manner It is, therefore, usual in charterparties, and sometimes in bills of lading, to fix times within which the ship is to be loaded. and discharged and where that is done, the provision is under stood as an undertaking by the freighter that the ship shall be loaded or discharged within the time SO fixed. The shipowner must not be in default he must by his servants do his part of the work of receiving and stowing, or unloading, with diligence and with the proper number of men; but the undertaking as to the time which the loading or discharge shall occupy is given by the freighter, not by the shipowner. This used commonly to be marked in the charterparty by saying that SO many days are to be allowed the said merchant for loading, etc.'. But the effect is the same whether the clause is in that form, or states, generally, as is now usual, that the cargo shall be loaded' in SO many days. The promise is made by the freighter, for the benefit of the shipowner." I see no reason to differ from the views expressed in this passage and it is, as will appear, a matter of some importance in this case.
When we come to examine the facts of the present case we find that the respondent bound itself to provide a ship of a specified capacity at a port of loading in Australia, that, pursuant to the appellant's direction, it became bound to provide that vessel at Geelong and, there, receive a full cargo of wheat in bulk. By cl. it was the obligation of the charterer to bring the cargo to the side of the vessel and by cl. 11 the respondent implicitly undertook to appoint, with the approval of the charterer, a stevedore to perform the work of loading the cargo into the vessel. This work, it may be observed, was work which, because of the provisions of the Stevedor- ing Industry Act 1949, the respondent could not lawfully undertake to perform by its own immediate servants. Then, by cl. 9, a daily loading rate was specified which, in the case of bulk wheat, was 1,500 tons per weather working day. Upon the strength of these provisions the appellant asserts that the respondent undertook, first of all, that the vessel would receive the cargo and, secondly, that it promised unconditionally that the cargo would be loaded at the specified daily rate during ordinary working hours and, if required, that the loading would proceed continuously. There are, however, two answers to this contention. In the first place, the respondent did not undertake to perform the work of loading the cargo into the vessel by its own immediate servants; as already mentioned it could not lawfully undertake to do so. What undertook to do was to appoint a stevedore approved by the appel lant to perform this task and it did not undertake or warrant that suitable labour would at all times be available for this purpose