28 F. 526 | S.D.N.Y. | 1886
The Ariel, a small yacht, was injured by a collision in the Kills, and sank within the line of the bulk-head. Bee 22 Fed. Rep. 739. On the next day this libel was filed to recover for a total loss. The referee on damages has reported the yacht to have been worth $500 when sunk. No efforts were made by the libelant to raise or repair her, though she sank near his place of residence, and could have been raised for a small sum. Two months afterwards, when the raising was more difficult, she was raised by the pilot commissioners for $65, and taken to Gowanus fiats, where she has ever since lain abandoned. The referee finds that the yacht could have been repaired at the time when she was raised for $350, and has allowed.that sum as damages. Both sides have excepted, — the libelant, because a total loss was not allowed; the claimant, for excessive damages. The referee further finds that had the boat been raised at once, or within a reasonable time after she was sunk, she could have been repaired for $100 less than it would have taken to repair her at the time when she was raised. The evidence indicates, and the referee finds, that the failure of the libelant to raise and repair the boat was because he chose to avail himself of the opportunity to dispose of the boat by seeking to recover in this action for a total loss, although she might have been easily raised and repaired.
The supreme court in the case of The Baltimore, 8 Wall. 377, 386—388, held explicitly that, under circumstances analogous to the present, where the vessel was sunk, not at sea, but in a river, and in comparatively shallow water, it was the duty of the libelant to make reasonable exertion to save the boat, and to prevent a total loss. If I were at liberty to disregard the rule there laid down, I should not feel disposed to do so, since the obligation there stated seems to me one of evident justice. The cases cited by the libelant (The Falcon, 19 Wall. 75; The Columbus, 3 Wm. Rob. 161) have no reference to