(after stating the facts as above). The appellant contends that, the cargo having been loaded on a barge, which became an instrument in the transportation of the cargo only in connection with the tug, the situation was the same as if it had been carried on the tug, and that the relation between the appellee and the appellant was solely one of affreightment. But there was no contract here between the appellee and the barge and the tng. The bill of lading was made with the barge, and did not include the tug, and there is nothing therein to indicate that the tug and the tow were engaged in a common venture. Since the barge had no power of her own, there was an implied contract that a tug would be furnished by the appellant to carry her to her destination. The only express reference to a tug was that the carrier reserved the privilege of towing with one tug other barges in the *760 course of the voyage, a reservation .evidently made to obviate objection to possible delay- in transportation caused by the additional load.
We do not regard the situation the same as it would be, had the cargo been carried upon the tug itself. The Supreme Court, in considering the provisions of the Harter Aet (Comp. St. §§ 8029-8035) in their relation to the evils which it was intended to obviate, has tended toward a strict construction thereof. The Irrawaddy,
The appellant relies upon the decisions of. this, court in The Columbia,
In The Seven Bells the owner of a barge-made a contract with the owner of a tug by which the latter was to make daily trips with the barge, and to haul all freight and express which the owner might furnish. It was held on the evidence that the tug was insufficient in power to handle properly the barge in rough weather, that both vessels were liable for loss of the cargo on the barge when she was east off by the launch during a high wind, and that the libelant’s contract with the owner of the barge,, whereby he shipped goods thereon, was not merely one of towage, but for carriage, on. which the two vessels became one instrumentality, the owner of the barge being the owner of the launch pro hac vice. It is true that in that ease the Harter Aet was set up as a defense, but it was not involved in the decision, as the owner of , the cargo recovered judgment,for his damages on the ground that the tug was insufficiently equipped to handle the barge.
We are of the opinion that the Harter Aet applies only to the relation of a vessel to the cargo with which she is herself laden, and does not relieve the owner of a tug from liability for its negligence in. towing the barge on which the cargo is carried. Cases directly in point are The Murrell (D. C.)
The appellant cites The Nettie Quill (D. C.)
We find no merit in the contention that, irrespective of the Harter Aet, the appellant is exempted from liability by the terms of the bills of lading. The bills of lading were issued for goods on board the barge Tennessee. The exceptions therein expressed extend only to dangers of fire and navigation, or any other peril, accident, or danger of the seas, rivers, or steam navigation, or steam machinery, and they apply only to the barge, and not to the tug, or to any other vessel, or to the appellant as the owner of the tug. No tug was referred to in connection with the contract of transportation. The exemption clause, therefore, does not excuse negligent towage. The Steamer Syracuse,
The appellant cites The Oceanica,
The decision of the ease^ of The Maine was based upon the fact that the lighterage company which furnished the barge and the tug was not a common carrier, but as a private carrier undertook the service under a contract which provided that the shipper should have no claim upon it, or its equipment, or boats whieh it might charter or control, for any loss of cargo. In The G. R. Crowe it was held that a vessel chartered for full cargo was not a common carrier, but a bailee for transportation, and could, by the express provisions of the charter party, be exempted from liability for leakage. We do not see that either decision casts material light upon the question involved in the present ease.
The decree is affirmed.
