BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Moon and Others v. The Caledonian Railway Co. [1876] ScotLR 13_517 (9 June 1876) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1876/13SLR0517.html Cite as: [1876] SLR 13_517, [1876] ScotLR 13_517 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
Page: 517↓
[
Circumstances in which it was held that the owners of a harbour were entitled to alter a practice as to preference in loading at certain cranes in the harbour without notice to the public.
Opinions, that the harbour-master himself might in the circumstances have made the alteration without authority from the owners of the harbour.
This was an action brought by the pursuer and others, as owners of the steamship “Nellie,” against the Caledonian Railway Company, as owners of the harbour of Grangemouth, concluding for £275 as damages for the loss sustained by the detention of the “Nellie” for eleven days outside the docks at Grangemouth.
The Lord Ordinary ordered a proof, and thereafter pronounced the following interlocutor:—
“ Edinburgh, 7 th December 1875.—The Lord Ordinary having heard parties' procurators on the closed record, productions, and proof, and having considered the debate and whole process, In the first place, Finds, as matters of fact, (1) That the defenders are now, and since 1867 have been, the owners of the harbour of Grangemouth; this part, as well as the other parts of the undertaking of the company of proprietors of the Forth and Clyde Navigation having been transferred to the defenders' company by virtue of ‘The Caledonian Railway and Forth and Clyde Navigation Companies Act, 1867’ (30 and 31 Vict. c. 106): (2) That for four years or thereby prior to October 1874, steamers were allowed a
Page: 518↓
preference over sailing vessels at the cranes at which coals are shipped in the said harbour; but, irrespective of this preference, steam vessels arriving at the dock gates had not ‘a preference in entering them over vessels already arrived:’ (3) That on 12th October 1874 the defenders resolved that the preference over sailing vessels at the cranes, which, as aforesaid, had previously been allowed, should not be continued, and on and after the 13th October 1874 all steamers not already ‘upon turn,’ or not regular traders, were in consequence put on an equality with sailing vessels requiring the use of the cranes: (4) That the intention of the defenders to change the existing usage was not communicated, nor was there any publication of the order by which this change was effected before it was brought into operation: (5) That this change of usage was not an act of capricious administration, but, on the contrary, was resolved on and ordered in good faith, and in the belief that it would operate beneficially upon the trade of the port: (6) That the screw steamer ‘Nellie,’ of which the pursuers are the owners, was, on the 9th of the said month of October 1874, chartered to Messrs Hugh MacLean and Company of Glasgow, by the charter-party No. 6 of process, whereby it is, inter alia, provided that she should, ‘with all convenient speed sail and proceed to a loading-berth at steam crane at Grangemouth, or as near thereunto as she may safely get,’ and there take in a cargo of steam coal: (7) That in terms of this charter-party the ‘Nellie’ was subsequently taken to Grangemouth, where she arrived after five o'clock, and after Custom-house hours, on 17th October 1874: (8) That on arrival the master desired to take his vessel into the wet dock, on the quays of which the coal cranes are placed, but his requests to be allowed to enter at that time was refused by the harbour-master, on the ground that, as alleged, the space available for vessels in which coals were to be loaded was already filled with vessels which, under the new regulations, were entitled to a preference over the ‘Nellie’ at the cranes: (9) That the reason thus assigned was true in point of fact: (10) That the ‘Nellie’ lay at the entrance to the dock till the morning of the Monday, 19th October 1874, when she was taken to and moored at the Ballast Quay, where, though put on turn for a crane berth on said 19th October, she was kept till the afternoon of the 28th of October, when her turn for the crane arrived, and when accordingly she was taken into dock and berthed at the crane No. 2, which is the larger of the two steam cranes in the harbour of Grangemouth, and at which vessels of the size of the ‘Nellie’ are in use to be loaded: (11) That the ‘Nellie’ was, by the operation of the new regulations, detained at Grangemouth, and outside the dock, for eight days longer than she would have been so detained had her turn at the crane been regulated by the usage which was thereby changed: And (12) that this detention was the cause of loss or damage to the pursuers. In the second place, Finds, as matter of law, that the defenders were entitled to fix the conditions on which the cranes in question were to be used, and the change made as aforesaid on the order or turn in which vessels were to be served having been resolved on and carried out in good faith, and, as the defenders believed, for the benefit of the trade of the port of Grangemouth, the loss and damage for which reparation is now sued for is not loss or damage resulting from fault on the part of the defenders, and consequently is not loss or damage for reparation of which the defenders are liable: Therefore sustains the defences, assoilzies the defenders, and decerns.” The substance of his Lordship's note appended to this interlocutor will be found in the opinion of the Lord President.
