Court Opinion

ID: 8765171
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 12:22:23.505846+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:01:49.505996
License: Public Domain

WOlyVKRTON, District Judge
(after stating the facts as above). It has been made a question as to what bearing the Harter act has upon the determination of this controversy. The respondent maintains that it has a distinct and persuasive bearing, while the libelants, upon the other hand, put it beside the case, and assert that, under its proper construction, it is without important application, in view of the facts as substantiated by the evidence. In this relation I will make some inquiry as to the state of the law prior to the adoption of the Harter act and the causes that led up to its enactment.
Where not qualified or restricted by an express agreement, there was an implied warranty by the shipowner attending every contract for the carriage of goods at sea that his vessel was seaworthy at the outset of the voyage, which warranty was absolute, not depending in any measure upon the observance of diligence, or upon knowledge or ignorance respecting her actual condition in any particular. Chancellor Kent expresses the rule in the following language:
*516“The ship must be fit and competent for the sort of cargo and the par» tieular service in which she is engaged. If there should be a latent defect in the vessel, unknown to the owner and not discoverable upon examination, yet the better opinion is that the owner must answer for the damage caused by the defect. It is an implied warranty in the contract that the ship be sound for the voyage, and the owner, like a common carrier, is an insurer against everything but the excepted perils.” S Kent’s Com. 205.
The rule was expressly applied in England in The Glenfruin, 10 P. D. 103, and The Cargo ex Laertes, 12 P. D. 187., In each of these cases there was a breakage caused by a latent defect not discoverable by the exercise of reasonable care. In the former it was held that under the implied warranty of seaworthiness the shipowner contracts, not merely that he will do his best to make the ship reasonably fit, but that she shall really be fit for the voyage; and in the latter that the ship was not seaworthy, and that, but for a limitation on the implied warranty in the bills of lading, there would have been a breach. The Supreme Court of the United States has adopted the following language, stating the doctrine, being an utterance of Mr. Justice Gray while sitting in the Circuit Court, namely:
“In every contract for the carriage of goods by sea, unless otherwise expressly stipulated, there is a warranty on the part of the shipowner that the ship is seaworthy at the time of beginning her voyage, and not merely that he does not know her to be unseaworthy, or that he has used his best efforts to make her seaworthy. The warranty is absolute that the ship is, or shall be, in fact seaworthy at that time, and does not depend on his knowledge or ignorance, his care or negligence.” The Edwin I. Morrison, 153 U. S. 199, 210, 14 Sup. Ct. 823, 825, 38 L. Ed. 688.
And Mr. Chief Justice Puller, in the decision rendered in The Caledonia, 157 U. S. 124, 131, 15 Sup. Ct. 537, 540, 39 L. Ed. 644, where it was urged that the warranty was not absolute and did not cover latent defects not ordinarily susceptible of detection, after a citation of the case of The Edwin I. Morrison and a review of many authorities, says, with perspicuity:
“In our opinion the shipowner's undertaking is not merely that he will do and has done his best to make the ship fit, but that the ship is really fit to undergo the perils of the sea and other incidental risks to which she must be exposed in the course of the voyage; and, this being so, that undertaking la not discharged because the want of fitness is the result of latent defects.”
This case was determined shortly prior to the adoption of the Harter act (Act Feb. 13, 1893, c. 105, 27 Stat. 445 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 2946]), and is conspicuous as showing the state of the law at the time as it relates to the rule pointed out. Mr. Justice Brown has shown the purpose of the Harter act, and the causes that led to its adoption, in The Delaware, 161 U. S. 459, 471, 16 Sup. Ct. 516, 522, 40 L. Ed. 771. He says:
“It is entirely clear, however, that the whole object of the act is to modify the relations previously existing between the vessel and her cargo. This is apparent, not only from the title of the act, but from its general tenor and provisions, which are evidently designed to fix the relations between the cargo and the vessel, and to prohibit contracts restricting the liability of the vessel and owners in certain particulars connected with the construction, repair, and outfit of the vessel and the care and delivery of the cargo. The act was an outgrowth of attempts, made in recent years, to limit, as far as possible, the liability of the vessel and her owners, by inserting in bills of lad*517ing stipulations against losses arising from unseaworthiness, bad stowage, and negligence in navigation, and otlier forms of liability which had been held by the courts of England, if not of this country, to be valid as contracts and to be respected, even when they exempted the ship from the consequences of her own negligence. As decisions were made by the courts from time to time, holding the vessel for nonexcepted liabilities, new clauses were inserted in the bills of lading to meet these decisions, until the common-law responsibility of carriers by sea had been frittered away to such an extent that several of the leading commercial associations, both in this country and in England, had taken the subject in hand and suggested amendments to the maritime law in line with those embodied in the Harter act.”
