Bissell v. The Steam-Tug Alexander
This text of 3 F. 671 (Bissell v. The Steam-Tug Alexander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The admitted fact that the relative weight of the tug and the canal-boat was such that the tiller of the canal-boat would control both the tug and the canal-boat renders it highly probable that the contract between the parties was as claimed by the respondent, viz.: that the respondent should furnish a man to steer the canal-boat; and inasmuch as the sole cause of the collision, in which the canal-boat was injured, was lack of proper steering of the canal-boat, it follows that the collision must be attributed to the fault of the libellant’s agent, and not to any fault of the Alexander, unless it be true, as claimed by the libellant, that at the time of the accident the man at the tiller of the canal-boat was sent there by the captain of jthe Alexander, and was consequently an agent of the respondent. Upon this question of fact the evidence is in flat contradiction. The man who was at the tiller of the canal-boat was a person in no w'ay connected either with the boat or the tug, who was going to Bockaway by the permission of the captain of the Alexander. He, of course, must know how he came to be at the tiller of the canal-boat, and I decline to accept his statement as the truth. He says he was put there by the captain of the canal-boat to steer the boat, while the captain went to his breakfast ; that he was wholly unable to manage the tiller, being a cripple; and that when the danger was seen he called, as did others, to the captain of the boat to come to the tiller, but without avail.
Such being the fact, there appears to be no room to contend that the tug can be held to be responsible for the collision that ensued. The libel is accordingly dismissed, with costs.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
3 F. 671, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bissell-v-the-steam-tug-alexander-nyed-1880.