A provision in a bill of lading, that the carrier "shall not be
liable for loss or damage caused by the perils of the sea," or by
"accidents of navigation," does not exempt the carrier from
liability for damage to part of the cargo by sea water under these
circumstances: while the ship was being unloaded at the dock in her
port of her destination, a case of detonators in her hold exploded,
without fault of anyone engaged in carrying or discharging the
cargo, and the explosion made a large hole in the side of the ship,
through which the water rapidly entered the hold and damaged other
goods.
Upon an appeal from a decree of the District Court of the United
States for the Southern District of New York dismissing a libel in
admiralty by the American Sugar-Refining Company against the
steamship
G. R. Booth for damage to cargo (64 F. 878), the
circuit court of appeals certified to this Court the following
statement of facts and question of law:
"On July 14, 1891, the steamship
G. R. Booth, a large,
seaworthy, steel vessel, was lying at the dock in the waters of the
harbor of New York, discharging a general cargo, which had been
laden on board at Hamburg for transportation to and delivery at New
York City. Part of the cargo laden on board at Hamburg consisted of
twenty cases of detonators."
"Detonators are blasting caps used to explode dynamite or gun
cotton, and consist of a copper cap packed with fulminate of
mercury. In use, the cap is placed in contact with dynamite, a fuse
is pushed into the cap until it meets the packing, the fuse is
lighted, and when the fire reaches the fulminate it explodes it,
thus exploding the dynamite. The detonators were made in Germany,
and were packed according to the regulations prescribed by German
law, adopted and enforced for the purpose of eliminating risk of
danger in handling
Page 171 U. S. 451
and transporting them. When thus packed, the immunity from
danger of an accidental explosion is supposed to be complete, and
they are transported and handled like ordinary merchandise by
carriers and truckmen, without the use of any special precautions
to avoid risk. They do not explode when subjected to violent shock,
as when thrown from such a height above the ground as to shatter in
fragments the cases in which they are packed. They were customarily
stowed and transported in vessels like ordinary merchandise,
indiscriminately with the other cargo, and until the present
occurrence, although millions of cases had been shipped and carried
to all parts of the world, no accident had happened, so far as is
known."
"The detonators were stowed with other cargo in afterhold No. 4.
While the steamship was being unladen, one of the cases exploded,
making a large hole in the side of the ship, in the No. 4 hold,
besides doing other damage. In consequence of the opening thus made
in the ship's side, sea water rapidly entered in the No. 4 hold,
beyond the control of the capacity of the pumps, and passed from
the No. 4 hold through the partition into No. 3 hold. In No. 3 hold
there was cargo belonging to the libelant, consisting of sugar,
which had not as yet been discharged. The sea water thus entering
the hold damaged the sugar extensively. The boxes of detonators
were stowed and handled in the usual way, and the explosion
occurred purely by accident, and without any fault or negligence on
the part of any person engaged in transporting them or in
discharging the cargo."
"The bill of lading under which the sugar of the libelant was
carried contained the following clause:"
"The ship or carrier shall not be liable for loss or damage
occasioned by the perils of the sea or other waters; by fire, from
any cause or wheresoever occurring; by barratry of the master or
crew; by enemies, pirates, robbers, or thieves; by arrest and
restraint of princes, rulers, or people; by explosion, bursting of
boilers, breakage of shafts, or any latent defect in hull,
machinery, or appurtenances; by collision, stranding, or other
accidents of navigation of whatsoever kind. "
Page 171 U. S. 452
"Upon these facts, the court desires instructions upon the
following question of law, viz., whether the damage to libelant's
sugar caused by the sea water which entered the ship through the
hole made in her side by the explosion, without her fault, is a
'loss or damage occasioned by the perils of the sea or other
waters,' or by an 'accident of navigation, of whatsoever kind'
within the above-mentioned exceptions in the bill of lading."
