International Paper Company v. The Gracie D. Chambers/Opinion of the Court

Libel in admiralty on the schooner Gracie D. Chambers, her tackle, etc., to recover the sum of $5,845 prepaid freight on a cargo of paper loaded on the schooner for shipment from New York to Bordeaux, France, by the International Paper Company. Judgment went for libelant in the District Court. It was reversed by the Circuit Court of Appeals by a divided court (253 Fed. 182). To this action this writ is directed.

The facts as found by the Circuit Court of Appeals are as follows:

'September 14, 1917, the schooner Gracie D. Chambers began to     load a general cargo in the port of New York, to be delivered at Bordeaux. Between September 27 and 29 the     libelant Paper Company shipped 120 tons of print paper.

'September 28, at 4:25 p. m., the Treasury Department at     Washington telegraphed the collector at the port of New York      to withhold clearance of all sailing vessels, any part of      whose voyages would bring them within the danger zone. There     was no official publication of this embargo, but it was put      into effect beginning September 29, by the refusal of      clearance to such vessels as they applied for them. Both the     shippers and the shipowners had heard rumors of the embargo      as early as October 1.

'October 3 the schooner moved out to an anchorage at the Red     Hook Plats, to save wharfage charges and to await clearance.

'October 4 the freight was paid against delivery of the bill     of lading.

'October 5 the master applied to the collector for clearance,     which was refused. He then applied to the authorities at     Washington to except this schooner from the embargo, on the      ground that she had begun to load before the order was made. Refusal to allow an exception in her favor was not definitely     and finally made until October 10. Subsequently the cargo was     discharged and the owners refused to return the prepaid      freight.

'The bill of lading contained the following provisions:

"Restraints of princes and rulers excepted.'

"Freight for the said goods to be prepaid in full without     discount retained and irrevocably, ship and/or cargo lost or      not lost."

The case was submitted with Nos. 449 and 450, 248 U.S. 377, 39 Sup. Ct. 147, 63 L. Ed. 312, and its primary question is, as there, the sufficiency of the clauses in the bill of lading as a defense. In those cases we decided that the bill of lading expressed the contract of the parties and hence determined their rights and liabil ities. And it is the safer reliance, the accommodation of all the circumstances that induced it. It was for the parties to consider them and to accept their estimate is not to do injustice but accord to each the due of the law determined by their own judgment and convention, which represented, we may suppose, what there was of advantage or disadvantage as well in the rates as in the risks.

It is asserted, however, that the vessel in this case did not break ground and that this fact distinguishes the case from Nos. 449 and 450. The fact does not deflect the principle of those cases. It was not made to depend upon the fact of breaking ground, but upon the bills of lading which provided for the payment of freight upon the shipment of the goods and the right to retain it though the goods were not carried, their carriage being prevented by causes beyond the control of the carrier.

Therefore, upon the authority of those cases, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals in this case is affirmed.

So ordered.