Duane v. Goodall

7 F. Cas. 1132, 1863 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMarch 7, 1863
StatusPublished

This text of 7 F. Cas. 1132 (Duane v. Goodall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duane v. Goodall, 7 F. Cas. 1132, 1863 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70 (N.D. Cal. 1863).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

The principal allegations of the libel, and that the facts therein stated constitute a marine tort, for which this court has jurisdiction to award damages, are admitted.

It is objected (1) that the demand is barred by prescription, or that it has become stale. In the admiralty there is no fixed limitation •of time within which suits must be brought. The court will not, it is true, entertain stale demands, but it is left to the discretion of the court to pronounce whether, in view of all circumstances of each particular case, the demand be so stale as to be deemed neglected and abandoned. Pars. Mar. Law, 665; Ben. Adm. §§ 574, 575. It is unnecessary to detail all the circumstances of this case at bar. They are such as, in my judgment, are abundantly sufficient to account for and excuse the long interval which elapsed between the commission of the wrongs complained of and the institution of the suit.

The second exception of the respondent presents a much graver objection. It -sets up, in substance, that the libelant has already sued and obtained judgment against James Watkins, master, and - Watson, mate, of the Golden Age, for the tort now complained of, and that that judgment has been satisfied. It is a familiar principle that, when several persons are jointly concerned in the commission of a wrong, each is separately responsible for the damage -done by the acts of all. He may, therefore, be sued separately, and a full indemnity recovered of him by the injured party. He cannot object that the other joint trespassers are not joined; nor can they, if subsequently sued, plead in abatement, or bar, that a suit is pending, or that judgment has been recovered against him. But if that judgment has been satisfied, and the injured party has received what a jury has awarded to be a full indemnity for the tort, it is obvious that he should not be permitted any further compensation from the other joint trespassers. The rule, therefore, that against joint trespassers there may be several recoveries, but only one satisfaction, is founded on reason and justice. If, then, in the • case at bar. the tort complained of was a joint tort in -which the party now sued and those heretofore sued were jointly concerned, it is obvious that the satisfaction of the judgment against the latter is a bar to any further claim for compensation against the former-The inquiry, therefore, is: Is the cause of action.in both cases a joint tort?

The libel alleges that the libelant was, on the 5th day of June, 1856, forcibly and against his will, etc., carried from and out of the Bay of San Francisco in the steamtug Hercules, whereof the respondent was master; that he was kept a prisoner on board said tug by an armed bana of kidnappers, who were- then and there aiding, assisting, combining and confederating with the respondent in a nefarious design to abduct and carry away libelant out of the state; that, in pursuance of such nefarious design .and intention, the respondent caused the said steamtug to be kept and lying in waiting off the Heads of this port until an opportunity to transfer the libelant to another vessel occurred; and that the respondent, having combined and agreed with said kidnappers to abduct and carry out of the state the li-belant, kept the steamtug in waiting off the Heads until the steamer Golden Age, commanded by one Watkins, approached, and, in pursuance of an understanding and agreement' had between the respondent and persons on board the tug and the master of said Golden Age, the said steamer was stopped, at about one hundred yards’ distance from the steamtug, for the express purpose of aiding and assisting said Goodall in his said nefarious and unlawful attempt and design of abducting and carrying away the libelant. It is further alleged that said Goodall, well knowing the- libelant was on board the steamtug as a prisoner, handcuffed and guarded, and intending maliciouslyto abduct and carry him away as aforesaid, and combining and confederating as aforesaid with said kidnappers and the said master of the Golden Age, did navigate and employ the steamtug as a means and instrument to accomplish and carry out said nefarious and unlawful abduction, and did, by said means, abduct and carry away the libelant, against his will, to said place on the high seas, where he was transferred from said steamtug to said steamer Golden Age, in pursuance of said agreement and understanding between said Goodall and the said kidnappers and said master of the Golden Age. The libel further sets forth that libelant was carried away in the Golden Age to Acapulco, where he escaped from the duress and imprisonment to which he was subjected on said steamer, and which was but a continuation of the said unlawful combination and con-i federation of the respondent and the before-mentioned persons to abduct and carry away libelant from the state. The fruitless attempts of libelant to return to this port, his voyage to Panama and destitute condition at that port, his voyage to New York and arrival there in enfeebled health, and with blasted reputation, by reason of the wrongs [1134]*1134inflicted on him, are set forth, and damages claimed in the sum of $25,000. The allegations in the libel against the master and mate of the steamer Golden Age are nearly identical with the foregoing.

That libel sets forth the arrest and imprisonment of the libelant by the vigilance committee; the sentence of banishment by that body; the carrying him on board the steam-tug in irons; his imprisonment there; the conveying him to the Heads, where he was transferred to the steamer, which hove to, to receive him; his abduction from the port and transportation to Acapulco; his escape at the latter port; his attempts to return to San Francisco; his being obliged to go to Panama, and thence to New York; his destitution and sufferings on board the steamer, on the Isthmus, and at New York, with the illness and loss of reputation and distress caused by the wrongs inflicted on him. It distinctly charges that Watkins, the commander, and Watson, the mate, of the Golden Age, combined “and confederated with said kidnappers, or persons on board the Hercules, to join and aid them” in completing and carrying out the nefarious, forcible, wicked, and malicious intention and design of abducting and kidnapping the libelant, etc.; that, in pursuance of said combination and confederation, the said Watkins caused his steamer to approach the Hercules, and “stopped and kept her in waiting for the accomplishment of the aforesaid malicious and wicked design of abducting, kidnapping, and forcibly carrying away said libelant.”

It is not easy to conceive more direct, explicit and emphatic charges of combination and conspiracy among several persons to commit a joint tort and carry out a common design than are contained in the allegations of the libelant in these cases. Not only is the common design expressly and repeatedly stated, but it is clearly to be inferred from the acts of each in furtherance of the common purpose; and that purpose is expressly declared to be the execution of the so-called “sentence” of the vigilance committee, to the carrying out of which the respondent, in each case, is charged to have lent his own services and the use of his vessel. The facts as they appear in evidence, or as admitted, abundantly sustain these allegations.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 1132, 1863 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duane-v-goodall-cand-1863.