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a libel against the steamship
G. R. Booth for
damage done to sugar, part of her cargo, under the following
circumstances: another part of the cargo consisted of twenty cases
of detonators, being copper caps packed with fulminate of mercury
for exploding dynamite or gun cotton. While she was being unladen
at the dock in her port of destination, one of the cases of
detonators exploded, purely by accident and without any fault or
negligence on the part of anyone engaged in carrying or discharging
the cargo. The explosion made a large hole in the side of the ship,
through which the sea water rapidly entered the hold and greatly
damaged the sugar.
The bill of lading of the sugar provides that "the ship or
carrier shall not be liable for loss or damage occasioned by the
perils of the sea or other waters," or "by collision, stranding, or
other accidents of navigation, of whatsoever kind."
The question certified by the circuit court of appeals to this
Court is whether the damage to the sugar is within these exceptions
in the bill of lading.
The case turns upon the question whether the damage to the sugar
by the sea water which entered the ship through the hole made in
her side by the explosion, without her fault, was "occasioned by
the perils of the sea," or, in other words,
Page 171 U. S. 453
whether it is the explosion, or a peril of the sea, that is to
be considered as the proximate cause of the damage, according to
the familiar maxim
causa proxima, non remota,
spectatur.
The many authorities bearing upon this point, fully cited and
discussed in the learned arguments at the bar, have been carefully
examined. But only a few of them need be referred to, because
judgments heretofore delivered by this Court afford sufficient
guides for the decision of this case.
In an early case, in which the action was upon a bond given
under the Embargo Act of December 29, 1807, c. 5, ยง 2, 2 Stat. 453,
to reland goods in some port of the United States, "the dangers of
the seas only excepted," the vessel was irresistibly driven by
stress of weather into Porto Rico, and the cargo was there landed
and sold by order of the governor, with which the master was
obliged to comply. It was argued for the United States that the
goods arrived in Porto Rico in safety, and the party had the full
benefit of them, and probably at a higher price than if he had
landed them in the United States, and that the sea was not the
proximate cause of the loss. But this Court held that the case was
within the exception in the bond because the vessel, as said by
Chief Justice Marshall in delivering judgment,
"was driven into Porto Rico, and the sale of her cargo while
there was inevitable. The dangers of the sea placed her in a
situation which put it out of the power of the owners to reland her
cargo within the United States. The obligors, then, were prevented
by the dangers of the seas from complying with the condition of the
bond, for an effect which proceeds inevitably and of absolute
necessity from a specified cause must be ascribed to that
cause."
United States v.
Hall, 6 Cranch 171,
10 U. S. 176.
In
Waters v. Merchants' Ins.
Co., 11 Pet. 213, the circuit court certified to
this Court the question whether a policy of insurance upon a
steamboat on the Western waters against the perils of the rivers
and of fire covered a loss of the boat by a fire caused by the
barratry of the master and crew. This question was answered in the
negative for reasons stated by Mr. Justice Story as follows:
"As we understand the first
Page 171 U. S. 454
question, it assumes that the fire was directly and immediately
caused by the barratry of the master and crew, as the efficient
agents, or, in other words, that the fire was communicated and
occasioned by the direct act and agency of the master and crew,
intentionally done from a barratrous purpose. In this view of it,
we have no hesitation to say that a loss by fire caused by the
barratry of the master or crew is not a loss within the policy.
Such a loss is properly a loss attributable to the barratry, as its
proximate cause, as it concurs as the efficient agent, with the
element,
eo instanti, when the injury is produced. If the
master or crew should barratrously bore holes in the bottom of the
vessel, and the latter should thereby be filled with water and
sink, the loss would properly be deemed a loss by barratry, and not
by a peril of the seas or of rivers, though the flow of the water
should cooperate in producing the sinking."
Id., 36 U. S.
219-220.
The maxim has been largely expounded and defined by this Court
in cases of insurance against fire.
In
Insurance Co. v.
