2 F. Cas. 1136 | E.D. Va. | 1841
The material facts in dispute between the parties are: 1. Whether the ship was abandoned by the officers and crew, and was in a state of derelict, when she was taken possession of by the libellants, or not? 2. Whether the situation of the ship and cargo was imminently perilous, at the time of the salvage, and in what degree?
The depositions of some of the libellants are taken and read as evidence in the cause. This is legal evidence; it forms an exception, from the necessity of the case, to the general rule, that a person interested in the re-
On the second point, more essential perhaps than the first in determining the rate-of compensation to be made, it appears to me that the following facts are established: That the danger of the Grace Brown proceeded in the first instance from a want of that local knowledge which a pilot could have afforded, had the captain succeeded in getting one in time. That while the wind was S. E. her situation was more dangerous; that when the libellants commenced-the work of salvage, the wind was N. N. W. and was favorable for getting her off; that she was got off by the rise of tide and the aid of her own sails; that she was prevented from going on shore by her anchors; that possessing the local knowledge belonging to their profession as pilots, the libellants incurred but little risk to their lives in the act of salvage; that as the weather was at that time, the pilot-boats were in no danger; and that in navigating the ship to Norfolk, the risk incurred was, under the circumstances existing, not considerable; that they commenced the act of salvage about one o’clock on Saturday morning, and arrived in safety at the wharf in Norfolk about eight o’clock in the evening of the same day. On tliese-facts, the' inquiry arises, Are the libellants entitled to salvage, and in what amount?Salvage is the compensation that is to be-made to other persons by whose assistance-a ship or its loading may be saved from impending peni or recovered from actual loss;- and in fixing the rate of salvage the court has. usually, regard not only to the labor and peril incurred by the salvors, but also to the situation in which they may happen to stand with respect to the property saved; to the-promptitude and alacrity manifested by them; to the value of the ship and cargo;: and to the degree of danger from which they were rescued. And it is laid down as ai principle which cannot be controverted, that, where it is proved that no human force could.' have averted the danger, unless Providence-kindly aided the exertions by which the object is attained, it does not deprive the sal-vors of merit, but may diminish the rate off compensation. It is for rescue from present impending perils, and not those which might possibly under subsequent contingencies befall the property, that compensation is made.. The danger of the property saved, at the-time of saving, its value, the extent of service, the danger incurred in rendering it, to-the lives and property of the salvors, their character, and their local knowledge, by
II. The question of salvage,--depending in all cases on the peculiar circumstances of each case, is subject to the legal discretion of the court. But in case of derelict, the merit is regarded as so great, the restoration of his abandoned property to the owner so entirely a clear gain, that the courts have established a very high rate of compensation with such uniformity, that, although the rule is admitted to be flexible, I should not be disposed under ordinary circumstances to depart from it. The general allowance has been of not less than one-third nor more than one-half of the entire value of the ship, cargo, and freight earned.
Was the Grace Brown derelict? I regard the law as well settled, that a mere abandonment of a ship on the high seas, with the bona fide intention of returning to her, when the impending peril shall have ceased, or the object of leaving her is attained, does not constitute the ship derelict. In the case of Rowe v. The Brig, [Case No. 12,093,] I do not understand Judge Story as contravening this doctrine. In the case of The John and Jane, 4 C. Rob. Adm. 216, Sir William Scott had intimated an opinion that if a vessel be captured and afterwards abandoned by the capturing enemy, it was not a ease of derelict, because neither the owner nor those who were in possession as his agents had committed an act of dereliction. So that in this view there must be a voluntary abandonment by the master and crew. But “this opinion,” says Judge Story, “has been silently retracted.” If the abandonment shall be without the intention to return, it is derelict, whether voluntary or involuntary. In the case of The Aquila, 1 C. Rob. Adm. 37, Sir William Scott had held that a legal derelict is properly where there has been an abandonment at sea, without the hope of recovery. Judge Story adds that it might perhaps have
Upon the whole case the merit of the libel-lants is not of a very high grade; as their services though promptly rendered were not very arduous, nor attended with great danger to them; as the ship was not in gseat and imminent peril at the time they took possession of her, or while in their possession, and as the value of their services to the owners was not considerable, as the master and crew were returning to her, and might have saved her with no great risk or trouble if the libellants had not taken possession of her. But the libellants are entitled to a liberal compensation for their services, and for them, their risk and expenses, I award to them the sum of two thousand four hundred dollars, clear of legal costs. In the language of Judge Hopkinson in the case of The Elvira, [Case No. 4,423,] I know of no probable or plausible calculation on which I can suppose that these pilot-boats and those on board could have earned half this amount while engaged with the Grace Brown, and certainly they could not have earned it with less labor, risk, and expense. I make no order of distribution amongst the salvors, as neither the proof nor the libel enables me to do so, and I presume it can be arranged amongst them.
Hon. John Y. Mason, afterwards t -oretary of the navy, attorney general, and minister to France.
There is error in this reference. The case cited is in 6 Rob. 92; but has no bearing upon the subject. [The case intended to be cited in the text is The Vrouw Margaretha, 4 C. Rob. Adm. 103.]