[assumpsit – negligence, neglect and bad stowage of horses – ship’s
cargo]
Ross (the plaintiff) v. Griffiths (the defendant)
Supreme Court of Van Diemen’s Land
January 8th, 1841
Source: The Cornwall Chronicle and Commercial and Agricultural
Register,
January 16th, 1841
Before Sir John Lewes Pedder, Knt., Chief Justice, and the following
special jury, L.W. Gilles, Esq., foreman, J. Down, J. S. Hill, J.
Cameron, A. Collett, A. Anderson, J. Atkinson, M. Gaunt, R. Pringle
Stewart, R. Petty Stewart, W. Kenworthy, and T. Bartley,
Esquires.
Mr. Stephen, opened the pleadings. This was an action of assumpsit
to recover the sum of £800. The declaration set forth that defendant
undertook to convey for plaintiff ten horses to
South Australia, but
while the horses were in his charge, through negligence, neglect,
and bad stowage, the horses sustained the damage set
forth.
The defendant pleaded, first the general issue, and then
specially, that he did always while the horses were in his charge,
take due and proper care of them, and that the loss sustained did
not occur from negligence, neglect, or bad stowage. This was denied
by the plaintiff, upon which issue was joined.
The Attorney-General said that he with Mr. Stephen was of
counsel for the plaintiff; it was an action for damages arising from
the improper conduct of the defendant, or those for whose acts he
was responsible, while conveying horses belonging to the plaintiff
in the Lowestoffe to South Australia. At the latter end of
September, 1839, plaintiff shipped at Coulson’s, nine horses and one
at Bryan’s Bay, on board the Lowestoffe, of
which defendant was owner. The vessel sailed, and when she had been
absent about a day encountered considerable stress of weather. Two
days after she returned to George
Town at
which time seven horses were dead and three were landed in a
melancholy condition. The damages sought to be recovered were for
the seven which died and the deterioration of the three which
survived. He had no doubt he should make out, indeed he thought it
would be hardly disputed, that defendant had entered into an
engagement to carry these horses to South Australia, and they must
be satisfied that the loss sustained by the plaintiff was through
the negligence of the defendant. He should prove that the heavy and
serious loss sustained by Ross arose from the unsatisfactory and
imperfect fitting-up, and that had the vessel been properly fitted
up, probably the accident would not have occurred. It was no answer
on the other side to show that even if the fitting-up had been
proper, the accident might have occurred; if the defendant could not
show that an act of God caused the accident, and that every
precaution had been taken in the first instance, the defendant was
liable. It might be argued that Ross being an old hand, and a
shipper of horses, should have seen that the fitting-up were proper,
or he was not entitled to recover, but a more dangerous doctrine,
and one more against law, to all parties, except the ship-owner,
could not be conceived. He would shew that the foundation upon which
these horses were placed, consisted of a vast quantity of sand and
some casks, and, as it was pumped up through the pumps, the casks
descended, and the whole fabric came down; all this was neglect and
culpable negligence on the part of Mr. Griffiths, or those for whom
he was answerable, He would make no observation upon the cause of
action having occurred in the month of September, 1839, the delay
did not originate with them; neither did he mean to say that it
occurred wilfully on the other side. He would place before them a
model of the Lowestoffe, and call witnesses to show in what
manner she was fitted-up before sailing, and the state in which she
appeared upon her return. He would leave the case in their hands,
satisfied that upon their oaths they would give that attention to
the case which it merited; exceeding important as it was to all
parties, and showing the liabilities of parties making such
contracts as Griffiths made with his client.
The following witnesses were then called:-
Mr. Eneas Allen. - In
1839 I was clerk to defendant, and am still so; I remember Mr.
Griffiths had a vessel in Sept., 1839, called the Lowestoffe
about sailing for South Australia; she was commanded by James Allen;
she was employed to take in freight and passengers for South
Australia; she took in some horses, I believe for plaintiff; I saw
Mr. Ross about shipping some horses; I know that he had horses on
board going to South Australia; I did not see them; plaintiff made
no agreement with me or Allen the Captain in my presence; I don’t
know how many horses were shipped, or when the vessel came back, to
my own knowledge; I received a letter addressed to Mr. Griffiths,
and one addressed to Mr. Griffiths or myself; I handed them over to
defendant’s solicitor; the letter bore the signature of James Allen;
I have no doubt it was his writing; it purported to give an account
of the accident to the horses; there was nothing said about the
pumps, or sand-ballast shifting, or being washed away to my
recollection; it gave no account how the accident
happened.
