
    Nelson et al., Plaintiffs and Respondents, v. Recknagel et al., Appellants.
    Where by the terms of a charter party, the plaintiffs chartered a vessel to the defendants “for a voyage from New York to Buenos Ayres, calling at Montevideo for orders, and from either one of those ports to a port in the United States, between New Orleans and Boston, or to a port in Great Britain, or in the English channel between Havre and Hamburgh both included, calling at Hamburgh for orders;” and agreed therein to take and receive on board “during the voyage aforesaid” all such lawful goods as the defendants “ may think proper to ship, anything hazardous or contraband of war excepted;” and the defendants thereby agreed to hire said vessel as aforesaid on these terms, viz.:
    
      Mrst. They “ engage ” to furnish a cargo of 200,000 feet of pine lumber “ from New York to Buenos Ayres, calling at Montevideo for orders, and from either one of those ports a full and complete cargo of dry hides, with horns for small storage if required.”
    
      Second. They “ do further engage to pay, . . for the charter or freight of the said vessel during the voyage aforesaid, in manner following, that is to say: “Eor the 200,000 feet of lumber out to Buenos Ayres, or Montevideo, freight free
    
      “For the hides, six pounds sterling, with (5 per cent) five per cent primage per ton of 2,240 lbs., free from all commissions, payable in cash, without credit or discount. If other goods are shipped, freight to be at proportionate rates. Lining hides free of freight;” and where such voyage has been performed and the lumber carried; and because no dry hides could be procured a full cargo of bones and bone ash, being 334 tons, was shipped at Buenos Ayres and carried thence to Southampton; and it appearing on the trial that a fall cargo of dry hides for said vessel would be 250 tons, and that the current rate of freight thereon was eighty shillings sterling a ton; and on bone and bone ash was thirty-five shillings sterling a tori; it was:
    1. Held, that the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover the same sum as if a cargo of dry hides had been carried.
    2. Held, also, that the rule of damages was the current rate of freight on the bone and bone ash; increased in such proportion as the stipulated price for carrying a cargo of dry hides exceeded the current rate of freight on dry hides trom Buenos Ayres to Southampton, at the time the bone and bone ash were shipped.
    3. (Bosworth, J., dissented, holding that the agreement to furnish a full cargo of dry hides and pay £6 per ton therefor, fixed a price to be paid for the voyage; and that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover the same amount, as if they had carried a full cargo of dry hides.)
    (Before Bosworth, Horau» and Pierrepont, J. J.)
    Heard, June 18;
    decided, July 3, 1858.
    This is an appeal by the defendants, Carl L. Recknagel and Gustav Schwab, from a judgment against them, in favor of the plaintiffs, William Kelson, and William Kelson, Jr. The action was tried in May, 1858, before Mr. Justice Slossoh, without a jury, a trial by jury having been duly waived. It is brought upon a charter party, dated August 6, 1855, executed by the plaintiffs, for the owners of the bark Roman, of the first part, and the defendants of the second part, to recover a balance of freight alleged to be due thereon. All the parties to the charter party, at the time it was executed, resided and did business in the city of Kew York; and the charter party was there made and delivered.
    The portions of it having any bearing upon the question presented by the appeal, are in the words following, viz.:
    “ This charter partir, made the sixth day of August, in the year one thousand eight hundred and fifty-five, between Wm. Kelson & Son for owners of bark Roman of Kew York, the burthen of two hundred and forty-five tons or thereabouts, register measurement, now lying in the harbor of New York, of the first part, and Recknagel & Schwab of the second part, witnesseth: That the said parties of the first part, for and in consideration of the covenants and agreements hereinafter to be kept, and performed by the said parties of the second part, do covenant and'agree on the freighting and chartering of the said vessel unto the said parties of the second part for a voyage from New York to Buenos Ayres, calling at Montevideo for orders, and from either one of those ports to a port in the United States, between New Orleans and Boston, or to a port in Great Britain or in the English Channel between Havre and Hamburgh, both included, calling at Falmouth for orders.”.......
    “ The said parties of the first part do further engage to take and receive on board the said vessel during the aforesaid voyage, all such lawful goods and merchandise as the said parties of the second part or their agents may think proper to ship, anything extra hazardous or contraband of war excepted.
    “ And the said parties of the second part, for and in consideration of the covenants and agreements to be kept and performed by the said parties of the first part, do covenant and agree with the said parties of the first part, to charter and hire the said vessel as aforesaid on the terms following, that is to say:
    “First. The said parties of the second part do engage to provide and furnish the said vessel a cargo of two hundred (200) thousand feet white pine lumber from New York to Buenos Ayres, calling at Montevideo for orders, and from either one of those ports a full and complete cargo of dry hides, with horns for small storage if required.
    “ Second. The said parties of the second part do further engage to pay to the said parties of the first part or their agent, for the charter or freight of the said vessel during the voyage aforesaid, in manner following, that is to say:
    “For the (200) two hundred thousand feet lumber out to Buenos Ayres or Montevideo, freight free.
    “ For the hides, six pounds sterling, with (5 per cent) five per cent primage per ton of 2,240 lbs., free of all commissions, payable in cash, without credit or discount. If other goods are shipped, freight to be at proportionate rates.
    “ Lining hides free of freight.”
    
