Waterbury v. Myrick

29 F. Cas. 379, 1828 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 6, 1828
StatusPublished

This text of 29 F. Cas. 379 (Waterbury v. Myrick) 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
Waterbury v. Myrick, 29 F. Cas. 379, 1828 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1 (S.D.N.Y. 1828).

Opinion

BETTS, District Judge.

The competency of this court, as a court of admiralty, to entertain this action, will not be made a point of decision, although that question was largely discussed by counsel on the hearing. It is not a point specifically in issue, no exception having been taken by the pleadings to the jurisdiction of the court, and the case not being one of sufficient doubt to induce the court to hesitate in taking jurisdiction in the matter.

In disposing of the case, I shall assume, <1) That the action in rem will lie by the owner of the Adelaide against the specie attached, provided it would lie against the merchandise saved from the cargo of the brig Greek. (2) That the owner of a vessel which is employed in a salvage service may recover compensation for such employment, as a co-salvor, out of the salved property, either by uniting with the officers and crew of the salving vessel in the suit, or by bringing it himself in his own right, in case they refuse or neglect to join. (3) That an action in personam will lie by one salvor against a co-salvor, to recover a proportionate share of the salvage compensation, when the whole is received by the latter, and he withholds the share of the former. The remaining points which demand consideration relate, first, to the action in rem, and, secondly, to the action in personam.

(1) Does the libellant make out a salvage interest belonging to him in the specie attached in this action? It is only in the capacity of co-salvor that he can proceed against this specie. To support an action in rem the libellant must show a proprietary interest in the money itself, as the produce of or substitute for property belonging to him. The action cannot be maintained on the ground that the relation of master and servant subsisted between the parties. It is true the libellant has sustained an injury by the conduct of the respondent, who was both master of the vessel and consignee of her cargo, of which the libellant was also part owner. The nature of the transaction between the parties required of the respondent strict attention and fidelity in the sale of the cargo, the business being entrusted to his personal judgment and discretion. Yet, during the time he was bound to render all his services to the libellant and to the other consignors, he withdrew himself from that service, and earned $1,800 in a different employment. However praiseworthy his motive may have been, if his object was to rescue lives or property in peril, he cannot justify himself by that motive in abandoning his trust, and devoting his personal services and the money of «the libellant to an expedition resulting in his own profit. This abandonment of his trust, does not, however, give the libellant authority to proceed against the moneys attached. In the first place, the money was obtained by the respondent on his claim for services as a salvor. These services are personal and hazardous, and are compensated upon other considerations than those of time and labor bestowed in rendering them, though these are important elements in fixing the amount. Even if the libellant could show a right to the proceeds of the ordinary services of the respondent, outside of his duty as master, he could not claim the extraordinary rewards which the respondent might receive for meritorious acts of bravery or charity. This was the principle of the case of Mason v. The Blaireau, 2 Cranch [6 U. S.] 240, 262, 270, where it was held that a master of a ship could not claim the salvage money which his apprentice had earned, but that it belonged to the apprentice himself, notwithstanding the right of his master to his time and ordinary earnings. Besides, the right of the libellant to the personal services of the respondent must be measured by the contract, direct or implied, between them, and that cannot be construed to give him a right to specific moneys gained by the respondent otherwise than in his capacity of master of the schooner and consignee of her cargo. Nor could the libellant attach such earnings by admiralty process, upon an equitable claim to participate in them, without showing a legal title in himself to those proceeds. Accordingly, if the contract is violated, the redress of the libellant is by action for damages for the breach; or. if he may waive the tort, and regard the abstraction of his funds as money had and received by the respondent, or borrowed by him. he can have no higher remedy for such right than the ordinary action at law to recover it back, and in neither case has he a privilege to arrest the money and hold that answerable in kind.

The libellant, then, can proceed in rem only by making out a salvage interest in the specie attached. The salvage interest claimed by him is not acquired in the ordinary way, by the use of his vessel in the enterprise, and in aid of the salvage service rendered by the master and by the men in his employment. The libellant's vessel was left in port, and the respondent obtained one belonging in Tuxpan. in which the adventure was carried out. He used for this purpose [383]*383$1,000, which belonged in part to the libel-lant, but not wholly, for it was the proceeds, but in what proportions is not shown, of the outward cargo shipped by various owners, and entrusted to the master to sell.

The maritime law empowers a master to employ, in a salvage service, a vessel under his command, and to put at hazard the interests of her owner; and it is for this reason only, that, upon considerations of general policy, the owner is indemnified for the risk to which his property is exposed, by being, as it were, novated as co-salvor. The owner’s claim to participate in the salvage reward rests always upon the risk and damage to which his property is or may be exposed, and on no other ground. Mason v. The Blaireau, 2 Cranch [6 U. S.] 240, 242; The Mary Ford, 3 Dall. [3 U. S.] 188; Bond v. The Cora [Case No. 1,621], But, in this case, the respondent was not, as master of the brig, authorized by the maritime law to devote the funds in his hands to these objects. It was a wrongful disposition of the money by the respondent, and does not import a voluntary contribution of it by the libellant; and, if the libellant may waive the tort, the money so used would not constitute the libellant a co-salvor. To this it may be added, that the funds so employed were not committed to the respondent for the uses of the voyage, but came into his hands abroad, as consignee of the cargo. Strictly speaking, salvage is the reward of those who engage in the salvage service, and is participated in only by those who actually effect the rescue. The San Bernardo, 1 C. Rob. Adm. 178. The owner of the vessel is admitted to participate in the reward by courts of admiralty, upon equitable considerations, both that the vessel is usually an efficient instrument in the service, and because of the risk to which their property may be thus subjected. But the principle on which others than actual salvors are permitted to share in the salvage reward stops there. The libel-lant could not have sustained an action, as a salvor, against the merchandise saved from the brig Greek, and therefore he cannot, in that capacity, proceed against this specie.

These are impediments to an action in rem, which are not removed by any recognised principle of maritime law. The libellant claims, however, that though his vessel was not employed by the respondent in earning the salvage reward, yet his money was employed to procure another vessel for that purpose, and that the money may therefore be regarded as the salving instrument.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 379, 1828 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waterbury-v-myrick-nysd-1828.