The Cairnsmore

20 F. 519, 10 Sawy. 176, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJune 14, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 F. 519 (The Cairnsmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Cairnsmore, 20 F. 519, 10 Sawy. 176, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99 (D. Or. 1884).

Opinion

Deady, J.

The libelants, J. E. Thomas, Thomas Doig, P. H. Ward, John Brown, James Tidwell, Duncan W. McKenzie, W. G-. Ross, A. McKenzie, John Wilson, 0. A. McG-aire, William Stodard, and Martin Foard, bring this suit for salvage against the tackle, apparel, and certain of the furniture, stores, and cargo of the bark Gairnsmore, lately stranded on Clatsop beach, a short distance below Point Adams light. The libel contains a list of the articles saved from the bark, which includes her sails, rigging, hawser, anchor, and mooring chains, chronometer, compasses, boats, anchors, and 29 barrels of cement, alleged to be of the value of $8,000. The claimants, J. A. Brown and W. T. McCabe, answering the libel, admit the salvage service, but allege that.soon after the stranding of the vessel, and before the saving of the articles in question, except the sails, they purchased the Cairns-more and cargo from the master for the sum of $450, and demanded the possession of the same from the libelants, which was refused; whereby they lost the opportunity of saving both the vessel and cargo, which they were prepared to undertake with a reasonable prospect of success.

From the evidence it appears that .the Cairnsmore was an iron vessel bound from England to Portland, with a cargo of cement of about 1,400 tons. On Thursday, September 27th, she went ashore on Clat-sop beach, in a thick fog, with a light wind, a mile or two below Point Adams light. On the next day the master and crew left her in the ship’s boat, and within a few hours were picked up by the steam-ship Queen of the Pacific, near the mouth of the Columbia river, and carried to Astoria. On Friday evening, McCabe, Duncan W. McKenzie, and several others of the libelants, having heard of the stranding, gathered in the vicinity of the wreck, and the next morning McCabe and McKenzie, by means of a small skiff, which the latter had procured, boarded the vessel, and took possession of her, and, with the aid of the rest of the libelants, commenced to wreck her. They first took off the sails, which were still set, and .sent them ashore on a line from the foretop to the beach, and then commenced to remove the rigging. During the forenoon of Saturday the master of the vessel visited the beach, and returned to Astoria with the local agent of Lloyds, who had come down from there with McCabe the day before. During his short stay on the beach the master did nothing towards asserting any right to the possession of the vessel, or interfering with that of the libelants, or objecting to their action. On his way back to Astoria the master met a telegram from Portland, advising him that he had been appointed agent for the owners, and directing him to associate some one with himself, and hold a survey of the vessel, and dispose of her to the best of his ability. ■ Thereupon the master selected his companion, Lloyds’ agent, as his associate, who was also the bearer [521]*521of a message from McCabe to bis clerk in Astoria to buy the vessel if sh s was offered for sale, and they two, concluding that they had aim dy held a sufficient survey of the véssel, went on to Astoria that evening, and then and there sold her and her cargo, without any further notice or other fyid, so far as appears, to McCabe’s clerk, as a wreck, for $450, — there being an understanding at the time between said agent and McCabe that the former should have an interest in the vent are if the sale was made, as they expected it would be. McCabe wen. to Astoria on Sunday, and returned on Monday, when he told the ibelants that he had purchased the vessel, and insisted that they shoi Id cease their work, and deliver the possession of the vessel and pro] erty to him, at the same time saying they should be paid for what thoj had done. The libelants-refused to quit work or surrender possess ion of the property, but told McCabe he might continue to work witl them as a salvor, or, that they were willing to stand in with him on t iie purchase, which they thought he ought to have made for the. ben< ¡fit of the whole party, as they had agreed beforehand to bid as higl as $3,000 for the wreck, if it was sold. But they would not alio v him to take exclusive possession, nor put a gang of men on boa -d to work on his account. McCabe would not accept their prop-osit on, and they would not yield to his demand; and therefore the forr íer did nothing more towards saving the property, and the libel-anti continued their operations until about November 10th, when they sun endered the vessel to the claimants. The only means they had of i aving the material, besides the line from the foretop, were ox teams which they hired from the neighboring settlers. At low tide the; e were driven in the surf within 30 to 40 feet of the vessel, and loa< ed from the yard-arm with heavy articles, which were hauled ash ire. There the sails and other perishable materials were stored in a tc nt until they could be removed to Skipanon by wagon, and thence boa ¿ed to Astoria, where they are now stored. The anchors and cha ins were left well up on the beach, where they are now, buried in the sand. According to the testimony of McCabe he had the men anc means at his command wherewith to have placed a donkey engine of ' ,000 pounds weight on the vessel by Tuesday, and taken out the car 50 in a few days, and thereby enabled the vessel to come ashore, out of the breakers, to a place of comparative safety, from which she mij ht have been thereafter gotten out to sea again at some convenient tira a. But it does not appear that the men were on the ground, nor tha t the engine was ever any nearer than Astoria. After the libel-ant s gave up the wreck, McCabe employed Thomas Doig, one of the lib< lants, and some four or five others, who removed from the vessel for him two anchors, weighing between three and four thousand pounds eac h, by lowering them from the yard-arm into a wagon and hauling the m ashore. It also appears from the evidence that by Monday the ves sel was beginning to fill from the water pouring in at her after-lights and companion way, and that by Wednesday the whole cargo [522]*522of cement was wet and ruined. The vessel remained intact until about February, when she broke up and went to pieces.

My conclusion from the circumstances is that the Caimsmore, when found by the libelants, had been abandoned by her master and crew without the hope of recovery or the intent to return and reclaim her. She was then derelict, and liable to be taken possession of by the first comer. 2 Pars. Shipp. & Adm. 288; Cohen, Adm. 78. Waiving inquiry into the bona ftdes of the sale to the claimants, and assuming that it was good as against the libelants, the claimants only succeeded thereby to the rights and interests of the former owners. As against the latter or their vendees, the libelants had the lawful possession of the property, and were entitled to keep the same so far and so long as was necessary to enable them to complete the salvage service in' which they were engaged. But the rights of the libelants were qual-¡ ified by the circumstance of their power or competency to perform this service. And if it was manifest that with their means they could not save the property as well or as surely as others who might offer to assist or take part in so doing, they were bound to allow such others to engage in the undertaking. 2 Pars. Shipp. & Adm. 279—281. The claimants, as owners, had also the right to participate in the saving of the property, so far as such participation was plainly necessary to that end. And it is clear that such necessity existed as to the cargo, for the libelants were not prepared to get it out with the dispa,tch which the circumstances required.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F. 519, 10 Sawy. 176, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-cairnsmore-ord-1884.