      The vessel took aboard the lumber and proceeded to Buenos Ayres, where she arrived about the 1st of November, 1855. The agent of the charterers there, was unable to furnish any dry hides, and the vessel was loaded with bone and bone ash, which she carried and delivered at Southampton. The master received freight there, on the 10th of June, 1856, at the rate of fifty shillings a ton, under protest, claiming the same freight as if a full cargo of dry hides had been carried. The capacity of the vessel for dry hides, was two hundred and fifty tons. She carried of bone and bone ash three hundred and thirty-four tons. The current rate of freight for hides, from Buenos Ayres to Southampton, was eighty shillings sterling a ton, and that for bones and bone ash was thirty-five shillings sterling a ton.
    The present action is brought to recover the difference between the freight paid at Southampton, and the amount which would have been earned, had a full cargo of dry hides been carried. The judge held that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover such difference, and gave judgment in their favor for the amount of it. From that judgment the present appeal is taken.
    
      Charles P. Kirkland, for defendants and appellants.
    I. The charter provides that the freight for carrying dry hides shall be £6 per ton; that if other goods are shipped, freight is to be at proportionate rates. This phraseology necessarily excludes the idea (upon which this judgment is based) that if “other goods” are shipped, the freight upon them is to be the same as though dry hides had been carried.
    Proof of this “proportionate rate ” was an essential part of the plaintiff's case; and for the want of it, the complaint should have been dismissed.
    1. The word “ proportionate ” is unambiguous and well understood. It means. adjusted to something else, according to a certain rate or comparative relation, proportional. (Web. Dic., Walk. Dic.)
    As for instance, if 120s. is stipulated to be paid for dry hides, when the current or usual rate is but 80s., and bone ash is carried instead, the proportionate rate of freight upon this article would be such as would bear the same relation to the current rate for it (bone ash) as 120s. for hides does to the current rate for that article, to wit, fifty per cent.
    2. It is idle to say that the owners of this vessel are entitled to the same amount of freight as they would have earned, had dry hides been carried. In other words, that “ proportionate ” means or is synonymous with “equivalent? This clause, under which the amount of freight is to be determined, might as well be expunged from the charter. According to the plaintiffs’ construction it is utterly meaningless, and they claim to recover just as much as though it had been omitted; estimating, not upon the goods transported, but upon dry hides, which could not be ■ obtained.
    II. The Court erred in excluding evidence of what the “proportionate rate ” of freight was at Buenos Ayres, under the usage and custom of that port.
    1. The inquiry was not directed to the point of usage, for the purpose of varying or even explaining anything in the charter, but simply to confine the witnesses within, and to obtain in mercantile phraseology, the basis upon which such proportionate rates are calculated; and the sixth interrogatory calls distinctly for the fact, to wit: The proportionate rate of freight upon bones and bone ash, instead of hides, under this charter, according to the usage or custom (in other words, the mercantile law) of Buenos Ayres.
    2. Buenos Ayres is the only place at which this essential fact ■—essential for the plaintiff—can be ascertained. There is no rate of freight at any other port upon goods shipped at Buenos Ayres. It was the place in the contemplation of the parties. The whole adventure was made with reference to the goods to be obtained at the River Platte, (Buenos Ayres or Montevideo) and that was the place of performance of the contract; the place from or at which goods are shipped is necessarily the only one at which rates of freight can be ascertained. Such rates vary with ' the supply or scarcity of shipping and of the article to be carried.
    III. It appears from the depositions of the witnesses at Buenos Ayres, that the proportionate rate, under this charter, for a single voyage from Buenos Ayres to Southampton was 25s., and consequently, 50s. for a double voyage, as this was. It is conceded that this sum was paid in full.
    
