5 F. Cas. 1075 | D. Me. | 1872
Two libels are promoted against this ship and her cargo by Nathaniel L. Thompson, a merchant of Ken-nebunk in this district, one founded on an alleged bottomry bond, or hypotheeatory obligation of the ship and cargo, executed to him by Young, the master of the ship, on the 19th day of January, 1871, as security for the payment of an advance of $10,000 in ninety days, made to the master by Thompson, and the other on salvage services rendered to the ship and cargo by Thompson and his assignor Cleaves, under a written contract for salvage made between Young and Cleaves December 15,1870, and subsequently assigned to Thompson by Cleaves, after a partial performance of the salvage services.
The material facts are, that this vessel, an iron propeller of about 1,000 tons American registry, sailed from Newcastle upon Tyne in the fall of 1S70, bound into the St. Lawrence. Her cargo consisted of about 100 tons of chemicals and glassware, together with the frame, plates and all other portions complete of an iron ferry boat, constructed for the Grand Trunk Railway by the Palmer Iron Shipbuilding Co., of Newcastle, who were also the owners of the “Clotilda.” In the course of her voyage the ship fell into distress and went into Belfast, Ireland; she there took on board, according to the statement of her master, 100 tons of coal, which was thrown down among the iron to prevent any further shifting of the cargo, and the season being late, her destination was changed to Portland. H. & A. Allan were understood to be the consignees of the ship and cargo, but bills of lading were never received by them, as it is said, and they made no claim to the control or direction at any time afterwards.
On the morning of the 13th of December, the ship was stranded on Wells beach, about forty miles westerly from this port. The weather at the time was stormy, dark and foggy, and blowing a double reef top-sail breeze with a heavy sea. The beach is of sand, quite -flat, affording very poor holding-ground, and is at the head of Wells bay, exposed to the full force of the winds and waves. The vessel went on at a low run of tides, near high water, and the sea broke heavily over her stern, she being fast in the breakers. The weather thus continued throughout nearly all of the 13th. The officers went ashore and took lodgings at the house of Mr. Davis, a respectable man living in that vicinity. At low tide the water left the forward part of the ship, so that on one side persons could pass freely to and from the ship. Her stern, rising and falling with the tide and sea, settled her in the sand making a bed for her. At low tide there were six or eight feet of water under the stern post. The master engaged Davis to procure men from the shore to go on board to clear up decks, get up cranes and other things necessary for discharging the cargo, and also to assist in pumping the ship; and eleven men were thus employed on board on the 14th.
A large crowd of people from the neighborhood collected on the beach near the ship on the 13th, including a number of experienced ship-masters, merchants and mechanics, and among them Robert Cleaves of Ken-nebunk, a place about ten miles from the ship. Cleaves has followed the sea for many years, has been in command of sailing vessels and steamships, and appears to have been a man of energy and readiness for emergencies, with funds at his command. He was introduced to the master of the “Clo-tilda,” and offered his services if he could render any assistance. The master informed him that he had sent to Portland for Lloyds’ agent, and to the Allans, and that he. should probably act on their advice. Cleaves gave him references as to his ability and character and then left.
He returned the next morning to the beach; it was then clear, the weather had moder' ated and continued to moderate throughout
Under this agreement Cleaves immediately went to work discharging the cargo. With the exception of procuring a steam pump, he was at no other expense than the hiring of the men and teams he employed, working principally at low tide in discharging on to the sand alongside, occasionally at full tide, employing a few hands in breaking out the cargo and getting it within reach of the ship’s tackles. He used the ship’s engines, winches, cranes, &c., constantly, but states that he kept no account of his expenditures, and is not able to testify how long he was employed in this business, or the number of his men and teams, or the amount paid by him; his impression is that he expended $3,-000 in the operation.
From the testimony of Mr. Goodwin, we learn that he commenced work on the second day, and worked steadily all the time there was any thing done, and he was paid $2.00 per tide, receiving in the whole $32.00, the pay for one night’s services as a watchman being included in that amount. The first week in January, the vessel being then filled with water, Cleaves concluded he had discharged all the cargo which was practicable without means of freeing her. At that time all the chemicals and glass, a portion of the sails, &c.. and about three-fourths of the ferry boat had been landed. Young pressed upon Cleaves the importance of landing the balance, as it would add to the value of that already landed, and finally Cleaves agreed to procure a steam pump, if one could be had for a reasonable amount, to free the ship from water so that they could reach the balance of the cargo. Cleaves procured a pump a.t Portland for $325, which required some repairs, and before they were completed, and the balance of the cargo discharged, Cleaves assigned this contract to Thompson, who afterwards removed some of the sails, chains and anchors from the ship, and then surrendered her with the balance of the cargo on board to Hilton, who had been sent to Wells from New York by Barclay & Livingston, agents for the owners, and who claimed to act in their behalf. Barclay & Livingston had contracted with the Coast Wrecking Company to get the ship off for sixty per cent, salvage, and by the exertions of this company, after nearly four months’ labor, the ship was finally taken off the beach, with the balance of her cargo in her, and brought to Portland in June last. $15,000 salvage was paid to the company in accordance with the contract, she being appraised with the cargo then in her at $25,-000.
