By ' Division B, composed of Justices O’NIELL, LAND, and BAKER.
The receivers of the Texas & Pacific Railway Company have appéaled from a judgment against them for damages in the sum of $2,737.96. The cause of action was that a dredge boat belonging to plaintiff was detained 27 days by the obstruction of navigation, by a bridge of the railway company, on Bayou des Glaises, near Longbridge station. It is alleged that Bayou des Glaises is a navigable stream, the obstruction of which was unlawful, and that the railway company, instead of removing the bridge promptly when requested by plaintiff, “did, willfully, knowingly, wrongfully and deliberately detain and hold up the boat of petitioner, from the 3d day of May, 1920, at noon, to the 30th day of May, 1920, at noon — a period of 27 days — on which day only did the defendants break their bridge and allow petitioner’s boat freely to pass and continue its journey.”
The manager of the dredge testified that, if he' had not been delayed at Longbridge,
As far as the record shows, plaintiff’s dredging contract on Darbonne Lake was fulfilled without any loss on account of the delays to the dredge. The only elements of loss were the services of the salaried crew of the boat and the earnings of the capital invested while they were idle. But the delay at Longbridge was not the proximate cause —in fact, it was not even the remote cause— of that loss, because the loss would have resulted in any event from the fortuitous event, from the stage of the river at Melville. For that reason the railway company is not liable for the loss, and would not be liable if the officers or employees of the company had been guilty of negligence in detaining the dredge at Longbridge.
The judgment appealed from is annulled, and plaintiff’s demand is rejected, and this suit is dismissed, at plaintiff’s cost.
Rehearing refused by Division C, composed of Justices DAWKINS, ST. PAUL, and THOMPSON.