So Mr. Justice Shiras says, as to the purpose of the act:
“Plainly the main purposes of the act were to relieve the shipowner from liability for latent defects not discoverable by the utmost care and diligence, and, in. event that he has exercised due diligence to make his vessel seaworthy, to exempt him and the ship from responsibility for damage or loss, resulting from faults or errors in navigation or in the management of the vessel.” The Irrawaddy, 171 U. S. 187, 192, 18 Sup. Ct. 881, 833, 43 L. Ed. 130.
The first section of the act relates to and inhibits any agreement whereby the vessel, its owner, master, or agents, may be relieved oí the consequences of its or their own negligence, fault, or failure in the proper loading, stowage, care, or delivery of any goods or property committed to its or their charge for carriage. Obviously, in view oí the causes, as related by Mr. Justice Brown, leading up to and inducing the adoption of the act, such a provision was deemed essential to prevent the shifting of burden for the consequences of fault or failure of duty to those who were innocent thereof and had a right to expect faithful service. In other words, the statute anchors the duty where it lay under the old and long-established rule in maritime law, which is so just and equitable that fair dealing would not admit of its being obviated by stipulation or contract. Note the section relates to loading, stowage, care, and proper delivery.
The second section relates to and inhibits any agreement whereby due diligence on the part of the vessel, or its owner, master, or agents, to properly equip, man, provision, and outfit the vessel, and to make her seaworthy and capable of performing her intended voyage, may be relieved against. It also inhibits any relief by contract against the existing obligations of the master, officers, agents, or servants to carefully handle and stow the cargo, and to care for and properly deliver the same. This section has, in effect, been construed as authorizing the vessel to contract against the obligation of seaworthiness, but not against the duty of exercising due diligence to render her in all respects seaworthy and fit for the voyage contemplated, but that, .without a contract for the purpose, the section does not, of its own force and operation, relieve against the obligation of providing a seaworthy vessel. In other words, by the intendment of the provision under consideration, it is still incumbent upon the owner, master, or agents to provide a seaworthy ship, unless by contract he or they shall limit their obligation to the exercise of due diligence to make her so. This latter obligation cannot, however, under any conditions, be relieved against. The Carib Prince, 170 U. S. 655, 18 Sup. Ct. 753, 42 L. Ed. 1181.
*518The third section provides that, if the owner shall exercise due diligence to make his vessel in all respects seaworthy and property manned, equipped, and supplied, neither the vessel nor her owner shall become or be held responsible for damage or loss resulting from faults or errors in navigation or in the management of the vessel, nor shall either be held liable for losses arising from dangers of the sea, acts of God, public enemies, etc. In the case last cited Mr. Justice White has placed a construction on this section in language following:
“The exemption of the owners or charterers from loss resulting from ‘faults or errors in navigation or in the management of the vessel,’ and for certain other designated causes, in no way implies that, because the owner is thus exempted when he has been duly diligent, thereby the law has also relieved him from the duty of furnishing a seaworthy vessel. The immunity from risks of a described character, when due diligence has been used, cannot be so extended as to cause the statute to say that the owner, when he has been duly diligent, is not only exempted in accordance with the tenor of the statute from the limited and designated risks which are named therein, but is also relieved, as respects every claim of every other description, from the duty of furnishing a seaworthy ship.”