Tweed, 7 Wall. 44, cotton in a warehouse was
insured against fire by a policy which provided that the insurers
should not be liable for losses which might
"happen or take place by means of any invasion, insurrection,
riot, or civil commotion, or any military or usurped power,
explosion, earthquake, or hurricane."
An explosion took place in one warehouse resulting in a
conflagration which spread to a second warehouse, and thence, in
the course of the wind blowing at the time, to a third warehouse,
containing the insured cotton. This Court held that the loss of the
cotton was caused by the explosion, and therefore the insurer was
not liable, and, speaking by Mr. Justice Miller, said:
"The only question to be decided in the case is whether the fire
which destroyed plaintiff's cotton happened or took place by means
of the explosion, for, if it did, the defendant is not liable, by
the express terms of the contract. That the explosion was in some
sense the cause of the fire is not denied, but it is claimed that
its relation was too remote to bring the case within the exception
of the policy. And we have had cited to us a general review of the
doctrine of proximate and remote causes,
Page 171 U. S. 455
as it has arisen and been decided in the courts in a great
variety of cases. . . . One of the most valuable of the criteria
furnished us by these authorities is to ascertain whether any new
cause has intervened between the fact accomplished and the alleged
cause. If a new force or power has intervened of itself sufficient
to stand as the cause of the misfortune, the other must be
considered as too remote. In the present case, we think there is no
such new cause. The explosion undoubtedly produced or set in
operation the fire which burned the plaintiff's cotton. The fact
that it was carried to the cotton by first burning another building
supplies no new force or power which caused the burning. Nor can
the accidental circumstance that the wind was blowing in a
direction to favor the progress of the fire towards the warehouse
be considered a new cause. . . . We are clearly of opinion that the
explosion was the cause of the fire in this case."
Id., 74 U. S. 51-52.
In that case, as has been since observed by Mr. Justice Strong in
delivering judgment in a case to be presently referred to more
particularly,
"it was, in effect, ruled that the efficient cause, the one that
set others in motion, is the cause to which the loss is to be
attributed, though the other causes may follow it and operate more
immediately in producing the disaster."
Insurance Co. v. Boon, 95 U. S.
117,
95 U. S.
131.
In
Insurance Co. v.
Transportation Co., 12 Wall. 194, a large steamboat
on Long Island Sound was insured against fire, excepting fire
happening "by means of any invasion, insurrection, riot, or civil
commotion, or of any military or usurped power." The facts, as
found by the circuit court and stated in the report, were as
follows: another vessel came into collision with the steamboat,
striking her on the side and cutting into her hull below the water
line, in consequence of which she immediately and rapidly began to
fill with water. Within ten or fifteen minutes after the collision,
the water reached the floor of her furnace, and generated steam
which blew the fire against her woodwork, whereby her upper works
were enveloped in flames, and continued to burn for half or
three-quarters of an hour, when she rolled over and gradually sank
in twenty fathoms of water. From the effects of the collision
alone
Page 171 U. S. 456
she would not have sunk below her promenade deck, but would have
remained suspended in the water and could have been towed to a
place of safety and repaired at an expense of $15,000. The sinking
of the steamboat below her promenade deck was the result of the
action of the fire in burning off her upper works, whereby her
floating capacity was decreased, and she sank to the bottom, and
the amount of the additional damage thereby caused, including the
cost of raising her, was $7,300. Upon that state of facts, this
Court, affirming the judgment of the circuit court, held the
insurers liable for the latter sum. But in the opinion of this
Court, delivered by Mr. Justice Strong, the rule was recognized and
affirmed that
"when there is no order of succession in time, when there are
two concurrent causes of a loss, the predominating efficient one
must be regarded as the proximate when the damage done by each
cannot be distinguished."
And it was added, "And certainly that cause which set the other
in motion, and gave to it its efficiency for harm at the time of
the disaster must rank as predominant."
Id., 79 U. S. 199.
