Hand v. The Elvira

11 F. Cas. 413, 1829 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 14, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 F. Cas. 413 (Hand v. The Elvira) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hand v. The Elvira, 11 F. Cas. 413, 1829 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16 (E.D. Pa. 1829).

Opinion

HOncrNSON. District Judge.

This is a claim of salvage by tbe owners and crew of the pilot boat Leo, for services rendered to the schooner Elvira, by which it is alleged she was relieved from great danger and distress, and brought safety into the port of Philadelphia. A correct and careful understanding tff the facts of the case is peculiarly indispensable to a just decision of it, for every claim of this description turns on its own circumstances.. The argument of the-counsel for the libellants has been mainly raised on the statement published in a paper of this city, and-furnished by John Sea-bury, the second mate of the Elvira, which narrates the occurrences of the voyage in the usual animated and exaggerated style of such communications made for the public, and not for the more accurate purposes of a judicial inquiry. I cannot receive this publication as any evidence of the facts stated in it. John Seabury was examined as a witness on behalf of the respondent; what, therefore, he had said or published at another time, was properly admitted to impeach or test his credibility; and so far but no farther was it legal evidence. If a witness at another time has given an account of a transaction different from that given at the trial, he may be impeached by proving what he has said at another time, on the question of his credit; but you cannot substitute tbe other account in the place of that which you have discredited, making it thus the evidence of the cause. In this case, the difference is rather in the force of the expressions used, in the colouring of the description, in swelling exaggerations, than in matters of fact and essential importance. In a seaman’s protest and reports the waves are always mountain high, the winds never less than a hurricane, and the peril of life generally impending. There may be some pride of authorship in these compositions, and the writer mgy aim to exhibit his power and skill in describing dangers.

I will take the facts as they have been given by the witnesses examined here; and there is no material variance between those on the one side and on the other, where they speak of the same transactions. The Elvira sailed from St. Augustine, in Florida, on the 8th day of February last, loaded with live oak for the navy yard, at Norfolk, and bound for that port. She had on board tbe captain, the first mate, the second mate, two hands before the mast, two cabin passengers and seven steerage passengers who had been em[414]*414ployed in cutting the live oak. From the 8th to the 21st February nothing occurred that was remarkable; but on the 21st the schooner was knocked down on her beam ends; about 8 o’clock in the morning they cut away the mainmast; the schooner righted and fell off before .the wind. On the 22d they cut away the stauncheons and hove the deck load overboard, part of which had been previously washed off. On the morning of the 23d, the foremast was carried away. They then rigged two jury masts and determined to put into the first port in the United States. They could manage the schooner with the jury masts pretty well; so that they could steer an eight point course. From the 23d of February to the 13th of March, we have no regular or continued accounts ‘of the occurrences that happened. It seems that the schooner had been blown off, and had been navigated as above stated. It is important to be here noticed, that the effect of the gale was confined to the destruction of her masts and rigging; her hull does not appear to have received any injury. When she was knocked down on the 21st she took in about three feet of water; but after she righted and was got before the wind, she was cleared of this water by the pumps and leaked very little; about fifteen strokes in two hours, and this came through the deck. From the 21st of February to the (1th of March, the first mate says they were much fatigued, but after that they were better and thought themselves safe. On the Cth of March a man was washed overboard, by their shipping a heavy sea, which did not hurt the vessel. On the 13th of March, they fell in with the schooner Milo, bound from Carolina to New York, and put on board of her the two cabin passengers and two of the steerage passengers, who, I think, it was said, wanted to go there. From the Milo they received some bread and beef, being all the assistance they thought they wanted at that time. On the 14th of March they spoke a ship from round Cape Horn, belonging to Nantucket, but required nothing from her. The mate says that between the 23d of February and 13th of March, they saw several vessels, but did not speak them. During the period mentioned, it was blowing a considerable part of the time, and as an excuse for neglecting his log book, the mate says they had enough to do to keep the ship from going to the bottom. This was between' the 23d of February and the 6th of March, after which, lie says, they thought themselves safe. On the 17th of March at night, they made the lights on the Highlands, and, but for an unfortunate change of the wind, a few hours would have brought them to New York. But the wind came around to the westward; and the Elvira, unable to get to New York, bore away for Cape Henry, her original destination. On the morning of the 19th they saw a schooner to the west of them, about six miles. At 11 o’clock the wind died away calm. In the afternoon about 2 o’clock, or. as Palmer the pilot says, about 4 o’clock, they saw a small schooner, in the westward, which they took to be a pilot boat, and proved to be the Leo. She was steering on the wind S. S. E., and the Elvira W. S. W. The pilot boat made one tack and fetched them, ran across her bow, launched a boat and came on board. There is no material difference, I may say, none of any kind, between the narrative of the mate and that of Palmer one of the pilots. Palmer says the weather was suspicious, that the sun was about crossing the line, and they generally look for a breeze. But the fact was that the weather was good, and so continued throughout their service. The situation of the Elvira at the time she fell in with the Leo was, that her masts and rigging were gone, but they had replaced them hy jury masts and sails, under which she had navigated' the ocean for three weeks; had been blown off the coast and returned to it; by the aid of which she would have safely entered the port of New York, but for a critical change of the wind; and with which she was at that moment making her way under a free sail to Cape Henry, her place of destination. Whether she would have reached there we cannot positively say; but we have had no account of the wind or the- weather to render it improbable. I confess that I am not without some doubt, whether, in such circumstances, the captain of the Elvira was justified in coming to Philadelphia at all, and whether it was not his duty to pursue his course to Norfolk. He thought otherwise and may have been right; at any rate he asked and accepted the service of the libellants to bring him to Philadelphia; and he is bound to pay for it.

What was that service in relation to those who offered it, and whose claim to be remunerated for it, is now to be decided? When the Leo saw the Elvira, the former was running with a free wind to her harbour, within the Capes of Delaware for the night. Jeremiah Bennett first discovered the schooner from the mast head. The Leo of her own accord.uncalledbyany signal from the Elvira, not knowing of her distress, and perhaps supposing slio wanted a pilot (for the Leo was a pilot boat, then actually cruising in her vocation) immediately brought towards the Elvira, making signals for her. These signals were answered by the Elvira, who was then between thirty and forty miles outside of the capes.

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. Cas. 413, 1829 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hand-v-the-elvira-paed-1829.