4 F. 925 | S.D.N.Y. | 1880
In this cause, which was a suit to recover for non-delivery of cargo according to terms of bills of lading, the libellant has had a decree on the ground that the master and crew of the vessel were negligent in not protecting her cargo of sugar against damage which threatened to injure it through the known leaky condition of the vessel on her arrival at her place of discharge. A reference was ordered to compute the libellant’s damages. It appeared upon the trial that the cargo had already sustained damage by sea water, which was properly to be attributed to a peril of the sea, and the evidence tended to show that the water had been, before the arrival of the ship at her pier, more than six feet above the bottom of the cargo of sugar. The principal charge of negligence, on which the liability of the ship for subsequent damage was sought to be based, was in suffering a steam-pump employed by the master to pump the ship out to stop during the night of the twenty-eighth of December, so that in the morning the ship was again flooded with sea water. In the written opinion of the court occurred this passage with reference to the condition of the ship on the morning of the 29th: “The lower hold, whore the sugar was stowed, was flooded. The water had risen higher among the mats of sugar than it had ever been before.” Such seemed then to me to be, and still seems to be, the proper inference to be drawn
The commissioner will proceed in accordance with this decision.