To understand the point in controversy in the case, it should be stated it was found that the sole cause of the accident giving rise to the suit was a latent defect in a rivet passing through a ballast tank, from which the head had broken off, leaving a hole through which water poured in and upon the merchandise of the libelant. This defective condition of the rivet was found to have been caused by the fact that the quality of iron had been injured during the construction of the vessel by too much hammering, so that it became brittle and weak, rendering it unfit to sustain the reasonable pressure caused by filling the tank with water while at sea, and consequently causing the vessel to be unseaworthy at the time the bills of lading were issued and the goods were received on board. The contention made was that, as the owner exercised due diligence to make the vessel seaworthy, he was consequently not liable, because, under the present state of the law, the shipowner is no longer under the obligation to furnish a seaworthy ship, but only to exe.rcise due diligence to do so. Wallace, Circuit Judge, sitting in the Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, places this interpretation upon the language of Mr. Justice White:
“The provisions of the statute known as the Harter act (section 3), by which, if the owner ‘has exercised due diligence to make the said vessel in all respects seaworthy, neither the vessel, her owners, agent, or charterer, shall be held liable for losses arising from dangers of the sea’ (27 Stat. 415), does not relieve the vessel, notwithstanding it is satisfactorily proved that due diligence was thus exercised by the owner.” The Sandfield, 92 Fed. 603, 604, 34 C. C. A. 612, 613.
And such was the understanding of Dallas, Circuit Judge, in the case of Farr & Bailey Mfg. Co. v. International Nav. Co., 98 Fed. 636, 637, 39 C. C. A. 197, 198, wherein he says:
“This act has not modified the obligation of owners to furnish a seaworthy ship.”
And such is undoubtedly the correct rendering of the decision. But, if there was any question about the understanding, it is set at rest by the declaration of Mr. Justice Brown in his dissenting opinion ren*519dered in the same cause, wherein he says (page 664 of 170 U. S., and page 757 of 18 Sup. Ct. [42 L. Ed. 1181]) :
“I agree with the majority of the court that the Harter act cuts no figure in this case. While it is possible that the framers of this act may have intended to exonerate ships from the consequences of unseaworthiness, where due diligence had been used to make them seaworthy, it must be conceded that the language of the third section does not express such intent, siuce it only exonerates them from loss or damage resulting from faults or errors In navigation or management.”
And also by the explicit enunciation of the court in the later case of The Silvia, 171 U. S. 462, 464, 19 Sup. Ct. 7, 8, 43 L. Ed. 241, that:
“The Barter act has not released the owner of a ship from the duly of making her seaworthy at the beginning of her voyage” — citing The Carib Prince.
I have been impressed that the statute (this third section) prescribes a condition which in respect of its operation has the same effect as if a stipulation were inserted in the bill of lading exempting the vessel or owner from the consequences of unseaworthiness, provided due diligence was observed in rendering the vessel seaworthy. In illustration, in the case of The Friesland (D. C.) 104 Fed. 99, 100, the bill of lading contained, among other things, the following exceptions:
“It Is also mutually agreed that the carrier shall not he liable for loss or damage occasioned by * * * any latent defect in hull or machinery or appurtenances, * * * or by unseaworthiness of the ship at the time of shipment, or the commencement of or any period of the voyage, provided the owners have exercised due diligence to make the vessel seaworthy.”
The court says, commenting upon the agreement, that:
“Assuming the validity of this stipulation (The Carib Prince, 170 U. S. 653, 18 Sup. Ct. 753, 42 L. Ed. 1181), the question presented is whether the evidence shows the exorcise of due diligence by the respondent to make the steamer seaworthy as respects the condition of the valve chest.”
And further:
“The stipulation in the bill of lading releases the shipowner from responsibility for absolute seaworthiness, provided due diligence is exercised; but it does not release him, nor does it profess to release him, in the least from his previous obligation to make such careful inspection as the circumstances require.”
It was there found that a certain valve was out of order, from wear and corrosion, rendering the vessel unseaworthy, and that it was a lack of the exercise of due diligence in making her seaworthy.