Whilst Cleaves was at work discharging cargo, he called upon Young for money, and Young procured from the Allans $2,000 which he paid to Cleaves. In January, Cleaves demanded of Young payment of the balance due him under the salvage contract, and it not being paid, he left his demand for collection with his proctors. Young called upon various parties in order to raise the amount, and among others upon Thompson, the libellant, stating to him. “that the Allans had called upon him to repay them their advances, and that he was in want of $12,000 to pay Cleaves and Allans, and to forward the cargo to Portland and save the ship, and that he wanted the amount on a credit of four months.” Thompson declined making the loan, and advised him to go to Portland and see the Allans to get his money. He returned, stating “that he had been offered the money in Portland at thirty per cent, and that the Allans advised him to get the money of Thompson in Ivennebunk if he could; that Allans’ folks had promised to let him have $4,000 or $5,000, but that they had received a dispatch not to let him have another dollar.”
The owners had in the meantime been advised of the condition of the vessel, and ship and cargo were abandoned to the underwriters, and from that time neither owners, underwriters nor the Allans, in any way, so far as it appears, rendered any assistance to the master, gave him any advice or instructions, or took any steps to provide him with the necessary funds or credit. But all parties interested appear to have abandoned the master to his fate to do what he should think proper, or might by circumstances be compelled to do. manifestly not intending by anything they might do to be committed by the actions of the master in any ulterior proceedings, unless they should prove to be for their advantage. There was not that frankness and fair dealing which a master had a right to expect from his owners when advised that he was in distress in a foreign country; they seemed to fear that if they should give any advice or assistance to the master, they would thereby compromise their own rights among themselves, and they therefore preserved a complete silence, and abstained from all communication with him after the abandonment to the underwriters, and so cautious have they been, that it has not been thought advisable to .inform the judgment of the court in relation to the transaction, by the testimony of the master or owners of either ship or cargo, or of the consignees or underwriters. The defence is apparently presented by the original owners in their answer, charging most fraudulent practices on the part of Young and Cleaves, whilst it appears in evidence that Capt. Young has by the same owners been since advanced to the command of another and more valuable ship belonging to them, thus most pointedly discrediting the good faith of their answer in charging him with such fraudulent practices. "Whilst the defence is nominally made by the owners, the court cannot but believe that in fact it is conducted in behalf of the underwriters, the answer being subscribed and sworn to by New York merchants, one of whom is the general agent for Lloyds, and who has most diligently and carefully watched over and protected the interests of his principals, in no way compromising them by any voluntary explanations when examined as a witness, but the rather withholding all information which might in any way disclose any agency for the underwriters in making this defence.
This bottomry bond, as it is termed, was given under peculiar circumstances, and although drawn by able counsel, and intended to have the effect of an ordinary bond of bottomry, it is conceded that such cannot be its legal effect, as no maritime risk for any particular voyage is assumed by it. It recites, “that the ship is now ashore on Wells beach, and the master binds himself, the ship, tackle, apparel and cargo, a part of which lies on said beach, and the remainder on board the ship, in the sum of $10,400, to be paid to said Thompson, his heirs, &c.;” and the consideration is “that whereas said Christopher H. Young has been obliged to take up and has received from said Thompson, for the use of said ship and for the purpose of-paying salvors for saving cargo and lightening said ship and other expenses accrued by the stranding of the ship, the sum of $10,-
By this obligation the master was absolutely bound for the payment of the amount at the expiration of the ninety days, and although it recites that all the risks of the seas, rivers, &c., are to be on account of said Thompson, yet no particular voyage is set forth for which they are assumed, nor does it stipulate that the obligation is subject to any such condition, and that it shall become null and void in case of loss of the property by such casualties. This is not strictly a bot-tomry bond, and the second article in the libel founded upon it as such an instrument cannot be maintained. The libel contains a further article claiming to enforce a maritime lien on the ship and cargo for $10,000, the same being a loan for supplies and advances necessary for their care and preservation, and for which a lien existed, and which was by the master thus expended for their benefit. Such a lien, if it exists, may be enforced in this court, and is within the decisions in the cases of The Hunter [Case No. 0,904]; The William and Emmeline [Id. 17.6S7]; and The A. R. Dunlap [Id. 513]. It appears that Thompson well 'knew of the salvage contract made by Cleaves with Young, and of all that had been done in performance of it. He is therefore chargeable with full notice and affected with all the equities and obligations in relation to it.' to the same extent that Cleaves would be if he were now prosecuting a libel founded on said contract.