By the Court. - I saw the letter about three months
ago.
Examination continued. - I cannot say whether there was one
or two letters; if there were two letters, they gave the same
account; there was not to my recollection anything in the letters to
the effect that I was not to tell Ross how the accident occurred; I
don’t recollect anything in the Captain’s letters to the effect that
the pumps were choked; I cannot swear there was not something to
that effect.
Cross-examined by the
Solicitor-General. - I was never examined in any other place upon
this subject; I know there has been an investigation at our office
into this matter; I gave the key up, and sent part of the men in; it
was more than twelve months ago; James Allen, the captain was then
alive; he was one that was called; James Allen is since dead; I do
not remember the name of the mate of the Lowestoffe, and
cannot say whether he is dead or alive; I cannot say to my own
knowledge, that between the sailing and return of the
Lowestoffe there had been a severe storm; [log-book put in] I
believe it to be the handwriting of the chief officer of the
Lowestoffe, whose name I do not recollect; this entry is 3rd
October, 1839; I have no knowledge of his handwriting.
Re-examined. - I heard
that plaintiff was looking for the chief-mate, but did not find him,
I believe; I do not know a person named Rose then on board the
Lowestoffe; I have not heard that all the seamen of the
Lowestoffe are dead; the defendant is still a ship-owner; I
have not heard that all the men were got rid of in New South
Wales.
By the Jury. - I never
heard the Captain say anything about the pumps being choked, to my
knowledge; I saw the Captain when he came up, but I cannot say I had
any conversation about the accident; all Mr. Griffiths’ transactions
pass under my eye; it is customary to grant a bill of lading,
always, generally; there was not a set of bills of lading in this
instance; there was no receipt given, or it would have passed
through my hands; the freight was not paid here; I cannot say what
was the agreement between Mr. Griffiths and plaintiff; I cannot say
any demand was made for freight; I cannot say positively whether or
no there was anything in the letter about the choking of the pumps;
I had several conversations with the Captain, but I am not aware it
was about the accident.
By the Court. - After
the arbitration there was a demand made on behalf of Mr. Griffiths
for freight.
William Smith. - I am
gardener to Mr. James Henty; in September 1839, I was lodging at Mr.
Grayling’s; I assisted in taking nine horses from there to
Coulson’s, about eleven miles from here down the river; they were
plaintiff’s horses; I assisted in shipping them; it was about the
latter end of September, either the 29th or 30th; they were shipped
on board the Lowestoffe.
Cross-examined. - In
1939 I was living at Grayling’s as a helper; I know they were Ross’s
horses because he asked me to take them down.
Robert Cotton. - I am
a shipwright. I remember in October, 1839, I saw a horse shipped
belonging to Mr. Griffiths on board the Lowestoffe, which
vessel went to sea on the 2nd of October; I have fitted up upwards
of twenty vessels for the reception of stock; I have inspected
vessels going to sea by the captain’s request, and also the
fittings; I saw her on the 4th; on which day I think she returned;
there was a survey to inspect the fittings of the horses; I, Dr.
Smith and Captain E.P. Tregurtha were on the survey; I saw seven
horses dead, and three alive, very much bruised; those that were
dead were also very much bruised; the fittings then were down; there
were two stanchions which were hanging from the combing of the
hatchway; the bottom plate had sunk from them [model put in] this is
the appearance of a vessel fitted up for horses; the fore and aft
plates had sunk; there was nothing to secure the bars to the side of
the vessel; the back pieces were standing; if the hip of a horse got
under the side rails they might by that means be unshipped; the fore
and aft bottom plates rested upon sand ballast; if it had been
shingle ballast I should have fitted up for ten horses, the same as
the model; I generally secure the stanchions to the ceiling of the
vessel, and with bottom plates to shoulder them in; if they had been
so secured in sand ballast, they would not have shifted; I saw the
Lowestoffe after she was discharged; fourteen or fifteen tons
of sand ballast were taken out in Dr. Smith's punt; I did not
observe the pumps; I consider the accident to have occurred from the
fore and aft plate sinking, the upright pieces were then loosened
and would fall out except where they were spiked to the combing; in
calm weather it might keep the horses in, but not in rough weather;
the vessel would have been properly fitted-up, had it been shingle
instead of sand ballast; everything appeared very strong except the
bottom plates sinking.
