211 F. 840 | 9th Cir. | 1914
(after stating the facts as above). Neither the pleadings nor the evidence in this case raise any issue with respect to the liability of the appellant for the damages suffered by the appellee through the loss of its steamship, the Telegraph. It is admitted by the appellant that the sinking of the Telegraph was caused by negligence and fault on the part of the Alameda, and it is also admitted by the appellant that by reason of such sinking the Telegraph became and was a total loss.
But the contention of the appellant is that the court below erred in finding and decreeing that the value of the steamship Telegraph at the time of her loss was the sum of $45,000, or any sum in excess of the sum of $25,000. The amount which the appellee is- entitled to recover
In fixing the sum of $45,000 as the value of the Telegraph at the time she was sunk, the court below proceeded upon the theory of original cost, allowing for the difference of her upkeep and the natural fair depreciation of her hull, engines, house, and equipment. It is insisted by the appellant that the court erred in adopting this method of computation; that the rule of market value should have been followed; that the testimony showed that there was a market for vessels of the type of construction of the Telegraph; that the testimony further established the fact that the market value of the Telegraph at the time she was sunk would not have exceeded $25,000; and therefore the rule of market value should have been adopted by the court in fixing the value of the Telegraph at the time she was sunk. The appellee contends, on the other hand, that, under the circumstances of this case, the market value of the vessel did not measure the damage.
1. That a ship may have a market value, and that such market value, if made to appear, must be used as the basis for computing the amount of damages with which the owner of a negligent vessel is chargeable in a case where, through such negligence, another vessel has been sunk and the owners thereof have sustained a total loss, is a rule laid down by all writers on maritime law.
In Lowndes, Admiralty. Law, p. 140, the method of computing the damage to persons who have suffered loss by reason of a collision resulting from faulty conduct on the part of the other ship is stated in the following terms: ■
“Tlie general principle governing tlie computation of damages is that the sufferer by a collision which is the result of wrongdoing, whether negligence or mistake, is entitled to ‘restitutio in integrum’; he is, so far as practicable, to be restored to the same pecuniary position as if no collision had taken place. * * *
“In the case of a ship totally lost, the owner is entitled to recover the actual value, and this is defined in the admiralty courts to be her market value; that is to say,'the gross sum for which she might have been sold immediately before the collision.”
In support of this rule the author cites the decision of Dr. Lushington, in the case of The Clyde, Swabey, p. 23. In that case the celebrated admiralty judge said:
“ * * * Wherever damage is done by one vessel to another, the parties are to be restored into the same state as they were before the accident; that is to say, they are to have the full value of the property lost; restitutio in integrum is the leading maxim. The value is the market price at the time of the destruction of the property, and the difficulty is to ascertain what would be its market value. * * * In order to ascertain this, there are various species of evidence that may be resorted to; for instance, the value •of the vessel when built. But that is only one species of evidence, because the value may furnish a very inferior criterion whereby to ascertain the value at the moment of destruction. The length of time during which the vessel has been used, and the degree of deterioration suffered, will affect the original price at which the vessel was built. But there is another matter infinitely more important than this—known even to the most unlearned—the constant change which takes place in the market. It is the market price which the court looks to, and nothing else, as the value of the property. It is an old saying, ‘The worth of a thing is the price it will bring.’ ”
“When a vessel is totally lost by a collision with another vessel, which was caused by the negligence of those in charge of such other vessel, in order to place * * * the owner of the innocent ship as nearly as possible in the same position as he was before the collision, he should recover from the owner of the wrongdoing vessel the value of the lost ship. In most cases this value is the market value, having regard to the age, character, and condition of the ship. ‘It is the market value which the court looks to, and nothing else, as the value of the property. It is an old saying: “The worth of a thing is the price it will fetch.” ’ Dr. Lushington, in The Clyde, 2 Swa. 25. Market value must, however, be distinguished from anything like a forced sale value, for the value for the purposes of compensation is that which a willing seller and a willing purchaser would place upon a ship. While also the above statement of Dr. Lushington, as well as the adage, may be admitted to be correct generally, it is obvious that some vessels may have a value peculiar to themselves, having regard to their use, or the position or occupation of the owner. Therefore, if either owing to the absence of a market, or the peculiar or special character of her trade or work, the lost ship cannot fairly be valued at a market price, then the basis of assessment is the value of the vessel to her owners as a going concern.”
In Marsden’s Collisions at Sea (6th Ed.) p. 101, it is said:
“If the ship,is totally lost, the owner is entitled to recover her market value at the time of the collision. * * * Where the ship is of a special construction or character, and although of special value to her owner, has little or no market value, damages must be estimated by considering what is her value to the owner as a going concern at the time she was lost. Her original cost, her condition at the date of her loss, money spent in upkeep, and her past earnings, have all to be considered.”
