The libel in this case was filed to recover damages against the steam-ship Chadwicke, for refusing, on arrival at New York, to go to Perth Amboy to unload, as it is claimed she was bound to do, on request, under a stipulation of the charter.
On the eleventh of January, 1886, at Middlesbro’ on Tees, England, the vessel was chartered to the libelants to take on board 1,300 tons of spiegel iron, etc., and, “being so loaded, therewith to proceed to the port .of New York, Perth Amboj-, Jersey City, Hoboken, or Brooklyn, and there deliver the same as ordered on arrival.” The charter, however, provided that the vessel was “to be addressed to the freighter’s agent at the port of discharge; the captain to sign bills of lading as presented, without prejudice to this charter.” Three days afterward, the cargo being put on board, a bill of lading, in the common printed form, was signed by the master, stating the steamer to be “bound for New York,” and that the cargo was to be delivered “at said port of New York, * * * unto C. L. Perkins, Esq., 30 Pine street, or his assigns, * * * and all other conditions as per charter-party;” the port and consignee’s name being written in the usual blank spaces.
The steamer arrived at the quarantine station of the port of New York on the fifth of February, 1886, where a telegram from Mr. Perkins to the master dated January 30, 1886, was awaiting his arrival, and was received by the master, directing the steamer to Lehigh Valley Railroad dock, at Perth Amboy. Instead of going thither, he came up the bay, anchored off the Battery, reported to Mr. Perkins, the charterer’s agent in New York, demanded to be unloaded there according to the terms of the bill of lading, and refused to go to Perth Amboy. After the charter had been signed, the libelants informed Mr. Perkins, bj*- telegram, of the option contained in the charter. Thereupon the agent obtained an advance of 50 cents a ton upon a contract then pending, in consideration of a delivery of 1,000 tons, of the iron at Perth Amboy, instead of “ex *523ship” at New York. The option was worth to the libelants precisely 8500.
The claimants contend that the bill of lading, hi making the port of New York the place of delivery, determined the charterer’s option; and that he had no right afterwards to direct the vessel elsewhere. Perth Amboy is a different port, and in a different collection district, from New York, although not much further from quarantine, whore the master first received his notice, than are the ordinary discharging berths for such cargo in the port of New York. The consular invoices, sworn to by the libelants before the consul at Middlesbro’, declared that the cargo was shipped for New York, and designed to be entered there. The Revised Statutes require that manifests si mil be prepared at a distance of four leagues from the coast, staling the destination of the cargo, and the intended port of entry, and require the vessel, when ariving within the limits of the port, to make entry there; although there ore provisions under which goods destined for different ports, or arriving for orders, may, after arrival at one port, proceed to another port for delivery of the cargo. Sections 2776, 2779, 2807, 2811, 2812. The master ill preparing his manifest stated New York as the only port, and entered his vessel at the New York custom house.
The disposition of the cargo was evidently designed to be left'to the charterer’s agent in Now York. All the other places of alternative delivery named in the charter are in the immediate vicinity of New York. There is not the slightest reason to suppose that the shipper, in making out the consular invoices and the bill of lading for “the port of New York,” actually intended either to waive his option as to the place of final delivery, or to charge himself with any irregularity in a delivery at Perth Amboy, should that be directed byliis agent, even if lie know that Perth Amboy was a different collection district from Now York, which he probably did not know. The charter-party provides that the cargo is to bo delivered at anyone of the five places named, “as ordered on arrival.” The very terms of the charter provide, therefore, for an option to be exercised at the end of the voyage; not at the beginning of it. The designation was to be made on arrival; but on arrival where? Necessarily there must be some place short of the ultimate destination where the orders were to be received, and the master must have understood that fact. But. ail the other places named are so near to New York, and New York is so naturally the head-quarters for this region, that the master must have understood, when he signed this charter-party, that he was first to go to or near Now York, and there await orders as to the particular place of delivery. It is in this sense that the subsequent printed clause in the charter party must be construed, viz.: “The vessel to be addressed to the freighter’s agent at the port of discharge. ” Clearly, this printed clause in the charter cannot be construed as intended to take away the option previously stipulated for in the written clause, nor to override the written clause, making the ultimate place of delivery dependent on directions to be given “ on arrival ” at the primary port. The words “'port of discharge” are not strictly compatible with the prior *524clause, and they must yield to the evident intent of the charter as a whole, and be construed accordingly. The charterer’s agent was at the port of New York, where, under the circumstances, the master must have expected to go first; and the intent of the whole instrument seems clear that the vessel was to be consigned to New York for further orders,—a familiar form of charter, except that in this case the option was limited to a few places within the immediate vicinity of the primary port.
