Lamar v. The Penelope

14 F. Cas. 977, 1858 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 25, 1858
StatusPublished

This text of 14 F. Cas. 977 (Lamar v. The Penelope) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamar v. The Penelope, 14 F. Cas. 977, 1858 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61 (southcarolinaed 1858).

Opinion

MAGRATH, District Judge.

This is a claim for salvage. The service was rendered to a vessel, whose captain was dead, and crew disabled from the prevalence of yellow fever, at a time when she was in charge of an ordinary seaman, who had no experience in navigation, and had been from necessity forced to occupy this position. At Matanzas the Penelope had taken in a cargo of molasses. There the captain and several of the crew had died. The command devolved upon the first mate. He was taken sick with the fever soon after he sailed, and died a short time before his vessel was boarded by the supercargo of the Rawlins, who came on board in consequence of the signal of distress hoisted by the Penelope. There can be no doubt of the disabled and distressed condition of the Penelope. She had several feet of water in the hold; all of her officers disabled or dying; and her crew, from sickness and exhaustion, unable to do their duty. With no one acquainted with navigation, unable to take an observation, mistaking the position in which she was lying by more than two hundred miles, the vessel, cargo, and crew were obviously in a precarious and helpless condition. That service which was rendered in such a case, and resulted in saving the vessel and cargo, is in all respects a salvage service. The condition of the vessel at the time she received assistance, as it regards herself and other matters, is necessary for our examination, because it is at the commencement of our enquiry as to the value of [978]*978the service rendered. George Skinner, one of the crew of the Penelope, says that there was a great deal of water and molasses in the hold when she left Matanzas. She had not been pumped dry when she left. That for two or three days, from the sickness and exhaustion of the crew, they had not been able to pump the vessel. That by the mistakes of David Davis the vessel was about two hundred and fifty miles out of her way, and that he had been steering wrong from the time the master had been sick. After the death of the captain, no one on board could navigate the vessel, and the witness would not have trusted his life on board with those remaining. David Davis says, at the time when the Penelope was boarded she was very short handed; three were sick with fever; one died the next day; the rest of the crew very weak, having just recovered from sickness. It would have been impossible to navigate the Penelope without assistance from the Rawlins. If the crew, says the witness, had been well, there would have been no danger in going to Queenstown with Captain Seai-s of the Rawlins on board. In her then disabled condition she could go nowhere; the only thing to be accomplished was to save the lives on board, and the cargo and vessel. The witness says he had been sick the first day after he left Matanzas, and greatly exhausted from want of rest. He could not sleep because he was almost the only one on board not sick, or suffering from the effects of sickness. David Ward, also of the crew of the Penelope, says he united with David Davis in asking aid from the Rawlins. Jtie thought the vessel in great danger. She was short of sails; had 21 or 22 inches of water in the hold. He heard Captain Williams say that their only chance of safety consisted in meeting some vessel. The Penelope was very short handed; had but five men left for duty. Charles McDonald, another of the crew of the Penelope, says that when boarded from the Rawlins, only four men were able to work. The Penelope, he says, was in a very dangerous condition, with the crew so disabled that with Captain Sears in charge of the Penelope she could not have been carried to Queenstown. For some days previous to the death of Captain Williams, the vessel, he says, was floating about, at the mercy of the wind and waves. These witnesses, to whose evidence I have referred, belonged to the Penelope, and composed part of her crew. They have, as has been seen, not only testified as to the condition of the vessel, but they describe that condition particularly. It is more to their description than to their conclusion that our attention should be directed.

Although the Penelope was rescued from no particular peril, actually impending, and which, but for the presence and aid afforded her, would reasonably be considered as involving her loss; yet it is by no means that merely speculative danger, which is not regarded as sufficient to entitle aid, when afforded, to be considered salvage. The condition of the Penelope was one of absolute unseaworthiness. The pestilence which hung over her in her voyage had so diminished the number and enfeebled the strength of her crew, and this had so affected the vessel in consequence of the unavoidable neglect which it had produced, that she was unseaworthy, and needed aid to ensure her safety. Nor is it sufficient that in her condition she might have escaped shipwreck and reached a port in safety, that the service rendered her is to be deemed not entitled to compensation. If she had not received succor and yet had reached a port in safety, it could be considered in no other light than a fortunate escape. A salvage service is not disregarded because without it the vessel may have escaped; but it is rewarded because by it a vessel exposed to danger was brought safely into port. But the nature and extent of the danger must be understood to enable me to determine the compensation. It is the first of the circumstances which are to be considered in estimating the value of the salvage service. She had water in her hold. She could be kept free with a competent crew, but she had it not. With a high wind, she would make water freely. How far this is to be considered a danger, or a circumstance which might grow into a danger, has not been made plain by the evidence. Even when she was in the possession of the salvors, she was navigated with the water in her hold; nor was any attempt made with the pumps to free her from it. This, then, I think, although it might have become a source of danger, had not yet become so, when the salvors took possession of her. She had lost a part of her sails, and to a certain extent this was a disadvantage; but she was worked into port with the sails she had, and may have with them performed a much longer voyage. The want also of her sails was in itself unseaworthiness, and if not in itself a cause of positive danger, was negatively so, inasmuch as by it she did not possess the capacity to enable her to escape. The disabled and enfeebled condition of her crew, the absence of any person qualified to command, either by former experience or a knowledge of navigation, was, however, the most serious and important of all the disadvantages to which the Penelope was exposed. Unitedly, they seem to me to have reduced her much below the required capacity of a vessel to contend with the elements, and therefore to have made that service by which she was rescued of much consideration.

Let us now turn to the salving vessel, to ascertain under what circumstances she afforded the required aid; for the compensation to which she is entitled is made up, among other things, of the risk encountered, or to which the vessel was exposed while rendering or in consequence of giving the necessary aid. Her condition immediately [979]*979-subsequent to the time when she succored the Penelope shows that she was very far from being able to contribute to the relief -of others without affecting her own safety.

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Bluebook (online)
14 F. Cas. 977, 1858 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamar-v-the-penelope-southcarolinaed-1858.