Judges: MacLean, Scott
Filed Date: 11/15/1905
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The defendant hired the coal boat “ S. McKinley,” about November 28, 1904, for six months, at forty dollars a month; and on February 7, 1905, .-.rote the owner, here the plaintiff: “ I have this day sent your boat, S. McKinley, to your dry-dock,in Jersey City.” The boat did not come to the plaintiff’s dry-dock, but was later found by him in damaged condition, with a quantity of ice inside, about three miles away, at Port Johnston, to which it had been taken for coal for the defendant by a towing company. The amount of the judgment, equalling, excepting costs, the balance of rent accruing between the last payment and the time of resuming possession, implies that the learned justice found the defendant absolved from any imputation of negligence because the primary accident, staving in of a plank at the light water-line, occurred while the boat was in charge of an independent company, towing, when ice was running, a flotilla in the very service for which the McKinley was chartered; thus, with evidence that no collision or other extraordinary thing occurred, that the boat was not fit, ac
Gildeesleeve, J., concurs.