The \Richmond.\""
The \Richmond.\""
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a decree in admiralty which wás
The decree of the Circuit Court will be consequently affirmed, and as it will serve no useful purpose to enter into a discussion of the evidence in detail, no further opinion will be delivered. Having reached this conclusion, it is unnecessary to consider how much of the case has been brought here by the appeals that were taken.'
Decree affirmed.
070rehearing
A petition for rehearing having been filed,
delivered the opinion of the court.
We are asked to rehear this case on two grounds: 1, because on the evidence the decree below should have been reversed ; and, 2, because the exceptions to the commissioner’s report were not considered.
Notwithstanding what has been said in the briefs filed with this application, we still think the question of the liability of the “ Richmond ” is one of fact only. She was not a carrier of the “ Sabine’s ” cargo, and consequently not liable in any respect ás such. If not at fault for the collision, she is no more liable for damages to the cargo of the “ Sabine ” than she is for the damages to the “ Sabine,” on which the cargo was carried.
So far as the “ Sabine ” or her cargo, therefore, is concerned, the only question presented on this application is whether, in íaw, the Richmond was in fault for the collision, and that depends on the fact whether the “ Sabine ” had “ fled to the wall,” and for that purpose had gone closer to the left-hand shore than her pilot had ever seen a boat before, and the “ Richmond ” followed her. On that question of fact the case hinges, .for if
The decree on the merits was rendered April 19,1875, a féw days before the act of 1875 took effect. We were, therefore, as we thought at the hearing, compelled to consider and weigh the evidence on the question involved when that decree was rendered. We are clear now, as we were on the first hearing, that the presumptions in favor of the correctness of the two decrees below have not been overcome. If one set of witnesses are to be believed, the decree is right; if the other, it is wrong. There is, to say the least, no such preponderance in favor of the appellants as to justify us in overruling the decisions of the two courts below.
Petition denied.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The “Richmond.”
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published