By the Court - I can’t say how many stalls had been
fitted-up, they were all down but two; there was room for ten
horses; I went on board the vessel two or three hours after she came
in.
Cross-examined by Solicitor General. - I live in George Town,
and am a shipwright; it is dangerous at sea when the rails become
unshipped; I am not aware that between the vessel’s sailing and
return there had been a gale of wind; there was cargo fore and aft;
to the best of my knowledge the bottom plates ran in under the
cargo; I did not observe upon what the ends rested; five horses were
lying on the starboard, and two on the larboard side when I went on
board; the live horses were on the larboard side; the fitting laid
amongst the horses; it was a whole scene of confusion, except two
stancheons; the live horses were on their
legs; the timber of the fitting was sufficiently strong; also that
of the plates; the Lowestoffe was a schooner, about 206
tones; I knew it was the Lowestoffe because I knew the
captain, Allen; I saw him on board; I don’t recollect the
mate.
By the Jury. - I did
not examine the under side on the plates; I cannot say if there were
any casks under them; I cannot say what the ends rested upon; I
cannot say whether they rested upon anything else than sand; the
plates had sunk right down in a line with the uprights; I should
think there was a depth of five feet from the top of the ballast to
the ceiling of the vessel; there was plenty of room for casks and
general cargo underneath; I did not see the plates after the ballast
was taken out; I cannot say whether there were any transverse pieces
from the plates to the ceiling of the vessel; the stauncheons
standing were spiked as they ought to have been; I cannot say if
they were cleated; they are more safe when cleated; I pointed out to
Captain Tregurtha and Dr. Smith that the plates had sunk about 5
inches.
Mr. John Brown. - I am
a publican, but have followed carpentering and sawing; I saw the
Lowestoffe, October 5th, 1839; I went on board at George
Town; the horses had been taken out; the fittings were all adrift;
they were clearing the sand to get to the pumps, which I understood
were choked; the Captain said nothing to me about them; in the hold
I saw two plates fore and aft; there were no other plates transverse
or otherwise; if there had been I must have seen them; when they
were clearing out the sand, I saw them get out from amongst it one
cask, and hoist it up; the cask was got out of a bed of sand; there
was nothing under it that I could see.
Cross-examined. - When I got there the stalls
were all adrift; when I went on board I saw the sand had shifted
from under the plates, and there was nothing to support the
upwrights; I only saw one cask; I was on board on Saturday about an
hour and a half; there were a great many of the stanchions out, but
some in the plates; there were several hanging to the combing,
especially on the larboard side; there appeared to me more than
three or four stanchions morticed to the plates; the cask was about
fifty gallons; it was only one I saw.
By the Jury. - In the
centre of the plates the uprights had gone; at the ends, several
were standing.
Thomas Stanners. - I
am a wheelwright; I knew the Lowestoffe, belonging to Mr.
Griffiths; I went down to where she was lying opposite Mr. Coulson’s
for a horse; I went on board; it was about the 29th or 30th
September, 1839; Mr. Ross and I did not exactly understand each
other, so I took my horse back again; I saw the captain on board,
and I went down and found fault with the berths; I said to the
captain, I thought the berths would give way, as the uprights were
only just spiked on the combings of the hatchway; he called the
carpenter in and began to blow him up for not making them more
secure than they were; the uprights were halved in and spiked to the
combings; had the combings been morticed and the upright with a
tenant let in it would have been more secure.
Cross-examined. - That
is the way I should have done; I am not a ship carpenter, but can do
almost anything I am put to; the carpenter excused himself, saying
he had not sufficient tools; the captain called the mate to get it
done better; I am quite sure there was no cleating to the upper part
of the uprights, and I told the captain when the vessel rolled they
were likely to break away; there were no horses on board at that
time; why I and Ross disagreed was, that I expected cash, and he
wanted to give me a bill for the horse; I never sold Ross a horse
either before or since.