In the case of The Ontario (D. C.) 106 Fed. 324, it was held that, under the facts obtaining, the shipowners were exempted from liability for injury to the cargo, under a provision of the bill of lading that they should not be accountable for the unseaworthiness of the vessel at the commencement of the voyage, provided all reasonable means had been taken to provide against such unseaworthiness.
The Phoenicia (D. C.) 90 Fed. 116, presents another case wherein the question of latent defects and due diligence in securing seaworthiness under hill of lading is considered. And the later case of International Navigation Co. v. Farr & Bailey Manufacturing Co., 181 U. S. 218, 225, 21 Sup. Ct. 591, 593, 45 L. Ed. 830, by some expressions found in the opinion by the eminent Chief Justice, seems to lend sup*520port in the same direction. There the vessel was found unseaworthy by reason of both the covers of the after port on the starboard side being left unfastened and open when she entered upon her voyage. I quote the expressions alluded to:
“We do not think that a shipowner exercises due diligence, within the meaning of the act, by merely furnishing proper structure and equipment; for the diligence required is diligence to make the ship in all respects seaworthy, and that, in our judgment, means due diligence on the part of all the owners’ servants in the use of the equipment before the commencement of the voyage and until it is actually commenced.”
Then, referring to the second section:
“The obligation was to use due diligence to make her seaworthy before she started on her voyage.”
And, finally:
“We repeat that, even if the loss occur through fault or error In management, the exemption cannot be availed of unless the vessel was seaworthy when she sailed, or due diligence to make her so had been exercised; and it is for the owner to establish the existence of one or the • other of these conditions.”
The impression is also in harmony with the interpretation by an English decision of a bill of lading incorporating the Harter act (Dobell & Co. v. Steamship Rossmore Co., 2 Q. B. 408), cited in the opinion quoted from, wherein it was held that:
“To exempt the shipowner from liability it was not sufficient merely to show that he had personally exercised due diligence to make the vessel seaworthy, but that it must be shown that those persons whom he employed to act for him in this respect had exercised due diligence.”
In that case, through the negligence of the ship’s carpenter, who was a competent person, the ship entered upon her voyage with a port improperly calked, which rendered her unseawortliy.
Referring again to the act, the second section renders the obligation of the owner or owners to exercise due diligence to make the vessel seaworthy and capable of performing her intended voyage binding at all events and notwithstanding any stipulation to the contrary. So, with that obligation irrevocable and insusceptible of being thrown off, the third section has provided, by bringing the pertinent clauses into juxtaposition:
“If the owner of any vessel * * * shall exercise due diligence to make the said vessel in all respects seaworthy'and properly manned, equipped, and supplied * * * nor shall the vessel, her owner or owners, charterers, agent or master be held liable for losses arising from dangers of the sea or other navigable waters.”
And I was constrained to the view that this provision answers the stipulation that could be made under the old law, and is now proper to make, against latent defects or unseaworthiness when due diligence is exercised to detect or remedy the deficiency. But such rendering is not'in accord, as it seems, with the holding of the Supreme Court in the case of The Carib Prince; and I cannot say that it was the purpose of the court by the later decision of International Navigation Co. v. Farr & Bailey Manufacturing Co. to overrule or modify such hold*521ing. I am therefore bound by the clear ruling of the court in the former case.
However, a distinction has been observed between latent defects attending the construction of a ship and those deficiencies, arising subsequently, which may be discovered and remedied through “inspection, maintenance, and repair.” I refer to the case of The Alvena (D. C.) 74 Fed. 252. There the damage to a consignment of sugar was caused by means of cracks in some manner produced in a layer of cement designed to protect the iron plate of the vessel, through which sugar drainage had set up a corrosion of such iron plate and produced an aperture admitting sea water, to the injury of the cargo. Brown, District Judge, in determining the cause, has this to say:
“This act has been supposed to relieve the vessel from the consequences of all latent defects in her construction, where jdue diligence’ has been used to maleo her perfect; and in the case of The Millie R. Bohannon (D. C.) 64 Fed. 883, I stated that understanding of the act. See, also, The Silvia, 15 C. C. A. 362, 68 Fed. 230, 232. The language of the third section of the act, however, extends only to ‘damage or loss resulting from faults, or errors in navigation or in the management of the vessel’ or ‘from dangers of the sea’; and it is at least doubtful whether any loss arising solely from a latent defect in the ship, and not through any fault or error of navigation or management, is covered by the act. The requirement of ‘due diligence,’ however, is not satisfied by the mere appointment of competent persons to repair. Due diligence in repair and equipment must he exercised in fact. The Mary L. Peters (D. C.) 68 Fed. 919; The Flamborough, 69 Fed. (D. C.) 470. See The Rossmore (1895) 2 Q. B. 408. There is no question here of latent defects in the structure of the ship, but only of due diligence in inspection, maintenance, and repair; and the Harter act does not establish any new rule of diligence as to either of those subjects. The obligations of due diligence to make the ship seavorthy are in all respects the same as before the act.”
