The Gulfport

243 F. 676, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1153
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Alabama
DecidedJune 28, 1917
DocketNo. 1634
StatusPublished

This text of 243 F. 676 (The Gulfport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Gulfport, 243 F. 676, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1153 (S.D. Ala. 1917).

Opinion

ERVIN, District Judge.

This matter comes on to be heard on the motion to set aside the decree heretofore rendered in favor of the libelant and to dismiss the libel for the reason, as set up in said motion, that the tug Gulfport, which was libeled for salvage, was carried by the water, as raised by the storm of July 5, 1916, high and dry on land above and beyond the ordinary high-water mark.

The facts of this case are that the tug Gulfport was in a sectional dry dock belonging to libelant for the purpose of having certain repairs made upon it, when the violent storm of July 5, 1916, came on, which raised the waters in Mobile bay and river, and through the [677]*677combined rising of the waters and the violence of the wind, caused various sections of the dry dock to break away from its mooring on the east bank of the Mobile river and be driven up and across the river and on the marsh o-n the west bank of the river above the city of Mobile. When the violence of the storm abated and the waters receded, it left three sections of this dry dock, still containing the Gulfport on the marsh above the ordinary high tide line. Libelant had these sections of the dry dock with the tug still in them removed from the land and replaced in the waters of the river. The repairs on the Gulfport were then finished by the libelant, and she was again placed in the water.

Before operations wore begun by libelant looking to the replacing of the sections of the dock and tug in the water, a written agreement was entered into between libelant and the owners of the tug, under the terms of which it was agreed that the libelants should have the work of replacing the sections of the dry dock with the tug in them in the water, and pay for doing such work—

“Hie parties understanding that the dry dock company claims that the towboat company is liable to it to pay a part of the expenses of such removal of the docks and lug and the putting of them into the water, and the towboat company denies that there is any liability on it whatsoever to pay any part of such expenses, and this undertaking being entered into in order that the docks and tugboat may be taken oft' promptly and the question in dispute between the parties may be settled hereafter. The towboat company further agrees that if hereafter, it should be determined that the towing oomIpany is liable to pay some part of the said expenses and cost, then the towing company hereby agrees that the amount of liability shall be taken as $7,700.00; it being the purpose and intent of this agreement that the only matter open for litigation between the parties hereafter is the fact of liability vel non; it being agreed that if the towing company should be held liable, then the measure of such liability is fixed hereby, and no evidence to be adduced to fix the measure otherwise.”

On the original hearing of this cause, objection ivas made that libel-ant could not recover because no service was rendered directly to the tug, because, the tug being in the dry dock, all the services that were rendered were to the dry dock which contained 1he tug, and not to the tug, and it was contended that, under the ruling in the Atlanta (D. C.) 56 Fed. 252, and the San Cristobal (D. C.) 215 Fed. 615, there could be no recovery.

The court, after discussing these cases and citing the Lackawanna (D. C.) 220 Fed. 1000, McWilliams v. City of New York (D. C.) 134 Fed. 1015, Guindon v. Cargo of Zenith (D. C.) 197 Fed. 227, A Lot of Whalebone (D. C.) 51 Fed. 916, 110 Bushels of Wheat (D. C.) 120 Fed. 432, Morse v. Pomroy Coal Company (D. C.) 75 Fed. 428, and the Neshamitiy, 228 Fed. 286, 142 C. C. A. 577, entered a decree granting relief to libelants.

[1] The question raised by the present motion was not considered in the original hearing, and the sole question for consideration, therefore, is whether a boat which -had been deposited by the waters raised (luring the period of a violent storm, upon the land at a point above ordinary high tide, is a subject of salvage, or, to put the proposition in [678]*678a little different way, has the admiralty court power to grant salvage on a commodity which has been so deposited by the water?

I have found no case in which this question is directly considered or decided, nor have the very able and industrious proctors in this case been able to do so.

In the case of The Ella (D. C.) 48 Fed. 569, it appears that the ship was, by the force of a storm, deposited on land above the high tide, and was saved, and salvage was allowed, but in that case, just as on the original hearing in this one, the question now presented was not raised or considered by the court. It was, however, held in that case that a contract to save a schooner so situated was a maritime contract.

It is urged that, as this court has no jurisdiction in marine torts unless they were committed on the navigable waters, so by analogy, if the thing saved was on land, this court has no jurisdiction.

If what was said in Ex parte Phenix Insurance Company, 118 U. S. 618, 7 Sup. Ct. 28, 30 L. Ed. 274, in speaking of a marine tort, viz., “that the wrong must have been committed wholly on navigable waters, or, at least, the substance and consummation of the same must have taken place upon those waters to be within the admiralty jurisdic-' tion,” be true, then the rule should work both ways, and if the “substance and consummation” of the act be on navigable waters, then the admiralty does have jurisdiction, even in tort.

Now, the dock containing the Gulfport was floated by use of a cofferdam and then floated into the river, so that the substance and consummation of this act was in the navigable waters; hence by analogy this court has jurisdiction.

The question of salvage has more frequently been discussed from the standpoint of what may be salved rather than from what place the thing has been salved, and therefore the discussion and definitions and expressions by the courts have been directed rather to the character of the thing salved than to the place from which it has been salved. As said in the case of Cope v. Valentine Dry Dock Company, 119 U. S. 629, 7 Sup. Ct. 337, 30 L. Ed. 501:

“If we search, through all the books, from the Rules of Oleron, to the present time, we shall find that salvage is only spoken of in relation to ships and vessels and their cargoes, * * * which have been committed to, or lost in, the sea or its branches, or other public navigable waters, and have been found and rescued.”

Again on page 630 of 119 U. S., on page 338 of 7 Sup. Ct. [30 L. Ed. 501], the court says:

“There has been some conflict of decisions with respect to claims for salvage services in rescuing goods lost at sea and found floating on the surface or cast upon the shore. When they have belonged to the ship or vessel as part of its furniture or cargo, they clearly come under the head of wreck, flotsam, jetsam, ligón, or derelict, and salvage niay be claimed upon them.”

There is no question that the tug, the subject of this libel, is such a vessel as is liable for salvage, and this is conceded. The contention, however, is that at the time the contract was made and at the time the work was entered upon to float the tug and the sections of the [679]*679dry dock, in which it was then placed, the dry dock and tug were above ordinary high tide, and for this reason not subject to salvage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 F. 676, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-gulfport-alsd-1917.