In the Treatise on the Law of Maritime Collisions, by Herbert R. Spencer, we find the following (section 200):
.“Restitution is th'e rule in all cases where repairs are practical, and compensation when the loss is total. The measure of damages in case of total loss is the market value of the vessel at the time of the collision, together with its cargo and freight, and such other losses as are a direct result of the collision. The market value of the vessel, and not its real or intrinsic value or cost of construction, is ordinarily the measure of damages. The recovery is limited to the market value, and damages in excess of such value may not be assigned by reason of additional value to the owner, owing to peculiar fitness for the trade in which it is engaged, or otherwise; nor is the market value to be determined by what the owner would have been willing to take for the vessel, but it is the amount for which the vessel would have sold in the open market. * * *
“When the conditions are such that no market value can be shown where there is no market value, or, if shown, it is so manifestly disproportionate to the intrinsic value of the vessel that to order a sale at such a price would be a hardship, the court may adopt as the value of the ship the cost of construction with proper deduction for the deterioration in its value from the time of construction; especially may this method be resorted to if the vessel is but recently built.”
“The object of the act of Parliament was to provide that the owners of the vessel should not be liable beyond the value of the property engaged in the adventure at the time at which the accident happened; that is, the value which the property occasioning the loss or injury was capable of producing. In the common acceptation of the term, the value is the price which the property would fetch.”
The Lord Chancellor, after discussing the case, concluded that the proper valuation was the market value at the time of the accident, and that the method of value followed by the master, namely, cost price less deduction for wear and tear, was upon the wrong principle.
In the case of The Colorado, Fed. Cas. No. 3029, this English case was referred to as authority in a case involving the question of the value of a vessel which had been sunk in a collision and had become a total loss. The court held that:
“The correct rule upon this subject, when the vessel is a total loss, seems to be that the market value of the vessel just before the collision is the proper measure of damages; that the best evidence of such value is the opinion of competent persons who knew the vessel shortly before she was lost; and that the next best evidence is the opinion of persons conversant with shipping and the transfer of vessels. There are, of course, exceptions to this rule, as when the vessel lost, from some peculiarity of construction in order to adapt her to some special purpose out of the usual course of shipping, precludes there being any market value for her. An instance of this may be when a vessel is built for a special trade requiring peculiar and unusual conditions in her construction. In such a case, for want of a better criterion of value, cost of construction or purchase price, with a deduction for depreciation by ordinary wear and age, may be resorted to. See Lowndes, Coll. 141-146. But the present case does not fall within the exception. The commissioner had before him both classes of evidence stated in the rule, and, although the evidence may be open to criticism in some respects, I think it was amply sufficient to justify the finding.”
In The Granite State, 70 U. S. (3 Wall.) 310, 18 L. Ed. 179, the question was as to the value of “an old and pretty rotten barge” sunk by the steamer Granite State. The statement of the case contains the following recital:
“The commissioner fixed the value of the barge at $850, assuming apparently that she was worth this sum to her owners; though he stated that having been built for a special and unusual purpose, and being, unlike every other sort of craft! used in the port of New York, he had difficulty in forming any estimate. The difficulty, in truth, was obvious; some witnesses swearing that the boat was not worth having for a gift, others that she was worth $8 or $10, and others that in her former condition she could be made practically very useful. There was conflict in the testimony here as in the other part of the case. This report was set aside, and a new estimate directed. On new evidence the commissioner gave $150 more. This report, too, was set aside, and a third reference ordered; the court directing the commissioner to consider the actual cost of raising and repairing the barge and so putting her as near as could be into her former state. A report made on this basis was confirmed.”
What that report was, as to the value of the barge, does not appear in the case as reported; but the rule as followed by the District Court was held by the Supreme Court to be the correct rule under the circumstances of the case. There does not appear to have been any evidence as to the market value of the barge. In commenting upon this feature of the case the court said:
“There seems to have been some controversy in the District Court as to the measure of damages. No less than three different reports were made by the master on the subject. * * * There cannot be an establishd market value for barges, boats, and other articles of that description, as in cases of grain, cotton, or stock. The value of such a boat depends upon the accidents of its form, age, and materials; and, as these differ in each individual, there could be no established market value. A person may make considerable profits by the use of an old hulk of little value in the market for vessels. His loss cannot be measured by the ratio of her profits, as he might supply himself with another at a much cheaper rate. But when the injured vessel is not a total loss, and is capable of being repaired and restored to her original situation, the cost necessary to such repair cannot be said to be an incorrect rule of damages.”
The appellee cites this case in support of the rule followed by the court below, but it is manifestly not applicable. The broad statement that “there cannot be an established market value for barges, boats, and other articles of that description” must be considered with respect to the character of the barge in question. It was stated to be a “rotten hull.” It must also be considered with the qualification, “as in cases of grain, cotton, or stock.” It must also be considered in connection with the further qualification that the injured barge was not a total loss, but was capable of being repaired and restored to her original situation. The rule in such case, where there is no evidence as to market value, and the loss was not ■ total, cannot be followed where the loss is total and there is evidence as to market value.
“ * * * If tlie vessel of tlie libelants is totally lost, tlie rule of damages is the market value of the vessel (if the vessel is of' a class which has such value)', at the time of her destruction.”