Upon the authority of this case I am impelled to the application of the test of “due diligence” in discovering faulty conditions and maintaining the ship under inquiry in all respects in suitable repair for undergoing the voyage contemplated, rather than that of absolute seaworthiness. This I do because whatever injury was sustained by the cargo in the present case came about by leakage through the deck, and the defects or deficiencies conducing to the leakage were in all probability not a matter pertaining to structure, but such as were brought about by use and the deterioration of time. As observed in the opinion rendered in the case just cited, the “due diligence” required must have been exercised in fact.
A ship is seaworthy if it is reasonably fit to carry the cargo which it has undertaken to transport. Says Mr. Justice Curtis, in Dupont de Nemours & Co. v. Vance et al., 19 How. 162, 167, 15 L. Ed. 584:
“To constitute seaworthiness of the hull of a vessel in respect to cargo, the hull must be so tight, staunch, and strong as to be competent to resist all ordinary action of the sea and to prosecute and complete the voyage without damage to the cargo under deck.”
It is unnecessary to seek further definition as to seaworthiness, as the authorities all concur. The Silvia, 171 U. S. 462, 19 Sup. Ct. 7, 43 L. Ed. 241; The Sandlield, supra; The Orient (C. C.) 16 Fed. 916.
Where there is a warranty of seaworthiness under the charter party, and the proof shows damage to the cargo, the burden is cast upon the *522ship to establish the fact of seaworthiness, or to show due diligence in ascertaining whether or not the ship was in fact seaworthy before entering upon her voyage. It is said in The Edwin I. Morrison, supra:
“Perils of the sea were excepted by the charter party; but the burden of the proof was on the respondents to show that the vessel was in good condition and suitable for the voyage at its inception, and the exception did not exonerate them from liability for loss or damage from one of those perils to which their negligence, or that.of their servants, contributed.”
After further consideration, the court makes this observation, which applies very nearly to the facts developed in the present controversy, to wit:
“The obligation rested on the owners to make such inspection as would ascertain that the caps and plates were secure. Their warranty that the vessel was seaworthy in fact ‘did not depend on their knowledge or ignorance, their care or negligence.’ The burden was upon them to show seaworthiness, and, if they did not do so, they failed to sustain that burden, even though owners are in the habit of not using the precautions which would demonstrate the fact. In relying upon external appearances in place of known tests, respondents took the risk of their inability to satisfactorily prove the safety of the cap and plate if loss occurred through their displacement.”
. This authority is often alluded to with approval in subsequent decisions. See The Phoenicia, supra; In re Meyer (D. C.) 74 Fed. 881; The Nord-Deutscher Floyd v. President, etc., 110 Fed. 420, 49 C. C. A. 1.
“Perils of the seas” are defined and construed as follows:
“The words ‘perils of the seas’ embrace all kinds of marine casualties, such as shipwreck, foundering, stranding, etc., and every species of damage done to the ship or goods at sea by the violent and immediate action of the winds and waves, not comprehended in the ordinary wear and tear of the voyage, or directly referable to the acts and negligence of the assured as its proximate cause.” Tuckerman v. Stephens, etc., Transp. Co., 32 N. J. Law, 320.