Re-examined. - I remember it was the 1st of October, because
I had to pay Mr. Stilwell some money on that day.
Mr. W. M. Grayling. - I keep livery stables; I am related to
plaintiff; in September, 1839, I remember he took ten horses from my
stables for shipment; two men named Smith and Hill took them; it was
the 29th or 30th September, 1839; horses at that time was very dear,
and they would have averaged £65 each; I and Ross are judges of
horses; they would have sold to advantage.
By the Jury. - The
horses came into my stables as they were purchased; they were all
healthy and in a fit condition to ship.
Mr. William Scott. - I
am an agriculturalist; I saw ten horses in September or October,
1839, belonging to Ross; they were worth £65 each on the average;
they were draught and saddle horses, and some backs; there was one
very large horse; I saw them in Grayling’s
stables.
Cross-examined. - The
large horse was worth ninety guineas; I saw the horses at Grayling’s
in September, 1839; I looked at each horse, opened their mouths, and
examined some of their knees.
Mr. S. Feutrill. - In
November, 1839, I sold horses in South Australia; on good strong
horses I obtained about fifty per cent, upon the prices
here.
Dr. M. Smith. - I live
at George Town; I have been a good deal engaged in shipping horses
for South Australia; I generally went on board the vessels which
came in, and sometimes when they were going out; I remember the
Lowestoffe sailing lst October, 1839; she returned on the
4th; I then went on board; I was requested by Mr. Ross to go on
board the Lowestoffe and see the fittings, and horses, and
the state they were in; I went on board with Captain Tregurtha and
Robert Cotton; I believe Captain T. to be at Port Phillip. When I
went on board, I saw all the fittings down; I did not consider she
was fitted up secure; there was a bottom plate for the uprights to
be morticed into resting upon sand ballast; the sand ballast had
shifted away from it and allowed the uprights to get loose, and the
horses to break adrift; if these uprights had gone down into the
skin of the vessel, that would have been prevented, if perfectly
secured there with cleets; that was not done; the uprights were
nailed to the carline of the deck, they ought to have been cleeted;
I did not observe any casks amongst the sand ballast; I saw about
fifteen tons taken out; that was independent of the quantity which
might have been pumped up; I should say that the horses that were
alive were not worth a third of their original
value.
By the Court. - I
cannot say whether there was anything under the fitting but sand, I
saw nothing else; the under plate had sunk very
considerably.
Mr. W. L. Goodwin. - I
do not remember the sailing or return of the Lowestoffe; I
saw the captain of that vessel at Mr. Griffiths’ about December,
1839; I was one of two arbitrators who were to decide the question
between Griffiths and Ross; there were two letters produced; I think
they were addressed to Mr. Griffiths from Captain Allen; they were
shown to me at my request by Mr. Eneas Allen; they might have been
addressed to him; I should think the letters would be addressed to
the owner, Mr. Griffiths; Griffiths was in Launceston at the time of
the arbitration; I cannot speak as to the time of the vessel
sailing; whether Griffiths had been absent and returned I do not
know, but I do know that he was upon his premises at the time of the
arbitration.
This closed the plaintiff’s case.
The Solicitor-General moved for a non-suit, on the ground
that no contract had been proved that defendant had engaged to
convey the horses to South Australia.
The Chief Justice
thought there was proof of the horses being shipped for conveyance
to South Australia, it was also in evidence that freight was
demanded after the arbitration from which he thought there was
sufficient for the jury to come to the conclusion that there was a
contract; he would, however, reserve the point if
necessary.
The Solicitor-General.