      TV. The Court erred in admitting evidence of the meaning of the words 11 proportionate rate ” in the port of Hew York.
    1. Such evidence contradicts directly, the well known and generally understood definition of common words. It does not explain or interpret, but it substitutes a meaning directly the reverse of that borne by the words themselves. “Proportionate ” means unequal, but having a certain comparative relation to something fixed and settled, while “ equivalent” means equal. Ho more force can be given to the argument against the admissibility of this evidence than is contained in the mere statement of the facts. (Cow. & Hill’s Hotes, part 2, pp. 507, 508, and cases cited.)
    ■ Y. Judgment should be reversed, and judgment rendered upon the facts found, for the defendants.
    
      Charles Jones & Henry B. Cowles, for respondents.
    I. The Court below properly decided that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover the same amount of freight for the cargo carried from Buenos Ayres to Southampton, as they would have been entitled to receive for carrying two hundred and fifty tons of dry hides.
    1. It was manifestly the intention of the parties to fix the amount of freight which the vessel was to earn on the voyage for which she was chartered, and this has been done in the charter party itself. Heither party would have entered into a contract without knowing and determining what was to be received by the one and what was to be paid by the other.
    
      a. By mutual agreement, the vessel was not to be paid freight for the lumber carried from Hew York to Buenos Ayres, and the charter was not made with reference to the current rate of freight on lumber between the two ports.
    
      b. The defendants then agree, that the vessel having carried this cargo of lumber freight free to Buenos Ayres, shall there be laden with a cargo of dry hides at £6 per ton. They covenant absolutely to furnish dry hides and pay freight for the same at that rate. The amount of freight which was to be paid and received was thus fixed.
    c. The provision that if other goods were shipped, the freight was to be at proportionate rates, was clearly not intended by the parties either to increase or lessen the amount of freight to be paid and received. This provision was for the benefit of the defendants, and was not inserted to change or vary the standard fixed by the charter.
    2. The words “proportionate rates,” in the connection in which they are used, import that the freight on the substituted cargo shall be such a sum per ton, per cubic foot, or per gallon, as the case may be, as will give the vessel the same amount as she would receive for carrying dry hides at £6 per ton. The standard of price is fixed by the contract itself, and no rate per ton for other goods is proportionate to that fixed unless it will produce as large an amount of freight as would have been received for the stipulated cargo.
    In the present ease there were delivered 310 tons of bones and bone-ash. The vessel could have carried 250 tons of dry hides. The contract price for dry hides is £6 per ton. The proportion is as follows: 310: 250:: £6: £4 16s. 9/Td., which gives the rate per ton for bone and bone-ash. •
    3. But the words “proportionate rates,” as-used in this charter party, have a well-known mercantile meaning in the port of New York, and mean that if other than the goods specified in the charter are shipped, the vessel is to receive the same freight as though such specified goods had been carried.
    This was clearly proved, and the finding of the judge to that effect is not excepted to by the defendants. The evidence was admissible. (2 Greenl. Ev., §§ 278, 280; 2 Parsons on Con., 48, &c., and notes.)
    If, however, the Court should adopt the construction of the contract contended for by the plaintiffs, then this evidence, if inadmissible, would not be a good ground' of reversing the judgment. It should be rejected as immaterial, and the judgment affirmed.
    II. Evidence of what was the actual difference between the current rates of freight for dry hides and bones and bone-ash would not be admissible. The parties to the contract were mer- > chants residing and doing business in the city of New York, and did not contract in reference to any usage or custom at Buenos Ayres, or to the current rates of freight there. They, by contract in Hew York, agreed upon the freight which the vessel was to earn, without regard to the actual freight paid, or to be paid on goods at Buenos Ayres.
    The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
   By the Court.

