Savannah Sugar Refining Corp. v. Atlantic Towing Co.

15 F.2d 648, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2964, 1926 A.M.C. 1645
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 23, 1926
DocketNo. 4887
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 15 F.2d 648 (Savannah Sugar Refining Corp. v. Atlantic Towing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Savannah Sugar Refining Corp. v. Atlantic Towing Co., 15 F.2d 648, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2964, 1926 A.M.C. 1645 (5th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

WALKER, Circuit Judge.

The steamship Silverway and her cargo of sugar were libeled for alleged salvage services rendered. The court, by its decree entered June 3,1926, awarded to libelants $16,850 for salvage services rendered to the Silverway, her cargo, and pending freight, and prorated that amount according to salved values found, with the result that the sum of $4,653 was adjudged against the claimant of the Silverway and its surety, and the sum of $12,197 was adjudged against the claimant of the cargo and its surety, with interest on those sums from the date of the decree. The claimant of the cargo and its surety appealed from the decree, which is complained of on the grounds: (1) That the amount awarded was excessive; and (2) that the court erred in holding that the cargo was primarily liable for any part-of the amount properly allowable as salvage.

After the libel was filed, and after the steamship and the cargo had been released upon the giving of bonds, with surety, by the respective claimants thereof, the cargo owner filed a petition which prayed that the owner of the Silverway and its charterer be made parties, and that the amount of any salvage awards to which the libelants might be found to be entitled be decreed to be paid in the first instance by the Silverway and her charterer. That petition asserted the claim that the Silverway was unseaworthy by reason of not being equipped with adequate charts and sailing directions on her voyage from Cuba to Savannah, which was in progress when she stranded, that the stranding of the Silverway was due to such unseaworthiness, and that such unseaworthiness was a violation of the contract of affreightment under which the cargo was accepted and carried. There was no service of process under that petition, and the parties so sought to be brought in did not appear or respond to it.

The following statements contained in an opinion rendered by the District Judge are supported by the record:

“On the afternoon of June 29, 1924, at 5:50 p. m., at about high water, the steamship Silverway, bound from Cuban port to Savannah with a cargo of raw sugar, went aground on the shoals off the north end of Warsaw Island. The ship was going at full speed ahead and ran hard aground. The captain of the Silverway sent this wireless to the Savannah Sugar Refinery Corporation: ‘Want immediate assistance Vessel aground Making no water. Tybee Island Light bearing N. 14 E. eleven miles.’

“Knowledge of this was first brought to the captain of the Atlantic Towing Company by a boy who had received it over radio, and thereafter he was advised of it by Mr. Robertson, of the Savannah Refining Corporation, about 8:30 o’clock in the evening. The pilot boat Christabel arrived at the scene of the stranding at 11 p. m., June 29th. The tugs Cynthia and Henry W. Grady began preparation at Savannah, about 30 miles from the Silverway, at 8:30 p. m., and arrived at the scene of the stranding at 3 a. m. on June 30th. The pilot boat and these two tugs attempted to pull off the Silverway on the morning tide of June 30th. The tug Jacob Paulsen left Jenkins Island at 1:25 p. m. June 30th, and arrived at scene of stranding at 4:15 p. m. Those three tugs pulled on the Silverway the afternoon of' June 30th; the Christabel not being present. The tug Wm. F. McAuley was notified on June 30th to come from Georgetown, and arrived at the ship at 3 a. m. on July 1st, went to Savannah, and brought back a 4,000-pound anchor and 200 fathoms of hawser, and arrived .at the Silverway at 12:30 p. m. July 1st. On the morning tide of July 1st, the Christabel, Cynthia, GradyJ and Paul-sen pulled on the steamer. On the afternoon tide of July 1st, the Christabel, Cynthia, Grady, Paulsen, and McCauley pulled on the vessel, aided by the wrecking anehor, thereby succeeding in putting the Silverway afloat in about 15 minutes. The Cynthia supplied the steamship with fresh water necessary in working her engines. The value of the vessels engaged in the pulling and the supplying of water was approximately $250,000; 281 bags of sugar were lightered before the vessel was finally floated. The weather was warm and on the whole free from storms or menace thereof, though there was a slight brief blow. The Silverway was, at low water, aground substantially throughout its length, more deeply imbedded at the bow than at the stem. There was no loss to cargo. The service was strictly a salvage service, as no recovery for the service could be [650]*650had, unless success should be attained. There were 46 men engaged in the salvage, outside of the crew of the Silverway. The Silverway was valued- at $100,000, the freight at $10,-826.64, and the cargo at $290,537. * * * There was some risk of injury to the ship being permanently disabled, if it had become firmly imbedded in the sand.”

The ship sustained no damage, except from a slight injury to her engines, due to sucking in sand while she was aground. Two hawsers supplied by tugs engaged in the service broke during the pulling operations, and new hawsers were supplied and used. There was evidence as to the loss resulting from the injury to the hawsers, but there was no finding as to the value of those hawsers, or of those which Were furnished and used in their place, and no finding as to the value of the wrecking anchor which was furnished and used. There was no contract to pay the libelant for the services rendered.

The court’s valuation of the tugs which took part in the services rendered - is criticized. ' Testimony of witnesses, one of whom was disinterested so far as appears, fully supported that finding of the court. That testimony was not sought to be rebutted, otherwise than by evidence that in returns for taxes for the years 1922, 1923, and 1924 — the one for the year 1922 having been made and sworn to by one of the witnesses who testified as to the value of the tugs — the tugs were valued at considerably less than the valuations deposed to by- the witnesses. Evidence showed that undervaluation of property in returns of it for taxation was common in Georgia. It is generally so common as to make such returns quite unsatisfactory evidence of the actual value of property mentioned therein. The property values properly considered in fixing the amount of a salvage award are the actual values of the property saved and of the instrumentalities used in effecting the saving. We do not think that the record justifies the criticism under consideration.

It was contended that some of the salvors were chargeable with fault for the failure to send a wrecking anchor on one of the tugs which left Savannah during the night following the stranding, and that the salving operations were unduly prolonged in consequence of that failure. When those tugs left Savannah, no one there had any information of the stranding, except such as was furnished by the above set out radio message. That message gave no indication as to the nature of the stranding, nor as to what assistance would be required to get the vessel afloat. Evidence showed that that anchor weighed about 4,000 pounds, that it would take three hours, or a longer time at night, to rig it on a tug’s bow, and get it properly lashed in position to be dropped overboard at sea, and that, if the tugs had waited until the anchor could have been taken along, they would not have got to the scene of the stranding in time to attempt to get the vessel afloat during the morning high tide of June 30th. There was no suggestion by any one of the need of.- the aid of a wrecking anchor until after the pulling by three tugs during the evening tide of June 30th, when there was a foot more water than during the morning tide of that day, failed to get the vessel afloat.

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15 F.2d 648, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2964, 1926 A.M.C. 1645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savannah-sugar-refining-corp-v-atlantic-towing-co-ca5-1926.