Tice Towing Line v. James McWilliams Blue Line

51 F.2d 243, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1473
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 29, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 51 F.2d 243 (Tice Towing Line v. James McWilliams Blue Line) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tice Towing Line v. James McWilliams Blue Line, 51 F.2d 243, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1473 (S.D.N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

WOOLSEY, District Judge.

I overrule the first exception to the Commissioner’s report and confirm the amount of the salvage fixed by him for barges and eargo at $1,000.

I sustain the second and third exceptions to the Commissioner’s report.

The result of these rulings is that the li-belant may have a decree providing for an award of $1,000 recoverable primarily against the Director General and secondarily against the James McWilliams Blue Line.

I. This libel for salvage is the sequel of other litigations in which the Director General was held for negligent mooring at New-town Creek on February 4, 1920, of the coal laden barges Blue Girl and W. H. Elliott while under contract to tow them within the port of New York. James McWilliams Blue Line v. Davis, Director General (D. C.) 273 F. 622, affirmed 285 F. 312 (C. C. A.). It now comes before me on exceptions 1» the report of Earle Farwell, Esq., as Commissioner. His report has been printed in full in 1930 American Maritime Cases at page 1834 and, consequently, it is unnecessary to refer to it except incidentally.

II. Judge A. N. Hand, in a short opinion, 1 dated December 30, 1924, held the Director General primarily liable to the salvor for the award and referred the ease to a Commissioner , to find the value of the cargo salved.

-He said:

“This is a libel against the respondent for salvage services in the rescue of two barges with their cargoes in the East River. The latter brings in the Director General of Railroads upon the theory that the negligent operation of a tug by the agents of the latter occasioned the necessity for the salvage service, and that the Director General should accordingly bear any loss to the respondent occasioned thereby. The Director General pleads res adjudieata because in former action damages were recovered against him by the respondent for injury to its barges. It is argued on behalf of the Director General that any salvage for which the respondent might be made liable here should have been included as damages in the former action. The Director General also pleads the two year Statute of Limitations provided in the Salvage Act.
“In the case of British & Foreign Marine Ins. Co. v. Kilgour S. S. Co. [D. C.] 184 F. 174, Judge Hough held that the amount for which a libelant might be held liable for salvage could be added to the damages recovered by such libelant in a suit by it against a third party for negligence where the salvage services became necessary owing to such negligence.
“As a matter of fact no attempt was made in the former litigation (which is referred to *245 herq under the plea of res adjudieata) to recover anticipated salvage payments as one of the items of damage. The salvors were not a party to that litigation and, therefore, cannot be bound.
“Unless the salvage has been paid, — certainly unless it had been completely adjusted with the salvors, — it could not be treated as an item of damage without an adjudication by which they were bound as parties. Here there has been clear prima facie proof of sal-wage services. An attempt is made by bringing in the Director General under the Fifty-sixth Rule to hold him liable for the payment of salvage services occasioned by his negligence which he has never paid and which he could not have been compelled to pay in the state of the pleadings in the former action. I think the plea of res adjudieata must therefore be overruled, and the Director General held liable unless the Statute of Limitations is a bar. But the Director General is not liable for salvage; he is only liable to indemnify the person whose property was salved for losses occasioned by the negligence of a tug which the government was then operating. This cause of action would not accrue until the primary liability was in some way established. The Statute of Limitations had therefore not run at the time the Director General was brought in under the Fifty-sixth Rule.

“Inasmuch as sufficient testimony as to the value of the cargo has not been introduced, I shall only direct an interlocutory decree for the libellant, under which the Director General shall be primarily, and the Mc-Williams Blue Line secondarily liable, referring the question of the amount of salvage to be awarded to Pierre M. Brown, Esq.”

Earle Farwell, Esq., the Commissioner, who was substituted for Pierre M. Brown, Esq., originally appointed in pursuance of this opinion, found as the salved values involved, which were admitted or agreed, the following:

W. H. Elliott........ , 3,500.

Yessels’ salved total. $15,500.00 Blue Girl Cargo..... $7,363.25

W. H. Elliott Cargo.. 6,822.38

Cargoes salved total. $14,185.63

The Commissioner fixed $1,000 as the total award for the salvage of these values and allocated the proportion thereof to be assessed as salvage award against the barges alone as $532, to which amount he limited the libelant’s total recovery.

• The three exceptions filed by the salvor to the Commissioner’s report and now before me may be summarized as follows:

First. That the amount awarded libelant is inadequate.

Second and Third. That the award was limited to the proportion chargeable against the barges — the salved vessels — only, and excluded any award for services rendered to the cargoes thereof.

Having regard to the circumstances of the weather on the night of the salvage, cf. McWilliams v. Davis (C. C. A.) 285 F. 312 at pages 314-315-, and the promptness and skill of the service, I agree with the Commissioner that $1,000 is a proper award for the total salvage. I also agree that, proportionately assessed, $522 is a fair proportion of the award to be assessed against the barges alone. I do not agree, however, that this amount is all that is recoverable by the libelant herein.

III. The question of importance in this ease, therefore, arises, not out of the amount at which the award was fixed, but out of the respective liabilities for cargo’s proportion thereof as between the carrying barges and their negligent bailee tug.

It should be observed in this connection that, as Judge Augustus Hand held, there cannot be a direct claim for salvage against the Director General, operator of the negligent bailee tug, because the salvage suit was not brought within two years of the salvage service as required by the provisions of the Salvage Act of August 1,1912. Title 46, U. S. C., § 730 (46 USCA § 730). That is the law of this ease.

Thus the liability of the Director General is by way of indemnity only under Admiralty Rule 56 (28 USCA § 723). •

Such being the practice situation, it must next be determined what decree should be rendered in the exercise of the substantive equity which is one of the characteristic attributes of admiralty courts.

IY. The situation is this:

A sues B, a barge owner, on a cause of action for salvage which has arisen against B and in favor of A owing to the fault and neglect of C, the operator of a bailee tug.

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Bluebook (online)
51 F.2d 243, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tice-towing-line-v-james-mcwilliams-blue-line-nysd-1931.