It is therefore incumbent on the libellant to establish a necessity for the advances, and that the same were for the common benefit of ship and cargo, if he would sustain his libel against them. The justification for the advances by Thompson depends first, upon the validity and extent of Cleaves’ lien upon the ship and cargo for the salvage services rendered by him, and secondly, upon the authority of the master to hypothecate by a loan the ship and cargo to discharge such, lien. Upon the latter point it is sufficient to-observe that the master at this time was wholly abandoned by the owners and all other parties to whom he had a right to look for assistance and advice. It was very evident that they were not willing to assume any obligation, or to make any advances to him in his distress, or even to advise him as to the course he should adopt; but they left him to be governed entirely by his own judgment under the circumstances in which he was placed.
His alleged consignees repudiated the consignment, and had. as he stated, called upon him to repay the amount they had advanced, to him, and which he had paid to Cleaves on account of the salvage. The claim for the balance due to Cleaves under his contract had been left with the counsel for collection, and the only means of relief at the command of the master was from the property, either by permitting it to be libelled and disposed of by a court of admiralty, or from a loan by its hypothecation. The master then contemplated a completion of the voyage, that his-ship would be relieved and the cargo forwarded to its place of destination, if he could obtain funds to pay the claims upon them and other expenses on a credit of three months, and in the opinion of the court, any prudent owner would have adopted the-course taken by the master as he was then: situated; and the master was not only justified, but it was his duty to have obtained the-loan at a moderate rate of interest, and for a reasonable time to relieve the property from, the liens then existing against it, and not have subjected it to the expense and delay attending proceedings in admiralty, devest-ing him of all control or possession of the property, and greatly hindering, if not utterly preventing, his getting the ship off the beach or forwarding the cargo.
Of the $10,000 which was paid by Thompson to Young, $6,000 was paid to Cleaves. $3,183 to H. & A. Allan, and the residue was applied by the master in payment of officers, wages and other expenses. So far as these sums were paid in discharge of Cleaves’ claims, which were a lien upon the ship and cargo, including the repayment to the Allans of the $2,000 which was paid to-Cleaves, to that extent the court is of opinion that the libel may be sustained, and the libellant be subrogated to his rights. What then was the extent of Cleaves’ lien? Was this contract valid and obligatory, and were ship and cargo chargeable therewith ?
The written contract stipulates for the discharge of the cargo, stores and apparel, as-
In defence, it is contended that this sal-wage agreement is invalid, being unconscionable in its amount, the sum claimed under it being greater than the actual value of the entire cargo. The rale in relation to such con-tracts as laid down in 2 Pars. Shipp. & Adm. -306, is that “if at the time of service, the sal-vors make a bargain with the owners of the property in peril or their servants as to the Amount of salvage, this is enforced by the court only so far as it seems equitable and conformable to the merits of the case; and it is wholly disregarded if it be deemed unconscionable and oppressive to the owners of the property saved, or entered into under circumstances which amount to compulsion.”
In Houseman v. The North Carolina, 15 Pet [40 U. S.] 40, Taney, C. X, says, “In all such cases (of salvage contracts) unless the acts of the captain are ratified by the owners, his conduct will be carefully watched and scrutinized by the court, and his contracts will not be regarded as binding upon the parties concerned, unless they appear to have been bona fide and such as a discreet owner, .placed in like circumstances, would have made. If he settles the amount by agreement, those who claim under it must show that the salvage awarded was reasonable and just.” In The Emulous .[Case No. 4,480], Judge Story says, “It is true that contracts made for salvage services are not ordinarily held obligatory by the court of admiralty upon the persons whose property is saved, unless the court can clearly see that no advantage is taken of the parties’ situation and that the amount is just and reasonable.”
This rale has repeatedly received the sanction of the high court of admiralty in England. and been recognized by this and other admiralty courts in this country. See The W. D. B. [Id. 17,306]. If the agreement is proved, it should be presumed to be fair and equitable, and the burden is clearly upon the claimant to satisfy the court that to carry it into effect would be contrary to equity and justice, or that it was procured by fraud or compulsion.
