9 Bosw. 369 | The Superior Court of New York City | 1862
Lead Opinion
The complaint in this action'was dismissed at the trial; and judgment having been perfected, the plaintiff appealed to the General Term.
The ship Joseph Walker, of about 1,300 tons burthen, while lying on the west side of pier Ho. 29, East river, at ■ the-port of Hew York, taking in cargo, took fire, on the 26th of- December,' 1853, and sunk to the bottom. She had on board some 300 or 400 barrels of resin, some 300 bales of cotton, and some 20,000 bushels of wheat, all of which was submerged. The -defendant was insurer of If parts of the ship, other insurance companies, (who are also defendants,) were insurers of the interests of other owners; only 3-2 parts being uninsured, and the owners of those parts are also defendants. The sunken wreck was not ■removed from the slip, until the 25th or 26th of October, 1855. The insured owners' of the vessel abandoned her, after she was burned and sunk, as a total loss, and the insurance companies accepted the abandonment.
The plaintiffs, who are entitled to the wharfage of the ■bulkhead on the west side of this pier, and of the west half of the pier, bring this action to recover by way of damages for the obstruction of the slip, the amount of wharfage they claim to have lost thereby, and also
The two practical questions presented by this appeal are, (first,) what duty or obligation was imposed on the defendant by accepting this abandonment, and, (second,) whether'it has so failed to perform that duty or discharge that obligation, as to have become liable to pay damages to the plaintiff.
With reference to the first question, it maybe observed, preliminarily, that the ship took fire and sunk, without, any agency or fault of the defendant. She sunk to the bottom, in about 30 feet of water, at medium tide. From the time she. sunk until-she was removed, the plaintiffs expressed no desire to undertake her removal, nor made any objection to the means employed or time occupied in the effort; nor suggested that these means were injudicious or inadequate, nor that the efforts were dilatory or censurably inefficient. The vessel was sunk in an arm of the sea, and became fixed to the bottom, and ceased to be movable as a ship or vessel, by any ordinary means in the course of business or navigation. The results of the efforts made to remove the wreck demonstrates, that it cost more to remove her, than all that was saved, of both vessel and cargo, was worth.
This Court held, when this cause was before it on a demurrer to the original complaint, that "the plaintiffs could not recover, without showing that the defendants, by due care and attention, could have removed the wreck, or, at least, have shifted its position so as to prevent its being a cause of injury, and that they were in default for not having done so. (2 Bosw., 106.) The cases relied upon, as supporting this doctrine, are Brown v. Mallett, (5 M., G. & Scott, 613; S. C., 12 Jur., 204,) Hancock v.
Creswell, J., said : “ Ho negligence or want of care is imputed to the defendants, either in placing the anchor where it was originally placed, or in allowing it to be removed.”
In White v. Crisp, (supra,) which, like the other two cases, arose on demurrer, the Court, in commenting upon and construing a particular allegation of the complaint, said: “How, we understand by this, that the defendants “ had it in their power, by due care and exertion, to have “ altogether removed this vessel, or to have shifted, at “ least, its position, and so might reasonably have been “ able to prevent the injury. If these words do not mean “ this, we think there was no liability on the part of the “ defendants.” * *
The fourth plea was, that the defendants “had used all “reasonable means for removing the wreck, but were “ unable before the" time when, &c., to do so; and that, by “ reason thereof, before and at the time when, &c., they “ had wholly abandoned and ceased to have any possession of it.” The Court held this plea good, and said it was clear the original owner or the transferee of the wreck may abandon it, and so put an end to his liability.
These cases establish the doctrine, that where a vessel becomes a wreck and sinks in navigable waters, the owner
It would be indeed strange, if a party who was under no legal obligation to remove, or to attempt to remove a wreck, should, because he attempted to remove it, and while using all reasonable means and diligence to accomplish the result, become liable because he had not removed it.
On no principle can a right óf action accrue, in such a ease, for not having removed the wreck, until at -least a sufficient time has elapsed to effect the removal by the use of reasonable means and diligence; and all liability for merely not removing will terminate, when the owner abandons the possession of the wreck and all control of it.
