The Queen of the Pacific

21 F. 459, 10 Sawy. 303, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedSeptember 9, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 21 F. 459 (The Queen of the Pacific) 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 Queen of the Pacific, 21 F. 459, 10 Sawy. 303, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139 (D. Or. 1884).

Opinion

Deady, J.

This suit is brought against the steam-ship Queen of the Pacific, “her tackle, apparel, furniture, appurtenances, and cargo,” to obtain compensation for a salvage service rendered them by the libelants. It is brought by George Mavel, the managing owner of the steam-tugs C. J. Brenham, Astoria, and Columbia; and W. S. Sibson, the managing owner of the steam-tug Pioneer; and 21 others, comprising the crews of said tugs, and for all others entitled. The libel was filed October 13, 4,883, and on the same day the vessel was arrested and delivered to the owner, the Pacific Coast Steam-ship Company, on a claim made by Mr. C. H. Prescott, its managing agent at this port. The answer of the claimant was filed on December 1st, and admits that the libelants performed a salvage service in respect to the vessel and cargo; and the contest between the parties is practically confined to the value of such service, and particularly to certain matters of fact, upon which the determination of this question largely depends.

On May 28,1884, the Ilwaco Steam Navigation Company, J. H. D. Gray, and 19 others, the crews of the steam-tugs Gen. Canby and Gen. Miles and a scow, filed a libel of intervention on behalf of themselves, as the owners, agents, and crews of said tugs and scow, set[461]*461ting forth the part they performed in the saving of the vessel, and asking that a corresponding portion of any sum allowed as a compensation therefor may be awarded to them by the court.

The answer of the claimant to the libel of intervention admits that the intervenors rendered the services alleged by them, but denies their alleged value and importance, and the circumstances of danger and risk relied on to give them enhanced value, and also sets up that they were paid for by the claimant at the time as follows: To said Gray, as age'nt for the said Ilwaeo Steam Navigation Company, $600; and to said Gray, personally, for the use and services of said scow and crew, and his own services, $654.

An amendment to the libel of intervention admits the payment alleged in the answer, but denies that it was received in full satisfaction of the service rendered, but with the express understanding that it should not operate as a bar to the claim of the intervenors as salvors in any suit that might be instituted for salvage.

Between November 21, 1883, and April 24, 1884, three libels of intervention were filed by a number of persons who appear to have been employed and paid by the claimant to throw over cargo, or were of the volunteer crew of the boat from the life-saving station. From the answers of the claimant thereto it appears that this crew have a suit now pending against the Queen, in Washington Territory, for the same service, and that the stevedores were employed and paid by the claimant at the rate of half a dollar an hour for their labor, and the proof sustains the answers in both cases. No evidence was offered or argument made on behalf of those intervenors, and it is taken for granted that their claims are abandoned and their libels will be dismissed. Separate libels of intervention were also filed by John McDonald and John S. Kidd, alleging that they assisted in saving the Queen,—McDonald by serving as “sole fireman” for “ten hours or more” on the tug Pioneer during the time she was employed in rescuing the Queen, atid Kidd as “sole engineer” on such tug during all such time. No defense is made to these claims, and they will bo taken as confessed. Besides, that of Kidd is proven by his own testimony.

Briefly, the facts, either admitted or proven, concerning the stranding of the vessel and her rescue, are as follows:

On September 2, 1883, the steam-ship Queen of the Pacific, being engaged in the coasting trade between Portland and San Francisco, left the latter port for the former, and arrived off the mouth of the Columbia river in the forenoon of September 4th, where she anchored for a time within the sound of the automatic buoy, and then crossed the bar and entered the river by the south channel, under the direction of a licensed Columbia bar pilot, whom she carried for that purpose. The weather was very thick with fog and smoke, the wind was light, and the sea quite calm. As she came abreast of Clatsop spit the vessel lost the channel and turned to the southward; and at or near high water, and about 1: 45 p. m., ran hard and fast on the [462]*462north end of said spit, in the quicksand, at a point about one-fifth of a mile to the south-westerly of a straight line drawn between Cape Disappointment and Point Adams lights, and about one mile and a third to the north-easterly of red buoy No. 2, and one mile and a half south of the wreck of the Great Republic, and within the 12-foot line, where she lay, heading south-easterly, at nearly a right angle with the channel, until she was pulled off the next day.

On this voyage the Queen had on board Mr. George G. Perkins, the vice-president of and a director in the Pacific Coast Steam-ship Company, and one of its general managing agents, and was fully equipped and manned. She was then about one year old, and worth $485,-000, and carried 160 cabin and 74 steerage passengers, and 1,860 measured tons of freight, worth $315,000, of which $95,000 worth was jettisoned, together with the United States mails and express matter of not less than $22,750 in'value. The passage money, which was prepaid in San Francisco, amounted to $3,124.56. The freight on the whole cargo was $8,955.07, and on the portion saved it was $5,912.28.

. As soon as the vessel stranded the master ordered the engines reversed, and attempted to back her off, but without success. Guns were at once fired and steam-whistles blown as signals of distress, and the chief officer, Mr. Hall, dispatched in a small boat to Astoria, with a message to Capt. George Flavel, one of the libelants, to send all the tugs under his control to the assistance of the Queen. The signal guns were' heard by the lookout of the tug J. C. Brenham, then lying at anchor in Baker’s bay, and the fact at once communicated to her master, M. D. Staples, who immediately started with his tug in the direction of the .spit, taking with him, at the request of Capt. O. T. Harris, then in charge of the life-saving station at Cape Disappointment, a life-boat and volunteer crew. The weather was very thick, and the Brenham proceeded under a slow bell, at the rate of about, six miles an hour, across the middle sand, directly for the spit, through a channel known to the master, and called the “Cut-off,” and reached the vicinity of the Queen in about 25 minutes. The Brenham then drew about 11 feet of water, and approached within about 150 feet of the stern of the ship, and a little on the port quarter, and was hailed by some one thereon, and asked to “come closer.” But, the tug striking the bottom, she withdrew from the ship near one-fourth of a mile, but within ear-shot, where she lay to until near 5 o’clock in the evening, when, haying received about 125 of the Queen’s passengers from her starboard gangway by means of the life and ship’s boat, she proceeded to Astoria, where she arrived with the passengers at half past 6 o’clock, and delivered a message from the Queen, concerning their disposition, to the claimant’s agent at that place.

In the meanwhile, the steam-tug Canby, the property of the Ilwaco Steam Navigation Companjr, then drawing from seven and a half to eight feet of water, in the course of its regular trip from Astoria to [463]

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. 459, 10 Sawy. 303, 1884 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-queen-of-the-pacific-ord-1884.