Inter-Island Steam Navigation Co. v. The British Ship Celtic Chief

4 D. Haw. 299
CourtDistrict Court, D. Hawaii
DecidedJune 17, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 4 D. Haw. 299 (Inter-Island Steam Navigation Co. v. The British Ship Celtic Chief) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inter-Island Steam Navigation Co. v. The British Ship Celtic Chief, 4 D. Haw. 299 (D. Haw. 1913).

Opinion

Clemons, J.

Three libels in rem — of the Inter-Island Steam Navigation Company, Limited, claiming $35,000 as compensation for salvage services, the Miller Salvage Company, Limited, claiming $20,000 for similar services, and the Matson Navigation Company, claiming $15,000 for similar services, — against the British ship Celtic Chief, her cargo and freight, are here consolidated for the purpose of trial. During the course of the hearing, the Inter-Island [301]*301company modified its claim to $25,000 and the Matson company its claim to $10,000.

Each company libelant concedes that in addition to its own efforts in the alleged salvage operations, which effected the removal of the ship from a condition of stranding on a reef, some assistance was rendered by the other libelant companies and also “some very slight assistance” by a German cruiser the Arcona, in whose behalf no claim for compensation is made.

In behalf of the ship, the claimant, her master, Captain John Henry, contends that the Miller company, though having lightered 239 tons of cargo and rendered some service with its anchor and tackle in pulling the ship away from the reef when finally afloat, or in starting her toward deep water as she neared the floating, has forfeited any reward by reason of the wilful misconduct of its superintendent, Captain F. C. Miller, in deliberately concealing from the other pulling agents, for at least two hours before the ship left the reef, his own knowledge that she was about to float free, in order that he and his company might have the more credit for her rescue. This point was not made in the claimant’s answer, but is urged in his counsel’s brief from certain evidence in the case. Other misconduct of the Miller superintendent, of which complaint is made, is his attitude, appearing from the evidence, with regard to the possible bumping of the Arcona by the Celtic Chief as she came off the reef, — he desiring such collision as'proof that the German cruiser was not pulling. And also the commencement of the lightering operations without laying anchors to prevent further drifting aground, and the delay in bringing to the ship’s assistance an available, large anchor of the Miller company until the morning of Wednesday, two days later than agreed, are assigned as negligence.

The claimant contends that the Matson company is entitled to no salvage, by reason of the want of success of the efforts of its tug the Intrepid, and of the misconduct [302]*302of her master, Captain McAllister, in refusing to obey the request of the Celtic Chiefs master to yield the Intrepid’s position to the Arcona, a more powerful vessel.

As to the Inter-Island company, the claimant contends, that its services were of the lowest order of merit, mere towing and lightering under conditions of no danger to either the salvors or the salved ship, and requiring no high degree of skill, and in which the salvors were actually negligent in beginning to lighter without having laid out anchors to prevent further drifting aground. However, there is conceded to the Inter-Island company an award of $4,379.77, being interest at 40 per cent; per annum on the value of the property in use for the number of days each item was used, added to that company’s own estimate of its expenses, $3,561.77, i. e., only $818 net for its services.

The claimant contends that, while the Inter-Island vessels and the Miller tackle did some pulling at the time the ship came off, one of the chief elements in her floating was the great strain on the lines of the powerful cruiser Arcona.

The value of the Celtic Chief, her cargo and freight money, is also made an.issue. And with regard to costs, it is contended by the claimant that the three libelants should each bear one-third, in view of their exorbitant claims.

The facts, as found to be established by the evidence and by the admissions of the pleadings, are hereinbelow set forth.

At about-2:20 o’clock in the morning of December 6, 1909, the Celtic Chief, bound from' Hamburg, Germany, to Honolulu, with a cargo mainly of fertilizer and a small ■quantity of general merchandise,'ran aground on a shoal reef about one-half mile to the westward of the channel entrance to the Honolulu harbor. When off port early on the previous evening her master, Captain Henry, who was without experiential knowledge of Hawaiian waters, hád [303]*303been warned by Captain J. R. Macaulay, the harbor pilot, of being too close to the reef, but this advice was no't heeded, whereupon the pilot immediately boarded the ship and offered further advice, which, also, was not heeded until too late. And at 9 o’clock that night the ship ran lightly aground on this reef, where she remained in a calm until 2 o’clock the next morning, when an off-shore breeze arising, she put on sail and endeavored to make the open sea, but had hardly gained headway before the breeze died down and left her in nearly the same position as Defore.

The reef in this locality runs east and west in ledges of coral rock, the outer ledge rising abruptly from deep water and extending back in a northerly direction on a plane of very slight grade for about a thousand feet to another ledge from two to four feet higher. The surface of the outer ledge presents patches of sand interspersed with hummocks of outcropping coral, soma of them of boulder size. Though the seabottom here shows superficially more sand than coral, the dominant character of the reef is coral rock, somewhat sharp and of some degree of hardness but at its surface not hard enough to withstand grinding under the moving weight of a vessel such as the Celtic Chief.

The air continued calm until about daybreak of Monday. Thereafter a light southeasterly breeze prevailed instead of the northeast trades which blow most of the year, but the indications, indeed immediate probabilities, were of a “kona” or period of southerly winds likely to blow strong and steady for several days, not uncommonly developing into a protracted gale. See The Chiusa Maru, 3 U. S. Dist. Ct. Haw. 366-367. A considerable but by no means extraordinary swell was striking the ship on her starboard quarter, and a current of from one to three knots per hour was running more directly against her starboard, — in other words, the current ran more from east to west and the swell more from south to north, the former more parallel with the reef, the latter more at a right angle with the reef. [304]*304The southerly swell continued throughout the stranding, varying in height to an average maximum of about eight feet. One of the photographs in evidence forcibly bears out the testimony on this point. The swell broke on the reef somewhat further in than the ship, as is also shown by two of these photographs; and of course, the sudden change of elevation of the plane of seabottom on going from deep water to the reef would tend to roughen the water in the vicinity.

For some time after both the first stranding and the second stranding, signal lights of distress were burned, but without response, and it was not until after daylight that help came when at about 6:30 o’clock the Young Brothers’ launch Huki-Huki appeared. She exerted a pull on the stern of the Celtic Chief with a new 4-inch Manila hawser (Manila lines are herein measured by circumference, steel lines by diameter), but withdrew after about an hour. No claim is made in her behalf.

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Related

The Cetewayo
9 F. 717 (E.D. New York, 1881)
The Celtic Chief
230 F. 753 (Ninth Circuit, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
4 D. Haw. 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inter-island-steam-navigation-co-v-the-british-ship-celtic-chief-hid-1913.