The pursuers reclaimed, and argued—(1) The defenders had no right to make this alteration in their practice. In the defenders' bye-laws for the regulation of the port it is provided that vessels “shall be put on turn for steam cranes when ready to use them, and load as ordered.” These bye-laws could only be altered by the Sheriff, and without his authority the defenders could not alter their existing practice as to loading. (2) Even if they could have done so, they must have given reasonable notice, which they had failed to do. If the contention of the defenders was sound, they were entitled to change their regulations without an hour's notice, and that was plainly absurd.
Authorities quoted—Browne on Carriers, 84; Wiggins v. Boddington, 3 Carrington and Payne, 544; Lawson v. Burness, 1 Hurlstone and Coltman, 396.
The defenders argued—(1) The bye-laws referred to were not intended to bind the defenders to any existing usage, but to insure by the imposition of penalties that masters and others resorting to the harbour observed the rules in force there. These bye-laws were mere police regulations—not measures for working the harbour—and there was not any contract between the parties constituted by them; besides, the bye-law referred to could not be interpreted as referring to the practice of giving steamers a preference over sailing vessels, as contended for by the pursuers. (2) It was absolutely necessary to make some alteration, and to make it at once for the conduct of the harbour, and what the defenders did was reasonable and fair to all parties. If any notice was to be held necessary, it must be notice to the whole world, and that would have caused intolerable delay and inconvenience.
At advising—
The defenders here—the Caledonian Railway Company—are owners of the harbour of Grangemouth, and they manage that harbour in the ordinary way, through a harbour-master, to whom is committed the conduct of all arrangements in connection with the admission and berthing of vessels, discharging and loading their cargoes, and various other matters.
For about four years prior to October 1874 there had been a practice—no regulation, but a mere practice—of giving steamships a preference over sailing vessels at the cranes at which coals were loaded; but in 1874 it was found that in consequence of the extension of the trade of the harbour, and the number and size of the steamers resorting to it, that this preference was inconvenient
Page: 519↓
In these circumstances the ship “Nellie,” chartered by Messrs Robertson & Company of Grangemouth and Glasgow, arrived at the harbour gates on the 17th October, and found that the old practice had been altered, and she was not to have the preference that steamships had hitherto enjoyed. The consequence was that she was delayed for eight days longer than she would have been had she received that preference. The owners now claim demurrage from the defenders as owners of the harbour; the ground for their claim, as I understand it, being that they had no right to alter this preference, or at least no right to do so without notice. Now, as to their right to alter it, I have not the smallest doubt; it was for the convenience of the ships frequenting the port that it was done, and the owners might change it at any time and apply any other rule of rotation, and I cannot doubt that the owners acted both in the interest of the harbour and of traders. But, then, it is said that they had no right to make the change without notice to the public. This is, at first sight, a very plausible objection, but if it is fully considered it is seen to be unreasonable. To whom was notice to be given. Notice at Grangemouth would not have reached the “Nellie,” nor the other traders frequenting the harbour. The trade of the harbour is not a local one, but extends all over the globe, and if notice was to be given at all, it must be given to the whole world. I cannot see where the limit is to be. Charters may at this moment be in course of being concluded in any of the the British colonies in reliance on this practice. Again, supposing the notice to have been given, how long is the harbour-master to wait before he adopts the new order? It will be a very long time before the intelligence reaches the uttermost parts of the earth, and therefore, upon inquiry, this becomes a most unreasonable view of the case. In short, this alteration, which put the “Nellie” in a most disadvantageous position, was quite within the power of the defenders to make, and was for the interest both of the harbour and the traders to it. Indeed, I have little doubt that the harbour-master, unless restrained by the terms of his appointment, could himself have made this alteration at any time.
The interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary was affirmed.
Counsel for Pursuers— Asher— Innes. Agents— Boyd, Macdonald, & Lowson, S.S.C.
Counsel for Defenders— Dean of Faculty (Watson)— Johnstone. Agents— Hope, Mackay, & Mann, W.S.