- A considerable portion of the questions put on behalf of the
plaintiff, related to matters which had been long before the public,
and he was convinced that it was impossible for twelve gentlemen
then assembled to have passed twelve months or more in the colony
without having heard of the matter in dispute, and it was equally as
impossible that an impression so formed could be annihilated in one
moment. Constituted as human nature is, he knew they had a different
task to perform, but he called upon them to discard all impressions
from their minds which they might have received upon the matter then
before the court. They were to try one simple issue between
conflicting parties, but not to confine themselves to what was
equitable and just between them, but to apply themselves to the
simple issue before the court. The allegations of the declaration
had not been borne out by the evidence that defendant had contracted
to convey the horses to South Australia, from the evidence of Allen
there was no proof of a contract existing between Ross and
Griffiths; Mr. Allen admitted there was such a vessel, but denied
the contract. If, however, they were satisfied there was sufficient
evidence to warrant their arriving at a conclusion that a contract
existed, then he admitted that in law Griffiths was placed in the
position of a common carrier, and was bound to deliver the goods he
received for such purpose in safety; the acts of God and the King’s
enemies excepted. He felt satisfied that from the evidence he should
adduce they would arrive at the conclusion that defendant did take
proper care of these horses, and that they had not been lost through
the carelessness, negligence, or improper stowage of defendant,
which if it was the case, it was the duty of the other side to
prove. [Here the learned gentleman went into an extensive commentary
upon the testimony given by the witnesses on the part of plaintiff,
wishing the jury to believe that the evidence was beneath their
notice.] He should leave the case in their hands, and call two
witnesses whom he was sure would convince them that every precaution
had been taken in fitting up the vessel.
For the Defence - Richard McDonald. - I am a shipwright; I
have been in the habit of fitting-up vessels for the reception of
live stock; in Sept., 1839, I was employed by defendant to fit-up
the Lowestoffe; we were obliged to get out the water casks to
get at the timber-boards to clean the timbers for a passage of the
water to the pumps; we did so, and swept it clean; we then stowed
the water casks afresh; they rested on proper beds made for them;
there was some dunnage laid between the casks and the ship’s skin;
on the top of the dunnage we laid sand ballast; that was done to
make a level for the horses to stand upon, and to fill up the
crevices between the casks more completely than the dunnage; we then
laid two pieces of scantling 6 x 4 athwart-ship in the wake of the
main hatchway; they were levelled off at the end, fitted nicely to
the skin of the vessel, and were spiked; the ends rested on casks
filled with water; there were two plates fore-and-after; they were
dropped in ¾ of an in. in each of the thwartship pieces, and spiked
with six inch spikes, and were wedged up from the water casks; there
was a solid foundation all along; there was a row of stanchions
between the berths, and they were secured to the plates, which were
morticed, and the tenants of the stanchion went through three inches
where the water casks allowed; the stanchions were fastened against
the combings of the main hatchway, both spiked and cleeted; the
berths were divided by two thwartship bars, there was a spike went
through each to secure it; I don’t think a horse could unship one of
them very quietly with his hip, the bars would be below the general
run of a horses hip; the upper bar was about three feet from the
floor; the work was stronger than the usual work put into vessels
carrying horses; she was from 150 to 180 tons; I never fitted up a
vessel so strong since I have been in the colony; Shields worked
with me in fitting up up the vessel.
Cross-examined. - I don’t think Shields saw the casks stowed,
he was working ashore at the time; the mate of the vessel and some
of the crew assisted me in stowing the water casks; I have fitted
out five or six vessels for Mr. Griffiths; I have fitted up about
two besides; can’t tell their names, nor the names of their owners;
I have neither journeymen nor apprentices; I fitted her up at the
Queen’s Wharf; I did not go as far as Coulson’s in the vessel that I recollect; I do
not know Thomas Stennar; I do not recollect seeing him before;
Shields lent me a hand to put the berths up; we put up the work
stronger because Mr. Griffiths was ill; we, therefore, put it up
stronger than if he could have seen us; I have been in Mr.
Griffiths employ about two years; before I was at work for Mr.
Jennings; I am an assigned servant to Mr. Griffiths and was so at
the time I have been talking of.
Re-examined. - We could not see Mr. Griffiths, and therefore
fitted up the Lowestoffe very strong, that it should be sure
to please.
By the Court. - I am sure the fore and aft pieces rested on
the casks, and where they did not wedged them up.
