Maltby v. Steam Derrick Boat

16 F. Cas. 564, 3 Hughes 477, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 174
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedMarch 29, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 F. Cas. 564 (Maltby v. Steam Derrick Boat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maltby v. Steam Derrick Boat, 16 F. Cas. 564, 3 Hughes 477, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 174 (E.D. Va. 1879).

Opinion

HUGHES, District Judge.

This is a libel in rem for salvage in raising a sunken steam derrick-boat from the channel of the Black-water river, near Franklin, Virginia. The libellants sent around from Norfolk to the wreck for the purpose, by way of Currituck and Albemarle sound, a wrecking schooner, furnished with chains, pumps, two divers, and a crew of, two or three other men. The work of raising consumed about four days; but the schooner remained somewhat longer by the side of the derrick-boat until the hole in her bottom was made entirely safe and stanch. The schooner was gone from Norfolk in making the trip to and fro, and in executing the job, about fifteen days. The derrick-boat had been in the employment of the United States, on a hire of $250 a month, in removing obstructions to navigation from the channel, when it sprung aleak and sunk in ten feet water. It was owned by the Albemarle & Chesapeake Canal Company, of which Marshall Parks is president. The salving was undertaken by the libellant at the request both of Mr. Parks and of the United States officer in charge of the derrick-boat. The boat had no machinery for propulsion, or sails. It was a boat of two decks, with a mast for hoisting purposes, and a steam-engine and machinery. The United States continued to use the derrick-boat after it was raised from the channel by the libellants, and returned it in good condition to the Albe-marle A Chesapeake Canal Company, after having had it in possession, in all, about four months. The vessel was libelled in this cause after its restoration to the possession of the company. The companj' intervenes in this suit by answer, and objects to the amount of salvage claimed, and also to the jurisdiction of the admiralty court over the ease, on the ground that the derrick-boat was not designed for navigation or commerce.

I shall consider in this opinion only the latter objection. It is contended in argument that a derrick-boat is not the subject of this jurisdiction, because it is not used in commerce and navigation. This might be a valid objection if the libel were for contract of affreightment, or for tort by collision, or such cause of action; but it is not a valid objection to a libel for salvage. It has long been held that property, whether it has been an actual instrument or subject of commerce or not, may be the subject of salvage.

In the case of The Emulous [Case No. 4,-480], Judge Story held, in 1832, that salvage service extended to all property “saved on the sea or wrecked on the coast of the sea.” In the case of The Emblem [Id. 4,434], Judge Ware, one of the most learned and soundest admiralty lawyers, awarded salvage from saving the trunks of a passenger containing silver coin. The coin was property forming no part of the cargo of the vessel. In the case of Hennessey v. The Versailles [Id. 6,365], Mr. Justice Curtis said: “The relief of property from an impending peril of the sea, by the voluntary exertions of those who are under no legal obligations, etc., constituted a technical case of salvage.” In the two cases of A Raft of Spars [Cases Nos. 11.528, 11,529], Judge Betts decided in the latter case [565]*565that such property was a proper subject for a libel for salvage, and in the former case refused to order the salvage suit to be set aside or to be stayed because there was a replevin suit pending in a court of common law for the salvaged property. In Taber v. Jenney [Case No. 13,720], a libel in admiralty was sustained by Judge Sprague to recover the value of the carcass of a whale which had been found floating in whaling waters by the defendants, and taken and converted to their own use. In the case of The Union Express [Id. 11,363], Judge Longyear held that a barge found adrift in Lake St. Clair was subject of salvage. In the case of Fifty Thousand Feet of Timber [Id. 4,783], Judge Lowell held, notwithstanding two or three adverse decisions, hereafter mentioned, which he cited and reviewed, that a raft of timber was a proper subject of a libel for salvage, and defined the law to be that “a salvage service is performed when goods are saved from the peril of the sea, or on other navigable waters; or cast upon the shores thereof.” The same judge held the same view in a valuable and learned judgment in the case of The Louisa Jane [Id. 8,532], where he held that a specific “contract for saving property on the sea or in a harbor, did not oust the admiralty court’s jurisdiction of a proceeding in rem or in personam, brought, by the contractor himself.” There is no judge whose decisions carry greater authority with the profession than those of Judge Lowell. In the case of Cheesman v. Two Ferry-boats [Id. 2,633], Judge Leavitt held that two new and never-used ferry-boats, which had been brought down to Cincinnati for the purpose of being put upon one of the ferries there, and moored at high-water mark above the city, on the Ohio side, which had broken loose during a great flood and been saved, not by landsmen on shore, but by a steamboat which encountered perils of the flood by doing so, many miles below on the Ohio river, were the proper subjects of a libel for salvage. There is also the case of The Senator [Id. 12.6G4], which was that of a scow, loaded with lumber, water-logged and abandoned on Lake Erie, and saved, in which Judge Long-year held that a libel for salvage was proper. I know of but two American admiralty cases which are decidedly adverse to the rulings which have been thus cited. One of them is the case of The Hendrik Hudson [Id. 6,355]. — an old steamboat fitted up as a floating hotel, — which is directly against them; and the other is the case of Tome v. Cribs of Lumber [Id. 14,083]. This latter case, however, is not directly adverse. The rafts of lumber were saved on the shore of the Chesapeake bay, below the mouth of the Susquehanna river, where they had been moored, and had broken loose in a high freshet. They were saved by farmers and landsmen, who had incurred no risk and exercised no peculiar skill in saving them; but who had merely taken possession of them when they floated near the shore, and fastened them to trees on- the shore. The service was wholly destitute of commercial or maritime attributes. These are the only American cases of which I know where the character of the property saved was made the objection to the admiralty jurisdiction in cases of salvage, and where the decision was adverse and based upon the non-commercial character of the property saved. The weight of the American authorities is, therefore, heavily against these two decisions, and I am constrained to disregard them, and to hold that any valuable property may be the subject of a libel for salvage in admiralty, provided that it shall have been saved under conditions which of themselves give the admiralty jurisdiction.

In the case at bar the saving was done by persons engaged in wrecking service, and furnished with and using a wrecking schooner and other wrecking appliances; and the principal and pivotal question is, was the saving done within the territorial theatre of the admiralty jurisdiction? The property saved was such as could be the subject of a libel for salvage; was the place where it was saved within that jurisdiction? The derrick-boat was sunk in the channel of a navigable river — navigable from the sea. The government of the United States was using the boat at the time in clearing away obstructions to the navigation.

It was formerly held that the admiralty jurisdiction of the courts of the United States, like that of the English courts, extended only to tide-waters. But, since the decision of the supreme court of the United States in The Genesee Chief, 12 How. [53 U.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sunglory Maritime, Ltd. v. PHI, Inc.
212 F. Supp. 3d 618 (E.D. Louisiana, 2016)
A. F. Bartlett & Co. v. Steam Dredge No. 14
64 N.W. 951 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1895)
Aitcheson v. The Endless Chain Dredge
40 F. 253 (E.D. Virginia, 1889)
Cope v. Vallette Dry-Dock Co.
16 F. 924 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana, 1883)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 F. Cas. 564, 3 Hughes 477, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maltby-v-steam-derrick-boat-vaed-1879.