Bukton v Tounesende or The Humber Ferryman's case (1348) B&M 358[1] is an English contract law case.
The Humber Ferryman's case | |
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Court | Court of King's Bench |
Keywords | |
Contract, remedies |
Facts
editNicholas Tounesende of Helle undertook to ferry John Bukton's horse across the Humber estuary. Tounesende overloaded the boat with horses and Bukton’s horse fell overboard. Bukton sued in tort, for trespass. There was no sealed document, and under previous law it had been required to sue for breach of a covenant. So Tounesende argued that the action should be brought in covenant. The King's Bench had travelled away from Westminster and had arrived in York.
Judgment
editThe King's Bench held the action could rightly be brought in tort. The claim was against the killing of the horse, and not merely the failure to transport it. Accordingly no documentary proof of a covenant was needed.
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ J Baker and Milsom, Sources of English Legal History (1986) 358