This view of the defendant’s legal duty, makes his liability, if one exist, arise out of his negligence }to use reasonable means and diligence. While using them, and he continues unable to remove the wreck, he is under no liability to pay damages to any one for not having removed it. The plaintiffs’ right, as against the defendant, is commensurate with the duty which the latter owes- to the former. They can maintain no claim against the defendant, except as founded on a duty it owes to him, and a failure to perform that duty.
Kegligence in the use of means to remove the wreck, is not necessarily established by proof that the means first employed were inadequate. If they were such as the best skill and the largest experience selected, in good faith, as
The most fully considered and best matured plans sometimes prove defective and fail. The best judgments at times form erroneous conclusions, and will continué to do sé, until to err ceases to be human. These misjudgments consist with the utmost caution, care and diligence.
The duty and grounds of the defendant’s liability, if any liability exist, being such as have been stated, we reach the question, whether there is any evidence which would justify a Jury in finding, that the defendant failed to remove the wreck, by reason of negligence in the selection or use of the means employed for that purpose.
Ho Witnesses Were examined on behalf of the defendant. We have, therefore, only to consider evidence given on behalf of the plaintiffs.
Thomas Bell made the first efforts that were made to remove the wreck. He was to have 75 per cent of the net proceeds of all he should raise; and he took entire possession and control of the wreck, in order to raise and remove her. It was" testified that “ he had the best repu- ' tatioti, as a man skillful in this sort of business, of any .man in the United States; he was esteemed the best wrecker in the United States, so far as the witness was acquainted with his reputation. He used the same means that had been successfully employed to raise the “ Great Republic,” a ship of some 4,500 tons, which was sunk the same night as the Joseph Walker, and under similar circumstances.
Ho one except Mr. Mason suggests an opinion or intimation that Mr. Bell had not the skill imputed to him, or that the opinion was entertained, before his efforts proved a failure, that the means employed were not wisely selected, Or were inadequate, or were not vigorously employed. John W. Mason; one of plaintiffs’ witnesses, says he thought, at the time, and told Mr. Bell, that he thought Mr. Bell “got along very slowly”—“That Bell said he was using all the diligence he could, and was getting his
Junius S. Lewis, another witness on behalf of the plaintiff, testified that he had been a wrecker some eight or ten years, and had raised wrecks from various depths, one being operated upon at a depth of eighty feet below the surface. That he became interested with Bell, in the raising of this wreck, in June, 1854. He details what was done while he was concerned in the operations. In answer to the question whether, “ during the term of your work- “ ing at that wreck, from your commencement with it, “ under Oapt. Bell, and in connection with him, until the “ work was arrested, under Condon, was it prosecuted with “ all the diligence the work admitted of?” He said, “It was, in my judgment. I never used more diligence, and I never knew Mr. Bell more devoted; every man that could be used successfully, or to any value, was brought to the work,” &e., &c. Also, that the suspension of the work from in December,' 1854, into March, 1855, was required by the prudential considerations which lie stated.
Ho one expresses an opinion contrary to that of Mr. Lewis; and Mr. Lewis, on examining Bell’s plan, thought it judicious, and approved of it. When he suspended work in December, 1854, he thought the vessel was in a condition to be removed in a couple of weeks, when the work could be resumed, in the following March.
Somewhere from the first to the middle of March, 1855, Mr. Lewis resumed operations, and was soon arrested in his labors by the city authorities, who then took exclusive possession and control, and thence continued it, until the wreck was removed in October, 1855.
The only other witness who expressed an opinion, in regard to the means used by Bell & Lewis to remove the wreck, is Joseph T. Martin, who testified to the opinion that it could have been removed in January, 1854, by
I do not think a Jury would be justified in finding negligence in the selection or use of means, on such slight evidence as that of Messrs. Mason and Martin, against that of Messrs. Bell & Lewis; or that the evidence, as a whole, justified the submission of any such question to the Jury. It should not be submitted, where the plaintiff’s evidence is equally consistent with the absence as with the existence of negligence in the defendant. (Cotton v. Wood, 8 Com. Bench, N. S., 568.) But the case is not even as strong as that, on the part of the plaintiff.