The evidence does not establish that any fraud was practiced by Cleaves, or that the contract was obtained by compulsion, or any advantage taken of the position of the property of the master. On the contrary, the agreement was made with deliberation, between parties fully competent to contract, after time for reflection, and as the court has no doubt, after the master had consulted with Lloyds’ agent as well as Capt. Ail'd and other parties in relation to it. At the same time the court is equally well assured that the agreement was entered into under a mutual mistake of the real condition of affairs and of the consequences which must result from its enforcement, and that to sustain it will produce gross injustice.
The invoice value of the cargo, freight added, is admitted to have been in currency, $47,178.20, twenty-five per cent, of which sum, $11,794.55, is the amount of salvage claimed for discharging the cargo; and to this is added a further sum of $060, being one-fourth of the alleged value of sails, stores, &c., belonging to the ship and landed from her under the salvage contract. An appraisal in bond of the entire cargo has been taken by order of the court, by persons well qualified for that duty, who have under oath estimated its entire value on the wharf in Portland at $14,086.49. Deducting from this amount the expense of removal from Wells beach to Portland, $3,-226.22 would leave the net value on the beach $10,860.27, whilst the amount claimed as salvage for its discharge is $11,794.55, being more than $900 beyond the value of the entire cargo. This appraisal, so far as it relates to the ferry-boat, is said to be erroneous and should not conclude the court, as the appraisers have considered it as of no greater value than scrap iron, and have not allowed its real value as the parts of a boat in readiness to be put together and completed. This was a matter entirely for the consideration of the appraisers, and courts of admiralty are never inclined to question the correctness of a valuation made by those it has selected for that duty. On the contrary, in England, such appraisal is always held conclusive as to value. I am not aware of any authority to that effect in this country, and without intending to decide whether the court is or not concluded by its valuation, 1 have no doubt that the appraisers in the present case have arrived at a just and correct result.
It must be recollected, that this portion of the cargo, the frame and plates of an iron ferry boat, is a kind of property designed
The libellant states that he was offered §45,000 for the cargo, and so informed Hilton, the agent for the underwriters, and that when a week or two afterwards Hilton wanted him to take it he refused as the chance had gone. At that time the property was in the custody of the court, and on petition the court would at once have directed the acceptance of the offer; it is not referred to in any of the correspondence, and the court cannot but think that there is some mistake in relation to it, and that for the cargo, as it then was, no such amount would have been paid for it by any one after a careful examination of its condition.
Taking therefore the valuation as correct, and sustaining and enforcing this salvage agreement, the entire cargo would not pay for its landing, and it would require the further sum of §900 to be realized from the ship and freight, if the cargo was first applied to the payment. It is claimed that the ship should bear her proportion of this expense, as she was benefited by the discharge of the cargo and removed thereby from immediate peril to temporary safety. As I have before stated, I think this expenditure was for the common benefit and to the advantage of the ship, and she should bear her proportion of it according to the benefit rendered to her from the expenditure. She was rescued from the then impending peril of destruction from the breakers, but she was not then brought into safety and a condition to perform her voyage.
To accomplish this, a long delay and heavy expenditures were incurred, which, in my view, should be deducted from the value of the ship before she can be called upon to contribute to the expense of her discharge. She was valued at §20.000 in the dock at Portland, but this did not include her sails, spars, chains, &c., amounting to about §2,-000 additional. Her whole value, therefore, when taken off the beach was about §22,-000, on which sixty per cent, was paid the Gcast Wrecking Company as subsequent salvors. Deducting the amount of this second salvage would leave a value of §9,000 in the ship to contribute to the expense of her discharge, which added to the net value of the cargo on the beach, §10,8G0.27, gives an aggregate of property of nearly §20,000 to contribute to the salvage claim of §11,794.. 55 for cargo, and §660 on sails, chains, &e., amounting to §12,454.55 to be borne by the §20,000.
Cleaves was engaged but about a fortnight in this enterprise; the labor was not very severe or perilous, as after the second day he found no difficulty in obtaining all the men he required at §2.00 per tide, and ox-teams including drivers at §4.00 per tide; the weather was cold but not stormy, with the exception of one day, and his expenses beyond his payments for men and teams and the steam pump did not exceed §100. His contract gave him the privilege of the ship’s coal, engines, tackles and cranes, and by means of them he was enabled to discharge successfully a large portion of the cargo at an expense, so far as the court can discover from his own statements, not exceeding §2,-000 or §2,500.
