Supreme Court of Canada
Deitcher v. Whitzman, [1936] S.C.R. 539
Date: 1936-05-27
Louis Deitcher and Jacob
Deitcher, doing business under the firm name and style of Deitcher Brothers
(Defendants) Appellants;
and
Myer Whitzman and Edward
Whitzman (Plaintiffs) Respondents.
1936: April 28, 29; 1936: May 27.
Present: Duff C.J. and Cannon, Crocket,
Davis and Kerwin JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF NOVA
SCOTIA EN BANC.
Contract—Sale of goods—Contract for sale of
scrap steel, accumulated on a certain wharf, to be loaded there on ship—Clause
providing that weight of goods be ascertained by checking ship’s
draft—Subsequent arrangement for transferring goods and loading at different
place—Change in circumstances—Conduct of parties—Dispute as to weight of goods
loaded—Method of ascertainment—Evidence to prove weight.
Defendants contracted to purchase from
plaintiffs certain scrap steel, part of which was on a wharf at Dartmouth and
part at Halifax, and which was to be loaded on a steamer chartered by
defendants. The contract provided: “Railway weights to govern settlement on all
material loaded in Halifax. For material loaded in Dartmouth, weight to be
obtained in accordance with ship’s draft. [Plaintiffs] have the right to
appoint Lloyd’s Agents to act on [plaintiffs’] behalf as regards to checking
the draft for weight purposes, and [defendants] are appointing ship’s chief
officer for the same purpose.” The intention that the steamer should take on
the Dartmouth cargo from said Dartmouth wharf was frustrated by the ship
captain’s fears that there was not sufficient depth of water for that to be
done safely. The parties then made an agreement whereby the Dartmouth scrap was
loaded into lighters and transported to the ship’s side at a pier in Halifax.
It was loaded and stowed in the steamer from these lighters while the Halifax
scrap was being put on from the pier. Plaintiffs did nothing as to checking the
ship’s draft, nor did defendants or the ship’s officer notify them that the
draft was to be checked for the purpose of ascertaining the weight of the
Dartmouth scrap. The main dispute was as to the weight of the scrap brought
from Dartmouth, to prove which weight the plaintiffs at the trial adduced
evidence of the lightermen and others. The jury’s finding of the weight was in
plaintiffs’ favour, and judgment was given accordingly, which was affirmed on
appeal. Defendants appealed to this Court.
Held: In the
circumstances the above quoted weight clause respecting the Dartmouth scrap in
the original contract could not fairly be held to have been incorporated as an
implied term of the new arrangement made for its loading: checking its weight
by the displacement method within the true meaning of said weight clause became
impossible owing
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to the simultaneous loading (which the clause
could not be taken as contemplating) of Halifax and Dartmouth scrap at Halifax;
further, the clause contemplated concurrent checking and raised a duty in each
party to co-operate with the other in the checking of the draft. It was therefore
competent to plaintiffs to prove by the best available testimony the weight of
the Dartmouth scrap actually delivered; and the evidence adduced warranted the
jury’s finding.
Judgment of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia
en banc, [1936] 1 D.L.R. 780, affirmed.
APPEAL by the defendants from the judgment of
the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia en banc
affirming (Ross J. dissenting) the judgment of Hall J. at trial, on findings of
a jury, in favour of the plaintiffs. The action was mainly for the price of goods
sold and delivered, and the main question in dispute was the quantity (weight
in tons) of scrap steel delivered by plaintiffs to defendants. The material
facts of the case and questions in dispute are sufficiently stated in the
judgment now reported. The appeal was dismissed with costs.
D. McInnes and S. E. Schwisberg for the
appellants.
J. A. Walker K.C. for the respondents.
Duff C.J.—The appeal should be dismissed with costs.
The judgment of Cannon, Crocket, Davis and Kerwin JJ. was delivered by
Crocket J.—The defendants, a firm of Montreal exporters, entered into a
contract in writing with the plaintiffs, junk dealers of Halifax, in May, 1934,
for the purchase of approximately 1,500 tons of scrap steel at the price of
$8.50 per ton and approximately 100 tons of skeleton scrap at $7.50 and $6.50
per ton, loaded on a steamer (SS. Lina L.D.), which the defendants had
chartered to load at the ports of Montreal, Quebec and Halifax for a voyage to
Japan. Part of the purchased scrap had been accumulated on the French Cable
Company’s wharf at Dartmouth and part was in Halifax, and the contract stated
that the defendants expected the steamer in Halifax about the middle of July.
The written contract contained the following provision:
Railway weights to govern settlement on all
material loaded in Halifax. For material loaded in Dartmouth, weight to be
obtained in
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accordance with ship’s draft. You have the
right to appoint Lloyds Agents to act on your behalf as regards to checking the
draft for weight purposes, and we are appointing ship’s chief officer for the
same purpose.
The intention of the parties obviously was that
the Lina L.D. should dock at the wharf, where the Dartmouth scrap was
located, and the scrap loaded and stowed on the steamer directly from the
wharf. The steamer arrived in Halifax harbour on July 22, but the intention of
the parties that she should take on the Dartmouth cargo from the French Cable
wharf was frustrated by reason of the fears of the captain that there was not a
sufficient depth of water to enable her safely to do so. The result was that
the parties entered into a new agreement regarding the Dartmouth scrap, and the
steamer proceeded to Pier No. 3 on the Halifax side of the harbour, where she
docked and next day began taking on the scrap, which had been brought there in
railway cars. The Dartmouth scrap was loaded into lighters at the French Cable
wharf, transported to the ship’s side and loaded and stowed in the steamer from
these lighters, while the Halifax scrap was being put on from the pier. A
dispute arose between the parties as to the weight of the steel scrap which was
brought from Dartmouth, the defendants claiming that it weighed only 464 tons,
and the plaintiffs that it weighed 867 tons.