If this view is correct, then there is no liability resulting from the mere omission to remove the wreck, prior to the time Mr. Lewis was ejected from it.
From that time, neither the defendant nor any one employed by it or with its consent, had any possession or control of the wreck. They all abandoned it, or what is practically the same thing, suffered the city authorities and the persons employed by them, to retain exclusive possession and control.
Mayor Wood’s contract with Walter B. Jones was con-' eluded April 28, 1855, by which Jones was to be paid $13,000 for raising the wreck, and was to have the benefit of any lien or liens on the vessel and cargo.
A reference to the opinions expressed by the witnesses who made efforts to. remove, or applied for contracts to ' remove the wreck, shows that they severally erred in their conclusions as to what they could accomplish; and shows the importance, in disposing of the evidence bearing on the question of negligence, of remembering the wide difference there is between error in judgment and negligence. The event may demonstrate the existence of the power,. and yet not tend to prove the latter.
In the proposition of Martin, dated January 6, 1854, he stated his expectation of being able to raise the wreck in
Inasmuch as his company never before or since raised a ■vessel of over 300 tons burden,- and abandoned their process about a year and a half after that, and inasmuch as all the efforts made did not result in her removal until, in October, 1855, it cannot be said to be an act of negligence . that the contract was not given to that company. And there is nothing to justify the conclusion, that if it had been given to that company, that the wreck would ever have been removed by the means it proposed to employ.
Mr. Bell does not state in what time he thought he could remove her. But it is evident he expected to accomplish it as. soon as he had placed the canvas in position, and was able to use his pumps.
Mr. Lewis states the opinion, that, by using his plan in the outset, he could • have removed her in about two months. But that he would not have commenced work under it before March, as it could not be safely prosecuted earlier. At the outside, according to his theory, he would have removed her in five months from Jan. 1, 1854.
His plan was adopted in August, 1854. He commenced immediately, and, the last of September, was in readiness ... for efficient operations, and prosecuted them until about the middle of December,' 1854, when the weather became so frosty that he deemed it unsafe to expose his chains to the action of such weather, and suspended operations, supposing that in March, on the return of suitable weather, they could be concluded in about two weeks. What the event would have further demonstrated in regard to his plans and anticipations, had> he been let alofie, is left to conjecture. He was expelled from the wreck in March, 1855, by order of the Mayor of the city. In addition to what he testifies to, as to actual diligence and good faith in his efforts, it was his interest to permit no unnecessary delay/ Heither he nor Bell was to be paid anything if they did'not succeed; and they incurred the expense of
On the 26th of April, 1855, the contract between Mayor Wood and Walter R. Jones, for the removal of the wreck, was concluded. Jones agreed to remove it “within a, reasonable time,” and states in his contract, that he thinks “the job may be accomplished in sixty days.” This is as long a period as Lewis thought he required, if his plan had been originally adopted.
On the 30th of April, 1855, O. E. Barnes contracted with Walter R. Ives, to remove her in 90 ■ days from .that date. On the 9th of May, 1855, Barnes and Daniel Dodge contracted with Jones to remove her in 90 days from that date.
On the 15th of October, 1855, over five months from that time, Barnes was occupied in taking out cargo, and, in turn, was expelled from the wreck, and excluded by force, from continuing his labors, although he then had it in a position which would have secured its removal in a few days.
Hence, the testimony shows, without contradiction, that from early in January, 1854, until October, 1855, (except-. ing the time that Lewis suspended operations, from, the middle of December, 1854, to March, 1855,) different persons, conversant with business of this kind, and interested to effect the removal, and to effect it with the least practicable delay, were constantly and vigorously occupied, at a great expense to themselves, to accomplish that' object.
There is no giymnd, upon the evidence^ on which the conclusion can be justified, that - it was negligence to attempt the removal by Bell’s plan; or, after that was demonstrated to be insufficient, to pursue the plan of Lewis; or that there was a want of reasonable diligence in pursuing either plan, while the work of removal was prosecuted under it.
