This is a suit to recover the possession of the ship. On the night of December 29, 1900, she went aground on the beach about 18 miles eastwardly from Sand Island light, near the entrance to Mobile Bay, exposed to the winds and waves of the Gulf of Mexico. On learning of the stranding of the ship soon after it happened, and before this libel was filed, her owners abandoned her to the insurers. The libelants were the insurers under contract with the owners, and accepted the abandonment. D. C. Eitzen, the Russian vice consul stationed at the port of Pensacola, Ela., and who was also the agent of the insurers, appointed a board of surveyors to examine and inquire into the condition of the ship. The board consisted of S. C. Cobb, surveyor for the American Bureau of Shipping, Jacob Kryger, surveyor for the National Board of Underwriters, and Robert H. Langford, ship carpenter and master builder, all of Pensacola. In their report the surveyors valued the ship, as she was lying stranded on the beach, at $1,500. They expressed the opinion that she could not be gotten off within a reasonable expense, and recommended that she be sold, and, if she could not be sold, as she was lying, for $1,500, that the master strip the vessel at once, in order to dispose of all material on her to the best advantage. The survey took place on January 2, 1901. On January 4, 1901, the master of the ship sold her, and executed a bill of sale therefor, to W. H. Northrup, for $i;6oo. The ship was subsequently gotten off the beach, towed to Pensacola, and converted into a barge. Her value was variously estimated by the witnesses, some of whom had seen her after the survey and before she was gotten off the beach. They differed widely in their opinions of her value,
While it is' charged in the libel that the sale was fraudulent and void, it is not shown by the proof, or claimed in the argument of counsel, that there was any fraud or want of good faith on the part of the master in making the sale. But it is insisted by counsel that the master did not act on his own judgment, and that he was unduly influenced. The conduct of the Russian vice consul, Eitzen, in connection with the sale, is especially criticised, and it is suggested that his action and advice in the matter was improper, or at' least suspicious. It appears from the evidence that Eitzen did have something to do with the sale, in so far, at least, as aiding the master to find a purchaser, and perhaps in bringing the purchaser and the master together, and in expressing his opinion as to the advisability of a sale. But I see nothing in this that was improper or unreasonable, in view of the fact that he was the representative of the nation to which the ship belonged, and was also the agent of the insurers of the ship. The ship was a Russian ship. She belonged to a distant foreign port, where her owners resided. The insurers were likewise foreign and in a distant country. It was not unnatural that the consular representative of the country to which the ship belonged, and agent of her insurers, should manifest much interest in the matter; and to whom would the master more naturally look for counsel and aid than to such representative and agent? But suppose Eitzen was unduly active in urging a sale, and was acting, in bad faith or from improper motives, as intimated by libelants’ counsel, how would that affect the sale made by the master, if he acted in good faith, and was justified by the circumstances of the case? The master, through the vice consul, called to his aid disinterested persons of experience, who were competent to advise, after a survey of the vessel and her injuries, as far as they could be ascertained, whether it were better to attempt to save and repair her or to sell her; and, as said by the supreme court in the case of The Amelie, 6 Wall. 18, 18 L. Ed. 806: “Although his authority to sell does not depend on their recommendation; yet, if they advise a sale, and he acts on their advice, he is in a condition to furnish the court reviewing the proceedings such evidence in justification of his conduct.” Two of the three sur
. To entitle the libelants to recover, the sale by the master must have been without authority, and void. “To justify the sale by the master of his vessel in a distant port, and in the course of her voyage, good faith in making the sale and a necessity for it must both concur; and the purchaser, in order to have a valid title, must show their concurrence.” The Amelie, 6 Wall. 18, 18 L. Ed. 806. The master,
If it be suggested that the fact that the ship was floated, saved, and restored to a material part of her original value disproves the • necessity for the sale, it may be answered, in the language of the supreme court in the case last cited (The Amelie):
“Not so. It may tend to prove the surveyors were mistaken, but does not affect the duty of the master to follow their advice, when given in such strong terms, and with no evidence before him that it was erroneous.”
In the case of The Sarah Ann, 13 Pet. 387, 10 L. Ed. 213, Mr. Justice Wayne said:
“Nor can the necessity for a sale be denied when the peril, in the opinion of those capable of forming a judgment, makes a loss probable, though the vessel may in a short time afterwards be got off and put afloat. It is true, the opinion or judgment of competent persons may be falsified by the event, and their judgment may be shown to have been erroneous by the better knowledge of other persons, showing it was probable that the vessel could have been extricated from her peril without great injury or incurring great expense; and the master’s incompetency to form a judgment or to act with a proper discretion in the case may be shown. But from the mere fact of the vessel having been extricated from her peril no presumption can be raised of the master’s incompetency, or of that of his advisers.”
The master’s statement that Eitzen made the trade for the sale of the ship, and the implication thereby that he, in executing the bill of sale, was only carrying out Eitzen’s contract and dictation, is contradicted by the testimony of Northrup, Eitzen, and Tunison. Eitzen, no doubt, found the purchaser, and brought him and the master together; but that the trade was actually made by the master, and not unwillingly made by him, I think there can be no doubt from the testimony. I apprehend that the master, being unfamiliar with the English language, did not express himself with accuracy or clearness, and did not say in his testimony exactly what he meant. The fact that the ship was subsequently gotten off the beach and put afloat within a reasonable expense, as compared with her value when afloat, may show that the surveyors on whose advice the master acted in selling the ship were mistaken in their opinion or judgment as to the practicability of getting the ship afloat, and as to her value; but these subsequent events do not affect the duty of the master to follow their advice, when given as it was, and with no evidence before him that it was erroneous. The Amelie, supra; The Sarah Ann, supra; 20 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.) 213. I think “the circumstances were such that a person of prudent and sound mind, after carefully observing all the facts and weighing all probabilities, could have no doubt as to the advisability of a sale,” and that the
A decree will be entered dismissing the libel at the cost of the libelants.
