5 F. 822 | D. Me. | 1880
The Freddie L. Porter having been held accountable for the loss of the Hope, the case is now presented on exceptions to the report of the assessor in the matter of damages.
The report finds that “at the time of her loss the Hope was employed in carrying stone for the season, by a verbal contract, and; that at the close of the season her owners would have received $450 for their proportion of the net earnings from the date of the loss.” The value of the Hope is fixed at $950, and these two sums, amounting to $1,400, are allowed by the assessor as damages sustained by her owners from the collision, with interest from such date as the court may deem equitable.
The assessor has also filed with his report the testimony, as taken from his minutes, which he admits are not full and complete. As reported, the evidence does not warrant the finding of the assessor “that the Hope was hired for the season,” and the parties have agreed that, instead of recommitting the report, the witness should be recalled and examined before me upon this point. It is sufficient to remark that his testimony now given, fully sustains this finding “that the Hope was sailing, at the time of the loss, under a legal contract for her employment during the entire season, the net profits from which, to her owners, would have amounted to $450.”
Exception is made as to the allowance of $450 for the owners’ share of her earnings from the date of the loss to the
Where the vessel was sunk, and became a total loss, this principle has not always received the approval of the English admiralty court. In 1849, in 3 W. Rob. 164, (The Columbus,) Dr. Lushington said: “Suppose, for instance, that this vessel had been an East Indiaman, bound on her outward voyage to the East Indies, with a valuable cargo on board, for the transportation of which not only would the owners be
In the Betsey Carnes, 2 Hagg. 28, a smack was run down through negligence, while engaged in rendering salvage service to another vessel, and Lord Stowell allowed, in addition to the value of the smack, damages for the loss of the expected salvage reward. See, also, The Yorkshireman, 2 Hagg. 30, note.
In 1860, The Canada, Lushington, 584, was decided. That vessel was carrying cargo from Cadiz to St. Johns, under a charter to carry timber from Quebec to England. She was totally lost by a collision on the voyage to St. Johns. The
The admiralty courts in this country do not recognize the distinction between cases of total and partial loss in fixing the damages caused by a collision, but in both cases they allow, as part of the damages, the net freight which the ship at the time of her loss was in process of earning. In The Rebecca, 1 B. & H. 356, Judge Betts allowed damages to the full value of the vessel and freight, although she was a total loss. In 2 Ben. 228, which was a ease of total loss, Blatchford, C. J., says: “The vessel having been in the act of earning freight, the freight which she was thus in the act of earning and was lost by collision is allowed as a just measure of compensation.” In support of this, he cites The Gazelle, 2 Wm. Rob. 279, and Williamson v. Barrett, 13 How. 101, neither of which were cases of total loss, as the injured vessel was repaired. The learned judge also refers to one of his own decisions, (The Heroine, 1 Ben. 227,) in which he says: “Upon the well-settled principle of allowing tp the injured party as damages, in cases of collision, an indemnity to the extent of the loss sustained, the freight which the injured vessel was in the act of earning and has lost, is allowed as a just measure of ■compensation, but this must be net and not gross freight.” In that case the libel claimed for the loss of the vessel, but the report does not show whether she was or not a total loss-
The question here presented was before the supreme court •of the United States in The Baltimore, 8 Wall. 386. Judge Clifford there states as the rule: “If the vessel of the libellant is totally lost, the rule of damage is the market value of the vessel at the time of her destruction. Allowance for freight is made in such case, reckoning the gross freight, less the
The only distinction between these cases and' the present» waiving the question of total or partial loss, is that here the hiring of the Hope was for a fixed term of time instead of her being chartered for a single trip. This contract she had entered upon and in part completed; nearly one-half of the time of her employment had expired, and she was in the performance of it at the time of her destruction, while in the other cases the vessel was at the time of the loss sailing on an intermediate voyage to a port of destination, where her charter was to commence, and she was to receive a cargo in accordance with her charter. In the opinion of the court, this difference does not afford any support to the claim of the schooner that the right to recover for the loss of freight is too remote and contingent to be allowed, but rather tends to sus
The libellants object to the sum of $950 allowed by the assessor as the value of the vessel. The testimony produced on this point before the assessor accompanies his report. It is sufficient to remark, that the usual conflict upon the value of a lost vessel exists; the estimates on the one side and the other varying from $750-to $2,600. The assessor is a man of large experience in such affairs, and no man in this state is better qualified to judge of such property. He has been a ship-master for many years, and of late a ship-broker and marine insurance agent, and has had great experience as an average adjuster and appraiser of vessels. He stated to the court that he had had some acquaintance with vessels of the description of the Hope and of their value. The court is satisfied with the value he has placed upon this vessel, and his report is therefore accepted and all objections are over- . ruled.