Hume v. Frenz

150 F. 502, 80 C.C.A. 320, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4110
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 4, 1907
DocketNo. 1,318
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 150 F. 502 (Hume v. Frenz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hume v. Frenz, 150 F. 502, 80 C.C.A. 320, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4110 (9th Cir. 1907).

Opinion

ROSS, Circuit Judge.

This was a libel, brought by one Herman Frenz, as master of the American schooner Del Norte, against the appellant, Hume, as owner of the schooner, and against the appellee insurance companies, insurers of the vessel, to recover his wages for a period of something over five months succeeding the stranding of the vessel on the 11th day of June, 1904. The libelant alleged in his libel that during the period mentioned the defendants thereto were the owners and operators of the schooner, and that he performed services as master thereof at their request. Each of the three defendant insurance companies answered separately, denying that it was the owner or operator of the vessel, and denying that the libelant at any time performed services for it, or at its request. And the other defendant, Hume, made like denials of the averments of the libel.

The case shows that Hume, as owner of the schooner, had procured to be issued by the insurance companies mentioned policies of insurance covering the vessel, and had employed the libelant Frenz as her master to perform certain voyages between the port of San Francisco and Siuslaw. on the coast of Oregon. On her second trip to Siuslaw river, and while laden with cargo for San Francisco, the schooner was, on the 11th day of June, 1901, stranded on a sand spit at the mouth of that river. The insurance companies, being notified of that fact, sent an agent to the vessel for the purpose of rescuing and repairing her, which agent, on his arrival, discharged the crew, and, within a few days thereafter, discharged the mate, retaining the master of the schooner only. The vessel was taken from the sand spit and partly repaired, then reladeti with cargo, and brought to San Francisco by her master. Both Hume and the underwriters deny that the master did so by virtue of any authority from them, and both refused upon the arrival of the schooner at San Francisco to receive the freight money or in any wise to become responsible for the charges and expenses. The master thereupon received the freight money from the consignee, and expended it in paying the crew and other expenses incident to that voyage. The schooner not having been fully repaired at Siuslaw river, the insurance companies ordered her into the dry dock at San Francisco, and made further repairs of damage incurred in the stranding, for which expenses they permitted the vessel to be libeled and sold. The period for which the libelant’s wa.ges are demanded commences at the 'time the insurance companies sent their representative to the vessel, and ends at the time of the further repairs made at San Francisco.

In the course of the trial in the court below, these proceedings occurred :

“The Court: Is there any dispute about the fact that somebody owes this libelant for all tliat he claims? That is not disputed?
"Air. Frank (for the defendant Hume, appellant here): Not so far as we are concerned.
“Mr. Hengstler (for the insurance companies, appellees here): Not so far as we are concerned.
[504]*504“The Court: Who owes it depends on the question who owns the vessel, is that it?
“Mr. Hengstler: Yes.”

The real controversy between the parties in the court below was, as is indicated .by the above extract from the record, whether Hume or the insurance companies should pay the libelant the amount of wages to which he was admittedly entitled; the contention of Hume, the appellant here, being that the insurance companies took possession of the vessel when stranded, to rescue and repair her, and, having failed to return her to the owner free of liens incurred in such repairs, are to be deemed to have accepted the abandonment of the vessel which it is claimed by the appellant he made, and are therefore to be treated as the owners of the schooner from the time they took possession of her.

On the other hand, it is contended on the part of the insurance companies, the appellees here, that Hume never did abandon the vessel, and never had any right to do so, and that they did not employ the libelant as master, or otherwise, and had nothing to do with the voyage from Siuslaw river to San Francisco, or with the earnings of the vessel on that voyage.

The court below dismissed the libel as to the insurance companies, and gave the libelant judgment against Hume, who brought the present appeal, the libelant not having appealed; upon which ground the ap-pellees insurance companies have moved for a dismissal of the appeal, contending that Hume has no appealable interest against them. This suggestion proceeds upon the theory that the record presents no controversy between the appellant and the appellees. But the fact is, as shown by the quotation we have made from the record, that the only controversy in the court below was between Hume and the insurance companies as to which was liable for the wages that were admittedly dúe the libelant. The decision of that question by the court below was against Flume and in favor of the insurance companies, which controversy is presented anew in this court by the appeal, which the defeated party in the court below had the clear right to take. The motion to dismiss the appeal is denied.

A. H. Herriman was the man sent by the insurance companies to the stranded vessel. On the trial in the court below, the proctor for the appellees, in answer to a question by the court, stated that “he was the agent for the insurance companies, but went up there for all concerned.” The consent of Hume to the sending by the insurance companies of Herriman is evidenced by this letter, introduced on the trial in the court below by the appellees:

“San Francisco, Cal., June 15, 1904.
“Mr. C. J. Stovel, Representing the Underwriters on the Hull of the Schooner Del Norte, 122 Sansome St., City — Dear Sir: Confirming our conversation with your Mr. Miall this morning, we hereby consent to have Capt. A. H. Her-riman, a'cting as representative of all interests concerned, proceed to Siuslaw river for the purpose of reporting on the schooner Del Norte (ashore on the south spit) and of conducting salvage operations if deemed advisable.
“Yours truly, R. D. Hume & Company.”

The testimony shows that this letter was written by Herbert Hume, a partner of R. D. Hume; the latter being at the time in the state of [505]*505Oregon. In respect to both the statement of the proctor for the ap-pellees as well as the letter above quoted, it should be said that an act done for the benefit of the property, to whomsoever it may belong, ought not to be construed against the party who thus seeks the common interest. 2 Phil. Ins. § 1692.

The undisputed evidence shows that Herriman reached the stranded vessel on the 18th of June, 1904, discharged the crew, retained the master, and the mate also for a few days, when the latter, too, was discharged by Herriman, who proceeded to procure the vessel to be hauled off the spit and to be partially repaired. The testimony of the master is to the effect that when Herriman retained him and the mate he told him that their wages would be paid by the insurance companies. In his deposition Herriman denies that he told the master anything of the sort. The appellant, Hume, testifies in effect that, in a conversation he had on the 21st of June, 1904, with the representative of the insurance companies, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
150 F. 502, 80 C.C.A. 320, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hume-v-frenz-ca9-1907.