Mesner v. Suffolk Bank

17 F. Cas. 161, 1 Law Rep. 249
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedNovember 15, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 161 (Mesner v. Suffolk Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mesner v. Suffolk Bank, 17 F. Cas. 161, 1 Law Rep. 249 (D. Mass. 1838).

Opinion

DAVIS, District Judge.

This libel is for salvage service alleged to have been performed, for the benefit of the respondents, in saving two packages of bank bills, of the declared value of $50,000, asserted to have been saved, under circumstances of great peril and extremity from the captain’s office in the steamer New England, in which that property had been deposited by Joseph H. Dorr, agent of the Suffolk Bank, the said steamer having been previously deserted by all on board from apprehension of her sinking, after a disastrous collision with another vessel, the schooner Curlew; the exertions of the li-bellants in the premises being, as they assert, induced by a reward of five thousand dollars, offered by said Dorr, one of the passengers in the New England. The respondents place their defence on the following averments, summarily collected from their answer. First. That the night on which the collision occurred, was very pleasant with little wind, the sea calm, and the atmosphere so clear, that a vessel could be seen at the distance of several miles; that the schooner was sailing at a slow rate, and under usual sails; that the steamer was proceeding with great velocity, under high steam, and with several sails spread, and that under such circumstances. the collision could not have occurred, but through a defect of duty, on the part of the officers and crew of the steamer, who were at the time, in special charge of the engine and navigation of the New England, and that the libellants, themselves, or some of them, were in said special charge of the engine and navigation of the steamer. Secondly. That the respondents had delivered to Mr. Joseph Dorr, their agent, two packages of bank bills, one package containing bills of the Globe Bank, of Bangor, to the nominal amount‘of 20,000 dollars, and the other package containing bills of the Commercial Bank, of Bangor, of the nominal amount of 20,000 dollars, both packages being placed la one carpet bag, which was delivered with its contents to the clerk of said steamer, for safe keeping; that the said bank bills were comprehended in an agreement, subsisting between the respondents, and the said Globe and Commercial Banks, respectively, relative to the redemption of their bills, by which the said banks had been charged for the amount by the Suffolk Bank, and that the said bills, by the • terms of such agreement were at the risk of said Globe and Commercial Banks respectively. Thirdly. That they do not admit, that the said Dorr made such offers of reward, nor any offer of reward, to the libellants as they allege, and that he was not authorized or empowered in behalf of the respondents, to promise such, or any reward whatever, for the recovery of said bills, or for any purpose whatsoever. Fourth. That the said steamer and property on board, were not abandoned by the officers and crew, as in the libel alleged, but, that from and after the collision, and until the libellants themselves finally left the steamer, the officers and crew thereof remained, and were on duty, on, or about that vessel, without abandoning the same, or any property on board; that the libellants, themselves, were acting under the orders of the captain, and other officers, and continued, and acted under such orders until long after the time of the services alleged in the libel. Fifth. That the libellants in the premises, were not acting in their private or individual capacity, but that said bank bills, together with other large amounts of bills, money and other property, belonging to various persons, were taken from said steamer by her officers and crew, only in discharge of their several duties, and to relieve themselves, and the owners of said steamer, from the legal liabilities which would have been incurred by the dereliction or loss of said property; that the same was done under the direction of the captain and other officers; that the said bills and other property being recovered were delivered to, and remained in the possession and control of the said captain and other officers, and were, afterwards, delivered by them or some of them, to the several owners, or to others for said owners, without any claim or pretence of claim by the libellants, or any of them, or by said officers, or others, of any right of salvage thereon; that the bills were delivered by the captain of said steamer, to the respondents, without any claim of salvage, or notice of such claim, or any allegation or pretence, that he. or any of the officers, or crew, had, in respect to said bills, done more or acted otherwise, than was re[163]*163quired in the performance of their several duties, and for their protection and discharge from their legal liabilities. Sixth. That the motives, or inducement, by which the libel-lants were actuated, were not such as they allege, but that they acted as the respondents verily believe, in all the premises, only in performance of their several duties, and under the orders of the officers, and for earning, and securing their own customary wages; that the libellants, and each of them, in fact, claimed, and received, from the owners and officers of said steamer, their customary wages, for all said time, and until their arrival at Boston, the day following, as also all their wages at the time of t'ae collision pending, or at any time earned; that the libel-lants were, thereby, fully paid for all services alleged or done by them, at the time aforesaid, and that they, nor any of them, ever made any or further claims upon said owners or officers, than for their wages so paid in full. Seventh. It is denied that the labor and risks incurred by the libellants, in the premises, were in nature or degree as in the libel alleged. They were, it is asserted, by the respondents, comparatively slight, in a very little (if any) degree, exceeding the common services and risks of seamen, the whole having been done in full daylight, and in a very short time, and in the particular mode pointed out by others; that the sea was calm, the weather pleasant, and numerous boats and assistants constantly at hand; that, in fact, equal or greater labor and risk were incurred by other persons than the libel-lants, on board and about the said steamer, who have made no claim for compensation. Eighth. That if the bills so saved, were in fact the property, and at the risk of the respondents, the saving was of no pecuniary benefit to them, the same being of known amount, and the whole matter capable of explicit proofs; that independently of the agreement with the Globe and Commercial Banks, the claim of the respondents, upon those banks, from which the bills had been issued, for the amount, would not have been defeated or affected, by the total loss of said bills.

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Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 161, 1 Law Rep. 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mesner-v-suffolk-bank-mad-1838.