No case has been called to our attention where the court has since modified or changed that rule.
See, also, The New Jersey, Fed. Cas. No. 10, 162; La Normandie, 58 Fed. 427, 431, 7 C. C. A. 285; The Pennsylvania, Fed. Cas. No. 10,948; The Hamilton (D. C.) 95 Fed. 844, 845; The Lucille (D. C.) 169 Fed. 719, 721; The Utopia, 16 Fed. 507, 509.
■ These authorities admit of no doubt. In the ascertainment of the value of a vessel, in casei of a total loss, the rule of market value must be adopted, if there is a market for such vessel and the market value thereof be made to appear, unless the vessel falls within the exception which we have noted.
2. But it is contended by the appellee that the rule of market valué cannot be applied to the case now before this court for the reason that the Telegraph was in a class by herself by reason of the fact that she was possessed of extraordinary speed; and for the further reason that the evidence showed that there was no market for a vessel of her type of construction. Their claim is that the only fair method by which the value of the Telegraph could have been ascertained was by testimony showing the original cost of construction, less a proper allowance for depreciation. And in support of this claim they proceeded' to introduce testimony showing the original cost of construction of the Telegraph and the percentage of depreciation of the various parts of their steamship during the nine years she had been in operation.
It appears from the record that the Telegraph was a passenger steamer of the stern wheel type, having a length of about 153 feet, a width of about 27 feet, and a depth of 8 feet; that she was built at Everett, Wash., in 1903, at a cost of about $75,000. After a careful consideration of all of the testimony introduced by the respective parties, we are not prepared to, agree with the appellee that the testimony showed that the Telegraph wasdn a class by herself by reason of the fact that she was possessed of extraordinary speed. It is true, one of appellee’s witnesses testified that the Telegraph was “the fastest stern-wheeler in the word”; but the record is replete with testimony tending to show that such was not the case. Barney Dionne, a witness on behalf of the appellant, testified that he was chief engineer of the Telegraph for about' 3% years; thát he had'got out of the Telegraph all of the speed she ever made, and the best she could make was between 18 and 19 statute miles per hour; that the Telegraph was not the fastest stern-wheel vessel ever constructed; that'he knew that the Telephone and the Bailey Gatzert (both stern-wheel ’steamships operating on and. in the vicinity of 'Puget Sound) could run faster than the Telegraph unifier the same conditions; that he had seen the Telephone catch up with the Telegraph when he was driving the* latter at her best, showing
Nor can we agree with the appellee that it appears from the record that there was no market for a steamer of the type of construction of the Telegraph, and that such market not being showh, and a market value for her made to appear, the rule of market value could not be applied as a fair method of computing her value at the time she was sunk; and therefore her value could only be proven by other circumstances, such as cost of construction, less a proper allowance for depreciation. In this connection it must'be remembered that the Telegraph was one of a numerous class of stern-wheel steamers which are operated for the carriage of freight and passengers upon and in the vicinity of Puget Sound, the Willamette river, and the Columbia river, and between Portland and Astoria; and that steamers of a similiar type of construction are also operated on the Bay of San Francisco and upon the rivers tributary thereto. The construction of the Telegraph was in no respect an innovation in the art of shipbuilding. It appears from the record that the Telegraph could have been used on any of the routes and at any of the places above named. It also appears that stern-wheel vessels of the general type of construction of the Telegraph were frequently bought and sold for use on Puget Sound and other places along the coast where vessels of the stern-wheel type could be utilized. Capt.’ Gibbs, agent and surveyor for the San Francisco Board of Marine Underwriters, testified that there were several routes on which a vessel like the Telegraph could have been operated;. that he had known of several sales of stern-wheel vessels similar to the Telegraph; that the Telephone was sold in Portland,. Or., for use on San Francisco Bay, for $24,800; that the steamer Charles R. Spencer, a vessel similar to the Telegraph, was sold for $20,000; that it would appear that there must be a market for this kind of vessel; and that in his opinion the fair reasonable market value of the Telegraph before she was sunk was about $25,000. George N. Skinner, a witness on behalf of the appellant who had been
The testimony of these witnesses was, we think, sufficient to estabdish the fact that there was a market for the Telegraph and that her value in such market would not have exceeded $25,000. But the testimony finds further support in the fact that in 1910 the appellee purchased the Telegraph and the City of Everitt (another stern-wheel steamer of the same general type of the Telegraph, but smaller), together with the good will of the route upon which said steamers were being operated at that time, for the sum of' $55,000.- And. in connec
In view of this testimony, we think the court below erred in basing the value of the Telegraph at the time she was sunk on the theory of original cost, less a percentage for depreciation. We are of opinion that the evidence was sufficient to, justify the court below in finding that there was a market for a vessel of the character of the Telegraph in Puget Sound, at the time of the accident, and that her value in such market at that time ,was $25,000.
The decree of the court below will, accordingly, be reversed, with directions to enter a decree in favor of the appellee for the sum of $25,000. Costs in this court in favor of the appellant.