operator6
Member
Hi guys, been having some wind-powered fun in the Bristol Channel (based at Cardiff Yacht Club, 21ft Coromandel). I was hoping to have more windy fun with a new boat, but this has now gone pear-shaped, and I need to tap into the group's experience for advice.
Some history - I was modifying my Coromandel to a standard I thought necessary for my little jaunts, and costing it, when a Jester Challenger came on the market. This is a Kingfisher 20+ JR (junk rig, natch), and had just completed the JAC08 challenge (Jester Azores Challenge 2008). It had everything done which I considered necessary on Pi Pi, and so I decided to buy it. Everything great, went to Scarborough to have a look, lovely, went back the next week to pick her up and bring her to Cardiff. This is when it went wrong...
I used a flatbed trailer, thinking it being all steel would not present a problem, pulled by a transit van - all within loading tolerances. Well, it did. Ten minutes into my return journey, and the trailer floor failed (the boat cradle went through the floor at four points). Having dropped about 4 inches, all my secure lines went loose, the trailer snaked then jack-knifed, and spun me around on the A64 in Yorkshire. It threw my new boat up the road, causing some nasty damage to her port side. Police involved, but no prosecution nor fines. Recovered by police powers, and went back the next week (cutting short my holiday trip to Ireland) to bring it down again (a very nervy trip, but incident free, on a steel transporter trailer).
It was around a crazy time for me, with far too much going on, and in my haste to get her down, neglected to insure her for the trip. It simply never dawned on me.
Anyway, the crux is this: do I have a case against the trailer hire company, to claim for the damage repair, recovery, maybe even trauma? I'm not one of these people who blame everyone else for events and quite happy to take responsibility for my actions, *if* I am responsible. However, in this case, I believe I did everything right, and if the trailer floor had not failed, I'd be sailing Goldie in Cardiff now.
The trailer hire company maintain the loading is my responsibility, and they are not liable for the trailer floor failure, and also want to charge me for the recovery/repair of their trailer.
I'm organising a solicitor to get legal advice on my position, but thought you guys might have some experience that you could share.
Sorry for the long post; this looks like it could be expensive and protracted, and, worst of all, land-based! Any yottie solicitors here?
cheers, Paschall
Some history - I was modifying my Coromandel to a standard I thought necessary for my little jaunts, and costing it, when a Jester Challenger came on the market. This is a Kingfisher 20+ JR (junk rig, natch), and had just completed the JAC08 challenge (Jester Azores Challenge 2008). It had everything done which I considered necessary on Pi Pi, and so I decided to buy it. Everything great, went to Scarborough to have a look, lovely, went back the next week to pick her up and bring her to Cardiff. This is when it went wrong...
I used a flatbed trailer, thinking it being all steel would not present a problem, pulled by a transit van - all within loading tolerances. Well, it did. Ten minutes into my return journey, and the trailer floor failed (the boat cradle went through the floor at four points). Having dropped about 4 inches, all my secure lines went loose, the trailer snaked then jack-knifed, and spun me around on the A64 in Yorkshire. It threw my new boat up the road, causing some nasty damage to her port side. Police involved, but no prosecution nor fines. Recovered by police powers, and went back the next week (cutting short my holiday trip to Ireland) to bring it down again (a very nervy trip, but incident free, on a steel transporter trailer).
It was around a crazy time for me, with far too much going on, and in my haste to get her down, neglected to insure her for the trip. It simply never dawned on me.
Anyway, the crux is this: do I have a case against the trailer hire company, to claim for the damage repair, recovery, maybe even trauma? I'm not one of these people who blame everyone else for events and quite happy to take responsibility for my actions, *if* I am responsible. However, in this case, I believe I did everything right, and if the trailer floor had not failed, I'd be sailing Goldie in Cardiff now.
The trailer hire company maintain the loading is my responsibility, and they are not liable for the trailer floor failure, and also want to charge me for the recovery/repair of their trailer.
I'm organising a solicitor to get legal advice on my position, but thought you guys might have some experience that you could share.
Sorry for the long post; this looks like it could be expensive and protracted, and, worst of all, land-based! Any yottie solicitors here?
cheers, Paschall