Hoffman, J.

— The proposition of the plaintiffs is, that whatever might be the goods shipped, they were to receive the same rate of freight as if hides had been shipped. The price per ton of whatever might be carried, was to be calculated and adjusted, so as to amount to the sum total of the freight, which the capacity of the ship would enable her to earn for hides, at £6 per ton.

On the other side, the defendants insist that some rule of proportion is plainly contemplated. If other goods are shipped, the freight is to be adjusted upon a comparison with something in relation to something. If the contract had been as the plaintiffs contend, it would have been perfectly simple to have said, that full freight as for hides at £6 per ton, should in all events be paid, the capacity of the vessel to carry hides being all that was undetermined; in short, that the freight shall be such for other goods, as will give the same amount as if the vessel had been filled with hides.

But when the instrument declares, that freight for other goods shall be at proportionate rates, a comparison of rates is indicated and directed.

We concur in this view; and we think that the method of solving the question suggested by the defendants' counsel is a correct one.

The freight stipulated to be paid for hides must necessarily bear a certain proportion to the rate of freight for hides, had the ©barter been made at Buenos Ayres. That proportion is found to- be fifty per cent; that is, the rate agreed upon is fifty per cent more than that from Buenos Ayres would have been. The articles actually shipped were at the current rate of thirty-five shillings a ton at that place. Add fifty per cent to that price, and a proportionate rate is attained. The words receive some effect.

The charter party shows, that the fact was contemplated of the inability of the agents of the charterers to procure dry hides-at Buenos Ayres. Hence the provision to fill with other goods, and the liberty to do so, implied in the clause in question.

We are justified also in considering that the parties were acquainted with the nature and description of the commodities generally shipped from Buenos Ayres, to the designated ports in Europe. “Vessels chartered to load other produce at proportionate rates, run the risk of being loaded according to the convenience of the charterer, unless certain proportions of different articles are stipulated for. This may appear unjust; but on the other hand it must be supposed that no ship-owner would charter his vessel to' load at a foreign port, unless he was acquainted with the produce shipped at, and the customs of such port; and in case of his failure, by the necessary stipulations in the charter party to secure his vessel, he himself would be the only party to blame. A ship-owner, wishing to avoid all such risks, charters his vessel for a round sum to carry a cargo of legal merchandise."

Both parties then acted on the contract which presumes that other goods may be shipped, and on the implication that such goods must be of the description usually made the subjects of shipment from Buenos Ayres. They have met the question of the freight to be paid, under such anticipated circumstances, by the clause in question. Nor is it at all unreasonable to presume that the parties had some knowledge of the rates of freight of the articles which were usually shipped at that port. This assumption is not interpolating new and other terms into a contract. It is introducing facts, justly to be inferred as known to the parties, to interpret any ambiguity in their agreement.

The ship-owner secures to himself, by the agreement thus understood, a certain premium upon the current rate of freight of the articles which his ship shall in fact carry. Whatever is the proportion between the £6 per ton stipulated, and the current freight of dry hides from Buenos Ayres, that proportion shall regulate the increase of premium upon the current freight of what is transported. Thus in the present instance, the difference between the rates for hides was £2, or fifty per cent, the current freight there being £4. This premium or advance upon the £115s., the freight of the bones, gives £2 12s. 6d., payable to the ship-owner.

So the effect in relation to the charterer is, to protect him from paying the full freight of £6, as if he had shipped hides, when probably the profit of his adventure from his inability to procure them, might be much less than if his apparently main object had been realized by obtaining them.

