21 F. Cas. 426 | S.D.N.Y. | 1867
This is a libel for salvage, filed by William H. Good-speed, owner, and George W. Ward, master, of the steamer Charles W. Lord, on behalf of themselves and of the crew of the Charles W. Lord, against the screw steamer Saragossa, her tackle, &c„ and her cargo and freight money. The Saragossa was on her way from Charleston to New York. The Charles W. Lord was on her way from Galveston, Texas, via Key West, to New' York.
The service rendered in this case was a salvage service, and was one of merit, and ought to be properly rewarded. But there is nothing in the case to justify the extraordinary demand made at the trial, that the libellants should receive more than $40,000 as salvage compensation. The weather was not stormy; there was no exposure or risk of life on the part of the master and crew of the Charles W. Lord; there was no imminent peril to the Saragossa; there was no great amount of labor or skill bestowed or displayed on the part of the salvor vessel; nor was there any great length of time occupied in the service. On the other hand, the value of the property imperilled by the deviation of the Charles W. Lord from her voyage was large, and the service was rendered promptly and efficiently; and the policy of the law is to encourage salvage services by steam vessels, especially when rendered to steam vessels which are carrying passengers.
I do not consider, as an element in the salvage service in this case, any speculation, growing out of the gales which blew between the time the vessels arrived at Fortress Monroe and the time the Charles W. Lord subsequently arrived at New York. Whether the Saragossa would or would not have been able to repair her machinery before the gales came on, so as to have had its aid in keeping off from a lee shore, or in keeping her head to the wind, or whether, if she had not succeeded in repairing her machinery before the gales came on, she would or would not have been able to lay to in a gale by the use oi her sails alone, are questions having too many contingent ingredients, to be considered in estimating the value of the salvage service. And, if I were to' consider them, I should hold, that the weight of the testimony is, that the Saragossa could have repaired her machinery, so that she would have had the use of steam before the gales came on, and that if she had not repaired her machinery she would still have been able to lay to by the aid of her sails alone. So, also, as to the gales which the Charles W. Lord encountered on her voyage from Fortress Monroe to New York, and which caused damage to her, and which it is claimed she would not have encountered if she had not deviated from her voyage to assist the Saragossa, because she would have reached New York before the gales came on, — all such considerations are too remote to enter into the question of the compensation for the service rendered. In the case of The Emulous [Case No. 4,480], it was argued, that a storm which occurred the next day after the saved vessel and cargo reached a harbor, would have very probably occasioned their total loss if they had not then been in port. In reply to this, Judge Story says: “Admitting that to be true, still it cannot constitute a material ground, in a case like the present, for enhancing the salvage. Salvage is a compensation for the rescue of the property
In the present ease, the Charles W. Lord was engaged in towing the Saragossa for about thirty-four hours, from the time she took her in tow till the two vessels arrived at Fortress Monroe. The Charles W. Lord was obliged to go to Norfolk to procure coal, and arrived there about ten o’clock a. m. on the 19th of March. When she was about to anchor the Saragossa at Fortress Monroe, she was requested by the Saragossa to tow her to Norfolk, and consented to do so, because she had to go there herself for coal. She accordingly took the Saragossa in tow to Norfolk. About the time the two vessels arrived at Fortress Monroe it commenced to storm, with snow, and about six hours afterwards to blow. It blew heavily that day, and blew a gale from the eastward that night and through the 20th and until the morning of the 21st, so that the Charles W. Lord would not go to sea. During that gale it blew so heavily that eight or ten steamships came into Hampton Eoads from sea for a harbor. When the Charles W. Lord did go to sea, she encountered a gale which compelled her, after about three days and a half, to return to Norfolk for more coal. During that gale she carried away her steering gear for a time, but repaired it at sea, and suffered other damage. Now, if we could enter the region of speculation so as to take into account what might have happened to the Saragossa if she had been out in the gales which came on after she reached Fortress Monroe, we must equally speculate in regard to the Charles W. Lord. And, on the evidence, it would be reasonable to say that, in consequence of her having been delayed by towing the Saragossa, she was saved from exposure and damage, to an extent open wholly to conjecture, by not being out in the gale which commenced on the 19th. But this fact ought not to diminish the value of the salvage service she rendered; nor can the losses she did suffer in the gales she afterwards met with, before she ’ reached New York, enhance such value. Notwithstanding the season of the year, nothing which happened in regard to wind or weather, can, in fact or in judgment of law, be reasonably said to have been foreseen, much less acted upon, during the time the salvage service was in progress.
In view of all the facts in this case, the salving vessel being a steamer, her value and that of her cargo, stores and freight money being $434,200, the risk to which she was put in reference both to herself and her cargo, the value of the Saragossa and her cargo and freight money, which was, in round numbers,. $100,000, the condition in which the Saragossa was, and the nature and duration of the salvage service, I think that the sum of $9,000, or a little less than one eleventh of the value of the property saved, is a liberal and, at the same time, a fair compensation. Of this sum I award one-half, or $4,500, to the' owner of the Charles W. Lord. The usual proportion given to the owner is one-third. Mason v. The Blaireau, 2 Cranch [6 U. S.] 240, 269, 271; The Henry Ewbank [Case No. 6,376]. But that was a rule fixed in reference to sailing vessels, and the policy of courts of admiralty now is to encourage salvage services by large, powerful, well equipped and valuable steamers, by giving to their owners as large a share as one-half in the compensation awarded. The Howard, 3 Hagg. Adm. 256; The Earl Grey, Id. 363; 2 Pars. Mar. Law, bk. 3, c. 7, p. 622, note 7. Of the remaining $4,500, I award $500 to the master of the Charles W. Lord, on account of his responsibility in undertaking the salvage. The remaining $4,000 will be distributed among her officers and crew in proportion to their respective monthly wages, the master sharing pro rata in the $4,000, in addition to the $500 specially allotted to him. The apportionment will be made by a commissioner,