, and that a petition for limitation of liability was afterwards filed, is not a defense to the libel.