The rule was held to be inapplicable to that case because the
damage resulting from the fire and that caused by the collision,
apart from the fire, were clearly distinguished, and because the
policy, exempting the insurers from liability for losses by fire by
certain specified causes, covered losses by fire from all other
causes, including collisions. But for those distinctions, the
decision could hardly be reconciled with the earlier opinions
already referred to, or with that delivered by the same able and
careful judge in the later case of
Insurance Co. v. Boon,
95 U. S. 117.
In
Insurance Co. v. Boon, a policy of insurance against
fire, issued during the war of the Rebellion, for one year, upon
goods in a store in the City of Glasgow, in the State of Missouri,
provided that the insurers should not be liable for
"any loss or damage by fire which may happen or take place by
means of any invasion, insurrection, riot, or civil commotion, or
of any military or usurped power."
The City of Glasgow, being occupied as a military post by the
United States forces, was attacked by a superior armed force of the
rebels, and defended by the
Page 171 U. S. 457
United States forces, and during the battle the commander of
these forces, upon its becoming apparent that the city could not be
successfully defended, and in order to prevent military stores,
which had been placed in the city hall, from falling into the hands
of the rebels, caused them to be destroyed by burning the city
hall, and the fire, spreading from building to building, through
three intermediate buildings, to that containing the goods insured,
destroyed them. This Court held that the loss was within the
exception in the policy, because the rebel military power was the
predominating and operating cause of the fire, and in the opinion
of the Court, delivered by Mr. Justice Strong and strongly
supported by authority, the true rule and its application to that
case were stated as follows:
"The question is not what cause was nearest in time or place to
the catastrophe. That is not the meaning of the maxim
causa
proxima, non remota, spectatur. The proximate cause is the
efficient cause -- the one that necessarily sets the other causes
in operation. The causes that are merely incidental, or instruments
of a superior or controlling agency, are not the proximate causes
and the responsible ones, though they may be nearer in time to the
result. It is only when the causes are independent of each other
that the nearest is, of course, to be charged with the
disaster."
95 U.S.
95 U. S.
130.
"The conclusion is inevitable that the fire which caused the
destruction of the plaintiffs' property happened or took place not
merely in consequence of, but by means of, the rebel invasion and
military or usurped power. The fire occurred while the attack was
in progress, and when it was about being successful. The attack, as
a cause, never ceased to operate until the loss was complete. It
was the
causa causans which set in operation every agency
that contributed to the destruction. It created the military stores
in the city hall, and made it the duty of the commanding officer of
the federal forces to destroy them. His act therefore in setting
fire to the city hall, was directly in the line of the force set in
motion by the usurping power."
95 U.S.
95 U. S.
132.
"The court below regarded the action of the United States
military authorities as a sufficient cause
Page 171 U. S. 458
intervening between the rebel attack and the destruction of the
plaintiffs' property, and therefore held it to be the responsible
proximate cause. With this we cannot concur. The proximate cause,
as we have seen, is the dominant cause, not the one which is
incidental to that cause, its mere instrument, though the latter
may be nearest in place and time to the loss. In
Milwaukee
& St. Paul Railway v. Kellogg, 94 U. S.
469, we said, in considering what is the proximate and
what the remote cause of an injury,"
"The inquiry must always be whether there was any intermediate
cause,
disconnected from the primary fault and
self-operating, which produced the injury."
In the present case, the burning of the city hall, and the
spread of the fire afterwards, was not a new and independent cause
of loss. On the contrary, it was an incident, a necessary incident
and consequence, of the hostile rebel attack on the town -- a
military necessity caused by the attack. It was one of a continuous
chain of events brought into being by the usurped military power --
events so linked together as to form one continuous whole.
95 U.S.
95 U. S.
133.
In general accord with the opinions above quoted are two cases
in this Court upon the meaning and effect of the term "dangers of
navigation," or "perils of the sea," in a bill of lading.
The Mohawk, 8
Wall. 153;
The
Portsmouth, 9 Wall. 682.
