The Huntsville

12 F. Cas. 996
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. South Carolina
DecidedNovember 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 12 F. Cas. 996 (The Huntsville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Huntsville, 12 F. Cas. 996 (southcarolinaed 1860).

Opinion

MACRATH, District Judge.

The steamship Huntsville in her voyage from Savannah to New York, off Cape Romáin, was discovered to be on fire. Her captain determined to make for the nearest port, and her course .was changed for Charleston. Signals of distress were set, and the Patapsco, a steamship owned by the same company, was sig-nalled. The steamship followed her to afford such assistance as she could. Between Cape Romain and Bulls the Huntsville took •a pilot. The female passengers left her, and, in the pilot boat, were brought to the city of Charleston. Under the charge of the pilot boat, the Huntsville was brought through Maifit’s channel, and when she reached the inner buoy, went ashore. It was ebb tide; and under ordinary circumstances it would not have been attempted by the pilot to bring her in at that state of the tide. Her condition, however, was calculated to excite alarm, the smoke then issuing from her, and the pilot advised the captain, and he concurred in the advice, to make the attempt, and trust to the chance of relief by a steamer. Her signal of distress, which had been kept flying from the time her course had been changed, attracted the attention of the revenue cutter William Aiken, Capt. Coste, who sent an officer on board of her, and, having ascertained the cause of her distress, relieved her by taking her passengers, their baggage, and that of the crew, the nautical instruments, and some of the furniture of the steamship, and bringing them and it to the city of Charleston. The libellants Ross C. Davis and others, owners of the steamer Nina, having been released from another engagement, previously made, to tow a vessel to sea, proceeded also to render assistance. Hereafter it will be necessary to examine particularly the evidence which relates to the extent of the service rendered by the Nina. The Huntsville at length floated, and was got off. By the Nina she was towed to Southern wharf in the city of Charleston. Before, however, the Huntsville reached the wharf, certain occurrences had taken place, which principally affect the second libellants. Mr. Caldwell, the consignee of the Huntsville, made .an application to the mayor of the city for permission to bring the vessel to one of the wharves. The chief of the fire department had also inquired of the mayor what was his purpose in relation to the vessel. That gentleman considering it unsafe, informed both parties of his intention not to suffer the steamship to come to the city. Upon a second and more urgent application being made to him, .he went to the wharf to determine how far he would be justified in recalling the refusal he had given. The location of the Southern wharf, the quarter from which the wind was blowing, the report of an officer whom he had sent to ascertain if there was a probability of the fire being subdued if the steamship was allowed to come to the wharf, the large amount of property at risk, and the understanding that the steamship would be put under the charge of the fire department, and no expense of any kind be incurred by the city, induced him to give his assent to the admission of the steamship to the wharf. She was brought to the wharf. The fire department took charge of her, and subdued the fire.

The first of many questions raised in the case, which I propose to consider, is that which involves the right of the second, libel-lants to maintain in this court, a claim for salvage. If the denial of the right to salvage be the legal consequence of the propositions from which in the argument it was deduced, it cannot be maintained, for these propositions are in themselves undeniably true. The obligation to afford succor to those who may be in distress is incorporated with every code of laws which obtain respect and command obedience in civilized societies. To aid those who may be unfortunate is alike the duty of nations and individuals, [998]*998and its obligation is postponed only in cases .where it would be productive of injury to those who otherwise are bound to its performance. And this duty is in many cases made more specific in its obligation by being incorporated in the stipulation of treaties by which the claim of those who need succor becomes changed from an imperfect obligation, as it affects others, into a perfect right which may be enforced, and in aid of which the authority of government may be invoked.

■ The treaties which, have been made by the' United States with France, Spain, Portugal, and perhaps other nations, all contain pro-, visions which operate to secure by force of positive municipal law, that protection and succor for the unfortunate which the moral law and the law of nations have declared to be proper. At an . early period protection was much needed and aid much required in cases of disaster at sea, or of wrecks on the coasts of seas. Piracies and sea robberies are said to have preceded any regular state of commerce, and cruelties on the coasts, in cases of wrecks were the retaliations practiced for the injuries suffered from those who controlled the seas. The right to wrecks, to whomsoever it belonged, whether claimed by the crown or those who held under its grant, was in its enjoyment distinguished by enormities which provoked the reproach that in some places wrecks were considered blessings proper to be prayed for. In the civil law we find the censure justly due to the inhumanity which prevailed in relation to such practices in the refusal of the Homan emperor to enrich his treasury by the calamities of others, and the experience of an English monarch of. the suffering which shipwreck entailed upon those who experienced the misfortune is said to have been the occasion at that time of those provisions in the laws of Oleron which recognized the right of those who in such cases had occasion for protection. Moll. De J. Mar. 265. But this protection from that forfeiture which resulted from misfortune, whether it enured to the benefit of the ruler or of those who, without regard to law, enriched themselves at the expense of suffering to others, has never been confounded with the right to salvage, — a right which, conceding to the unfortunate the restoration of that which would have been lost without the assistance of others, and which regards that assistance as suggested by the highest considerations of humanity, yet enforces upon those who have been restored to their property, a proper regard for the services of those who have thus saved for them that which otherwise would have been lost. Martens, Law Nat. 167. And this principle, with the increase of commerce, and the necessity for its ap-' plication in all cases, has lost such of its attributes as may have existed in connection with individual cases, and is regarded now only in the light of a general law resting upon the broad basis of public policy and of the most comprehensive application. Besting, however, as it did, upon the obligation of individuals to afford succor to the distressed, and suggested, as it is presumed to have been, by higher considerations than the mere desire for gain, that obligation which is now imposed upon those who are saved to those who save is divested of all considerations which apply .to the case of a mere contract. And so necessary is it to keep this service strongly and distinctly márked by the considerations which have been applied to it, and so essential is it to the necessities of commerce, that even allegations of improper motives inducing the efforts in salvage cases as. valid objections to compensation, if deserved, will not be heeded, unless they have been subsequently carried into practice to the injury of those whose property has been saved. Le Tigre [Case No. 8,281]. It is not, then, because of.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F. Cas. 996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-huntsville-southcarolinaed-1860.