124 F. 659 | E.D. Pa. | 1903
This is a case of salvage, which presents the usual dispute concerning the sum to be awarded to the salvor in payment for expenses, delay, and meritorious service. The principal facts, which are for the most part not in controversy, are as follows:
The Ereza is a Spanish steamship of 4,838 tons gross, and 2,599 tons net, register, and was built of steel, in 1894. On January 18, 1902, she left the Austrian port of Fiume, bound for Philadelphia, carrying a cargo of 44,000 bags, or about 4,400 tons, of raw beet sugar, worth $124,520.12, upon which the amount of the marine freight was $9,737.30. When the ship arrived at the port of Philadelphia she was worth about $135,000, so that the total value of the vessel, cargo, and freight was something over $269,250. The British steamship Yeoman was built of steel in 1901, and is of 7,379 tons gross, and 4,784 tons net, register. At the time under consideration she was worth say $500,000, and was laden with a cargo of cotton valued at $900,000, upon which the freight at risk was about
I do not think it necessary to itemize the award that is to be made. I have taken into account the expenses of the vessel during the delay that is properly to be attributed to salvage service, the cost of the coal that was thereby made necessary, the sum paid the pilot boat Philadelphia, and other proper expenses at the breakwater, and the value of the time lost. The principal difficulty concerns the value of the service, and it is a difficulty that always confronts a court in the attempt to settle upon the amount of a salvage award. In coming to a conclusion, the value of each vessel should certainly be considered, and also the value of the cargo and freight that were saved. With regard to the value of the cargo and freight of the salvor, it is argued, and I think correctly argued, that the Harter act (Act Feb. 13, 1893, c. 105, 27 Stat. 445 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 2946]) requires such value to be excluded. The third section of that statute provides that, if a vessel plying to or from a port of the United States shall be seaworthy, and properly manned, equipped, and supplied, at the beginning of the voyage, she shall not be liable to the cargo for losses arising from saving or attempting to save life or property at sea, or from any deviation in rendering such service. This being so, the value of the cargo at risk is no longer an element in determining what perils the salving vessel was obliged to encounter. The point has already been decided in the federal courts, and it is only necessary, I think, to refer to these decisions: The Chinese Prince (D. C.) 61 Fed. 699; The Florence (D. C.) 65 Fed. 248; The Alaska (D. C.) 75 Fed. 430.
Taking into consideration, therefore, the expenses to which,I have already alluded, the value of the ships, and the value of the Ereza’s
When the agreement to tow was entered into, the amount to be paid was left undetermined. The sum was to be settled by arbitration in London, but, so.far as appears, no effort was made by either party to carry this agreement into effect. No demand for a specific sum! is made in the libel, and none is tendered by the answer; the libelant’s counsel suggesting $30,000 in his brief, while the counsel for the respondent admits that $4,565.63 should be allowed for disbursements and as recompense for time and service, and concedes that a sum should be added as a reward, “based upon the gallantry, courage, zeal, and intrepidity shown, also having regard to the value saved,” apparently suggesting a small percentage, say 2^2 per cent., on such value. There is sufficient range between these two suggestions to allow some freedom of movement, and I have exercised my best judgment to reach a fair and just result.
A decree may be entered in favor of the libelant for $20,000, with costs of suit.