In
The Mohawk, a steamboat, carrying wheat under a bill
of lading containing an exception of "dangers of navigation,"
grounding on the flats, and, in the effort to get her off, became
disabled by the bursting of her boiler, and afterwards sank. It was
argued, among other things, on the one side, that the explosion was
not a danger incident to navigation, and, on the other, that the
sinking of the vessel was the immediate cause of the damage to the
wheat. The question at issue was whether the vessel was entitled to
freight
pro rata itineris. This Court, speaking by Mr.
Justice Nelson, said that "the explosion of the boiler was not a
peril within the exception of the bill of lading," and therefore
the case fell within that class in which the ship is disabled or
prevented from forwarding the goods to the port of destination by a
peril or accident not
Page 171 U. S. 459
within the exception in the bill of lading. 8 Wall.
75 U. S. 162.
Although this statement was perhaps not absolutely necessary to the
decision, it was upon a point argued by counsel, and shows clearly
that the Court was of opinion that the explosion, and not the
sinking, was the proximate cause of the loss.
In
The Portsmouth, it was decided that a jettison made
to lighten a steamboat which had been run aground by her captain's
negligence was not within an exception of "the dangers of lake
navigation" in a bill of lading, and Mr. Justice Strong, in
delivering judgment, said:
"A loss by a jettison occasioned by a peril of the sea is, in
ordinary cases, a loss by perils of the sea. But it is well settled
that if a jettison of a cargo or a part of it is rendered necessary
by any fault or breach of contract of the master of owners of the
vessel, the jettison must be attributed to that fault or breach of
contract, rather than to the sea peril, though that may also be
present, and enter into the case. This is a principle alike
applicable to exceptions in bills of lading and in policies of
insurance. Though the peril of the sea may be nearer in time to the
disaster, the efficient cause, without which the peril would not
have been incurred, is regarded as the proximate cause of the loss.
And there is perhaps greater reason for applying the rule to
exceptions in contracts of common carriers than to those in
policies of insurance, for, in general, negligence of the insured
does not relieve an underwriter, while a common carrier may not,
even by stipulation, relieve himself from the consequences of his
own fault."
9 Wall.
76 U. S.
684-685.
Generally speaking, the words "perils of the sea" have the same
meaning in a bill of lading as in a policy of insurance. There is a
difference, indeed, in their effect in the two kinds of contract,
when negligence of the master or crew of the vessel contributes to
a loss by a peril of the sea. In such a case, an insurer against
"perils of the sea" is liable, because the assured does not warrant
that his servants shall use due care to avoid them, whereas an
exception of "perils of the sea" in a bill of lading does not
relieve the carrier from his primary obligation to carry with
reasonable care unless prevented by the excepted perils. But when,
as in the present case, it is
Page 171 U. S. 460
distinctly found that there was no negligence, there is no
reason, and much inconvenience, in holding that the words have
different meanings in the two kinds of commercial contract.
The
Portsmouth, above cited;
Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Erie
Transportation Co., 117 U. S. 312,
117 U. S.
322-325;
Liverpool Steam Co. v. Phoenix Ins.
Co., 129 U. S. 397,
129 U. S. 438,
129 U. S. 442;
Compania de Navigacion La Flecha v. Brauer, 168 U.
S. 104;
The Xantho, 12 App.Cas. 503, 510, 514,
517.
In the case at bar the explosion of the case of detonators,
besides doing other damage, burst open the side of the ship below
the water line, and the sea water rapidly flowed in through the
opening made by the explosion, and injured the plaintiff's sugar.
