91 F. 998 | 3rd Cir. | 1899
The nature of this case as it was presented in the court below is sufficiently stated in its opinion (87 Fed. 768), as follows:
“The libel in this case is filed to recover damages for the detention of the schooner Oscar G. Schmidt and the steam tugs Israel II. Duncan and Laura, in Cooper creek, Camden county, in this district. It appears from the record that on February 17, 1897, the schooner, in tow of the tugs, passed v. the creek through the draw of the bridge which spans the same, and that upon their return trip they were unable to pass through the bridge. The cause of the failure was that, in attempting to open the draw, the main casting, which operated the pivot on which the draw swung, broke. It is charged that this breakage was due to the careless and negligent conduct of the servants of the respondents, and that they failed to have the same repaired within a reasonable time.”
The court below, being of the opinion that the evidence failed to show negligence on the part of the respondents or their agents, or that the bridge was not repaired and the draw opened with all reasonable dispatch, entered a decree dismissing the libel, with costs, and the case is now before v. on appeal from that decree.
The appellant, in his brief, rests his contention upon the proposition “that the respondents were negligent (1) In that they had notice of the defective condition of the drawbridge for some time prior to the detention, and failed to have it mended; (2) that the boats were unnecessarily and unreasonably detained, by reason of the keeper’s refusal to have the draw opened; and (3) in that the respondents were unquestionably tardy in having the draw opened.”
This proposition, in each of its parts, asserts matter of fact which could not, in any instance, have been found from the evidence. It does not appear that the respondents had knowledge of any defective condition of the drawbridge which contributed to cause the delay complained cf. The report which had been made by the bridge tender to the board of freeholders was not of any condition of the bridge which interfered with navigation, but only of its “binding,” and making his “duty onerous.” The delay resulted from the breaking of a casting, and this was caused, not by a failure of the respondents to act upon the complaint of the bridge tender, but by the defective manner in which the workmen who were employed, two or three days before the casting broke, to remedy the quite distinct subject of the bridge tender’s complaint, had performed their work. There is nothing to show that the board of freeholders did not suppose, or that they were not justified in supposing, that the repairs which they had ordered had been properly made. Under