38 F. 518 | D.S.C. | 1889
These libels, claiming salvage, were consolidated at the hearing. The Cachemire, a French steam-ship, propeller, built of steel,
• There is some conflict of testimony upon the point whether the steamship was at anchor when the pilot hailed her. The master, officers, and crew swear that she was. The pilots and their apprentice say she was not. There is no doubt that she was perfectly stationary, and there is also no doubt that she waited for the tugs at anchor. There are no tugs in that neighborhood employed exclusively in the business of sea towing. The nearest tugs were those of the libelant Moses E. Lopez. He is the head of a company engaged in mining phosphates in the bed of
First, as to the Tugs. Were their services salvage services? These tugs were employed in the private business of their owner. They were regularly and fully occupied in that business. They were not general towboats. They had under their charge and sole protection floating property of great value. When Mr. Lopez was informed that their services were asked he would not consent. When be was further informed that a passenger steam-ship was in peril, short-handed as he was, he sent three of his tugs at once, abandoning their business. Judge Bradley, in The Suliote, 5 Fed. Rep. 99, says that one of the purposes of the extraordinary award of salvage “is to insure the most prompt, energetic, and daring effort of those who have it in their power to furnish aid and succor.” Salvage is given for the succor of persons or property in danger, by the sacrifice or risk of property, of persons, or of time. Lopez sent this assistance promptly and energetically, risking his property, deprived of the protection of the tugs. Was the steam-ship in danger? She had lost her rudder. She wras seeking a port. She had but 85 tons of coal, — a supply scarcely sufficient for four days. In a tempestuous season, on a lee shore, she was exposed to a possibility of grave peril. Services rendered under such circumstances are salvage services. Williams & B. Adm. Jur. 117. It is pressed earnestly that the services of the tugs Avere mere towage services. “Mere towage service is confined to vessels that have received no injury or damage, and mere towage reward is payable in these cases only when the vessel receiving the service is in the same condition she would ordinarily be in without having
The Pilot-Boat and Pilots. The services rendered by these were of two kinds, — carrying the message which brought the tugs, and the services, rendered by the pilots. The first is a salvage service, (The New Orleans, 23 Fed. Rep. 909,) and of a low grade. Let it be valued at $200. See, The Cassandra Adams, 30 Fed. Rep. 379. What of the pilots? They were cruising on their pilotage ground, looking out for employment, saw this steam-ship, and hailed her. They were attracted, it is true, by what they supposed were her signals of distress. Even so, as pilots they were bound to go to her, and offer their services. This daring and valuable body of men are allowed a monopoly of pilotage, and can compel the acceptance- of their service in order that experienced mariners should always be at hand to aid by their skill and knowledge vessels seeking a port. While acting in the strict line of their duty they cannot be salvors. Hobart v. Drogan, 10 Pet. 108; The Æolus, L. R. 4 Adm. & E. 29; The Jonge Andries, Swab. 226, 303. To entitle services to salvage reward they must be rendered by those under- no legal obligation to render them. The Alphonso, 1 Curt. 376. “The pilot’s obligation to the public is to cruise off the-port for which he is commissioned; to offer his services to vessels which he may suppose bound inwards, — to a vessel in distress first, though she may. be more distant »than another; and in many cases of distress his relation begins and ends with no more than the service of a pilot. Where the ship is in distress, being dismasted, sprung a leak, or from any other casualty, but can still be navigated with whatever may be her draught of water, it will be a case of ordinary pilotage.” Lea v. The Alexander, 2 Paine, 473. The Cachemire was navigable. She had been under steam for five days, and had come from mid-ocean. When the tugs came to her she again, under her own steam, using the tugs to direct her, went on her way into port. She never was a helpless ship; and, save the loss of her rudder, she was complete in every respect. The Alaska, 23 Fed. Rep. 603. In The Grid, 21 Fed. Rep. 425, “the peculiar knowledge required of a pilot is as to the depth of water-, and the rise, time, and strength of the tides; and where these items of