The plaintiffs consequently brought this action
to recover the balance alleged to be due to them for goods sold and delivered
under the written contract and for the cost and expenses of the transportation
of the Dartmouth scrap to the steamer’s side. The plaintiff Edward Whitz-man
also claimed $495 in addition for supervising the loading of 1,980 tons of
scrap iron at Halifax under a special agreement made with the defendants in
June. The total amount claimed by the plaintiffs was $15,364.13, upon which
they credited payments to the amount of $6,271.25, leaving a balance claimed of
$9,092.88.
The action was tried at Halifax before Mr.
Justice Hall and a jury. The jury, in answer to questions submitted by the
learned Judge, found that the defendants agreed to pay the plaintiffs the cost of
transferring the Dartmouth scrap from the Cable wharf to the ship’s side; that
the Lina L.D. could have loaded 920 tons at the Cable wharf in safety;
and that 875 tons of scrap steel were delivered by lighters to the ship’s side.
The jury also found that
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the cause of the delay in loading the steamer
was the transferring of the material in scows from Dartmouth to Halifax. The last mentioned finding bears
only on the question of the defendant’s counter-claim for demurrage. Upon these
answers the learned trial Judge directed a verdict for the plaintiffs for
$7,091.04, which was affirmed on appeal to the Supreme Court en banc by Sir
Joseph Chis-holm, C.J., and Graham and Doull, JJ.; Ross, J., holding that the
verdict should be reduced to $4,048.04. All four Appeal Justices held that the
jury’s finding that the defendants agreed to pay the cost of the transferring
of the Dartmouth scrap to the steamer’s side at the Halifax pier could not be
set aside, though Ross, J., remarked that it was not very strongly supported.
As this finding is one which depends entirely
upon the credibility of evidence, I think
it must be taken as conclusive upon the question. The finding on the question
of delay disposes of the claim for demurrage.
The substantial attack on the trial and appeal
judgments centres entirely around the construction and application of the
weight clause above quoted, and the evidence upon which the plaintiffs relied
to prove the weight of the scrap which was delivered to the steamer in lighters
from the French Cable wharf. All this evidence was objected to on the trial as
an attempt to vary the terms of the written contract regarding the method of
ascertaining the weight of this material, which method, the defendants
contended, was still applicable notwithstanding the alleged new agreement for
the loading at Halifax from the lighters. If this contention is sustained, the
finding of the jury as to the weight of the Dartmouth scrap delivered cannot,
of course, stand. If it is not sustained, the jury’s finding is fully warranted
by the evidence relied on.
I concur entirely in the view of the majority of
the Supreme Court en banc as expressed by Mr. Justice Graham, that the weighing
clause did not in the circumstances apply to the Dartmouth scrap as loaded. The defendants having loaded their own scrap at
Halifax at the same time that the loading of the Dartmouth scrap was proceeding
under the new agreement, it became quite impossible to check the weight of the
Dartmouth scrap by the displacement method within the true meaning of the
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weight clause. Such a thing as the simultaneous
loading of the Halifax and Dartmouth material at Halifax was surely never
contemplated by either party. The displacement method was prescribed for
ascertaining the weight of the Dartmouth scrap separately, and obviously could not be used to determine the
weight of a mixed shipment.
I also fully agree with the view stated in the
majority judgment on appeal that, even if it should be held that the weight
clause was not affected by this complete change of conditions, as written in
the original contract, it contemplated concurrent checking and raised a duty on
the part of each to co-operate with the other in the checking of the steamer’s
draft. The checking contemplated was not a mere observation of the draft of the
vessel as she lay in the water before and after the loading of the material.
The clause says:
You have the right to appoint Lloyd’s
Agents to act on your behalf as regards to checking the draft for weight
purposes, and we are appointing ship’s chief officer for the same purpose.
The checking, as is clearly shewn on the record,
involves the ascertaining of all fuel and ballast aboard immediately before
loading commences and also immediately after its completion and the sounding
for this purpose of all tanks, peaks, bilges, etc. The importance of an
accurate checking as to all these points is evident from the fact, which was
pointed out in the record, that every inch of additional draft in the water
represented an addition of 44½ tons of cargo. It is quite true that the
plaintiffs did not themselves appoint anyone to act for them in the checking of
the draft or request an opportunity of checking it for themselves, but they
were never notified by the defendants or by the ship’s officer that the draft
was to be checked, as provided by the weight clause, for the purpose of
ascertaining the weight of the Dartmouth material, and it seems to me in all
the circumstances that it cannot fairly be held that the weight clause of the
original contract was incorporated as an implied term of the wholly new
arrangement which the jury found was entered into between the parties with
respect to the loading of the Dartmouth scrap. This clause, in my opinion, is
not applicable for the reasons stated, and it was therefore quite competent to
the plaintiffs to prove by the best available testimony the weight of the
material which they actually delivered to the defendant’s
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chartered steamer. The evidence of the
lightermen and others which they did adduce for this purpose, in my judgment
fully warrants the finding which the jury made that at least 875 tons were
supplied to the steamer from Dartmouth. For this the defendants should be
required to pay.
I would, therefore, dismiss the appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitor for the appellants: L. A. Lovett.
Solicitor for the respondents: W. N. Wickwire.