Long v. The Tampico

16 F. 491, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 22, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 16 F. 491 (Long v. The Tampico) 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
Long v. The Tampico, 16 F. 491, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63 (S.D.N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Brow, J.

The libels in the above cases were filed by the owners of the steam-tug doe, and all others in interest, to recover compensation for services alleged to be of a salvage character, in rescuing the Tampico and the Progresso from a fire which broke out at Pratt’s oil docks, on Sunday evening, August 8, 1880.

Salvage compensation has been recently allowed by this court for services rendered to the Cyclone, (ante, 486,) in the same fire. Some of the facts bearing upon the present claim are there stated, and need not be here recapitulated.

The Tamp'ico and the Progresso were two small steamers, about 65 feet in length, which had just been built at Greenpoint, and were designed for the Mexican government, to be used as revenue cutters. At the time the fire broke out on board the Nictau they lay moored along-side of each other, on the side of the slip opposite the Nictau, from 100 to 125 feet distant from her, on the southerly side of the Manhattan railway pier, and from 100 to 150 feet inside of the outer end of that pier. The engineer and the fireman, with the aid of some other attendants, hauled the Tampico towards the outer end of the pier, and there hailed the steam-tug Joe, which had come up to render assistance. The tug made fast to the Tampico and hauled her a short distance away from danger of the fire, and immediately returned and towed the Progresso, which had also been moved out towards the end of the slip, to the same place, and afterwards towed them both to a place of safety. As the Progresso was towed out from the slip, the Cyclone, already on fire, swung across the slip, and [493]*493her bows, earned, upward by the flood-tide, struck the piles near the end of the pier where the Tampico and Progresso had been, and there became entangled so as to obstruct further egress from the slip until she was towed away. A third cutter, the Campeachy, lying further inside the slip, having her retreat thus cut off, was carried as far as possible towards the bulk-head, where she escaped injury.

At the time when the Joe was called and rendered her assistance, there were evident grounds of alarm for the safety of the cutters. The sails of the Progresso had caught fire, but the flames had' been put out by the use of pails of water. The extent of the fire could not be foreseen; the situation was one of strong apprehension of immediate danger; and that is a sufficient basis for an award of salvage compensation. McConnochie v. Kerr, 9 Fed. Rep. 50, 53, and cases there cited. There is some question whether in the strong flood-tide the few hands then on board these vessels would have been able to haul either of them out beyond the end of the pier, on account of the strong pressure against the end of the pier as soon as the vessels were brought out so as to catch the strong upward current. But I think the evidence shows that even if the men on board could have done this, before they would have had time to accomplish it unaided, the Cyclone, which had been cut loose to escape from the Nictau, in drifting to the pier where she became entangled, would have crashed into one or both of the cutters, and inflicted more or less severe damage, and possibly have sunk them.

The assistance rendered by the Joe was, therefore, most timely. It was the first help that arrived at the spot. The service was, however, short, — hardly more than half an hour, altogether, — was not difficult to perform, and was towage only; nor was it attended with danger to life or limb.

Objection is made, however, that these cutters were at this time the property of the Mexican government, and in its possession, and were, therefore, exempt from seizure under process of this court for the enforcement of the salvage claim. The answers deny that said vessels were within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of the court, and aver that “said steamers were foreign public vessels; owned and commissioned by the republic of Mexico, a sovereign state at peace with the United States, and exempt from the jurisdiction of the courts of this country.” The question thus presented has been carefully argued upon both sides.

The elaborate and exhaustive examination given to the subject of the exemption of the property of a sovereign power in the cases of [494]*494The Exchange, 7 Cranch, 117; Briggs v. Light-boats, 11 Allen, (Mass.) 157; and The Parlement Belge, (1880,) on appeal, (5 Prob. Div. 197,) renders superfluous any further examination of the general principles involved. These cases fully sustain the general proposition that the property of a government, while in its possession and employed in or devoted to the public use, is exempt from judicial process, on the ground that the exercise of such jurisdiction is inconsistent with the independence of the sovereign authority and the necessities of the public service. In the late case of The Fidelity, 16 Blatchf. 569, the steam-tug Fidelity, being the property of the municipality of this city, and devoted in its daily operations to the public uses, was upon this ground held exempt from seizure on a claim of damage,- and the libel in rem was dismissed. Waite, C. J., says:

“A public vessel is part of tlie sovereignty to winch she belongs, and her liability is merged in that of the sovereign. Under such circumstances redress must be sought from the sovereign, and not from the instruments he uses in the exercise of his legitimate' functions.”

He adds:

“ Property does not necessarily become a part of the sovereignty because it is owned by the sovereign. To make it so, it must be devoted to the public use, and must be employed in carrying on the operations of the government.”

In the case of Briggs v. Light-boats, Gray, J., says:

“After they had once come into the possession of the United States for public uses, whether remaining at the builder’s wharf or at the station of their final anchorage, or on their way from the one to thé other, they were subject to the exclusive control of the executive government of the United States, and could not be interfered with by state process. The immunity from such interference arises, not because they are instruments of war, but because they are instruments of sovereignty, and does not depend on the extent or manner of their actual use at any particular moment, but on the purpose to which they are devoted.”

In the last case the light-boats had been constructed for the uses of the United States government, and attachment proceedings were taken against the vessels under a lien law of Massachusetts in favor of workmen; but prior to the commencement of the suit the vessels had been delivered over by the contractors to the United States authorities, who had already fully paid for them and had partly manned and equipped them for their destined public uses. Gray, J., says:

“If they [the petitioners) had filed their petitions and attached the vessels before these came into the possession of the United States, they might well have contended that the courts of the commonwealth had acquired a jurisdie[495]*495tion of the cases which could not be divested until the object of the suits was accomplished.”

In the case of The Davis, 10 Wall.

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Bluebook (online)
16 F. 491, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-the-tampico-nysd-1883.