If there be any liability for that, it must be pursued against those who had the possession and control, and used the means, which are alleged, to have been unreasonably inefficient or dilatory.
I think, therefore, that on the evidence there can be no claim against the defendant for damages for not having removed the wreck. And, if this be so, there can be none for the expenses of dredging, «paused by the accumulation of débris,:«deposited by the action of the tides in and about the wreck. Hor is there any for injury to the pier itself.
The plaintiffs’ only witness who spoke to that point, states, that “there was no special damage done to the pier—not to amount to anything—probably fifty dollars would have replaced all that.” There is no specification of any item of damage done to the pier itself, by either Bell or Lewis; nor of their having made any use of it, which obstructed the passing or repassing of carts, or which was in itself wrongful. -
And I cannot think that by force of the contracts with Bell, or between Bell and Lewis, it can be held, that whatever use they made of the pier, was a like use and occupation by the defendant. The latter had no control over their operations and was not an actor in them.
The possession and control of the ship were surrendered ■ to Bell. He undertook the removal, and to do it as best he could. Ho one had any direction to give to him, or undertook to interfere with him in carrying out his plan.
I think the cause was correctly disposed of at the trial, and that the judgment should be affirmed.
Two causes of action are set out in the complaint in this case. The first for the occupation of the plaintiffs’ slip or dock by the vessel in question, (Joseph Walker,) while afloat and after she was sunk, and by other vessels employed to refit, float or remove her; this was a quasi contract. The other, for the loss of the wharfage of such slip by the use of various machinery and vessels closing it up, and the sinking of them and the vessel in question in such slip ; which was a species of tort. #
The defendants, in their Answer, besides putting in issue the right of the plaintiffs to the wharfage of the slip in question, and the fact of defendants having kept any vessels or machinery fast to the pier, or that the vessel in question remained fast to the pier, deny two important allegations in the complaint:
I. Any ownership of the vessel after she was burned and sunk, and all acts of ownership thereof by them.» ■
H. The possibility of removing such vessel, within a reasonable period, without unreasonable expense, even by proper means and with due diligence.
The plaintiffs’ claim rests entirely upon the actual ownership of the .wreck by the defendants, or their exercise of acts of ownership over it, the duties thereby devolving'on them, and their mode of discharging such duty.
The question of liability of the owners of a submerged vessel, for injury to other vessels by it, is discussed and passed upon iú White v. Crisp, (10 Exch., 312; S. C., 23 Law J. R., [N. S.,] Ex., 317, and 26 Eng. L. and Eq. R., 532,) and "Brown v. Mallett, (5 M., Gr. & Scott, 613,) but nothing, is said as to any supposed liabilities by implied contracts with third persons. That the Court in those cases did not intend to apply the doctrine laid down by them to contracts is evident from the qualification in the last case of the doctrine laid down in the first, by requiring the sunken vessel, or obstruction, to be a public nuisance in ordpr to make the owner responsible. The first case admits the liability to cease when the possession of the sunken vessel is abandoned; and the duty which is therein
The reason for the distinction in such case, as to the liability for torts, or on contracts, is obvious. Where a person has power to remove an obstruction from the highway, whether of land or water, when it is valuable to him as a piece of property, and he exercises acts of ownership over it, it is a permissive nuisance to omit to do so, and he is responsible for injury caused by it to others. But' a vessel sunk in a slip, by an unavoidable cause, is a common calamity to both the owners of the slip and the vessel, for which neither is responsible. The waters of the slip are still part of the aquatic highway, on or over which every one has a right to go. The defendants would have had no right to shift the nuisance to another slip, or the channel way, nor were they under any obligations to destroy all the property in it by blowing it up and scattering it, merely because it was an obstruction to the plaintiffs’ profits. They were bound, undoubtedly, not to leave it an unreasonable time there, and were bound to use due diligence in removing the property, or abandoning the ownership .of the wreck. This can be the only reasonable, practical and just rule, where two persons are overtaken by a common calamity, and one seeks to. aggravate or prolong the injury to the other for his own benefit.
