The Copperfield

268 F. 77, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 864
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedAugust 17, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 268 F. 77 (The Copperfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Copperfield, 268 F. 77, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 864 (S.D. Fla. 1920).

Opinion

CARR, District Judge.

The facts of this case may be stated in short as follows:

On August 25, 1919, the) four-másted schooner Copperfield left Mobile, Ala., on her maiden voyage, bound for Alicante, Spain, loaded with some 550,000 feet of pine lumber in her hold and on deck. She proceeded on her voyage until September 8th, when she encountered such weather that she attempted to make Key West for an anchorage until the. weather settled. No pilot coming aboard, the master tried, on the 9th, .to beat ihto Key West Roads for anchorage; at 1:30 p. m., anchored with the port anchor; at 6 p. m., let go the starboard anchor. She rode by these until a third anchor was let go. On the 10th the hurricane struck her while riding with three anchors. This hurricane continued through the' 10th and 11th, leaving the vessel with masts broken at the deck, jibboom gone, deck load partly washed overboard, and masts and rigging over the side, drifting, with anchor chains and hawser broken. The last entry in the log is on the 11th, and the crew must have abandoned the wreck between the 11th and the afternoon of the 12th, when she was sighted by Lieut. Roberts, some three miles from where she was found by the Senator Bailey. The Senator Bailey, an ocean-going tug belonging to the Gulf Refining Company, was at Port Tampa during the hurricane, and under orders from the owner left Port Tampa on September 13th, to look for the barge Monongahela, whifch had broken loose from the steamer towing her. On the 14th the' barge was found and towed into the harbor of Key West, arriving on the 15th, in the early morning. The tug remained in the harbor of Key West through the day of the 15th, with instructions to remain in that harbor and take the barge out to meet the vessel from which she had broken loose, when she should arrive.

Under orders from the -owner, the tug left Key West in the early morning of the 16th, to go out and render aid to the steamship Wi-nona, then ashore not far from Tortugas. Arriving there, and finding that no aid could be rendered to the steamship, the tug started on her return to Key West, and while on her way discovered the Copperfield aground on Half Moon Shoal, about half past 4 in the afternoon. The schooner was aground about southeast from tire buoy marking the western edge of the shoal, lying in a kind of bight or pocket. The chart shows the depth of water on the shoal to range from 2 to 3 fathoms. By using the lead line the Bailey approached to within 300 yards of the wreck, anchored, and sent her small boat and put a part of her crew aboard. By sounding from the small boat and from the tug, they succeeded in approaching within 75 feet of the wreck, and anchored about northeast from the wreck; the first anchorage having been about southwest from the wreck. The. schooner was lying with her bow pointing about east. Afterward the Bailey was brought alongside the port bow of the wreck and made fast. The crew of the tug commenced to clear away the wreckage of spars, rigging, etc., which lay on the starboard side of the schooner, and continued this labor until about in the neighborhood of 4 o’clock in the morning of the 17th, using pocket flash lights and the searchlight of the tug to aid them. A [79]*79hawser belonging to the schooner was attached to the anchor chain hanging over the schooner’s how and carried aboard the tug, and the tug then commenced to pull, and in a short time cleared the schooner from the shoal.

The draft of the tug is left uncertain; no one apparently knowing what her exact draft was. It was somewhere between 11 and 14 feet, probably between 11 and 12. The draft of the schooner was probably in the neighborhood of over 16 feet.'

The entrance to Tampa Bay was some 190 miles away and Key West some 40-odd. The tug started for Tampa, towing the schooner by the hawser astern. The schooner had considerable water in her hold, her rudder was broken, steering gear out of order, and owing to the inability to steer her, and the water in her, sheered badly, and some two or three hours after the tow commenced, parted Lhe hawser, and was then taken alongside, and during the remainder of the day of the 17th was towed in this manner. At nightfall she was dropped astern again, and thus proceeded slowly during the night, and next morning taken alongside again, and thus continued until the night of the 18th, when she was taken into Tampa Bay, and docked at Eggmont Key aboi:t 12 o’clock, midnight. Next morning she was taken to the city of Tampa, and tied up to the Seaboard dock.

During the 17th, while towing alongside the tug, the stern line parted, and it was necessary for the tug to use one of her wire cables to replace the broken hawser. During the 18th, the tug used her syphon to pump the water out of the schooner, thus lightening her.

It is claimed by witnesses that the vessel was hard aground and was pounding heavily, so heavily that it was difficult to maintain one’s footing. This does not impress me as probable, taking into consideration the location and extent of the shoal, the prevailing wind, and the surroundings as delineated upon the government chart in evidence. Nor does the physical condition of the schooner as shown by the examination of her bottom in the dry dock lend credence to such claim.

That the service rendered was a salvage service and one of merit there can be no question, but that any great risk of life or property was incurred I do not find. Nor do I find any display of heroism in its rendition. The work of the crew was arduous, and continued over the better part of three days; but the explanation of why it was decided to make the longer trip to Tampa, some 230 miles, to the dock where the schooner was left, than the shorter one of 40-odd to Key West, is not satisfactory.

The effects of the hurricane on the water had ceased before the discovery of the wreck by the Bailey, and there was ample water both in depth and extent to have taken the wreck into Key West. However, it might have been an error of judgment on the part of the master of the tug, and such error should not be visited upon the allowance to the libelant in this case. Nor do I think the increased time required to tow the wreck to Tampa, rather than to Key West, should be allowed to augment the amount as a salvage service.

The testimony of the officers of the tug does not impress me favorably. It impresses me that these witnesses systematically endeavored to [80]*80exaggerate the danger to the property salved as well as to the salving tug and salvors. I suppose this is natural, and is more or less apparent in salvage cases. Nor do I think the actions of the salvors, after the service was rendered, in delivering the salved property, to be commended. Certain of the ship’s papers were delivered to the collector at Tampa, yet the vessel’s log and charter party were retained by the master of the tug until the taking of testimony at Galveston, in January. Certain navigating instruments and books were taken from the schooner and retained until after the filing of claimant’s answer charging such action. A small boat was taken from the schooner and placed on the Bailey, and carried by her to Port Arthur, and, returned only after the filing of such answer, not to mention the disappearance of berth lamps and compass, canned goods from the stores, etc.

It is true the three officers testify that they knew nothing of the disappearance of these last-mentioned articles, but the-explanation occurring to proctors for libelant that a fishing boat might have gone aboard and stolen the lamps, etc., does not impress me with its probability.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Permutit Co. v. Paige & Jones Chemical Co.
22 F.2d 916 (Second Circuit, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 F. 77, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-copperfield-flsd-1920.