The explosion, in consequence of which, and through the hole made
by which, the water immediately entered the ship, must be
considered as the predominant, the efficient, the proximate, the
responsible cause of the damage to the sugar, according to each of
the tests laid down in the judgments of this Court above referred
to. The damage to the sugar was an effect which proceeded
inevitably, and of absolute necessity, from the explosion, and must
therefore be ascribed to that cause. The explosion concurred, as
the efficient agent, with the water at the instant when the water
entered the ship. The inflow of the water, seeking a level by the
mere force of gravitation, was not a new and independent cause, but
was a necessary and instantaneous result and effect of the bursting
open of the ship's side by the explosion. There being two
concurrent causes of the damage -- the explosion of the detonators
and the inflow of the water -- without any appreciable interval of
time or any possibility of distinguishing the amount of damage done
by each, the explosion, as the cause which set the water in motion,
and gave it its efficiency for harm at the time of the disaster,
must be regarded as the predominant cause. It was the primary and
efficient cause, the one that necessarily set the force of the
water in operation. It was the superior or controlling agency, of
which the water was the incident or instrument. The inflow of the
sea water was not an intermediate cause, disconnected from the
primary cause, and self-operating; it was not a new and independent
cause
Page 171 U. S. 461
of damage, but, on the contrary, it was an incident, a necessary
incident and consequence, of the explosion, and it was one of a
continuous chain of events brought into being by the explosion --
events so linked together as to form one continuous whole.
The damage was not owing to any violent action of winds or
waves, or to the ship's coming against a rock or shoal or other
external object, but it was owing to an explosion within the ship,
and arising out of the nature of the cargo, which cannot be
considered, either in common understanding, or according to the
judicial precedents, as a peril of the sea.
As was observed by this Court in
Insurance Co. v. Boon,
above cited:
"Often, in case of a fire, much of the destruction is caused by
water applied in efforts to extinguish the flames; yet it is not
doubted all that destruction is caused by the fire, and insurers
against fire are liable for it."
95 U.S.
95 U. S. 131.
If damage done by water thrown on by human agency to put out a fire
is considered a direct consequence of the fire, surely damage done
by water entering instantly, by the mere force of gravitation,
through a hole made by an explosion of part of the cargo, must be
considered as a direct consequence of the explosion.
Upon principle and authority, therefore, our conclusion is that
the explosion, and not the sea water, was the proximate cause of
the damage to the sugar, and that this damage was not occasioned by
the perils of the sea, within the exceptions in the bill of
lading.
Nor can the damage to the sugar, attributable not to a peril of
the sea, but to the explosion of part of the cargo after the ship
had ended her voyage and had been finally and intentionally moored
at the dock, there to remain until her cargo was taken out of her,
be considered as "occasioned by accidents of navigation."
Canada Shipping Co. v. British Shipowners' Association, 23
Q.B.D. 342;
The Accomac, 15 Prob.Div. 208;
Thames
& Mersey Ins. Co. v. Hamilton, 12 App.Cas. 484;
The
Mohawk, above cited.
Much reliance was placed by the appellee upon a recent English
case in which the House of Lords, reversing the decision
Page 171 U. S. 462
of Lord Esher and Lords Justices Bowen and Fry in the Court of
Appeal, and restoring the judgment of Lord Justice Lopes in the
Queen's Bench Division, held that damage to goods by sea water
which, without any neglect or default on the part of the shipowners
or their servants, found its way into the hold of a steamship
through a hole which had been gnawed by rats in a leaden pipe
connected with the bathroom of the vessel, was within the exception
of "dangers or accidents of the seas" in a bill of lading.
Hamilton v. Pandorf, 12 App.Cas. 518, 17 Q.B.D. 670, 16
Q.B.D. 629. There is nothing in the report of any stage of that
case to show that the sea water entered the ship immediately upon
the gnawing by the rats of the hole in the pipe, and any such
inference would be inconsistent with one of the opinions delivered
in the House of Lords, in which Lord Fitzgerald said:
"The remote cause was, in a certain sense, the action of the
rats on the lead pipe; but the immediate cause of the damage was
the irruption of sea water from time to time through the injured
pipe, caused by the rolling of the ship as she proceeded on her
voyage."
12 App.Cas. 528. However that may have been, that case differs
so much in its facts from the case now before us that it is
unnecessary to consider it more particularly.
Question certified answered in the negative.