The mere occupation of the plaintiffs’ slip by the vessel in question, therefore, did not give them a right of action until it was unreasonably prolonged, whether it were two or fifty years. It is true one of the witnesses, (Lewis,) says he lifted the vessel clear, and could have carried her anywhere; but he does not say he could have carried her to a place of safety; and the defendants had as much right to endeavor to save the cargo in that slip as anywhere else, provided they used due diligence. After such lifting, the labors of the defendants were continued in endeavoring to remove the cargo and lighten the vessel;
In regard to .the testimony respecting the degree of care and judgment practiced in the use of means in this case, it would appear that an experienced man was employed within a short time after the accident, who worked diligently until he left; that when he left, another of equal skill was employed in his place, who continued working diligently until stopped'by cold weather, and in the spring operations were resumed and continued actively, until stopped as before mentioned. The delay or defeat of the enterprise by the bursting of the-canvas first employed to
Assuming the plan of Mr. Lewis to have deserved the praise bestowed by him upon it, and to have been actually superior to that of Captain Bell, yet in the opinion of the latter, who was at least equally experienced, it was not so. It was not, therefore, so clearly the best plan as to have required the defendants to adopt it, even although a Jury might have found it to be the best, if that question had been submitted to them, because there is no evidence that it was generally recognized to be the best, so that a prudent man would have most probably adopted it in his own case. Estimates of witnesses, as to superiority of plans or the" time necessary to raise this vessel, based upon a continuously favorable use of means, without interruption by accidents or neglect of contractors, are wholly inapplicable and unavailable against evidence of actual failure after employing the means and judgment, and using the degree of diligence, required and permitted by law in such case. If no mode had been attempted, such evidence might have been available in determining from what time damages should begin to be estimated, but for that purpose only. Captain Bell agreed to do his work “ with all possible despatch,” and was a competent person; if he failed, the only . obligation on the defendants was to renew their efforts, as long as they claimed property in, and exercised the rights" of owners over the wreck.
Messrs. Martin and Mason are the only witnesses who found fault with the means employed; the first opposed to them a plan of his own, which he had never seen tried on a vessel of anything like the size of the Joseph Walker, and the second admitted he had no experience in wrecking business, and did not know as much as the operator, whose slowness he criticized. Every one employed on the vessel worked diligently, on the plan adopted by him, and there
The case was, therefore, properly taken from the consideration of the Jury, and the judgment should be affirmed.
For the purpose of determining this appeal, it must be assumed to be the settled law of this case, “ that when a vessel alongside of a public pier in the City of Hew York, is, accidentally, and without fault of her owner, burned, and sinks to the bottom, near the mouth of the slip or basin, thereby so obstructing the slip and bulkhead as to prevent other vessels coming in; those entitled to the slippage or wharfage, cannot recover for the loss thereof, caused by such obstruction, from the owner of such vessel, without showing that such owner, by due care and attention, could have removed the wreck, or at least have shifted its position so as to prevent its being a cause of injury, and that he is in default for not having done so. That when an insurance company, which has insured an undivided interest in such vessel and has
The complaint as amended did allege that the wreck, “ the said ship, Joseph Walker, could have been removed with reasonable care, skill and diligence, in a short space of time, to wit, in the space of sixty days from the time when so sunk.” That the defendants, having control and possession of said ship, have conducted themselves so negligently, unskillfully and carelessly, in and about their attempts at the removal of said ship, which they undertook to do, and as was their duty to do, and in and about the bringing into said slip, and sinking or suffering to be sunk and left there of thfe said other vessels or hulks, and in various other acts of negligence, unskillfulness and carelessness in respect thereto, that the plaintiffs have suffered great and lasting injury. That by means, of all
The only question undisposed of, if any, arises under the amended complaint, alleging that the defendants having undertaken to ■ remove or shift the wreck, have not exercised due care and diligence in not removing the same within the space of sixty days, as with reasonable care, skill and diligence might have been done.
There was no sufficient evidence upon which this could properly be inferred by the Jury in favor of the plaintiffs ; the direction to find for the defendants was therefore correct. (18 N. Y. R., 425.)
