The plaintiff owned a barge which it orally demised to the defendant from day to day on a per diem hire, the bailor to furnish a bargee, the bailee to pay him and use her at its pleasure, and to return her at the end of her service. There was no express promise to return in good condition. Nine months later the defendant was -towing- her, lightly laden, on the starboard side of a tug wilh a lighter outside, and two lighters on the tug’s port side, from Greenville, New Jersey, to Brooklyn. The lug liad put the lighters at their several slips, and with the barge alone was coming to her- destination, when, less than two hundred feet away, for some unknown reason she suddenly began to settle and sank. When raised, it was found that of the thwart-ships planks which formed her bottom, that nearest the stern “mud log” was gone. On the side of one of the foré and aft bilge logs there was a nine inch bruise or gouge, just above one end of the missing plank, about three inches wide and a half inch deep, which could have been made by a descending blow that, if carried below the bilge log, would strike the end of the plank, and might loosen it from its seat. The barge had been repaired fifteen years before, but it did not appear how old the plank was; it was spiked to the bilge-log and had been torn away, leaving some of the spikes in position. Nobody could explain how the plank had been loosened, or whether it was tom off in raising the barge, though obviously she had suffered some damage before she settled and sank.
The plaintiff sued at law upon the bailment, charging only a failure to return in good condition, reasonable wear and tear excepted; the answer denied some of the allegations, but pleaded no defence. Upon the trial the plaintiff proved the delivery and return in bad condition and rested. Strictly the complaint was bad on its face; the bailee can bo held only for Ms negligence in the case of a demised barge. Harms Co. v. Upper Hudson Stone Co.,
The bailor, upon proving the bailment and injury, is entitled to the benefit of a presumption of fault which the bailee must meet by showing, either how the barge was injured, or that however-that was, it was not due to his neglect. Cummings v. Pennsylvania R. Co.,
However, as he appears to have misapprehended the effect of our decision in Cummings v. Pennsylvania R. Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
