Brooklyn Ash Removal Co. v. . Connell

The defendant in this action was the owner of a scow, which, with other scows, she let and chartered to the plaintiff. The scows were to be used by the plaintiff for a term fixed, at a monthly rental, in and about New York harbor, in carrying out a contract with the street cleaning department of the city. The charter of the scows provided that the defendant should keep the same in repair. The plaintiff delivered the scow in question to the defendant for repair. The defendant made the repair and then refused to return the scow to the plaintiff. Thereupon the plaintiff brought this action in replevin against the defendant to recover possession of the scow.

The main ground on which the defendant refused to return the scow was the provision of paragraph two of the contract, which reads as follows:

"Second. We (meaning the defendant) will furnish a captain for each scow at our own expense, who will be under your control and orders but you are not to be responsible for the acts of any captain in the care, movement or navigation of said scows, and we will save you harmless, and defend you from any claims, actions or suits arising therefrom."

It is the claim of the defendant that she merely let the use of the scows to the plaintiff, and by the provision of paragraph two in the contract she at all times had possession of the scow so that an action in replevin will not lie. It seems to me that this argument of the defendant is not sound.

It is altogether a question of the intention of the parties, and we have only the contract to go by. The contract amounted to a demise of the scows to the plaintiff, which, *Page 505 of course, carried with it the right to possession, unless the contrary appears from paragraph two. Did the parties intend anything to the contrary by that paragraph which prescribed that the defendant should furnish a captain with the scow? If they did, the paragraph fails to show such intention.

What the duties of a captain of a scow may be is not set forth in the contract. So far as we can see, he was nothing more than a laborer or deckhand employed with the scow. When the owner of a large vessel, propelled by its own power, charters the same and agrees to provide the captain and crew of the vessel, we can understand something of the relationship of the parties, but to speak of the captain of a scow tells us nothing.

If we take it that the contract did not give the plaintiff complete possession, then the provision of paragraph two, relieving the plaintiff from responsibility for the acts of the captain, would seem to be unnecessary, because it is possession which entails responsibility.

The Federal courts in this district have held that provisions in a charter, like the provisions of paragraph two in this case, do not defeat the effect of the instrument as a demise. (TheWillie, 231 Fed. Rep. 865; Dailey v. Carroll, 248 Fed. Rep. 466.) I think that is the better view, and that judgment on the pleadings should not have been directed.

I recommend that the judgments appealed from be reversed, with costs.

HISCOCK, Ch. J., COLLIN, HOGAN, McLAUGHLIN and CRANE, JJ., concur; CHASE, J., dissents.

Judgments reversed. *Page 506