Shute v. Dodge

7 La. Ann. 479
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 15, 1852
StatusPublished

This text of 7 La. Ann. 479 (Shute v. Dodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shute v. Dodge, 7 La. Ann. 479 (La. 1852).

Opinions

By the court: (Slidell, J., absent.)

Eustis, C. J.

The questions upon which this case has been made ultimately to turn, relate to certain claims set up by the defendant, Dodge, on the proceeds of the sale of the steamer Concordia. The learned judge of the district court describes the case as troublesome and intricate beyond any one which has ever passed through his hands. In deciding it, we must endeavor to simplify it as much as possible; every thing which has not a serious bearing upon the result, must be kept out of view.

This appeal is taken by the defendant, and the plaintiff asks a change in the judgment in his favor.

The plaintiff represents the owners of two-thirds of the steamer Concordia, of this port; her captain, 5. B. Frost, owned the other third. She was snagged a short distance above Fort Adams, on Sunday the 17th of October, 1850.

Frost was insured for five thousand dollars, with the Columbian Insurance Company, of which Mr. Snethen was the agent, and abandoned as for a total loss; the abandonment was not accepted.

The cargo of the steamer was very valuable, and the captain made a contract with Snethen, as the agent of a bell boat, to save the cargo and other property from the wreck, in consideration of the salvage hereafter to be agreed upon by certain named arbitrators, and the free and full possession of the wreck.

Not only the cargo was saved, but-the boat was raised and brought to New Orleans, on the 16th of November. She was sold by the port wardens, and bought by Dodge, the owner of the bell boat. She was then put into Salter and Marcy’s dock, for repairs, was sequestered in this suit, and, after the first judgment rendered in the suit, was sold under the agreement of all concerned, and produced the sum of $8000, which is now before us for adjudication.

The plaintiff, at the time of the accident, was building a new boat at New Albany, and under date of the 31st October, writes a letter to Capt. Frost, in which he says, after noting the misfortune of the Concordia:

“I can now say nothing in relation to the course you should take with the wreck and whatever can be saved. I feel satisfied that you will act for the best interest of all parties, and under advice or instruction from the offices. There are many articles of furniture which we can use on the M, which I would like to have, but which will not be wanted now. I should prefer the sale of everything postponed until I get down; but the boilers and machinery might be shipped at once to New Albany, to Phillips, Hise Co., to be landed at their [481]*481foundry; if this can be done, I would advise it, as the best means of selling it to advantage.”

This letter was received by Capt. Frost on the 9th of November, and shown to Mr. Snethen on that day.

Assuming that the captain, for the preservation of the steamer and her cargo, had full power to do what a wise and prudent man would think most conducive to the benefit of all concerned, during the. existence of the necessity for his exercising his power. When we read this letter, and consider the circumstances in which the captain found himself, we cannot entertain a doubt that it conferred on him authority to act according to his best judgment in relation to the interests of the writer, and justified him in making any lawful contracts of expenditures called for by the exigencies of the occasion.

Frost was however insured, and had abandoned for a total loss. The plaintiff was not insured. Frost’s interest was, that the steamer should not be saved, but that his abandonment and right of recovery should be fixed. At the same time he had his duty to perform, which was to act for the best interest of all concerned; a very awkward relation to occupy.

It appears, from the evidence, that Snethen was determined, from the beginning, to raise the boat, and that he had no directions from Frost to do any such thing. Frost acted on the reserve as to this project, and his interest was, that it should not be undertaken. Snethen knew this, but he was the agent of the bell boat and of the underwriters, and if he could convert this total into a partial loss, it would be money in the pocket of the underwriters; and it was further his interest to do the best he could for the bell boat, who. would be engaged with her men on the spot, and obliged, in some sort, to prepare for the raising of the boat, by taking out her cargo.

Frost made no contract, and would make none to raise the boat, and the affair was Snethen’s own, for the benefit of parties whom he represented, and not of the plaintiff. These are the conclusions we have come to, from the testimony of both Frost and Snethen.

Frost says, that he never made.any objection to her being raised, but did not want her raised. His idea was, to have the machinery taken out and shipped to New Albany or Louisville, where steamboats are built, according to the plaintiff’s instructions. Snethen acted with his eyes open, according to his views of the interest of those whom he represented. The plaintiff was absent, and Frost declined acting for him, in making any agreement as to the raising of the boat.

The hull of the steamer was not worth the expense of saving. They all knew this, and Snethen, under this state of facts, had the boat raised and brought to New Orleans.

Although Frost was silent as to the doings of Snethen and the workmen, in raising the boat, yet nobody was deceived by it, still less Snethen, who can gain no advantage from the position of Frost, which he created, by not accepting the abandonment of his interest insured.

The district judge considered the claim for raising the steamer, and bringing her to New Orleans, exclusively as one of salvage, and adjusted it on the principles of marine salvage. He thought he was allowing all that could rightfully be asked, in giving Dodge, the owner of the bell boat, one-half the proceeds of the steamer, resulting from the sale by the port wardens, on the 24th November, to wit, one half of $3650.

[482]*482We are not satisfied that the case is one to which the principles of marine salvage are applicable, nor that the facts constitute the ingredients of what we held in law, to be salvage services; but this objection is only to the principle of the adjustment, which, under the circumstances, we would, in an ordinary case, consider inapplicable. But the defendant has no right to complain of this mode of adjustment, for Snethen undertook the business, on the exclusive footing of salvage. He told Frost, “if the diving bell boat succeeded in raising the Concordia, the boat would be entitled to salvage ; if she failed, it would be her own loss.” He made a salvage adventure, exclusively so, and had no right to expect, and did not expect, any other mode of reimbursement.

It has not been attempted to defend the sale of the steamer, by the port wardens, and it follows, of course, that Dodge could acquire no rights by his purchase. Nor do we consider, that he had, in any legal sense, the right of possession of the steamer, from the circumstance of having raised her by means of his boat.

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7 La. Ann. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shute-v-dodge-la-1852.