The bill of lading must be construed in the same sense, and as designed to indicate the port of New York as the primary port only, where C. L. Perkins would direct the place of final delivery according to the option provided for in the charter. No doubt the bill of lading omits what ought to have been inserted in it in order to make its provisions literally harmonious with the charter, and to make the whole intent clear from that paper alone; and some of the ordinary printed language of the bill of lading should also have been stricken out. Such incompatibilities of expression between the charter and the bill of lading are not infrequent, where the charterer’s goods are laden on board. Often the two papers wholly fail to be adjusted nicely to each other. A bill of lading referring to a charter-party is never construed as intending to express the whole intent, or to control the charter-party in consequence of mere inharmonious expressions. The charter is the deliberate and controlling document; and, where the intent of the charter is clear, a bill of lading given under it, and referring to it, as between the ship and the charterer, does not supersede the express provisions of the charter-party that are clearly intended to apply to the situation, however inartificially the bill of lading may be framed. It is “little more,” says Parsons, (Ship. & Adm. 286,) “than evidence of the delivery and receipt and shipping of the merchandise, for the charter-party is the controlling contract as to all the terms or provisions which it expresses.” Perkins v. Hill, 1 Spr. 123; Wagstaff v. Anderson, 5 C. P. Div. 171, 177; Sewell v. Burdick, 10 App. Cas. 74, 105; Gledstanes v. Allen, 12 C. B. 202; Rodoconachi v. Milburn, 17 Q. B. Div. 316, 320.
To control the charter-party, there must be sufficient evidence of anew contract between the parties pro tanio. In this case there is no evidence of any further or different contract. It is the simple casé of a loose, incomplete, and incompatible wording of the bill of lading, but without any further negotiation or change in the consideration or intent of the charter. The bill of lading says: “All other provisions as. per charter-party;” and it thereby adopted all its provisions that were designed by the charter to become applicable. In Gullischen v. Stewart, 11 Q. B. Div. 186, S. C. 13 Q. B. Div. 317, the bill of lading was held controlling, as to payment of freight and demurrage, because the charterers, in receiving delivery of the goods, acted in the character of consignees, and not in that of charterers, which alone the charter-party covered; and the cesser clause of the charter-party was held inapplicable, and not within the original intent.
The stipulation for one of several places as the place of final delivery was a valuable privilege to the shipper, and to some extent burdensome *525upon the vessel. It is incredible that the shipper, having secured this option, and carefully provided that it should he exercised “on arrival,” and by presumption of law having paid for this privilege, immediately waived it intentionally, and then informed his agent of this option for his future guidance. In my judgment, therefore, the charter clearly controls. The master was not authorized to treat the bill of lading as waiving the option secured by the charter, or as designating anything more than the primary port where he was to receive from the charterer’s agent his final orders as to the particular place of delivery. The manifest should have stated the provision for final orders at New York, or the several alternative places, according to the charter. There .would then have been no difficulty in delivering at Perth Amboy; and, even after the vessel had been entered at New York, though there would have been doubtless some inconvenience and delay, I think there was no insuperable obstacle. Wyncoop, Vessels & Voy. § 341. No objections of that kind were stated by the master at the time. The complaint made of ice around Perth Amboy seems much more likely to have been the determining consideration, in connection with the inharmonious reading of the written documents, in leading the captain to refuse to proceed thither. There is no evidence, however, that the ice was such as to furnish a legal defense, and no such defense is made.
Decree for the libelants, with costs.