It was not suggested in the demand made on behalf of the plaintiffs to go to the Jury, what question if any they should be called upon to pass on; this demand was therefore too broad and comprehensive t'o predicate an exception upon, on a refusal being made. The request to submit questions of fact to a Jury, in analogy to a request to charge the Jury, must be specific, not general. (1 Kern., 61; 2 id., 313; 1 Seld., 422; 3 id., 266; 18 N. Y. R., 558, 565, 566.) To require the submission to a Jury, it is not enough to say that there was some evidence to go to a Jury; there must be evidence upon which they might
The direction in favor of the defendants is abundantly supported by the evidence; it would have been error to refuse it; this Oourt would be compelled to set aside a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs; the proof is overwhelming as to the skill, care and diligence exercised to remove the obstructions.
Again, the direction, to find a verdict for the defendants, could have been put upon the ground, that the defendants were not responsible to the plaintiffs, even if there had been a want of due care, skill, &c.; the contract with Mr. Bell, authorizing him to take possession of the sunken property, with the view to its removal with all reasonable despatch, was made by the owners of the vessel and cargo, Samuel Thompson and nephew, and before the abandonment to the defendants; the latter could exercise no control or direction over Mr. Bell or his servants ; he was not bound to obey or receive the orders of the defendants; while in the performance of this work he was in the exercise of an independent business; the relation of master and servant not existing between the defendants and him who alone could or did cause the injury complained of, the plaintiffs had no cause of action against the defendants. (24 Howard’s U. S. R., 110, 124; 4 Bosw., 140.)
I had some hesitation in concurring in the affirmance of the judgment in this action; not because I was disposed to question the legal principles so well stated and reasoned in the opinions already delivered, in favorof affirming the judgment, but because I doubted that, under the facts in this case, those legal principles justified the decisions of the learned Judge, at the trial of the cause. There appeared to me to be some justice in the plaintiffs’ claim for damages or compensation, if the defendants, while occupying the plaintiffs’ dock, were laboring as well for their own profit, in saving the vessel and cargo, as for the public or the plaintiffs’ benefit, in removing the wreck and disencumbering tile slip.
And this view seemed, at first sight, to find support in the testimony of the witness Lewis, where he states that, in the fall of 1854, “he had lifted the vessel so that she might be carried anywhere in the harbor, but that, to make it a sure thing,” he took her further into the slip, and had partially unloaded her, when, fearing the effect of the frost upon the heavy chains by which he held her up, (it being then about the middle of December,) he discontinued operations until the spring, expecting that at that time he would complete the work in a couple of weeks.
This looked, at first, like neglect of duty to the plaintiffs—omitting to remove the vessel out of the slip, when the operator testified “that he might have carried her anywhere in the harbor; ” and it appeared, too, as if the defendants, (or their agents, the wreckers, which is the same thing, in effect,) had ventured on, or assumed the responsibility of this neglect, under the temptation which the state of things then presented—of speedily unloading the vessel and possessing themselves of the cargo, to their own immediate emolument. But further reflection removed this impression. To take the vessel out of the plaintiffs’ slip,
To endeavor to save as much as possible of the wreck and cargo, was not incompatible with the entire fulfillment by the defendants of their whole duty to the plaintiffs in this matter; and I do not see that any effort which they made in that direction did interfere with that duty. Ko reasonable plan could be proposed, and no one could, in reason, be required to adopt any plan, for the accomplishment
Concurring, then, as I do, in the legal principles to which I have referred in the commencement of this statement, I can see no ground upon which the defendants can be held liable. They were only bound, at the utmost, to exercise due diligence and care; this, I think, they have done. There was no doubtful question in the case, which it was proper or necessary to submit to the Jury, and the direction given to them by the Court, to find a verdict for the defendants, being correct, the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Dissenting Opinion
The case, briefly stated, is this:
The ship Joseph Walker, while lying at the plaintiffs’ wharf, in Hew York, in December, 1853, with cargo on board, was partially burned, and sunk to the bottom, alongside the wharf, remaining attached thereto by her chain cable, leaving a portion of her hull above the water, and occupying such a position as to exclude all other vessels from access to that part of the wharf in front of which she lay. The injury to the vessel and cargo being more than half their value, they were abandoned by the owners to the defendants, who were insurers, as a total loss, under the policies; and the defendants, thereupon, accepted the abandonment and paid the insurance. The defendants did not abandon the ship and cargo as derelict, but, on the*393 contrary, entered into a contract with a Mr. Bell, an experienced wrecker, providing for the raising of the ship and cargo by him, in consideration of the payment to him of a large per centage of the proceeds to be derived from sales of the same when raised, or such portions thereof as-should be saved. Under this agreement, Bell, and Lewis', who became his partner and succeeded him, made various efforts, more or less vigorous, to raise and save the vessel and cargo. Those attempts were continued, with the exception of some intermissions on account of the weather, until April, 1855; during which period portions of the cargo were taken out, landed upon the plaintiffs’ wharf, and carried away and sold by the contractors, who also used the wharf as a passage way to and from the ship, for their men and materials. In April, 1855, the Mayor of the city, claiming that the vessel was a public nuisance there, forcibly stopped the proceedings of the contractors, took possession of the ship, and entered into a contract with a Mr. Jones, who agreed to. raise and remove the vessel for $13,000, to be paid him by the city; and Jones, thereupon, sub-let the job to others, who undertook to raise and save the ship and cargo, and to receive as compensation therefor 50 per cent of the net proceeds of the vessel, and 62¿-per cent of her cargo. On the 15th of October, 1855, the Mayor again took possession of the ship, and on the 25th or 26th of the same month removed her from the dock; whence she was taken to the Atlantic docks, in Brooklyn. The vessel was then worth $10,000, and her cargo was sold for about $5,000.
It is not necessary to consider the question as to whether the underwriters,.upon the abandonment of the ship and cargo to them, and their acceptance of such abandonment, took the ownership of the same cum onere, so as to become, ipso facto, liable to the performance of all the duties aud obligations touching her future disposition, to which the insured owners were then subject; nor the question as to what the duties and liabilities of such former owners, considering the situation and condition of the ship, were, at
If the defendants had abandoned the ship and cargo as derelict, the plaintiffs would have had a right to take possession, either for the purpose of removal as an obstruction to their wharf, or, in case it could be done without injury to others, in order to save the ship and cargo for their own benefit, if they should see fit so to do; and of this right they were deprived by the acts of the defendants and their employees in taking and holding exclusive possession of the vessel, not for the purpose of removing it out of the plaintiffs’ way, but of placing her and her cargo in such a condition as would, and did, enable the defendants to make money.
Tested by the rules of common honesty, it was the duty of the defendants, upon assuming the ownership and control of the vessel, either to remove her from the plaintiffs’ wharf, without unreasonable delay, as a wreck and an obstruction to their business there, or to compensate them for the injury caused by such obstruction. For nearly two years, owing to the failure of the defendants to remove her, the vessel continued to occupy the same position, though partially submerged, in front of the plaintiffs’ wharf, which she filled prior to the accident; and for this
The evidence in this case was sufficient, I think, to justify the Jury in finding, as a fact, that the ship could have been removed from the slip in a very short time time if the efforts of the defendants had been directed to such removal merely. One witness, an agent of a wrecking company, and himself a wrecker of considerable experience, says that the ship could have been taken out within two weeks after she was sunk. Lewis, one of the contractors, testifies, that in August, 1854, the ship was actually raised, so that when the tide rose she lifted free and clear; and that he could then have carried her anywhere in the harbor; and I think it may reasonably be assumed from his testimony that his failure to remove her at that time was induced by his desire to take, such further steps as would insure the safety of the vessel and the preservation of her cargo, out of which his compensation was to be derived. Even if this were otherwise, however, it appears to me that under the rule as laid down by Justice Maulé, the plaintiff was entitled to recover upon the evidence as it stood at the time the Judge, upon the trial of this action, directed the Jury to find a verdict for the defendant, or at least that the evidence was sufficient to require a finding of facts by them.
Eor these reasons, I am of opinion that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted.
Monell, J. concurred in the dissenting opinion of Barbour, J.
Judgment and order affirmed.