By the Jury. - The casks were ton butts and rested on beds,
and the upper part of the cask touched the under part of the plates;
the ballast was stowed before we laid the plates; we weighed up the
plates where they did not travel, and even nailed the wedges to the
casks; there was only one tier of the casks fore and aft; between
the bilge of the casks, and the skin of the vessel there was about
2ft. 6in. which was filled up with dunnage nearly to the level with
the bilge, and that was covered with sand to make a bed for the
horses to stand upon; to secure the wedges, I nailed them to the
casks; I used seven-inch spikes for the purpose.
John Shields. - I am a carpenter; I was employed in fitting
up the Lowestoffe, in 1839; the water casks were stowed
before I began, and a level surface made; the thwart-ship pieces
were bevelled off to the side of the vessel; they are called
sleepers; there were plates fore and aft so they rested upon the
thwart pieces at the end, and upon the casks along the centre; where
they did not meet the casks we put in pieces of timber to bring up
the bearing from the casks; there were scarfs an inch deep in the
thwart-ship pieces to admit the plates; I had previously fitted up
vessels for carrying stock; the fittings of the Essington
were as strong as any I ever fitted up; in my opinion they were
abundantly strong to convey ten horses to Port Adelaide; the
uprights were morticed into the plates below, and spiked and cleeted
into the combing above.
Cross-examined. - I fitted up the Essington on one
occasion before when she took horses - that was a successfully trip;
I never heard of her losing horses when I fitted her up; I am a
house carpenter; I do not know upon what the casks rested; it might
have been sand or any thing else; I swear positively the stanchions
were cleeted; McDonald told me the vessel was to be fitted up; he
did not day for whom; I saw Mr. Eneas Allen whilst putting it up; he
came and asked if Mr. Ross was on board; he said he was the person
the horses belonged to which were going to Adelaide; I am quite sure
I heard that from Mr. Eneas Allen; I believe McDonald went down the
river in the vessel, but I do not recollect he told me so; she was
not quite finished when she left the Queen’s Wharf; there was no
other carpenter on board when I was there; I was on board one day
only; we knocked them up in that time.
Re-examined. - It was not a hard day’s work either; the
berths were complete all but the breast-piece.
By the Jury. - There was nothing to prevent the plates going
amidships except the scarf of an inch in the end of the thwart-ship
pieces.
This closed the case on the part of the defendant.
The Attorney-General in reply would respectfully submit, that the defence had been
totally unsustained as to the contract.
The Solicitor General
would give up the contract, satisfied that it had been
proved.
The Attorney-General in continuation.
- The contract being established, the other point
was deeply important to the community at large, and he would venture
to contend that if they were satisfied such negligence had been
proved, that the loss grew out of it, he was satisfied his Honor
would direct a verdict for plaintiff. It was the duty of the other
side, if they would, to have proved it to have arisen from an act of
God or the king’s enemies, which they had not done; the log-book had
been put in, and he had offered to admit the contents of that book
if they would produce the two letters spoken of by Allen, but this
had been declined by the discreet attorney and solicitor for the
defendant. If the defendant professed to give a fair account of the
transaction, why were these letters kept back? - Because these
parties loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were
evil. If they believed the testimony of McDonald, he would recommend
every one of the jury upon their retiring home, to dismiss their
superintendents or overseers, and be as little from their homes as
possible; because, according to his testimony, assigned servants did
more work when their masters were away than when superintending.
They were called upon to decide in the dark, without the twilight
which might have been cast upon the case by those two letters which
were no doubt glimmering in the pockets of Mr. Gleadow. He would
leave the case in their hands, satisfied that unless they placed
implicit credence in the evidence of men who came to praise their
own work, that he should have a verdict at their
hands.
His Honor in summing up, remarked, that he should not read over one tittle of the
evidence unless they wished it, satisfied as he was with the close
attention they had paid to the whole of the proceedings. There were
two points upon which he would address them; they would dismiss from
their minds every thing they had heard before, more especially that
the subject matter before them had been submitted to arbitration,
and whether any award had been given or not they could know nothing
about. There was evidence that freight had been demanded after the
arbitration, but that was no legitimate conclusion that it was due.
Whatever conclusion they arrived at, must be from the evidence they
had heard that day.
The jury after an absence of nearly four hours returned into Court, and found a verdict for the plaintiff
(Mr Ross), damages £386.
Notes
See also Launceston Advertiser, 14 January 1841; The Launceston Courier, 11 January 1841.
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