Judges: Gildersleeve
Filed Date: 12/15/1898
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The plaintiff is the owner of the canal boat “ Lewis Stewart.” The defendant is a foreign corporation. On or about the 27th day of October, 1896, at Elizabethport, H. J., the defendant shipped on said boat a cargo of coal of 2244- tons, according to the bill of lading and the evidence of the defendant’s witnesses. This cargo was consigned to Tinsley & Co. of New York city, and the place of consignment was the dock of Tinsley & Co., Mott Haven canal. It was agreed that the freight should be twenty-two cents a ton, making a total for such freight of $49.39, upon which a credit was allowed of $6.74. It was also agreed that the demurrage should be at the rate of $3 a day after four lay days. In his complaint, the plaintiff claims $42.65 for freight and $36 for demurrage, to-wit, $3 a day for twelve days; but on the trial he reduced his claim to ten days’ demurrage, making his total claim $72.65. On October 28, 1896, the captain of the boat reported its arrival in the mouth of the Mott Haven canal to the consignees, and offered to them the bill of lading. The consignees, however, declined to accept it until the boat had arrived at the place of consignment, and told the captain to bring his boat to the dock. The captain was taken sick that day, and the boat remained at the mouth of the canal overnight without a keeper. On the following day, i. e., October 29, 1896, another captain was put on board, and reported to the consignees. The latter looked at the cargo, and declined to accept it on the ground that there was less coal than the 224-|- tons consigned. The boat lay in the canal, some two or three hundred feet from the dock, or place of consignment, until Hovemher 5, 1896, when it was agreed between the consignor and the consignees that the latter should take the coal at the weight in the boat.
It is very clear that if the shortage of 24 1/10 tons of coal was due, as the justice has found, to the fault of the plaintiff, the defendant should not be held responsible for the delay in arriving at a new agreement, and the consequent claim for demurrage. Besides which the testimony as to the value of the lost coal fixes the amount at a sum much larger than the $72.65 allowed by the justice, i. e., the amount of plaintiff’s claim. The decision of the justice appears to be as follows, viz.: “ Judgment for the defendant, and I am convinced that the shortage of coal is clearly chargeable to the plaintiff. I have offset the defendant’s counterclaim in amount equal to plaintiff’s claim, $10 costs.” The return, however, states the judgment to be for defendant in the sum of $25.47, “ damages,” and costs. The word “ damages,” however, is evidently unintentional, as the costs, disbursements and prospective charges, as taxed, amount to the said sum of $25.47.
For the reasons above stated, the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Beekman, P. J., and Gtegerich, J., concur.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.