I think the judgment must be reversed, and the amount adjusted upon the principles stated. If the parties do not settle this among themselves, a new trial must be had, with costs to abide the event.

Pierrefont, J., concurred with Judge Hoffman.

Bosworth, J.

(Dissenting.)—The bark Roman, was chartered for a voyage from New York to Buenos Ayres, and thence, or from Montevideo to a port in the United States between New Orleans and Boston, or to a port in Great Britain or in the English Channel between Havre and Hamburgh, both included.

The voyage has been performed, and the practical question is, to what compensation are the owners entitled, by the terms of the charter party.

The clauses fixing the compensation to be paid, require that a cargo of 200,000 feet of white pine lumber shall be carried from New York to Buenos Ayres, freight free.

That the defendants shall provide at Buenos Ayres or Montevideo, “ a full and complete cargo of dry hides, with horns for small stowage if required,” and shall pay “for the hides, six pounds sterling with (5 per cent) five per cent primage per ton of 2,240 lbs., free of all commissions, payable in cash, without credit or discount. If other goods are shipped, freight to be at proportionate rates. Lining hides free of freight.”

Instead of shipping 250 tons of dry hides, which the bark could have carried, (there being none which could be procured) 334 tons of bones and bone-ash, making a full cargo, were shipped and delivered at the port of discharge.

What is meant by “ proportionate rates,” of freight to be paid on other goods, if shipped ?

If, as the defendants contend, the customary or actual rate then charged at Buenos Ayres on a cargo of dry hides from that place to the port of discharge is to be first ascertained, and then the rate on the cargo actually shipped, and if the latter is then to be enhanced in such proportion as the contract rate for carrying- the dry hides, exceeds that which shall be ascertained to have been the current actual rate for carrying them, then it was left by the charter party, entirely uncertain how much it would be the duty of the defendants to pay or the right of the plaintiffs to claim. The amount earned on that theory, on the cargo actually shipped, is over $3,000 less than would have been earned by carrying a cargo of dry hides. Had the cargo been something else thán bones and bone-ash, the loss of the ship owner, on this theory, might have been still greater. On this theory, the amount to be paid cannot be ascertained by any information furnished by the terms of the charter party alone, even when the number of tons of the cargo actually carried, and the number of tons of hides that could have been carried have been determined by actual weight, or have been agreed upon.

The further questions also arise, what was, at the time, the usual or fair price per ton for carrying dry hides from the port at which they were to have been.shipped to the port of discharge, and what of the cargo actually shipped? And in case of disagreement between the parties, as to these two matters, how is the question to be settled ?

To find any basis for the defendants’ theory, it becomes necessary to interpolate into the contract, a reference to the actual freight at the time, on dry hides, and on the cargo actually carried from Buenos Ayres to the port of discharge, in order to make them subjects of consideration and comparison, in ascertaining and stating the proportion, provided for by the contract.

But treating the contract as one which determines the price to be paid for the voyage (on ascertaining the actual weight of a full cargo of dry hides); and as specifying all the subjects to be considered, in ascertaining and stating the “proportionate rates,” if other cargo should be shipped, the contract leaves it substantially certain what was to be paid for the voyage, no matter what might be the cargo carried.

I think the fair meaning is that, whatever might be the cargo shipped, (and the defendants, although agreeing to furnish a full cargo of dry hides, were to be permitted to ship something else, whether hides could or could not be procured,) the defendants were to pay such a rate of freight, that the cargo (whatever it might be) at such rate, would produce the same sum total in dollars or pounds sterling, as a full cargo of dry hides at six pounds sterling per ton, of 2,240 lbs., would produce.

It was not known precisely, without going into an arithmetical calculation, how many tons of dry hides the bark would carry; but it was known nearly enough for all practical purposes, .and sufficiently so to advise both parties about what sum the vessel would earn. Not knowing the precise sum to be paid, if a cargo of dry hides should be furnished, instead of ascertaining by arithmetical calculation to what sum it would amount, and. inserting that as the one to be paid whatever might be the cargo, the clause was inserted that if cargo other than dry hides should be furnished, freight should be paid at a rate which would be in such proportion to the whole thereof, as six pounds sterling per ton of dry hides is to the whole number of tons thereof, making a full and complete cargo.

