Anderson v. The Edam

13 F. 135, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 161
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 27, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 13 F. 135 (Anderson v. The Edam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. The Edam, 13 F. 135, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 161 (E.D.N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Benedict, D. J.

These two actions are brought—one by the master and owners of the steam-ship Persian Monarch, and the other by the master and owners of the steamrship Napier—to recover salvage compensation for services rendered to the Dutch steamer Edam. They were tried together by consent. The following are the facts:

The steamer Edam, laden with a cargo and passengers, left Rotterdam, bound for New York, on the first day of January, 1882. On the fourteenth of January, in latitude 43 deg. N- and longitude 58 deg. 30 min. W., she lost all the blades of her propellor. Bails were then set, and she proceeded for seven days under sail with signals of distress flying. One steamer of the Hull line passed by in plain sight without stopping, although informed by gun and signal that the Edam required immediate assistance. On Saturday, January 21st, when about latitude 40 deg. 36 min. and longitude 68 deg. 50 min. W., the steam-ship Persian Monarch, a powerful steamer, bound to the westward, fell in with the Edam, and at her request took her in tow. The weather was then fine, but by midnight it blew a gale, with a heavy sea. On Sunday morning the hawser parted in the increasing gale. Efforts to regain the hawser were made during Sunday without success. During Sunday night the Persian Monarch lay by, exchanging signals with the Edam until 3:15 on Monday morning. After that the Edam was lost sight of. Efforts to find her were kept up by the Persian Monarch until 1:30 p. m. on Monday, when the hope of finding her was abandoned, and the Persian Monarch took a course for New York, where she arrived on Tuesday. Upon arrival the agents of the Edam were informed by the master of the Persian Monarch how and where the Edam had been left, and he held consultations with the officers of a revenue cutter, which the agents of the Edam procured to be dispatched from New London in search of her, and he also prepared charts to aid the cutter in her search, which •search proved to be vain.

The Edam, when lost sight of by the Persian Monarch on Monday morning, was some 65 miles south-west of Nantucket shoals, powerless to hold any course, and drifting to the north-east. The weather was cold, and some of her crew became frost-bitten. Her decks were covered with ice. The sea continued high, she rolled heavily, and some of her sails were blown away. By noon on Monday she was among the breakers on Nantucket shoals. The small boats were made ready and life-preservers distributed among the passengers. She passed near dangerous breakers in 12 fathoms of water, and •once actually touched, after which the leak increased, At 2 o’clock she passed between the shoals and the Davis light-ship, nearly 70 miles from where she had been left by the Persian Monarch. She drifted until morning to the south[137]*137ward without control of her movements, steering in one direction while she drifted in another, her sails only steadying her. On Tuesday the gale and sea moderated, but the drifting of the steamer to southward continued. On Wednesday the sea was smooth, the wind light, from the south-east, and the Edam on the inner edge of the Gulf stream, 180 to 200 miles E. by S. -J- S. from Bandy Hook, 60 miles S. from Hantuekct shoals, some 80 miles S. E. from where the Persian Monarch had left her, and S. of the usual track of steamers bound in or out of Hew York, when at about 8 a. m. she was discovered by tlio steam-ship Hapier, an iron steam-ship of 1,927 tons, bound from Hew York to London, which had happened to take a more southerly course than is usually taken by out-going steamers. When the Edam was discovered by the Hapier she had flying from her mainmast the signal “ Want immediate assistance,” and from her foremast the signal “Will you take me in tow?” The Hapier ran down to her, and, in answ’er to her signals, replied that she would tow her to Halifax. The master of the Edam then went oil board the Hajlier, and, with great earnestness, entreated the master of the Hapier to tow him to Hew York, representing the perils lie had encountered on the shoals, the disabled condition of his vessel, and the danger of Ms being wrecked on the shoals, in ease of storm, while being towed towards Halifax. After much hesitation, arising from his unwillingness to return to the coast, the master of the Hapier consented to endeavor to get the Edam to Hew York, upon the agreement that the compensation for the service should be determined in London by arbitration.

At 11 A. m. on Wednesday the Hapier commenced to tow the Edam by a hawser fastened around her mainmast. Her speed, with the Edam in tow, was six knots an hour, having before been eight and one-half knots. About-6 o’clock on Wednesday the weather changed, a strong wind came up from the south, increasing to a gale, with sieet and rain. The sea set strong from the S. W., and at 10 o’clock was very boisterous, washing over the Hapier. All hands on board the Hapier, in all departments, stood watch through the night. The crew stood by the hawser, -watching it and parcelling it. The strain was so severe that the heaving hawser was brought from the forepeak to be used in ease of need. There was six hours’ hard work, amid exposure from the sleet and rain and cold, in handling the hawser. The gale became so strong and the sea so high that the Hapier could make but between two and three knots an hour, and abandoned her course to head more to the sea. Thursday morning the gale abated somewhat, but tlio sea continued heavy throughout the day and night with the wind from the S. W. At 6 p. m. thick fog set in and heavy rain, and at half-past 8 r. M. the Hapier, having run her distance to Sandy Hook, headed to wind and put her engines dead slow to keep her position until the fog should lift. During the night the fog lifted and the Highland lights appeared bearing about H. W., distant about 15 miles. The Hapier steamed slowly for the Ilook, the sea running high, with strong ebb-tide, and between 10 and 11 o’clock Friday morning she left the Edam safely at anchor off Hoffman’s island. The Hapier was obliged to procure fresh coals before she could resume her voyage. She ordered them on Friday, but could not get them until Monday. On Tuesday she sailed again for London, just a week from the date of her original departure.

[138]*138The Edam was a new steamer, built at a cost of $226,525. Her cargo was worth $220,000. On her arrival in New York she had on board coals, stores, and provisions worth $4,300. Her freight for the voyage amounted to $6,500, her passenger money to $3,080. She had on boar.d a crew of 52 persons, all told, and 146 passengers, 35 of whom were children.

The value of the Napier was $160,000; her cargo was worth $98,750. Her crew numbered 25, all told. In saving the Edam she incurred expenses amounting to $1,134.56, $422.06 of which was for insurance of the cargo from New York to London after her return to New York with the Edam. She was detained seven days.

The underwriters on the Edam having refused to assent to a determination of the amount of the Napier’s compensation by an arbitration in London, the above-entitled action was commenced in her behalf, and also an action in behalf of the Persian Monarch. In both actions the claim is for salvage.

The claim'of the Persian Monarch will be first considered. r. It seems plain to me that this claim must be wholly disallowed, upon the ground that the services rendered by the Persian Monarch were not successful. The contention in behalf of the Persian Monarch is that her failure to bring the Edam into port is important only in measuring the amount of the reward. I do not so understand the law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 F. 135, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-the-edam-nyed-1882.