Joel,

 

Thanks very much for your help. I apologize for bothering everyone with my
dumb mistake. I got the email through jus fime using the correct address.

 

Art

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Joel
Aronson
Sent: Tuesday, November 06, 2012 3:52 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Stus-List Need Legal advice please

 

Art,

 

The address to start a new thread is [email protected].  No bounce!

 

On Tue, Nov 6, 2012 at 3:48 PM, Roth Arthur <[email protected]>
wrote:

Hello everyone,

 

I'm sorry to break into this string of very important emails, but I have
been trying to post a question about a problem I'm having with my boat and
it seems that when I send the email it is not being posted. I'm mailing to
the [email protected] address. I will be grateful for any
advice.

 

Thanks,

Art Roth C&C 36 Godspeed

Palmetto, FL

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Joel
Aronson
Sent: Friday, November 02, 2012 10:39 PM


To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Stus-List Need Legal advice please

 

Chuck,

 

He should check with his insurance company to get some advice even though he
only has liability coverage.  If he knows who insures the clamboat, he
should make a claim and if he gets no satisfaction he can get help from the
state insurance commissioner.  Wish I could give you an answer, but I'm not
an admiralty lawyer, and they are few and far between.  Getting rid of the
debris is probably a good idea just to prevent further damage.

Joel

Sent from my iPad


On Nov 2, 2012, at 10:15 PM, Chuck S <[email protected]> wrote:


During Hurricane Sandy, in Atlantic City two 80 ft commercial clamboats
broke loose from their docks and drifted down onto my friend's boat.  The
clamboats did a lot of damage, scarred his hull, and destroyed the docks so
he lost his slip, which he paid for in advance.  He lives aboard and though
the boat floats fine, no leaks, just a nasty scar down the whole starboard
side, no lifelines, cosmetics.  He has insurance but only liability
coverage.  His boat blew across the harbor and landed on the dock at Golden
Nugget Marina.  His boat was so well secured before the storm that even
after the clamboats pushed him down the lagoon several hundred feet and set
others adrift or sunk, my friend's boat sits on er waterline and is
surrounded by sections of the old floating dock and at least three piling
still hanging from the boat.

He has damage to is boat.  He lost is slip.  So we thought the clamboat
owner should make him whole, by replacing what they destroyed; the docks,
patch his boat and pay for a slip until this is completed.  He is being told
the damage to his boat from Hurricane Sandy is his own problem because
everyone is covered by "act of God".  We have photos of the clamboats
against his boat and at each move as they destroyed docks at several
properties, sunk a 22' Catalina and set a Bayliner adrift.  The marina tells
him, he has to hire a professional to remove all the debris that is tied to
him.

He's staying with me for now.  What rights does he have?  

Chuck
Resolute
1990 C&C 34R
Atlantic City, NJ

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-- 
Joel 
301 541 8551

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