This is a libel in personam brought against the owner of a coal barge, Northern No. 29, by the owner of the cargo she was carrying when she sank on December 10, 1933. Both the vessel and her cargo were a total-loss. The libel contains two counts; one alleging a contract of carriage and a breach thereof by failure to deliver; the other’ in tort, on the theory that the respondent was negligent in supplying an unseaworthy barge for the transportation of the libelant’s coal. The respondent’s answer denied the making of "a contract of carriage, denied that the barge was unseaworthy or that he was negligent in the respects alleged, and invoked the benefit of the limitation of liability statutes. The District ’Court refused recovery on the contract count, but granted it on the tort count and denied limitation of liability. From the interlocutory decree the respondent has appealed, while the libelant has filed cross-assignments of error because the contract count was not sustained.
Northern No. 29 was a wooden, coast-wise coal barge owned by the respondent, Joseph P. Martin, and operated for him by P. F. Martin, Inc., a corporation for which he acted as agent at Norfolk, Va. In June, 1933, the barge was chartered to Marine Fuel Corporation to carry coal from Hampton Roads to Mont-ville, Conn., during a term ending April 1, 1934, at an agreed hire per ton carried. Marine Fuel. Corporation made a subcharter to the libelant at a higher rate per ton carried. Under this subcharter several cargoes had been safely carried for the libelant prior to the final voyage on *41 which the barge was lost. On each voyage freight based on the bill of lading weight had been paid by the libelant to Marine Fuel Corporation at 70 cents per ton, and the latter had paid P. F. Martin, Inc., 67½ cents per ton. The amount received by P. F. Martin, Inc., was credited to the account of the respondent. It was the custom at Hampton Roads to have the shore agent of the barge owner, instead of the master, sign the bills of lading because the barges were towed away from the dock to an anchorage as soon as loading was completed. Such a bill of lading was given with respect to the cargo in suit. It was prepared by the libelant, and its material portions read as follows: “Shipped in good order and condition by Flat-Top Fuel Company, Inc., in and upon the Barge called the Northern No. 29 * * * two thousand and one half tons * * which I promise to deliver in like good order alongside at the aforesaid Port of Montville, Connecticut (the dangers of the seas only excepted) unto Robert Gair Company or his or their assigns, he or they paying freight for the same at the rate of-per ton * * *.
“J. P. Martin, Master.”
The respondent’s name was appended by an authorized representative of his office.
Relying upon The Fri,
Hence the libelant must' rely solely upon its tort claim. On December 5, 1933, the barge was loaded to less than her full capacity and towed to an anchorage. Her voyage began on December 7th. Nothing untoward occurred until the evening of December 9th when the captain discovered that she was leaking. Captain Styron testified that up to this time he had used the pumps morning and night, as was customary, and “she had been making no water to speak of.” By 7 o’clock on the morning of the 10th the barge had taken in so much water that she had to be abandoned and shortly thereafter she sank. No wind or seas had been encountered sufficient to account for a seaworthy vessel springing a leak, and the District Judge concluded that the barge must have been unseaworthy when she broke ground. This finding we shall not disturb. But since Martin had no contract relations with the libelant, he neither expressly nor impliedly warranted her seaworthiness, and the duty he owed the libelant was not an absolute duty to have her seaworthy, but a duty not to cause damage to the libelant’s property by the negligent use of her. The Cullen No. 32,
. Decree reversed, with directions to enter a decree in conformity with this opinion.
