Merritt & Chapman Derrick & Wrecking Co. v. North German Lloyd

120 F. 17, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 30, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 120 F. 17 (Merritt & Chapman Derrick & Wrecking Co. v. North German Lloyd) 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
Merritt & Chapman Derrick & Wrecking Co. v. North German Lloyd, 120 F. 17, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16 (S.D.N.Y. 1902).

Opinion

ADAMS, District Judge.

These are salvage actions brought by the libellants to recover for services in connection with three steamships, the Bremen, the Main and the Saale, and their cargoes. The necessity for the services arose out of the fire which occurred at the respondent’s pier in Hoboken on the 30th day of June, 1900. This fire, with some of its consequences, has been fully described by Judge Brown in the case of The Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse (D. C.) 106 Fed. 963, and The Bremen, Ill Fed. 228, and The Main, Id., to [18]*18which I refer for a general statement of the facts leading up to the present controversies. In those cases, there were awards to various salvors for services to the mentioned vessels. The Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse was saved from the fire with little damage. The question of salvage in her case was then fully determined. The Bremen and the Main were seriously damaged by fire and it was necessary to beach them, which was done on the Weehawken flats. It remains to be determined what should be awarded as salvage for raising them. The Saale partly drifted and was partly towed down the river and was towed so that she took bottom on the Communipaw flats. Her case has not been heretofore considered in any aspect and it is necessary to determine what should be awarded as salvage for raising her, also what should be awarded for the salvage services of a number of tugs in pumping water on and into her and putting her into the position where the operations for raising her were carried on. These services were somewhat similar in character to those which have already been allowed in the cases of The Bremen and The Main, supra.

In each of the actions covering the Bremen and the Main, an order was made on the loth of May, 1901, referring it to a commissioner to take evidence and report upon the following questions:

“1. The amount of actual disbursements made by the libellant in performing the service claimed for, including the value of materials reasonably used up or lost in the service.
“2. The amount of the value of the services rendered calculated at a fair and reasonable rate, as upon quantum meruit, without reference to salvage.
“3. The value of the libellant’s plant employed in the service, or reasonably necessary therein.”

A similar order was made in the action in personam, concerning the Saale, with an additional question, viz.: “The value of the property saved.”

It has been agreed by the parties in the action against the Saale, her cargo, &c., that determinations of these questions relating to her, were necessary in such case, and that the method resorted to by the court of obtaining the aid of a commissioner’s findings in the action in personam should be effectual in disposing of the questions, so far as they should be applicable, to the action in rem.

In each of the cases, the commissioner has made a report. In the Bremen, he found that he was finable to arrive at definite answers to the 1st and 2nd questions. To the 3rd question, he answered that he found the valfie of the plant owned by the libellant and used in the service to have been $345,000, and of such as was not owned by it but used more or less, some of it very little, $165,000. In the Main, he found, also, that he was unable to answer the 1st and 2nd questions. To the 3rd question, he answered that he found the value of the plant owned by libellant and used in the service to have been $250,000, and of such as was not owned by it, but used more or less, some of it very little, $163,000. In the Saale, he found, also, that he was unable to answer the 1st and 2nd questions. To the additional question, numbered as the 3rd, he answered that he found the value saved to have been $55,536.27. To the remaining question, numbered [19]*19as the 4th, he answered that he found that the value of the plant owned by the libellant and used in the service to have been $187,000 and of such as was not owned by it but used more or less, some of it very little, $145,000.

All the findings with respect to the values of the plant owned by the libellant and used in the service, viz.: $345,000 in the Bremen, $250,000 in the Main, and $187,000 in the Saale, have been excepted to by the respondent and claimant. The exceptions are general and do not point out the particular errors complained of, nor what the findings should have been. The Commander in Chief, 1 Wall. 43, 17 L. Ed. 609. I understand from the brief, however, that the principal complaints are: (1) because the commissioner has reported the values of the same vessels as against the different operations and (2) because he has included certain vessels in the plant, which the exceptant thought were useless, or comparatively so. There can be no doubt that the same plant — or parts of it — was used in the three different transactions, but that would not apparently be a good reason for diminishing the value to a third in each case, unless it appeared that the plant was actually divided into thirds for use at the same time in the different operations, which does not seem to have been the case. The wrecking vessels and appliances were of course shifted around from one sunken, or grounded, vessel to another while the operations were under way, so that perhaps at no one time, were all the elements constituting the plant engaged at work on any one vessel, but there can equally be no doubt that the whole plant was available at proper times for use in the different operations and that such value is the one to be considered, so far as the value may have any effect upon the final question. With respect to the inclusion of the value of the vessels said to have been useless, it has no.t been shown to me, by references to the testimony, that such was the case. It is not to be expected that a work of this kind could be carried on without some loss of time by a part of the plant or that just the kind of a vessel best adapted for a particular purpose could be supplied at the moment wanted. I am satisfied that the commissioner’s findings are correct enough to meet the purposes for which they were designed, that is, to supply the court with a fairly accurate estimate of the value of the plant employed. The exceptions are overruled.

After the disaster, when the fires in the respective vessels had been extinguished and steps for the salvage of the property became necessary, some conversation took place between the representatives of the owners of the steamers and the wrecking company with respect to the latter taking charge of the work, and an agreement was reached and confirmed by letters between the parties as follows:

“New York, July 2nd, 1900.
“Merritt & Chapman Derrick & Wrecking Co., 27 William St., N. Y. City. Gentlemen: — We request you to take sole charge of all the operations on our steamers ‘Bremen,’ ‘Saale’ and ‘Main’ under the direction of our Superintendent, it being understood that if we cannot agree as to compensation for thé services rendered, the Board of Underwriters shall act as umpire.
“We are, gentlemen,
“Yours very truly,
“Oelrichs & Co,”
[20]*20“New York, July 2nd, 1900.
“Messrs. Oelriehs & Co., Agents, North German Lloyd S. S. Co., 5 Broadway,
New York City. Gentlemen:—
“S. S. ‘Saale’ — S. S. ‘Bremen’ — S. S. ‘Main.’

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Bluebook (online)
120 F. 17, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merritt-chapman-derrick-wrecking-co-v-north-german-lloyd-nysd-1902.