delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal involves the construction and application of § 3 of the Harter Act, c. 105, 27 Stat. 445, which, so far as pertinent here, provides: “That if the owner of any vessel transporting merchandise or property to or from any port in the United States of America shall exercise due diligence to make the said vessel in all respects seaworthy and properly manned, eqüipped, and supplied, neither the vessel, her owner or owners, agent, or charterers shall become or be held responsible for damage or loss resulting from faults or errors in navigation or in the management of said vessel . . .”
Petitioner is a common carrier on the Sacramento River in California and owns and operates the barge “ Tennessee,” which is not equipped with motive power, and the -steamer “ San Joaquin No. 4.” On September 23, 1921, petitioner received from respondent for transportation a quantity of barley in sacks. The bill of lading acknowledges shipment of the barley “ on board of the Sacramento Transportation [Navigation] Co.’s. Barge ‘ Tennessee ’ . . . ; with the privilege of reshipping in whole or in part, on steamboats or barges; also with the privilege of towing with one steamer, at the same time, . . . two or more barges, either loaded or empty.” While being towed by the steamer in the course of transportation,, the barge came into collision with a British ship at anchor and was swamped. The barley was a total loss. The sole cause of the collision was the negligence of the steamer. That both barge and steamer were “ in all respects seaworthy and properly manned, equipped, and supplied,” is not in dispute. Upon these facts, respondent filed his libel m personam against petitioner.
In the view we take of the case the sole question to be determined is whether the barge alone or the combina
The libel recites that it is
“
in a cause of towage,” and in argument this is strenuously insisted upon. Towage service is the employment of one vessel to expedite the. voyage of another. Here, while there was towage service, the contract actually made with respondent was not to tow a vessel but to transport goods, and plainly that contract was a contract of affreightment. See
Bramble
v.
Culmer,
The fact that we are dealing with vessels, which by a fiction of the law are invested with personality, does not require us to disregard the actualities of the situation, namely, that the owner of the tug towed his own barge as a necessary incident of the contract of affreightment, and that the transportation of the cargo was in fact effected by their joint operation. The bill of lading declares that the cargo was shipped
on board
the barge.
Considering the language of the bill of lading in. the light of all the circumstances, it is manifest that we are dealing with a single contract and the use of the tug must be read into that contract as an indispensable factor in the performance of its obligations. To transport means to convey or carry from one place to another; and a transportation contract for the barge without the tug would have been as futile as a contract for the use of a freight car without a locomotive. In this view, by the terms of the contract of affreightment, in part expressed and in part necessarily resulting from that which was expressed, the transportation of the goods was called for not by the barge, an inert thing, but by the barge and tug, constituting together the effective instrumentality to that end.
It is said that the Harter Act is to be strictly construed.
The Main
v.
Williams,
In The Northern Belle, supra, this court, speaking of a combination of barge and steamboat, said that “ the barge is considered as belonging to the boat to which she is attached for the purposes of that voyage.” In The “ Civilta ” and the “ Restless,” supra, a tug and a ship which she was towing by means of a hawser were held to be in contemplation of law “ one vessel, and that a vessel under steam.”
In
The Columbia, supra,
it was held that á barge having no motive power and a tug belonging to the same owner and furnishing the motive power constituted one vessel for the purposes of the voyage. In that case, wheat was to be transported by means of the barge, and the owner of the barge and tug undertook the transportation. The court said (p. 237): “As the wheat was to be carried on board the barge, which had no motive power, of necessity such power had to. be supplied by the carrier. . . . When the tug made fast and took in tow the barge, to perform the contract of carriage, the two became one
The court below rejected this decision as not applicable ,o a case arising under the Harter Act; but it is hard to see why the case is not pertinent and, if sound, controlling. What we are called upon to ascertain is the meaning of the term “ any vessel,” and the point decided in that case is that it includes a combination identical in all respects with that here dealt with. True, the court there, in construing the phrase, “ the owner of any vessel,” was considering one statute while here we are considering another and different statute; but there is no such difference between the statutes in respect of the connection in which the phrase is used or in respect of the subject-matter to which it relates as to suggest that Congress intended that it should bear different meanings.
Respondent contends that his view to the contrary is sustained by
The Murrell,
Decree reversed.
