23 F. 109 | S.D.N.Y. | 1885
At about 1 p. ar. on the twenty-fifth of September, 1883, a fire was discovered among bales of cotton on the lighter S. B. Baker,
The claimants contend that a very small sum only, if anything, should be allowed for the salvage services of 'the Lyndhurst, on the ground that the lighter originally lay in a good place for being drenched with water to put out the fire; and that her removal was directed, not for her own safety, but for the safety of other vessels. There were no proper means, however, for extinguishing the fire where the lighter lay in the crowded slip. Though the fire might be subdued, it could not be put out there. There were no means there of unloading the bales; and in the high wind then prevailing, the fire might break out anew at any moment, and in remaining there she would be a source of constant danger to other vessels. As it was, one other lighter caught fire. The removal of the barge was, therefore, a matter of necessity; both to put out her own fire and prevent its spreading.
The services of the Lyndhurst were clearly salvage services. They were rendered promptly and' efficiently. Her crew were active and energetic in removing the lighter; in playing upon her with their