Hope v. The Dido

12 F. Cas. 483, 2 Paine 243
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 F. Cas. 483 (Hope v. The Dido) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hope v. The Dido, 12 F. Cas. 483, 2 Paine 243 (S.D.N.Y. 1840).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Circuit Justice.

This case comes up on appeal from the district court of the United States for the Southern district of New York. There are cross appeals. The appeal taken ’on the part of the claimants of the brig and cargo, is upon the ground, as is alleged, that the case as made out by the libellants, is not one entitling them to salvage compensation. And the appeal on the part of the libellants is on the ground that the libel upon the cargo was dismissed with costs. The libellants, who were pilots of the port of New York, filed their libel against the brig Dido and her cargo, claiming salvage or pilotage, or compensation out of the same, for services rendered in towing the brig into the port of New York; having taken her up about twenty-five or thirty miles from the Hook, and then being about ten miles from the shore, having lost her rudder, but had sustained no other damage whatever, and was in all other respects well found. The testimony with respect to the distance- of the Dido from the Hook when she was boarded by the pilot, is somewhat at variance; but the view which I-have taken of the case, does not make it necessary that I should fix with precision the place where the vessel was boarded. The position as above stated is probably correct, and at all events, is sufficiently precise for all the purposes of this opinion.

The first case that presents itself, is whether this is a case for salvage compensation for the services rendered, so as to uphold the attachment of the vessel and cargo, or either of them, to enforce payment of the compensation. As has been already observed, the only injury which the Dido had sustained, or the only peril to which she was exposed, was being to sea without a rudder — being completely manned and equipped in every other respect. And whether towing in a vessel in this situation could properly be considered, a salvage service, would seem to turn upon the question, whether she was thereby rendered innavigable; if she had become innavigable, the service ought to be considered a salvage service. The towing her into port would, in such case, in all probability be saving her from shipwreck, or some impending peril, which threatened either a certain, or strongly probable loss. But if the vessel was navigable, so as to be able to avoid any threatened danger, although navigated with greater difficulty and delay, it ought not to be considered a case for salvage. I assume the principle that the libellants being pilots, forms no insuperable objection against their claiming salvage where a proper case is made out. The appropriate duty of a pilot is to navigate the vessel; and if it was innavigable, his services as pilot could not be required. But wherever pilots are permitted to become salvors, public policy requires that they should be held strictly to the discharge of their duty as pilots, before they are permitted to become salvors, as is said by Mr. Justice Wayne, in the Case of the Ship Alexander1 referred to in the argument. That pilots must, in all cases, before they can become salvors, go to the extreme point of their duty; and the circumstances of the case in which they may claim to be considered as salvors, must obviously be such as require efforts, perils to be encountered, labor or skill out of the line of their duty; and in that case, the judge said the vessel was in imminent peril, and that the.service-rendered saved .her from impending wreck; and this view of the cases in which pilots may. become salvors is fully borne out by the case of Hobart v. Drogan, 10 Pet [35 U. S.] 108 in the supreme court of the United States. It would be difficult to bring the case of the Dido within the rule here laid down, if the service of towing had been rendered within what was admitted clearly within pilot grounds; but that is a point in dispute, and which will be hereafter noticed. The evidence shows most satisfactorily that it was not an uncommon thing for pilots to-tow in vessels for which extra pilotage or compensation was given. The district court seemed to assume that the Dido was innavi-gable. The vessel, says the court, “had lost her rudder, and was without any substitute by which she could be steered so as to make any given, course. Her movements were fortuitous, and she required some external power to aid in bringing her within the port; and that was effected by the agency of the pilot-boat, and could have been done by any other vessel of equal power, directed by any person not a pilot.” Suppose a steamboat had gone out and towed in the-Dido, as the pilot-boat did. It would not have presented a case for salvage, and authorized attaching the vessel and cargo. But in the absence of any specific agreement, the compensation for the services might have-been in the common law courts, or in the admiralty, by proceedings in personam.

I cannot consider this a salvage service-which will subject a vessel and cargo of the value of $150,000 to admiralty proceedings in-rem, exposed to all the inconvenience and expense necessarily attending such proceedings, which are strongly exemplified by this-very case, where the marshal’s fees alone-upon the service amounted to about $1,300. All this, however, must be submitted to, if the law has provided no other redress, or the-libellants have not, by their own act, waived this mode of redress, if it ever existed. The-[485]*485view whiehl have of this case does not re- • quire, me to* decide whether the service ren-' dered was, strictly speaking, a pilotage Service. To decide this point.it might he nec-, essary .to . settle two distinct facts,-, viz.: • whether the libellant, Hope, entered upon the .service as a pilot, and what, properly speaking, is pilot ground, or the limits within . which pilots are bound to cruise. Upon both these questions there is much uncertainty from the evidence. I would, however, observe, that if Hope went on board the Dido, professing to act as a pilot, and so gave Cap-' tain Adams to understand, expecting to receive extra compensation for towing the vessel, he thereby precluded himself from claim-. ing ás for salvage service, although towing might .not, strictly speaking, fall within the duty of .a pilot And this construction would be. strongly- fortified by the uncertainty -as to -the.limits, .properly, speaking, of pilot ground; upon which point the evidence is very unsatisfactory. These limits are not fixed by any rule of law that I am aware of; it must depend upon usage or custom, and that usage does not appear .to be settled and uniform, but varying according to circumstances. When there was little or no competition among pilots, these limits were contracted within a short distance, and frequent; ly much further than the distance at which the Dido was boarded. And, indeed, the pilot in this case swears that he had often been out as far as where he boarded the Dido, cruising for vessels, and in such cases he charged, extra pilotage allowed by law. The weight of evidence, I think, is, that pilot ground has been generally understood as extending three or four miles outside the bar. But I would not be understood as at all settling that question in this case. But the ground upon which I place my opinion is, that the pilot, when he entered upon the service, or at any time during its performance, did not understand, or pretend that he was acting as a salvor, or entitled to a salvage compensation; and that, even admitting that his services might have been in the' nature of salvage service, he, by his agreement and course of conduct in relation to his compensation, has precluded him from now setting himself up as a salvor, and enforcing his claim in a court of admiralty by proceeding in rem.

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12 F. Cas. 483, 2 Paine 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hope-v-the-dido-nysd-1840.