Judge Story gives this definition:
“The phrase ‘danger of the seas,’ whether understood in its most limited sense as importing only a loss by the natural accidents peculiar to that element, or whether understood in its more extended sense as including inevitable accidents upon that element, must still, in either ease, be clearly understood to include only such losses as are of an extraordinary nature, or arise from some irresistible force, or some overwhelming power, which cannot be guarded against by the ordinary exertions of human skill and prudence.” The Schooner Reeside, 2 Sumn. 567, Fed. Cas. No. 11,657.
With these observations as to the rules of law applicable in cases of this nature, I will now determine the cause as it seems to me the facts warrant. It must be first premised that the ship Ninfa was 20 years old. Shortly after leaving port, namely, about February 7th, she encountered heavy seas, with more or less wind, not amounting to a gale, which continued until the 23 d, when water was discovered in her hold. On the latter date the log book shows that she was sailing “with the lower topsail only, furious wind and chopped sea breaking all over the ship, shaking very much.” She continued through the stress until the evening at 8 o’clock, when the discovery was made that she was taking water. It was only upon the 23d, and not prior thereto, that the sails were reefed so as to leave the lower topsail only for propelling the ship. The day previous the log book at 1 a. m. reads;
*523“On starboard tack, with all the lower sails except the main, fresh wind and heavy sea.”
At 1 p. m.:
“Wind still freshening. We cannot hold the foresail any longer, so we furl It”
The day previous to that:
“With the lower sails, sea from starboard, fresh wind, and very heavy sea; the ship suffering very much for the heavy roiling.”
On the 20th:
“More steady wind, running with lower sails and main topgallant.”
And on the 19th:
“With all the sails except the small ones; little wind.”
And so on back, with some change of sail, but not of material moment.
The stress of weather thus encountered on the 23d continued for some five days before the hold was cleared of the water by the vigorous use of the pumps. Immediately after this experience the captain calked nearly the whole deck, under the forecastle, and at numerous places about the ship, running midship and aft. It appears that thereafter the vessel met with heavy seas and weather, when the deck was flooded constantly, almost, if not quite, as bad as that experienced in the north Atlantic just described; but water was not at any time discovered in the ship after it was relieved thereof from the occurrence of the 23d. It is in evidence that the captain considered it necessary, after leaving Los Angeles, to calk nearly the entire deck, and this to enable the ship to pass survey. Even after the ship arrived in Portland, it was required to replace some of the planking amidship before she was allowed to depart again upon her voyage. The evidence is strong that the water came in in many places through the deck, and, while it is not apparent that much of the cargo near the top was injured, yet it is shown, by the evidences of where the water ran through amidship, that it undoubtedly came in in that way, and that the cause of the damage is attributable to the water pouring through her decks. Manifestly a large amount of water was taken into the hold, because the first tier of barrels of cement was entirely solidified, showing that it had been wet through, thoroughly; and a portion of the second tier was injured. The captain is himself of the opinion that the water came through the deck, and there is no testimony that it came in otherwise. It will be ^understood that the leakage from under the forecastle did not enter the hold, but the water was taken into the fore peak, where no cargo was stored, and bailed out by means of buckets, so that there can be but one conclusion; that is, that the water entered the hold through the main deck, and in great quantities.
The question resolves itself, therefore, unto whether due diligence was exercised 'by the owner of the vessel in rendering her staunch, tight, and in every way fit and suitable to undergo the voyage upon which she was about to enter. This is a burden resting with the owner, as it is a matter conceded that the cargo sustained damages through *524the admission of large quantities of water into the ship’s hold. The fact appears that the owner made but slight investigation to determine whether or not the deck of the ship was well-calked and safe prior to her leaving port. The only testimony in the record in this regard is that of Capt. Lauro Lauro, who states that he made very little effort to discover the condition of the deck. He applied no tests whatever to ascertain whether it was staunch and secure. He relates that another captain — Maresca—who is a nephew of one of the owners of the ship, made some tests; but they were of cursory character. He simply secured a hammer, and with it tapped around in different places on the deck and upon the inside of the boat, and with a small knife examined the calking. And this was the full extent of any tests applied by the owner or any one in his behalf to- determine the sufficiency of the deck to withstand the voyage. It is further in evidence that, after thorough examination of the ship on its arrival in port, no strains or openings were apparent in and about those parts or sections of the ship where it is usual to find them after having passed through heavy or unusual seas. There was but small breakage about the ship, and nothing upon deck was loosened or swept away. These things go a long way in refutation of the testimony of Capt. Lauro touching the severity of the sea and the weather through which he passed.
