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1862.

Cox

been twice or thrice re-coopered while they lay in the cellar; and that on the last occasion (about three weeks. before the sale) they had been entirely stripped, and new THE LONDON hoops put on.

and Others

v.

AND NORTH

WESTERN RAILWAY COMPANY.

Other witnesses were called on the part of the plaintiffs, who had seen the loading of the casks on the defendants' vans, and who (including the London port gauger) spoke to their being in a fit state for carriage by rail. Only one of the fifteen casks had been objected to, to Messrs. Thomas and Rough, and those gentlemen had at once directed the defendants to do what was necessary, and agreed to pay the expense.

The difference between the London gauge (taken immediately before the loading) of the contents of the casks and that taken at Liverpool at the company's station amounted to about 240 gallons. The London gauge showed the contents to be 2,278 gallons; that at Liverpool showed only 2,038 gallons. It was further proved for the plaintiffs that the leakage from the casks in question while they lay at Beal's Wharf was not more than the usual average leakage from oil casks.

Overend, in opening the defendants' case, said he would prove that the company had done all they could as careful carriers to insure the safe delivery of the goods. He would show that the casks were old casks, and were leaky when they came to defendants' hands, and they had suffered because of their own unsoundness, for which only the plaintiffs, and not the defendants, were to blame.

For the defendants a host of witnesses were called, including every person who had had anything to do with the oil from the time of its being loaded at Beal's Wharf until the time of its arrival at Liverpool. Their evidence went to show that the casks were very old and not sound; that the hoops were not tight on them, and they were

leaky even when received. It also went to negative the occurrence of any collision or accident anywhere along the line, and to show that due care had been used in the carriage.

His LORDSHIP, in summing up, said the two main questions which he should leave to the jury were, first, did the damage occur while in the defendants' possession from any inherent defects in the casks themselves? and, second, if there were defects in the casks, had the defendants. knowledge, or reasonable means of knowledge, of such defects; and did the damage arise from such defects? To prevent, perhaps, the necessity of other proceedings elsewhere, he should ask their opinion on a third point, in the event of their opinion on the other two being adverse to the plaintiffs, viz. if the defendants had not notice of any defects in the casks at the time of loading, but had such notice when they arrived at the goods' station, were they guilty of negligence, in fact, in forwarding them in their then state?

The jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs for the amount claimed, expressing their opinion that the damage did not arise from any inherent defect in the casks when delivered to the company's servants; and further expressing their opinion that the company should not have forwarded the goods from their London station in the condition they were found to be in when there (a).

(a) Vide Higginbotham v. The London and North Western Railway Company, Vol. II., p. 796, con

firmed in error on bill of excep-
tions, T. T. 1862.

1862.

Cox and Others

V.

THE LONDON
AND NORTH
WESTERN

RAILWAY
COMPANY.

1862.

Northumberland

Spring Assizes.

In an action on a marine policy for a construc

tive total loss arising from a leak:- Held, that it was for the jury whether the leak

arose from the ship being unseaworthy before the voyage, either

from any injury arising before the insurance, or from ordinary wear and tear, or whether it arose from the perils of the seas in the

course of the voyage insured, and whether the ship was abandoned in

the exercise of

an honest and

reasonable dis

cretion.

Newcastle, coram Mellor, J.

JARDINE AND OTHERS v. LEATHLEY.

THIS
was an action brought by the owners of the ship
Glenmanna against the defendant, an underwriter, for a
total constructive loss of the ship, upon a policy of insur-
ance dated the 7th of July, 1858, whereby the ship was
insured "at and from Bombay to any port of discharge in
the United Kingdom."

Pleas, denying the loss as alleged.

James, Q.C., Mellish, Q.C., and T. Jones for the plaintiffs.

Brett, Q.C., and Milward for the defendant.