The contract furnishes all the data necessary to be known to state the proportion and ascertain the result intended by both parties, except the precise number of tons of hides making a full cargo, and the number of tons of other cargo actually carried, or of the tons of register measurement which it required for proper stowage.

If dry hides had been carried, their actual weight was to be ascertained, and the price to be paid fixed, by multiplying it by the specified rate.

There are many considerations which support this view of the contract, as being the correct one, and the one in the actual contemplation of the parties. They all resided in New York, and the contract was made there. There is nothing to show that either of them knew the actual rate" of freight then charged at Buenos Ayres for carrying dry hides thence to Great Britain, or to some port between New Orleans and Boston, or that they had any reference to any such matter in making the contract. Neither is there anything to show that they knew what kinds of cargo there was most reason to suppose could be furnished, if hides could not be. The contract covers the whole voyage, and the freight to be paid for carrying dry hides, though nominally paid for the hides only, included, in the intent of the parties, an agreed compensation for carrying the lumber. On the defendants1 theory, if they could not procure dry hides, nor a full cargo of any kind, it is not obvious but that it might so happen that cargo enough might not be furnished at Buenos Ayres to compensate for carrying the 200,000 feet of lumber to that place from Hew York. If¡ contrary to the expectation of the parties, neither dry hides nor other cargo could have been procured, to what compensation would the plaintiffs have been entitled ?

By the natural and just meaning of the charter party, the defendants took the risk of being able to furnish a cargo. at Buenos Ayres. They secured the transportation from Hew York to and the delivery at that place of 200,000 feet of lumber. They were to furnish a full cargo of dry hides at that place, and the price per ton of 2,240 lbs. was stipulated. This was to compensate for the whole voyage. To what aggregate sum that would amount, could not be stated precisely, without entering into an arithmetical calculation. The defendants did not wish to be compelled to ship hides, if none could be procured for the purpose. The ship-owners were willing that the defendants should ship what they could procure, if they could not obtain hides, on being paid the same sum for the vessel for the voyage.

A careful consideration of the contract, convinces me, that its terms show this to be the intent and understanding of the parties. ■

The defendants covenant, absolutely and unconditionally, to provide and furnish at Buenos Ayres, or Montevideo “ a full and complete cargo of dry hides, with horns for small stowage if required;” and second, they “further engage to pay,” . . . “forth& charter or freight of the said vessel during the voyage aforesaid, in the manner following, that is to say:

“ For the lumber, freight free.

“ For the hicks, six pounds sterling, with (5 per cent) five per cent primage per ton of 2,240 lbs. free of all commissions, payable in cash, without credit or discount. If other goods are shipped, freight at proportionate rates.

“ Lining hides free of freight.”

The unconditional covenant to furnish hides, and a full and complete cargo of hides, and to pay six pounds sterling per ton of 2,240 lbs. on a full and a complete cargo, is a provision for ascertaining, substantially, a lump sum to be paid for the round; its precise amount to be ascertained by computing the freight which would be payable for a full cargo of dry hides at the rate specified.

This is a common form of a charter party, which provides a lump sum for a whole voyage, when by the terms of the instrument the whole freight is made payable on the homeward cargo. (Gilkison v. Middleton, 40 Eng. L. and Eq., 295; and see Wilson v. Hicks, id., 511.)

The “ proportionate rates ” of freight to be paid “ if other goods are shipped,” are to be fixed, so as to secure the compensation thereinbefore, (in the charter party,) covenanted to be . paid “for the charter or freight of the said vessel during the' voyage aforesaid.”

That is, “ if other goods- are shipped” to make a part only of a return cargo, they are to pay the same proportion of the whole price as the space they occupy would have produced, if filled with dry hides. If in addition to hides, various binds of merchandise compose a part of the homeward cargo, the same rule of proportion is to be applied to such various kinds of cargo.

