The principal question to be determined in this case is, whether a compliance by the defendant with the provisions of the act of congress “to provide for the better security of the lives of passengers on board of vessels propelled in whole or in part by steam, and for other purposes,” passed August 30, 1852, and of the act of which it is an amendment, exonerated the steamboat com-, pany from responsibility.
I am of the opnion that the act of congress does not exempt a party from a liability which the law otherwise imposes. The act' provides regulations under which steam vessels may be constructed and navigated, and contains no limitation or restraint upon any right which existed in favor of an injured party prior to the passage of the law, and inde-. pendent of its provisions.
There is no portion of the act which expressly exonerates owners and their employees from liability, who have complied with its terms and regulations, or which relieves them from the personal care and attention which is usually required of them in the construction and management of steam vessels,
I think that the law of congress was intended to provide additional guards and securities for passengers who might embark upon steam vessels, without exempting the owners from the liabilities imposed by the legal relationship which existed between them and passengers. It is quite obvious, *225that such was its design, and object, and it would be somewhat remarkable if by implication merely, and with no express provision to that effect, a party who had been injured could be deprived of the ordinary means of redress which the law furnishes, in such cases.
In the enactment in question, congress has not, I think, attempted to establish a statutory liability. Nor is there any . inconsistency between the act of congress and the rule of law which furnishes a remedy. They are both entirely harmonious and reconcilable. The act of congress provides for carrying passengers, under certain rules and regulations, and the law renders the owner responsible for damages occasioned by their neglect. I do not consider that the act of congress was designed to provide a reinedy, but it was simply for the purpose of increasing the guaranties against injuries to the person. The regulations which the act provides did not supersede the redress which the law extended to aggrieved parties, for injuries received.
The 13th section of the act of 1838, which the act of 1852 amends, declares that in all suits and actions against the proprietors of steamboats, for injuries arising from the bursting of the boiler, &c. the fact of such bursting, &c. shall be prima facie evidence to charge the defendant, or those in his employment, with negligence; thus .relieving the plaintiff in any such case from proving negligence in the first instance, and thus making his right to recover independent of any compliance with the requirements of the act in question.
The 30th section of the amendatory act of 1852 provides, that when damages are sustained by any passenger, &c. the master and owner of such vessel, and the vessel itself, shall be liable if it happens through any neglect to comply with the provision of law therein prescribed, or through any known defects or imperfections of the apparatus, &c.; thus giving the injured party a right of action for the very defects proved upon the trial of this case.
*226[Albany General Term, December 4, 1865.These provisions of the statute are inconsistent with the idea that the law in question was intended to repeal the common law remedy and to destroy entirely the plaintiff’s right of action.
But even if the act had been silent on that subject, I do not think that it would have deprived the party of any remedy which he previously enjoyed. Evidently this statute was not intended for any such purpose; and if we concede that a new remedy was granted, it would not take away one already possessed, unless it thus provided. For “if a statute gives a remedy in the affirmative (without a negative expressed or implied) for-a matter which was actionable by the common law, the party may sue at common law, as well as upon the statute; for it does not take away the common law." (2 Inst. 200. Com. Dig. action upon Stat. C. vol. 1, ed. 1800, p. 311. Sedg. on Stat. and Con. Law, 401, 402 also p. 93. Beckford v. Wood, 7 T. R. 620. Burden v. Crocker, 10 Pick. 383. See also Renwick v. Morris, 7 Hill, 575 ; Clark v. Brown, 18 Wend. 213.) I do not think it alters the case, because the statute was enacted by congress, instead of the state legislature.
As I have already observed, substantially, I regard this statute as a mere regulation for the benefit of the public, and not as furnishing a new mode of redress; and under any circumstances, with no repeal of existing rights and remedies, it would certainly be going very far to hold that it entirely destroyed them.
The plaintiff was clearly entitled to recover for his bodily pain and suffering, within the rule laid down by the Court of Appeals in Curtis v. The Roch and Syracuse R. R. Co., 18 N. Y. Rep. 541, 542 ; Ransom v. The N. Y. and Erie R. R. Co., 15 id. 415; and the judge committed no error in thus charging the jury.
The judgment must be affirmed, with^costs.
Mogehoom, Miller and Peclclmn, Justices.]