Evans v. The Charles

8 F. Cas. 838
CourtDistrict Court, D. Louisiana
DecidedNovember 15, 1842
DocketCase No. 4,556
StatusPublished

This text of 8 F. Cas. 838 (Evans v. The Charles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. The Charles, 8 F. Cas. 838 (lad 1842).

Opinion

McCALEB, District Judge.

This is a libel for salvage against the ship Charles, found derelict at sea, on the 4th of June last, about eighteen miles from South Point light-house, at the Balize, by the captain of the tow-boat Tiger. At the time she was discovered, she had all her sails set, and was apparently standing in towards the Balize. She had on board a cargo of lumber and staves, but was entirely abandoned. It appears that she left this port about the first of June last, under the command of a Captain Gorham, bound for the port of Bordeaux in France; that she had proceeded on her voyage about forty miles from the Balize, when she was abandoned by the master, crew and passengers under the belief that she was sinking. The ship Louis Quatorze was sailing within a [839]*839short distance of the Charles, at the time the determination to desert the latter was formed, and a signal being given, the master of the Louis Quatorze went to the assistance of the passengers on board the Charles and received them all on his own vessel. The master and crew of the Charles afterwards hailed and got on board a vessel bound to the port of Charleston; and the passengers pursued their voyage to France. With the ill-grounded apprehensions which led to the abandonment of the vessel to the mercy of the winds and waves, without a single human being on board, I have fortunately, so far as Capt. Gorham and his crew are concerned, nothing to do in passing an opinion upon the merits of the case; and I willingly take leave of this part of the evidence with the single remark that there seems to be not the slightest justification for the course of conduct they pursued. For, admitting that the vessel was making water and was thus rendered unseaworthy and insufficient to encounter the dangers of so long a voyage, it is yet fully established by the testimony of several intelligent and respectable witnesses, whose knowledge of nautical affairs cannot be questioned, that it was not only not probable, but not possible for the ship to have gone down with such a cargo as she then had on board. The plain, nay, the only course which honesty and the most ordinary knowledge of nautical affairs would have suggested, was to return immediately to the port of departure, where the vessel could have been refitted and again dispatched upon her voyage. Capt Kroll of the tow-boat Tiger, which went to the relief of the derelict vessel, states, that on hailing her and seeing no one on board, he ordered the crew of the tow-boat to go on board of her and examine her hold and cabin: that they refused to go, but that Mr. Clarke, the pilot finally complied with his request, and found upon examination that the baggage of the passengers and crew, as well as the bedding, had been removed, and that everything had been taken out of her except a small quantity of stores, and the cargo of staves and lumber, which has already been mentioned. The captain of the Tiger proceeds to say, that believing that the crew and passengers had either deserted her from apprehensions that she was sinking (his pilot having reported that she had thirty inches of water in her hold), or had been taken by pirates, he looked in every direction to see if he could find anything which could solve the doubts which hung upon his mind, and finally descried a small boat, which he immediately approached and found on board of it a dog. After cruising about in different directions for two or three hours, he returned to the Charles and took her in tow: that in returning to the Balize he encountered a severe gale, which lasted three-quarters of an hour. This gale, he thinks, would have driven the Charles ashore about 9 or 10 o’clock that night, had she not been relieved. He states that be was engaged forty-eight hours in towing her with two other vessels up to the city: that he hired six hands on board the ship Powhattan to go on board of her and pump her; and that these hands were engaged one-third of the time in working one pump. The reason that he employed the hands on board the Powhattan, was the positive refusal on the part of the crew of the tow-boat Tiger to have anything to do with the Charles. They declined in the first instance, to go on board of her to examine her, and refused to pump her, because they said they were not paid for pumping out other ships or vessels than the one upon which they were employed. According to the testimony of Captain Kroll, it appears that the crew of the tow-boat Tiger did nothing but their ordinary duties on board their own vessel, which is employed in towing vessels from the sea up to this port: that all the assistance he received, in saving the Charles, was derived from the meritorious exertions of his pilot, Mr. Clarke, the six men hired on board the Powhattan, and two other men whose names are not given and not remembered either by himself or Mr. Clarke, who was also examined as a witness on behalf of the intervening libelants, Clark, Grant and others, owners of the tow-boat Tiger. There is not a tittle of evidence to show whether or not these two men are of the number of the crew who appear as the original libelants. The testimony of Clarke, the pilot, coincides almost entirely with that of Captain Kroll, and especially with that part of it which relates to the refusal of the crew of the towboat, to aid in rendering relief to the Charles. They both say that the service they themselves rendered the derelict ship, was performed in the regular discharge of their accustomed duties, in towing vessels from the sea to this port, and they modestly refuse to receive any extra compensation, or to assert any claim for salvage. They also state that the tow-boat was subjected to an inconsiderable delay by the service rendered to the Charles, and that they were not prevented from bringing up other vessels as usual.

From a candid and impartial view of this testimony, I have no difficulty in coming to the conclusion, that the claim of the original libelants for salvage, should be dismissed. They have not only failed to show that they have rendered any service out of the line of their regular duty, as the crew of the towboat Tiger, but it is very clear from the testimony given, which is entirely disinterested, that they refused to render the very service for which they now demand a salvage compensation. The same must be said of the claim of the intervening libelants, .Simon Peterson, the carpenter, Levi Sprinkle, first engineer, Augustus Ducoing, second engineer, and James M. Brown, the mate on board the Tiger; for there is nothing in the evidence to show that they performed a single act out of the line of their ordinary duty. [840]*840They neither said nor did1 anything which indicated a wish or disposition to co-operate with the captain and pilot in their laudable efforts to bring the derelict vessel out of danger. The remark of the proctor at the bar, that the occupation of an engineer is such, that it would have been impossible for him with safety to the tow-boat, to have abandoned his post, is all very true; but it might with the same propriety be made with reference to the pilot or the fireman, who had each their separate and peculiar duties to perform, and we cannot say that because they could not do an act, that therefore they should be rewarded for its performance by another, when it is not shown that there was even a wish expressed, or a disposition exhibited, to render the service desired. In reply to the question, what is a salvor? Lord Stowell, in the case of The Neptune, 1 Hagg. Adm.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-the-charles-lad-1842.