Taber v. Jenny

23 F. Cas. 605, 1 Sprague 315, 19 Law Rep. 27, 1856 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 45
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJanuary 10, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 23 F. Cas. 605 (Taber v. Jenny) 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
Taber v. Jenny, 23 F. Cas. 605, 1 Sprague 315, 19 Law Rep. 27, 1856 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 45 (D. Mass. 1856).

Opinion

SPRAGUE, District Judge.

The first question is one of practice: the only pleadings are the libel and answer. According to the practice in this district, a replication, merely denying the truth of the answer, is not necessary; the allegations of the answer are deemed to be in issue, without such formal denial. The answer here sets up an award of referees, as a bar to the libel; the libel-lants not denying that such an award was made, insist that it was not binding, for two reasons; first, that one of the referees had prejudged the cause; second, that the award was made by an umpire, without hearing the parties. This is new matter, in avoidance of the allegations of the answer, and should have been put on the record. This is sometimes done by a replication; but the more regular mode is by a supplemental libel, to which there should be an answer by the respondents. See note to. Gladding v. Constant [Case No. 5,468]. The parties having come prepared to litigate these, as well as other points in controversy, and having engaged that a supplemental libel and answer shall be filed, so that all the issues shall appear upon the record, I proceeded at their request, to hear the cause, and will now state the conclusions at which I have arrived upon the merits.

This is a libel to recover the value of a whale. In the summer of 1852, the ship Hill-man, of New Bedford, and the ship Zone, of Fairhaven, were whaling in the Ochotsk Sea. On the morning of the 23d of July, one of the boats of the Hillman pursued and killed a whale, but being alone, and the ship being at a distance, and obscured by a fog, the boat was unable to take the whale to the ship, and for the purpose of securing it, anchored it in fifteen fathoms of water, with an anchor weighing about sixty pounds, and a double tow-line with about thirty-seven fathoms scope, and a waif was fixed upon it. This waif was a staff,- about eight feet long, with a flag at its head. After the whale was anchored, the boat lay by it nearly an hour to ascertain that it did not drift; the boat then went to the shore, which was not many miles distant. A few hours after the whale had been thus left by the Hillman’s boat, a boat belonging to the Zone, with her captain on board, came across the whale. The captain took down the waif, and then went to his own ship, which was quite near; he there ordered his mate to get into the boat, go the whale, and bring it to the ship. This was done. When the mate reached the whale, he found the tow-line and anchor attached to it, and they were both taken into his boat. The whale having been taken alongside the Zone, the crew of that vessel proceeded to cut it in, that is, to strip off the blubber and take it on board. In doing this they found two irons with the initials H. N. B., which clearly indicated that they had belonged to the Hillman, of New Bed-ford. These irons were taken on board the Zone, as were also the anchor and rope attached to it. The irons were left on deck, the anchor was put below. The Zone, while cutting in the whale, stood out from the shore, but on the day following, while boiling down, stood in. The Hillman’s boat having, after leaving the whale, returned to the ship, and obtained the assistance of other boats, went in search of the whale, but could not find it. This was on the morning of the 24th. During that day the mate of the Hill-man seeing the Zone boiling down, went on board of her and ascertained that she had taken the whale. The irons were lying upon [607]*607her deck, and he took them away. But he did not see or hear anything of '.the anchor and tow-line. The anchor was thrown overboard by the captain of the Zone, but at what time does not appear, except that it was before the 26th. The excuse given by him for this, was violent and abusive language in his own cabin, by Captain Bennett. That such language was used, is in proof. But that cannot justify the act of throwing the anchor overboard. On the 25th, Captain Cook, of the Hillman, and Captain Bennett, of the whale ship Massachusetts, went on board of the Zone and demanded of Captain Parker, her master, the bone and oil of the whale, which were refused. They were subsequently brought to Fairhaven, and taken and sold by the respondents. A demand for the proceeds was made upon them by the libellants, and refused.

When the whale had been killed and taken possession of by the boat of the Hillman, it became the property of the owners of that ship, and all was done which was then practicable, in order to secure it. They left it anchored with unequivocal marks of appropriation.

It having thus become the absolute property of the Hillman, was that ownership ever lost? It is contended that it was. First, by the usage peculiar to the whale fishery; or secondly, by the principles of law applicable to the facts of this case. The usage proved, is, that when a whale is found adrift on the ocean, the finding ship may appropriate it to her own use, if those who killed it do not appear and claim it before it is cut in. But, from the evidence, it does not appear that this whale was found adrift. On the contrary, I am satisfied that it was anchored when taken by the boat of the Zone. (The judge here examined the evidence.) Whether it was found in the place where it had been left by the captors, or had dragged the anchor, and if it had dragged, how far. Is left in some uncertainty. T do not ■ think it is shown to have dragged, certainly not to any considerable distance, and if it had, there is no proof of usage embracing such a case.

2. By the general principles of law. when property is separated from the owner, at sea, by force of the elements, or even by abandonment from necessity, the person who finds it has not a right to convert it to his own use, and cannot thereby divest the right of the original owner. The finder, in such case, has only the right of a salvor, and must conduct in good faith as such. If he embezzles the property, or wrongfully converts it to his own use, he may thereby forfeit his claim to salvage. In this case, the whale was not derelict, it had not been abandoned by the owner, but had been left with the intention to return, and the captor did in fact return as soon as practicable, and in less than twenty-four hours. Whether the whale, when found by the crew of the Zone, was in a condition of peril so as to be the subject of salvage service, need not now be considered, as that question is n'ot before the court. It is not presented by the pleadings, nor by the propositions, or arguments on- either side. Besides this, the conduct of the captain of the Zone was not that of a salvor, and was such as would preclude him from now assuming that character. A ship or merchandize found upon the ocean is still the property of the original owner, however distant he may be, and even although he believes it to be absolutely lost. It may, in such case, be subjected to a lien for salvage, but still the property, subject to such lien, is in the owner, and when such lien is displaced, the ownership is absolute and unin-cumbered. If such be the law with respect to property found derelict and drifting upon the ocean, for still stronger reasons must the right of the owner remain in full force to property which he has anchored and left only temporarily, soon to return and repossess it. That this would be so as to a vessel or boat so anchored and left, no one would doubt. But the same principle applies to this whale. By capture, killing and possession, it had become the absolute property of the libel-lants, and the anchor, waif and irons, were unequivocal proofs, not only that it had been killed and appropriated, but of the intention of the captors to reclaim and repossess it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 F. Cas. 605, 1 Sprague 315, 19 Law Rep. 27, 1856 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taber-v-jenny-mad-1856.