delivered the opinion of the court.
The steamboat Sangamon hired the plaintiff’s barge (the contract being in writing) at eight dollars a day, excluding the time it might be frozen in the ice, to be returned to plaintiff at Montezuma at any time, upon reasonable previous notice, and “ delivered in good order, the usual wear and tear excepted.” The suit is for the non-delivery, pursuant to the contract; and one defence set up in the answer is, that the barge was destroyed by an overpowering force — the ice in the Mississippi river — without any fault on the part of the defendant. This defence was struck out upon the objection of the plaintiff, and proof to the same effect, offered by the defendant upon the trial, was excluded.
If there had been no obligation upon the boat for the return of the barge, other than what the law implied upon the bailment, from the transaction itself, this defence, it is admitted, would have been sufficient. But it is insisted that here the party imposed the duty upon himself by a special contract, and therefore took the risk of such casualties ; the distinction being between a duty imposed by law and one imposed by the parlies themselves. We are told that by the civil law, when a *190person enters into an obligation to do a particular thing (unless it be of the essence of the contract, that a risk is incurred on the one side or the other), and is prevented from doing it by accident or an overpowering force, there is no ground for claiming damages for the non-performance. (Henderson v. Stone, 1 Martin, 641.) The object of both the civil and common law, in the matter, is to ascertain the intention of the parties, and execute their contracts accordingly. IE it were the intention of the boat here to make itself responsible, in case the barge was destroyed without any fault, even by a natural force that could not be resisted, the matter relied upon would, of course, be no defence; but the question is, whether this was the intention. It is argued, however, that this is the interpretation our law gives to an undertaking for the performance of any particular act, and that the courts are bound to adhere to this construction, no matter what may be thought of the propriety of it, as a rule likely to carry into effect the real intention of parties. An examination of the cases, however, we think, will show that there is no such inexorable rule applicable indiscriminately to the construction of all special undertakings.
In Pollard v. Moffer, (1 Dall. 210,) the covenant was to deliver up the demised premises (a house in Philadelphia), at the end of the term, “in good repair,” and the British army had taken and held the city of Philadelphia until after the term had expired, and, during the time, taken possession of the house and committed the waste and destruction complained of. This was admitted as a good defence to an action for not returning the premises in good repair pursuant to the contract.
In Young v. Bruces, (5 Littell’s Rep. 324,) where there was a special contract to return a hired slave, the court of appeals in Kentucky decided that the death of the slave excused the non-delivery; following in this matter, the cases in Virginia. (Harris v. Nicholas, 5 Munf. 487.) In Perkens v. Reed, 8 Mo. 33, and Ellett v. Bobb, 6 Mo. 324, this court went still further and decided that when a hired slave ran away, without any fault on the part of the hirer, that the latter was excused, *191and this decision corresponds with the decisions in Kentucky upon the same matter (Keas v. Yervell, 2 Dana, 249) ; and the ground upon which the latter decisions are put is, “ that the casualty by which the slave is lost is a peril incident to the nature of such property, and, therefore, in contracts concerning it, that peril shall never be presumed to have been guarded against, unless so expressly stipulated.”
It is true the hirer could not prevent the death in the first class of cases, nor the escape in the other class; yet, if his contract embraced these risks, he was bound to pay for the loss. Both cases, therefore, go upon the ground that there is no such imperative rule of construction applicable to contracts of this description.
The question here then is, was this risk within the engagement of the defendant, so that, no matter how the loss occurred, the party is bound, and we think it was not. Here is a general undertaking to return the property in good order, and it has perished without any fault on the part of the defendant by a natural force that could not be resisted, and we are of opinion that an undertaking to assume such a risk ought to be special and express, and so clear as not to admit of any other construction. Such is not the case here.
The hirer was even excused from paying for the use of the barge, if it should be frozen'up ; and if the plaintiff had been asked whether he expected pay for it, ip case it should perish by the same overpowering force, can there be any doubt as to the answer he would have given ?
Judge Ryland concurring,the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Scott, Judge.When the law creates a duty and the party is disabled to perform it without any default in him, and he has no remedy over, the law will excuse him. But when the-party, by his own contract, creates a change or duty upon himself, he is bound to make it good, if he can, notwithstanding any accident by inevitable necessity; because he might have provided *192against it by his contract. This is a principle as well established in our law as any to be found within its folds. It has. prevailed too long and exercised its influence in too many ways, now to be overthrown without much inconvenience and the causing of many future difficulties. This principle is a manifestation of the spirit of the race for whom our noble system of law was moulded; a spirit of bold, self-reliance, which scorns to resort to government for protection against events, whose occurrence might be obviated by the exercise of ordinary vigilance. It is this spirit which distinguishes the common from the civil law : a spirit, too, which distinguishes the people that are governed by the two systems of law. Too great a reliance on government for protection in matters against which the exercise of the faculties with which man is endowed by nature may guard him, b.egets a spirit of dependence which is inconsistent with that freedom of thought and action which should animate a self-governing people.
It would be a display of useless research to attempt a reference to the many cases in which the principle in question has been asserted and maintained. The books are full of them, and I conceive that there is no authority in the courts to depart from the law as it has been invariably understood. There is nothing whatever to distinguish this case from the many others which have occurred in the course of the administration of our laws ; and if the principle is not adhered to in this instance, it must be regarded as overturned — an act to the performance of which the legislature is alone competent. There may be cases in which the application of the principle will effect complete justice between the parties. Who shall draw the line of distinction? Is not that the province of the law-maker ? It is always safer, in a government of laws, to have fixed rules for the interpretation of contracts, than that every thing should be left to the discretion or sense of justice of the judge. Too much is already left to the discretion of the judge in our law, and the occasions for the exercise of such discretion should not be multiplied.