Pacific Mail S. S. Co. v. Commercial Pacific Cable Co.

173 F. 28, 97 C.C.A. 346, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5055
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 7, 1909
DocketNo. 1,687
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 173 F. 28 (Pacific Mail S. S. Co. v. Commercial Pacific Cable Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Mail S. S. Co. v. Commercial Pacific Cable Co., 173 F. 28, 97 C.C.A. 346, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5055 (9th Cir. 1909).

Opinion

ROSS, Circuit Judge.

The very voluminous record in this cause renders it impossible to review the evidence in detail in an opinion of reasonable length, so that we will not undertake to do more 'than indicate the grounds upon which we rest our judgment.

The appeal of the Commercial Pacific Cable Company, which was the libelant in the court below, is upon the ground that the amount awarded it by the trial court was inadequate, and that the court also erred in dividing, as it did, costs between the respective parties. What we shall say in respect to the main appeal, which is that taken by the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, the claimant, will dispose of the appeal taken by the libelant as well.

The action was in rem against the claimant’s twin screw steamship Manchuria for salvage, and resulted in a decree by the court below awarding the libelant $62,036.80, and dividing the costs between the libelant and claimant. It appears from the record that about 4 a. m. of August 20, 1906, the Manchuria, which was of 13,638 tons gross, and 8,750 tons net, register, ran upon a coral reef in the bay of Waimanalo on the northeasterly side of the island of Oahu, and there stranded. The place of stranding was on the lee shore, several hundred yards from the shore line, and less than a mile from the landing place of the Waimanalo Sugar Company. Waimanalo Bay is an open road-stead with a northern exposure, but at the time of the stranding of the Manchuria the water and sea were moderate, and the time of year was such that storms were not to be anticipated. The city of Honolulu is on the opposite side of the island, about 15 miles distant by wagon road, and within about two or three hours’ steaming distance, immediately upon the stranding of the ship one of its officers was sent to Waimanalo, and by telephone notified Hackfeld & Co., the ship’s agents at Honolulu, of the accident. Both the engines of the Manchuria were reversed, and the full power of her propellers used, as [30]*30soon as the reef was struck, in an attempt to back off, but without success. Within a few hours thereafter, to wit, about 9 o’clock in the morning of August 20th, the tug Fearless, of 700 horse power, and especially fitted for salvage work, arrived from Honolulu, and by means of a line to the ship attempted to aid in her effort to back from the reef. About 10:45 of the same morning the United States revenue cutter Manning, of 2,500 horse power, and the steamer Maui, of 447 horse power, arrived, and by means of lines therefrom to the distressed ship commenced aiding in the effort to. release her. During the afternoon» the ship ran out her stream and one bower anchor and emptied her ballast tanks, .but still remained stranded. Other vessels during the morning and afternoon came to the assistance of the Manchuria, and were used in transferring her cabin /and steerage passengers and their baggage to Honolulu. At the time of the accident the libelant’s cable ship Restorer was lying idle, with cold boilers, in the port of Honolulu, where she had been stationed since April 24, 1905. She was a vessel of about 4,000 horse power, of the value of about $600,000, and was maintained by the Cable Company for service in the repairing of its cables in the event of need. In the evening of the day of the stranding of the Manchuria, Hackfeld & Co. asked the master of the Restorer, who was Capt. Combe, and the superintendent of the Cable Company’s business at Honolulu, Mr. Gaines, whether the Restorer could be sent to the assistance of the Manchuria. They replied that she could not without express authority from the home office in New York. They were then requested by Hackfeld & Co. to cable for such authority, and while waiting for a reply to get up steam in the Restorer’s boilers in order to save time, which they agreed to do provided payment of the expenses of getting up steam was guaranteed them in the event the home office declined to grant the requested assistance. Hackfeld & Co. thereupon gave such guaranty, after which, to wit, about 10:30 p. m. of August 20th, the request was cabled and the Restorer’s fires started. - The next morning a reply was received authorizing the Restorer to go to the assistance of the Manchuria, whereupon Gaines asked and received from Hackfeld & Co. a written request for the assistance of the Restorer, and at 3 :07 in the afternoon of August 21st, that ship left Honolulu for Waimanalo Bay, which she reached about 6 o’clock in the evening, according to the testimony of Capt. Combe. He anchored from a quarter to half a mile from where the Manchuria lay. Being asked by his counsel what he did on his arrival in respect to the Manchuria, Capt. Combe answered:

“I did nothing, sir, until the morning of the 22d. I just sent my chief officer on board that evening when I arrived. Q. Why did you do nothing that night? A. Well, I arrived there at about 6 o’clock in the evening. It being a strange place, and not having any soundings, and on a lee shore, I decided for the safety of the vessel — it was getting on nighttime — that I would stop where I was until daylight. Q. What did you do at daylight? A. I hove up anchor and came up closer to the position of the Manchuria. Q. And then what did you do? A. Gave them a couple of grapnel ropes.”

The evidence shows that by far the heaviest damage suffered by • the Manchuria was sustained prior to the arrival of the Restorer. The unsuccessful result of the first day’s attempts to release the Manchuria [31]*31was cabled to the claimant at San Francisco by its Honolulu agents the next day, to wit, August 21st. In doing so the agents gave the claimant this information:

“Mant-Uum ovemigEit sagged little. Same position. Rolling, pounding heavily. Rough sea. Fresh wind. Making little water; No. 3 starboard one foot. Ño. 4 port bilge ten inches, in twelve hours. I’ort engine shaking. Main steam pipe broken 2 a. in. Saddle of double end and single end boilers cracked. Starboard engine moves little in pounding. No signs of hull getting weak. Will secure vessel hold in same position.”

In reply iliev were instructed on the same day that Capt. Metcalfe, Lloyd’s and underwriters’ agent, and an expert salvor, would leave San Francisco on the 23d with a powerful wrecking outfit, and that he recommended that the ship’s anchors be so placed as to prevent the vessel from going further on the reef and twisting broadside, and that the vessel should be kept as deep in water as possible until the anchors should he properly laid; that no part of the cargo should be removed unless it appeared certain that there was no risk of the vessel going further on the reef; that his opinion was that the vessel would have to be floated largely by warping, and could not be pulled off by towing alone. Capt. Metcalfe and his assistant, Capt. Pilisbury, with a large wrecking outfit, reached the Manchuria in the afternoon of August 29tli, and thereupon took charge of the salvage operations. In the meantime — that is to say, from the cessation of the unsuccessful attempts to pull her from the reef — the efforts of those in charge of the disabled ship were directed towards holding her in her then position, in which efforts the Restorer participated from and including the morning of August 22d, having during that time four of her grapnel ropes on the Manchuria, which she pulled and stopped pulling as ordered by the Manchuria. These grapnel ropes were ropes of wire wound with hemp, designed for grappling deep sea cable, each having a breaking strain of from 18 to 18 tons.

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Related

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230 F. 753 (Ninth Circuit, 1916)
The Fair Oaks
205 F. 192 (W.D. Washington, 1913)
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Pacific Mail S. S. Co. v. Waimanalo Sugar Co.
181 F. 927 (Ninth Circuit, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 F. 28, 97 C.C.A. 346, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-mail-s-s-co-v-commercial-pacific-cable-co-ca9-1909.