Considering the age of the ship, as one witness states it, the “original decir should have been all out of her.” But, notwithstanding, there has been no attempt to establish whether she had been redecked, or what repairs had been made so as to render her decks substantial and tight. Assuredly due diligence in ascertaining the condition of her decks required that more attention be paid thereto than the evidence indicates there was. But, even if we admit all that has been testified to upon this subject, when the facts just alluded to are taken into consideration, it does not seem to me that the damage was caused through what the law denominates “perils of the sea.” The ship was evidently not staunch and tight, as a ship ought to be contemplating a voyage' from London around the Horn to this port. It is always to be expected that severe weather may be encountered in the north Atlantic, after leaving London, on the course taken, and, of course, the ship should have anticipated the usual perils incident to such a voyage. The ship Ninfa should have been so repaired as to have enabled her to withstand the kind of weather that she actually encountered. I am convinced, at least, that there was lack of due diligence on the part- of her officers and servants in determining whether or not she was seaworthy before she left port. As was said in The Edwin I. Morrison:
“In relying upon external appearances in place of known tests, respondents took the risk of their inability to satisfactorily prove the safety of the cap and plate, if loss occurred through their displacement.”
And so it is here. Having relied upon their warranty that the ship was seaworthy, and finding that she was unable to withstand the stress of weather, the burden, as hks been previously stated, was cast upon the owners to show that they had exercised due diligence before she left port to determine whether or not she was in reality seaworthy as it relates to her deck, which proved insufficient. In this aspect of the case, the respondent has not shown due diligence, or any diligence of *525merit to overcome the prima facie case made by the libelants. The Friesland, International Mfg. Co. v. Farr & Bailey Mfg. Co., a.nd The Alvena, supra. I place but slight value on the surveys of the Italian consul and Lloyd’s surveyors, made before the ship left London, as their duties do not call for that rigid inspection and the application of known tests for the discovery of fault required of the owner for the determination of whether his vessel is seaworthy.
As it relates to the dunnage of the cargo, there can scarcely be a question that there was negligence on that account. In all probability, had the cargo been properly dunnaged, the damage would not have been nearly so great; possibly there would have been none at all. So I hold, therefore, that the vessel is liable for the damage sustained by the cargo.
I allow libelants damages in amounts as follows:
On 1,147 barrels K. B. S. cement, at §2.18 per barrel...§2,500 4(5
“ 298 “ loss by repacking, at §2.50 per barrel. 745 00
“ 528 “ reconditioned, decrease in value, at 23½ cents. 12(5 4.5
“ 7 “ loss by breakage, at §2.50... IT 50
Cost of inspection, 1,147 barrels..... 22 94
“ “ repacking, 872 “ at 33 cents (labor). 287 7(3
“ “ sacks in repacking 538 barrels damaged, 2,152 sacks, at 10 cents . 215 20
Wharfage and storage on 1,147 barrels, 1 month.. 57 35
On 238 barrels crown cement abandoned, at §2.08. 495 04
“ 4(5 “ entire loss in reconditioning, at $2.40. 110 40
“ 232 “ reconditioned, decrease in value, at 25 cents. 58 00
Cost of inspection, 238 barrels at 2 cents. 4 7(5
“ “ repacking, 278 “ at 33 cents (labor)... 91 74
“ “ 928 sacks used in repacking, at 10 cents. 92 80
Wharfage and storage on 238 barrels, at 5 cents. 11 90
On 75 barrels bleaching powder. 150 00
Extra stevedoring...... 20 07
Aggregating .$5,007 35
—and interest thereon, at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum, from the 27th day of November, 1903.
Judgment will therefore be entered accordingly.