From the evidence of the master of the ship, Captain Rogers, it seemed that the ship Glenmanna, Canadian built, of 995 tons burden, sailed from Bombay in December, 1858, after remaining there about seven months. She was surveyed at Bombay, and pronounced perfectly sound and seaworthy. The heat of the weather, however, had contracted her timbers. Soon after leaving Bombay she encountered heavy weather. After a heavy sea she sprung her mainmast, and when nearing the Cape of Good Hope she made a good deal of water. Soon afterwards she sprung a serious leak. Every effort was made to discover where the leak was, but without success, and a part of the cargo had to be thrown overboard. Witness then made for Trinidad, in order to have the leak repaired; but learning from another vessel that there was a slip at St. Thomas's, he made for that place, and arrived there on the 31st of March, the water then making three feet an hour. Numerous surveys were made of the ship, the last being on the 11th of May, when it was ascertained that the expense of repairing the ship and putting her into a seaworthy

condition would come to more than the total value of the ship, and they recommended accordingly that she should be sold by public auction. She was accordingly sold, and produced 2,950 dollars.

Mr. Joseph Cunard said, that he valued the ship at 31. 10s. a ton, which would make her total value 3,4791.

The evidence of the surveyors who surveyed the ship at St. Thomas's, and likewise that of the British consul there, which had been taken on commission, was read.

The case for the defendant was, that the damage which the ship had suffered did not arise from any of the perils insured against; that on her outward voyage, before the policy was effected, she ran upon her anchor off the Downs, and in all probability by so doing removed some of the copper sheathing from the bottom of the vessel; that subsequently, at Bombay, the worms got to this unprotected part of the ship's bottom; that, consequently, when she left Bombay, she was in an unseaworthy condition, and that the leak, which was the cause of all the ship's disasters, took its origin from that cause, and not from any perils of the sea. It was also contended, that no proper notice of abandonment had been given to the underwriters.

His LORDSHIP, in summing up, left three questions to the jury:

1. Was the leak, in their opinion, caused by the ship being unseaworthy at the time she left Bombay, in consequence of what occurred to her before the policy was effected, or from ordinary wear and tear; or was it caused by the violence of the winds and the waves after she left Bombay?

2. Did the captain, in abandoning the ship at St. Thomas's, exercise a reasonable discretion, and act as an independent uninsured owner would have done?

VOL. III.

G

F.F.

1862.

JARDINE and Others

บ.

LEATHLEY.

1862.

JARDINE and Others

บ.

LEATHLEY.

3. Was there, in fact, an unequivocal notice of abandonment given?

The jury answered all the questions in their favour, and returned a

Verdict for the plaintiff (a).

(a) See Lindsay v. Leathley, Vol. II., p. 696.

Northumberland

Spring Assizes.

Forging and uttering an

indorsement on

Coram Willes, J.

THE QUEEN v. WARDELL.

THE prisoner was indicted for forging and uttering,

well knowing the same to be forged, an indorsement to a a view to get it cheque for 47. 10s., with intent to defraud.

a cheque with

cashed by the credit of the

name:-Held, to support a conviction for forgery, even though the cheque was valid.

Knowles for the prosecution.

Campbell Foster for the prisoner.

It appeared that the prisoner had been an attorney, and being, from the failure of a partnership, in want of money, he had gone to Chatburn, near Clitheroe, near which place an old schoolfellow of his, the Rev. Reginald Remington, lived as curate of Downham. Having ascertained from the innkeeper at Chatburn where he lived, he called upon Mr. Remington, and, after a long conversation about old school days, asked Mr. Remington if he would indorse a cheque for him, drawn by his father, for 47. 10s., and asked him if he knew any banker in the neighbourhood. Mr. Remington refused to indorse the cheque, but said he would write a note to prove his identity, as he was a stranger in the neighbourhood, to his bankers, the Craven Bank, at Clitheroe, which would have the same effect. He accordingly wrote the following note, and gave it to the prisoner:

"Downham, Clitheroe, Nov. 27, 1861. Sir, Mr. George Wardell, the bearer of this, is the son of the Rev. C. C. Wardell, of Winlaton Rectory, near

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