Upon any other construction, the unconditional covenant to provide and furnish “ a full and complete cargo of dry hides,” would seem to be unmeaning.

By one clause, the plaintiffs covenant to take and receive on board “all such lawful goods,” &e., as the defendants “may think proper, to ship, any thing extra hazardous or contraband of war excepted.”

By another, the defendants covenant to provide and furnish “ a full and complete cargo of dry hides.” This covenant is not even qualified with the condition that such a cargo can be procured.

Then follows the clause, which professes to fix the price to be paid “ for the charter or freight of the said vessel during the voyage aforesaid.” And that is fixed by a stipulated, rate to be paid “for the hides,” viz., £6 per ton of 2,240 lbs.

I think it may be said in this case as was said in Capper et al. v. Forster, (3 Bing. N. C., 938,) that “ the original intention and expectation of the parties at the time the charter was entered into as to the amount of freight which would become payable for the voyage, must have been founded upon the assumption, that the ship would bring home a cargo consisting” of dry hides, a full and complete cargo of which, the defendants covenanted, absolutely and unconditionally to furnish. Omitting the clause, “ if other goods are shipped, freight to be at proportionate rates," that case and the present would be substantially alike.

If it was impossible to procure dry hides, still the plaintiffs would have been obliged to receive a cargo of lawful goods and merchandise. (Wilson v. Hicks, supra.) They would have no right to insist on returning empty, and then claim the whole stipulated freight.

In such a case, that is, if no dry hides could be procured and other cargo was shipped, the plaintiffs would have been entitled to recover just as much as if they had. brought a full cargo of dry hides, if the clause “if other goods are shipped, freight to be at proportionate rates,” had been omitted from the contract. Capper et al. v. Forster, supra, is a direct authority in support of this proposition.

In this view of the intent of the parties, and of this contract, the phrase “if other goods are shipped, freight to be at proportionate rates ” should be construed to mean, that the freight of “ other goods ” should be so rated and apportioned, that there would become payable “for the charterer freight of the said vessel during the voyage aforesaid” the same aggregate sum or compensation, that would have been due if the defendants had furnished a cargo of the article they absolutely covenanted to furnish, viz., dry hides.

Believing this to be the intent of the parties, and that the true construction of the contract will give effect to such intent, I think the judgment should be affirmed.

The judgment was reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event. 
      
       This action was tried a second time before Mr. Justice Woodruff and a jury, in December, 1858. The same facts appeared un the second trial as on the first; except that “the going rates (of freight) for bone and bone-ash from Buenos Ayres to Southampton, were 35s. to 40s.1' The. Judge considering himself concluded by the foregoing decision refused to charge, that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover the same sum, as if they had carried a full cargo of dry hides, and the plaintiffs excepted to such refusal. He “charged the jury that they should find upon the following principle or basis, namely: That as the current rate of freight at Buenos Ayres at the time the vessel received her cargo there, on dry hides from Buenos Ayres to the English channel was to the rate by the charter party agreed to be paid for dry hides, so was the current rate of freight at Buenos Ayres from that port to Southampton on bones and bone-ash to the amount which the plaintiffs were entitled to receive from the defendants, with five per cent primage added thereto. That from the amount so ascertained there was to be allowed to the defendants the amount which they had paid to the plaintiffs, and that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover only the balance thus found, with interest thereon from the time the freight was payable, which is agreed by counsel to have been June 10th, 1856. To which charge the counsel for the plaintiffs there and then excepted.”
      The jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, for $244.17.
      Erom the judgment entered upon that verdict, the plaintiffs appealed to the General Term. That appeal was argued at the January Term, 1859, before Bosworth, Oh. J., and Hoffman and Moncrief, J. J. The Court agreed •that the charge of the Judge conformed to the decision made by the General 'Term in July, 1858; and that the latter decision, could not with propriety, •be re-examined on such appeal, and affirmed the judgment. Bosworth, Oh. J., dissented from the decision, in other respects, on the grounds stated .in his opinion, as above reported.
     