The Mulhouse

17 F. Cas. 962, 22 Law Rep. 276
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJuly 1, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 17 F. Cas. 962 (The Mulhouse) 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 Mulhouse, 17 F. Cas. 962, 22 Law Rep. 276 (S.D. Fla. 1859).

Opinion

MARVIN, District Judge.

Where a ship and cargo, accidentally stranded, are saved by lightening the ship by carrying out anchors, or by other common or continuous labor or service, carried on with a view to the saving of both ship and cargo, the salvage expenses are properly to be apportioned upon the ship, freight and cargo, in proportion to their respective values, as in a case of general average. Moran v. Jones, 7 El. & Bl. 523; Bedford Ins. Co. v. Parker, 2 Pick. 1; 11 Pick. 90; Beran v. Bank of U. S., 4 [964]*964Whart. 301; The Emma, 2 W. Rob. Adm. 315; Nelson v. Belmont, 5 Duer, 310. In this class of cases, each article of the cargo—whether it be of great value and little bulk, and so easily saved, as money or jewelry, or of great bulk and little value, as coal or lumber, and so saved with difficulty — is charged with the same rate of salvage as the ship or freight, or any other article of the cargo. Beran v. Bank of U. S., 4 Whart. 301; Abb. Shipp. pt. 4, c. 10, § 12 et seq. For the interests of all the parties being connected in a common enterprise, and in the service being a common or continuous service carried on for the common benefit, the law considers that the parties are benefited by the service in equal proportions, and that, therefore, they ought to be charged with equal proportions of the expense, — “Qui sentit commodum sentire debit et onus.” But where, as in the present ease, the ship is lost, and the voyage broken up, no such rule obtains, but each article of the cargo or invoice is to -be charged with its own | particular expenses of saving. The interests of the parties are sundered by the destruction of the ship, and the maxim “Sauve qui peut,” — “Save who can,” — applies. It is like the case of a fire, on land, where each person saves his own goods at his own proper charge, and without any connection with his neighbor. The Samuel, 15 Jur. 407; s. c., 4 Eng. Law & Eq. 581; Bridge v. Niagara Ins. Co., 1 Hall, 468; Emerigon, tom. 1, p. 612; Perkins’ Abb. Shipp, pt. 4, c. 10, § 4, in notis; Marv. Wr. & Salv. §§ 164-167. In the present case, the ship being a general ship and accidentally lost, and the voyage broken up, it becomes the duty of the court to discriminate between the different articles saved, and to shape its decree in such a manner that each article shall be charged with its own separate salvage, determined in amount according to the labor expended and risk 'encountered in saving it, notwithstanding the fact that the master, as the common agent of all the shippers, claims the whole cargo by a single conjoint claim. The sloop Beckwith, Parke, master, was one of the first vessels at the wreck. When the sloop arrived, there were six or seven feet of water in the ship’s hold. More men and vessels were deemed necessary to save the ship and cargo. Captain Wilner, accordingly, determined to load the sloop, and proceed without delay to Key West for further assistance. He put on board the sloop sixty-seven bales of cotton, and five kegs, containing $25.500 '-nr silver coin, and proceeded in the sloop to this port. Arrived at anchor in the harbor, at about ten o’clock at night, his business required him to go on shore and the master of the sloop and two of her crew took him in their boat and landed him. The master of the sloop went to his house, and remained there all night. The two men got intoxicated, and remained on shore several hours — precisely how long docs not appear. Two men were left on board the sloop. Whether they continued awake or went to sleep does not appear. Between two and three o’clock in the night, some men from the shore went on board the sloop and stole one of the kegs containing $5,000. Before, however, they had succeeded in getting it on shore, Baker, Roberts, and Preston, three fishermen, who had risen early in the morning, in order to market their fish, missed their boat; and, while looking for it, they discovered a boat coming towards the shore, with three men in it. They hailed the men, and challenged the boat as theirs. They soon heard a plunge in the water, near where the boat then was, and thought one of the men had fallen overboard. The three men, however, landed on the whart, and disappeared, without being recognized, in the dim starlight. About seven or eight o’clock in the morning, the fishermen, hearing of the loss of the money, suspected that the men who had taken their boat so unceremoniously, had taken the money also; and they thought it likely that the money might be found at the place whence proceeded the sound of the plunge. Acting on this idea, they soon realized the truth of their conjectures, and found the money sunk in seven or eight feet of water. They restored it to the captain of the ship. They claim compensation in the nature of salvage for this service.

Now, it is very plain, upon the foregoing statement of facts, that Parke, master and part-owner of the sloop, both as master and part-owner; Rand, mate; Noyes and Robinson, seamen; composing the whole crew who came up in the sloop from the wreck, and upon whom the duty of watching and taking care of the goods committed to their keeping was devolved, have forfeited their shares of the salvage, both upon the money and upon the cotton, on account of their neglect to take proper care of the money. Their duty was obvious. They were each and every of them, bound to take the same kind of care, and exercise the same degree of diligence in keeping the property placed in their custody, that a prudent man ordinarily takes and exercises in keeping his own property. Tested by this rule, it is plain that they were guilty, not of ordinary neglect merely, but of gross negligence — so gross, that it produces a suspicion that they were in collusion with the thieves. But it is not necessary to accuse them of larceny or embezzlement. Their shares are as much liable to forfeiture for so gross a neglect of duty, as for embezzlement or larceny. “The maritime law,” says Justice Story, “demands most emphatically from salvors, scrupulous good faith and uprightness of conduct — giving them a liberal reward for fidelity and vigilance, and visiting them with severe reprobation and diminished compensation for every negligence.” The Boston [Case No. 1,673]. “Salvors,” says Judge Ware, “are not only bound to scrupulous honesty themselves, but while the prop[965]*965erty is in their custody, they are jointly required to employ every reasonable degree of diligence to prevent it from plunderage by others. Any negligence in this respect if not visited with an entire forfeiture of salvage, will be remembered in fixing the amount.” The John Perkins [Id. 7,360]. The supreme court, in the case of The Blaireau, 2 Cranch [6 U. S.] 240, reduced the share of the mate to that of a common seaman, because he had neglected to use due diligence to prevent pilfering from the cargo saved. To encourage good conduct, the maritime law, on grounds of policy, compensates the services of a meritorious salvor, where the amount of property saved is large, with a reward, — a gratuity,— something over and above a quantum meruit for ordinary work and labor. On the same grounds of policy, it diminishes, denies or forfeits the reward, according to the demerit of the salvor. The Blaireau, 2 Cranch [6 U. S.] 240. The reason for this diminution or forfeiture is, not so much that the owner of the property saved may in this way, be indemnified, in whole or in part, for the loss or damage caused by the misconduct, though this is by no means overlooked, as that the misconduct impairs or destroys the merit of the delinquent and renders him unworthy of its reward. Accordingly, the extent of the diminution or forfeiture is measured.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 F. Cas. 962, 22 Law Rep. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-mulhouse-flsd-1859.