Russell v. The Alamo

28 F. 312, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2270

This text of 28 F. 312 (Russell v. The Alamo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court for the Southern District of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. The Alamo, 28 F. 312, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2270 (circtsdfl 1886).

Opinion

Pardee, J.

This cause came on to be heard on the transcript and evidence, and was argued, whereupon the court finds the following as the facts of the case:

(1) The facts as propounded in the amended libel, and in the several intervening libels, are practically admitted by the claimants’ answer, and said allegations of fact are therefore taken to be true, and to the extent to which they go they are the facts in the case.

[313]*313In addition thereto the court further finds:

(2) The Alamo is of 2,256 tons register, 650 feet long, 40 feet beam, and at the time of the disaster in question siie was well manned and equipped, and provided with the outfit of a first-class steamer, including steam-capstans and anchors, chains, hawsers, derrick, etc. When she grounded siie was steaming along at a speed between 10 and 11 knots an hour, and she run hard on the reef, so that she was aground for over one-third of her entire length. Siie was so hard aground that she was not pounding, and although siie was across the ridge of the reef, how and stern ailoat, outside of swinging a point or two, siie was not moved until she "was finally pulled off.
(3) The chain furnished by the libelants, and which parted, was 45 instead of 75 fathoms long, and was inadequate and insufficient, as the result proved; but- the libelants furnished and used it in good faith, without knowledge or suspicion of any flaw' therein.
(4) The libelants did not carry out the ship’s anchor and chain, nor run an anchor on the port bow, and to windward, until the master of the Alamo repeatedly urged the same, .supported by the opinion of Capt. Wilde, United States navy, both of which, in the light of after events, were wise and proper efforts and precautions; but the libelants acted in good faith, and witli their best judgment, and the appearance of things then was that the ship could only be got off by lightering and jettisoning cargo until the ship could bo pulled directly astern off from the reel', and this appearance was justified by the final result.
(5) The final relief to the siiip was hastened by the assistance of the steamers Dix, laurel, and Blake; and the credit of floating the ship should be divided between the libelants and those steamers.
(6) The charges of bad faith, want of zeal, and intentional misrepresentation, made by the claimant against the libelants, are not sustained by the evidence.
(7) The services rendered by the libelants involved no unusual risk of property, peril of life or limb, nor expense, courages gallantry, nor heroism, but they ■were, considering the time and place, and lliebusiness of libelants, beneficial and successful services to the Alamo in distress, and are entitled to be compensated as salvage services, and above a mere reward for work and labor.
(8) The district court found the services of the libelants on behalf of the Alamo and cargo to be salvage services, and entitled to a compensation of $18,000, being per cent, upon a conjectured value, and being a sum not quite '¿l por cent, on the admitted value, of ship and cargo, and this sum is reasonable and proper salvage, under the facts of the case.
(9) The services of the intervening petitioners, Lowe, Bussell, Roberts, Sawyer, and Griffin, with their boats and crews, in saving 664 hales cotton jettisoned, are admitted to have been salvage services, and the court finds that they wore worth one-third of the value, or $12.50 per bale, amounting to the sum of $8,300.
(10) That a portion of the salved cargo which was perishable has been sold under order of the district court, and the proceeds thereof, less costs, to-wit, $1,105.43, are now in the registry of the court.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW.
(1) That the libelants should have judgment against the Alamo and cargo for the sum of $18,000, and costs of suit.
(2) That the intervening petitioners should have judgment against the cargo of the Alamo for the sum of $8,300, and costs of suit.
(3) That the sum of $1,105.43, now in the registry of the court, being the
[314]*314proceeds oí perishable cargo sold, less costs and charges, should be applied to the payment of judgments rendered against the Alamo and cargo.
JUDGMENT. '
The foregoing facts and conclusions of law being considered, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the libelants, as named in the amended libel, do have and recover of the steam-ship Alamo, her tackle, apparel, and furniture, and her cargo, for salvage services rendered, the sum of $18,000, and all costs of suit; the said sum of $18,000 to be distributed among the several libelants according to the rules of court and the customs in this district governing such cases.
And it is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the intervening petitioners hereinafter named do have and recover for the salvage of the number of bales of cotton specifically stated the sum of $8,800, as follows, to-wit:
Petitioner Gideon Low, - - - 83 bales, $1,037 50
“ Wm. J. Russell, - - - 59 “ 737 50
,f J. H. A. Roberts, - - - 47 “ 587 50
“ Win. A. Sawver, - - - 7 “ 87 50
“ Richard Griffin et al., - - 468 “ 5,850 00
—The said sums to be distributed among the several intervening petitioners, their ships, and officers and crew, according to the rules of court and the customs of this district governing such cases.
And it is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that, upon the payment of the sums herein awarded, together with the judgments in favor of Sweet-ing and Roberts not appealed from, and all costs and charges, less the sum of $1,105.43 now in the registry of the court, the said steam-ship Alamo and her cargo shall be released to the claimant for the benefit of the owners thereof, and all bonds or stipulations (if any there be herein) be canceled.

In explanation of the findings and judgment, I deem it proper to assign a few reasons. The case has been argued as though all the facts were in dispute, when in reality all the averments of the amended libel are admitted, except that the chain which parted was only 45 instead of 75 fathoms long. Besides admitting the matters alleged in the amended libel, the answer of claimant makes several aver-ments touching the conduct and services of the libelants, and tending to depreciate the value of such services, even to denying all right to salvage, and these averments are practically the only issues of fact in the ease. And I understand that the claimant, on the general facts of the case, in his answer, admits that the services rendered by libelants were salvage services.

The first complaint of the claimant is.

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Bluebook (online)
28 F. 312, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-the-alamo-circtsdfl-1886.