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[249 U.S. 334, 335] Messrs. J. Parker Kirlin, of New York City, and Frank S. Masten, of Cleveland, Ohio, for petitioner.
Messrs. Francis S. Laws, of Philadelphia, Pa., and Sherwin A. Hill, of Detroit, Mich., for respondent.
Mr. Justice HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a petition to limit liability for the loss of cargo on the Benjamin Noble, brought by the present petitioner after libels in personam had been filed in different districts by the cargo owners, the Cambria Steel Company. The right was denied by the District Court on the ground that the vessel was unseaworthy with the privity and knowledge of the owner when she sailed and that the owner had made a personal contract by which it warranted seaworthiness. The Benjamin Noble, 232 Fed. 382. The findings, rulings and decree of the District Court were affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. 244 Fed. 95, 156 C. C. A. 523, sub nom. The Benjamin Noble. A writ of certiorari was granted before Luckenbach v. W. J. McCahan Sugar Refining Co.,
We very much appreciate the danger that the act should be cut down from its intended effect by too easy a finding of privity or knowledge on the part of owners, as also by too liberal an attribution to them of contracts as personally theirs. We are not disposed to press the law in those directions further than the cases go. But in this case in addition to the finding of the owner's privity to the unseaworthiness was the further finding that the
[249 U.S. 334, 337]
contract was the personal contract of the petitioner-a finding that seems warranted if any contract by a corporation can fall within the class. That such contracts may impose a liability that cannot be transferred to what is left of the ship is decided. Luckenbach v. W. J. McCahan Sugar Refining Co.,
Decree affirmed.
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Citation: 249 U.S. 334
No. 231
Decided: March 31, 1919
Court: United States Supreme Court
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