The principal part of the cargo was heavy, crooked and difficult to handle, but the hindrances were not very different from what they would have been at many of the wharves in this town. It was allowed to be dropped upon the beach, and in some instances by so doing was broken or bent, and its value greatly diminished; but it was necessary to use all expedition possible in this work, and the court is not inclined to make any great deduction on this account, although with more care and time it would undoubtedly have been landed in better condition. The salvage claim is four-fold the expenditure, without any risk of property, or any personal exposure to danger, or requiring of the salvors extraordinary skill and exposure in the business, and is more than fifty per cent, of the entire value of all the property benefited by the service, which is the usual amount allowed in cases of derelict at sea, attended with much risk and exposure
If both parties had then known that its value when landed would not have exceeded $11,000, it cannot be supposed they would have contracted that Cleaves should receive $11,794 for its discharge. Both believed that when landed it would be worth and would command nearly, if not quite, its full invoice value with freight. They do not appear to have contemplated any diminution of its value by reason of the damage it had sustained on the voyage, or which it might receive in process of landing, or from its not being a kind of property which at all times would command a purchaser at nearly its original cost. There was evidently such a mistake as would require a court of admiralty in the present instance not to hold this agreement obligatory upon the claimants.
In the opinion of the courtasalvage contract similar to the one now under consideration ordinarily should not receive the sanction of the court, it being in conflict with the policy of courts of admiralty in matters of salvage. The value of the property as saved should always be a very important element in determining the amount, and an agreement to pay a fixed proportion of the invoice value and freight, entirely excludes any consideration of the present value of the property. Salvage services are only required when the ship or cargo is in distress; and when a vessel is stranded, it is almost certain to be the case that the cargo is more or less injured, and in most cases so as to materially affect its value and reduce it below its original invoice cost. Compensation for salvage services is allowed by reason of the benefit conferred. and ought to bear some proportion to such benefit. This can only be ascertained by an examination of the cargo, and if found damaged, the benefit being so much the less, the award for salvage should be affected thereby; but by the rule adopted in this agreement, the salvor is assured of his reward without any regard to the benefit he may render the owner. The cargo may from various causes, as in the present instance, not be of sufficient value to pay the price agreed, and yet if the agreement is to control the rights of the parties, the salvors will realize more than the whole value of the property.
It is for the interest of commerce and navigation that compensation for salvage services should usually be somewhat of a contingent nature, dependent on the value of the property rescued from peril by the services. The diligence and skill of salvors are thereby incited and promoted, and they will be much more likely to render valuable aid and assistance, and to rescue from peril a much larger amount of property, if they understand that their reward is dependent upon the value of the property saved, than they otherwise would, if they were sure of a-certain amount, provided the property saved proves insufficient to realize such amount. Salvage services are generally required in storms and rough weather, are attended with more or less danger and exposure, and salvors would not be inclined to expose themselves to continued peril and danger in rescuing the balance of the property at risk, after they had saved enough to insure their own demand upon it, under a contract like the present. It is frequently the case, that the portion of the cargo which is in the lower hold of a ship in distress cannot be discharged without much more cost and peril than attends the discharge of that found between decks; and it is certainly not salutary or judicious for the court to approve of any practices by which salvors will be induced to abstain from saving that portion of a ship’s cargo which is most difficult to rescue, and content themselves with taking care of that only which can be preserved without much trouble or exposure.
The agreement not being sustained by the court, it only remains to determine what is a reasonable award for the salvage services rendered, the property benefited thereby being of the estimated value of $20,000. The cargo is stated in the contract to have been of the invoice value of $35,000 in gold, so that the amount which Cleaves expected to receive was in excess of $10,000.
“Compensation as salvage is not viewed by the admiralty courts merely as pay on the principle of quantum meruit, or as a remuneration pro opere et labore, but as a reward given for perilous services voluntarily rendered, and as an inducement to seamen and others to embark in such undertakings to save life and property. Public policy encourages the hardy and adventurous mariner to engage in these laborious and sometimes dangerous enterprises, and with a view to withdraw from him every temptation to embezzlement and dishonesty, the law allows him in case he is successful a liberal compensation.” The Blackwell, 10 Wall. [77 U. S.] 14.
In my view, the sum of $6,000 under all the circumstances of this case is a reasonable and just award for the salvage services. It is probably a somewhat larger sum than the court would have awarded if there had been no agreement in relation to the amount; but an inducement of a much larger compensation was thus held out by the master to Cleaves if he would undertake the service, and it is possible he might not have assumed it if he had not expected to be thus liberally rewarded. If these claimants, therefore, are required to pay more than they otherwise