The Wave v. Hyer

29 F. Cas. 464, 2 Paine 131
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 F. Cas. 464 (The Wave v. Hyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Wave v. Hyer, 29 F. Cas. 464, 2 Paine 131 (circtsdny 1863).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Circuit Justice.

The respondents filed a libel in the district court, claiming an allowance as salvors of the schooner Wave and her cargo; and the court, by its decree, allowed as salvage one-tenth of the appraized value of the vessel and cargo to the libellants, amounting to $1,103.78. From this decree an appeal has been taken to this court. Some of the questions involved in the discussion at the bar, as connected with the circumstances of this case, are new, and by no means free of difficulty. In our complicated system of government, questions of jurisdiction must necessarily frequently arise; they are at all times interesting and sometimes doubtful, and minds equally enlightened and equally aiming at' correct results, may nevertheless arrive at different conclusions.

It will not be necessary for me. under the view which I have taken of the case, to enter into a particular examination of all the points which have been made and discussed at the bar. I shall confine myself strictly to this case, which requires me only to decide, whether the libellants in the court below, being pilots of the port of New York, appointed under the authority of the state, could, for the services rendered by them, sustain in the district court a claim for salvaged.3

It is admitted that the libellants are pilots, [466]*466or officers holding some station in the pilotage establishment for the port of New York, and deriving their authority from the laws of the .state of New York; and that the whole service was performed within the jurisdiction of the state, and within the range of the pilotage establishment.

The character in which the libellants were acting, is important in no other point of view than for the purpose of deciding what dutj' was imposed upon them as pilots with respect to this vessel under the circumstances in which she was found; for I apprehend, if they did no more than was their duty to do as pilots, it is very clear they cannot set themselves up as salvors. We have in the ease of The Neptune. 1 Hagg. Adm. 227, Lord Stowell’s explanation or description of the character of a salvor, which is perhaps as accurate as is anywhere to be found in the books. A salvor, says he, is a person who, without any particular relation to a ship in distress, proffers useful service, and gives it as a volunteer adventurer, without any preexisting covenant that connected him with the duty of employing himself for the preservation of that ship; and, therefore, he says, the crew of a ship whose stipulated duty it is to protect that ship through all perils, cannot be considered salvors. He adds, that he will not say a case cannot exist where they might claim as salvors, but they must be very extraordinary circumstances indeed, for the general rule is very strong and inflexible, that they are not permitted to assume that character. They are excluded upon just grounds, although a liberal allowance in meritorious cases is founded in sound policy, as holding out strong inducements to men to exert themselves in the preservation of lives and property about to perish at sea; yet when such allowance is claimed by men who have a duty to discharge in the preservation of such property, great care should be taken not to hold out a temptation to a dereliction of duty. Hence it is, that in general, seamen, pilots and passengers cannot sustain a claim for salvage for the ordinary assistance they may have afforded a vessel in distress, it being no more than their duty; but for extraordinary exertions beyond their duty, such claim has been sometimes, though very rarely, allowed: always, however, accompanied by remarks showing the extreme caution with which such claim is admitted. This is fully exemplified in the case of The Neptune, already referred to, which was a claim of salvage by seamen. And the like language was held by the same judge as applicable to the claim of salvage by a pilot in the case of The Joseph Harvey, 1 C. Rob. Adm. 306. It may be, says he, in an extraordinary case, difficult to distinguish a case of pilotage from a case of salvage, properly so called, for it is possible that the safe conduct of a ship into port, under circumstances of extreme danger and personal exertion, may exalt a pilotage service into something of a salvage service, but in general they are distinguishable enough, and the pilot, though he contributes to the safety of the ship, is not to claim as a legal salvor. So, in the case of Mason v. The Blareau, 2 Cranch [6 U. S.] 240, in the supreme court of the United States, salvage was allowed a seaman under extraordinary circumstances, where the ship had been abandoned by the master and crew, and the seaman claiming salvage was considered as discharged from his contract as a mariner, and of course had no further duty as such to discharge. The ease of Dulany v. The Peragio [Case No. 4,123], decided in South Carolina, contains no doctrine at variance with the view I have taken of the one now before the court, but is in accordance with it in principle. The judge says, this case comes before the court as a case of salvage, but, on a full investigation of the evidence, it does not seem to be altogether such. The pilot took the sloop in tow, and it is admitted some compensation is due over and above the usual rate of pilotage. And as no question of law arose in the case, and he had consulted persons conversant in these matters, none of whom considered it a case of salvage, but all agreed compensation should be allowed, by way of encouragement to pilots to do more than their mere duty, he allowed $200. Here, although it was considered that the pilot did more than was strictly his duty, the court did not consider it a case of salvage.

The rule which governs all these cases is founded upon the soundest principles of justice and public policy, and is fully recognized by Mr. Justice Washington in the ease of Le Tigre [Case No. 8.281]. When, says he, the service for which the compensation is claimed by a public officer is required of him by the law virtute officii, or it becomes a duty necessarily connected with his public employment, we can perceive the most obvious reasons why a compensation beyond what the law allows should not be claimed from the owner of the property saved. And he mentions pilots as a class of officers falling within this rule. I am not disposed in the least to call in question the jurisdiction of the district court, as a court of admiralty, over suits for pilotage upon the high seas; nor. in denying the jurisdiction of the district court in this case, is it necessary that I should sustain the doctrine of the common law courts in England as to the jurisdiction of the admiralty; or hold, that if the contract be for services to be performed on a navigable river or waters within the body of a county, no suit will lie in the admiralty in favor of the pilot for such services. 2 Wils. 264. It may be admitted that pilotage services partake so much of a maritime character, that under our system, and the grant of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction to the district courts, those courts, in the absence of any legislative provision on the subject of pilotage, may sustain suits for such services, although performed within the body of a county. But it must be borne in mind that pilotage services are not so exclusively of a maritime character [467]*467that common law courts do not take cognizance of suits for such services, even when performed upon the high seas. 2 Bos. & P. 612; 10 Johns. 112; 1 Caines, 105. There is nothing in the nature of the remedy, or the subject-matter, which can take away the jurisdiction of the common law courts.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 464, 2 Paine 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-wave-v-hyer-circtsdny-1863.