ORDER GRANTING PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT
LYNCH, District Judge.
I. INTRODUCTION
On the afternoon of July 3, 1984 a number of crafts were fastened together and moored in San Francisco Bay south of the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge. The flotilla consisted of the Heerema Barge H. 109, one or more barges owned by Kaiser Steel Corporation, and a large
oil drilling rig owned by Shell California Production, Inc.
At approximately 3:30 p.m. the Heerema Barge dragged her mooring anchor and the flotilla began to drift northward toward the bridge.
In response to distress calls, the tug
Polaris
motored to the flotilla and offered assistance. The offer was accepted, and the
Polaris
then maneuvered to attach a towline to the Heerema Barge. Once the towline was affixed, the
Polaris
attempted to position the flotilla so that the strong westerly wind would push the flotilla to shallower waters in the eastern part of the Bay. At approximately 4:15 p.m. the flotilla was grounded upon a rock in the eastern part of the Bay approximately 500 yards south of the bridge.
With the assistance of other tugs that had arrived at the scene during the events described above, the
Polaris
towed the flotilla to Anchorage No. 5 in the Bay and was released from further obligations at 6:20 p.m.
The owner, charterer, and two-person crew of the tug
Polaris
have initiated litigation to obtain a salvage award for the acts performed on July 3, 1984. Defendants have brought a motion for partial summary judgment urging this Court to clarify and limit the factors it may consider in making a salvage award. Before such a determination can be made, the Court must decide what law governs this case.
II. CHOICE OF LAW
Salvage awards are the subject of local,
national, and international laws.
When this Court sits as an admiralty court, it applies the general federal maritime law.
Southern Pac. Co. v. Jensen,
244 U.S. 205, 215, 37 S.Ct. 524, 528, 61 L.Ed. 1086 (1917). The Court must determine precisely what constitutes the federal maritime law in this case. Defendants contend that the Court is bound by The Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules of Law Relating to Assistance and Salvage at Sea, Sept. 23, 1910, 37 Stat. 1658 (1913), T.S. No. 576,
reprinted in
3A M. Norris,
Benedict on Admiralty
App. B-1 (7th ed. 1984), (sometimes referred to as The Brussels Convention of 1910; hereinafter the “Salvage Treaty” or “Treaty”). Plaintiffs argue that the maritime common law of the United States, exclusive of the Salvage Treaty, should be the guide. For the reasons outlined below, this Court is compelled to apply the Salvage Treaty.
The Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution makes clear that along with the Constitution and laws of the United States, “all Treaties ... made ... under the Authority of the United States ... shall be the Supreme Law of the Land.” U.S. Const, art VI, cl. 2. Article II explains that a treaty is made under the authority of the United States when it is signed by the President and ratified by two-thirds of the Senate. U.S. Const. art. II, sec. 2, cl. 2. As a result, once a treaty is ratified it is the law of the United States and is as binding as a federal statute.
See In Re Aircrash in Bali, Indonesia on April 22, 1974,
684 F.2d 1301, 1309 (9th Cir.1982) (upholding the applicability and constitutionality of the Warsaw Convention’s limitations on air carrier liability).
The Salvage Treaty was signed by the United States in 1910 at Brussels and was ratified in 1913. 37 Stat. 1658 (1913). Thus, if by its own terms the Salvage Treaty applies to the case before this Court, it must be given effect.
Warshauer v. Lloyd Sabaudo S.A.,
71 F.2d 146, 148 (2d Cir. 1934) (The Treaty is self-executing; it needs no implementing legislation.). The Court appreciates that the Salvage Treaty “has played little part in the development of American salvage law and has rarely been construed, discussed or cited,” G. Gilmore & C. Black,
The Law of Admiralty
534 (1975),
but that historical observation is not a justification for this Court to ignore the Treaty if it is applicable.
The scope of the Salvage Treaty is laid out in its Articles 1, 14, and 15. Article 1 provides that the Treaty will apply to salvage operations, regardless of where they occur, involving seagoing vessels and ves
seis of inland navigation.
Article 14 exempts from the Treaty’s coverage ships of war and Government ships.
There is no contention here that either the nature of the vessels involved or the location of the operation renders the terms of the Salvage Treaty inapplicable to this case.
Article 15 makes the Treaty applicable when any of the vessels involved belongs to a country that has signed the Treaty. However, it provides that it will not apply “where all the persons interested” are from the country in which the case is being tried.
There is a dispute in this case as to the meaning of the phrase “all the persons interested”; plaintiffs contend that all the persons interested are from the United States while defendants contend that they are not.
The Court can find no American authority interpreting the phrase, nor was it directed to any foreign authority that has provided an interpretation. Nevertheless, the Court is confident that in this case it would be error to conclude that all the persons interested are from the United States. The phrase certainly requires consideration of the nationalities of the plaintiffs. In this case the human plaintiffs are American citizens while the corporate plaintiff is part of an entity incorporated under the laws of one of the United States.
The phrase must also encompass the defendants. However, plaintiffs and the defendants opposing this motion disagree as to how the phrase should be interpreted with respect to the defendants. Plaintiffs have urged the Court to treat only those defendants who have been served and have appeared before the Court as members of the class of all the persons interested.
The Court believes that to reinterpret “all the persons interested” as “all parties served” would be to violently restrict the scope of the Treaty. The phrase must at least encompass named defendants, and in this case two of the named defendants, Heerema Marine Contractors, S.A.
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ORDER GRANTING PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT
LYNCH, District Judge.
I. INTRODUCTION
On the afternoon of July 3, 1984 a number of crafts were fastened together and moored in San Francisco Bay south of the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge. The flotilla consisted of the Heerema Barge H. 109, one or more barges owned by Kaiser Steel Corporation, and a large
oil drilling rig owned by Shell California Production, Inc.
At approximately 3:30 p.m. the Heerema Barge dragged her mooring anchor and the flotilla began to drift northward toward the bridge.
In response to distress calls, the tug
Polaris
motored to the flotilla and offered assistance. The offer was accepted, and the
Polaris
then maneuvered to attach a towline to the Heerema Barge. Once the towline was affixed, the
Polaris
attempted to position the flotilla so that the strong westerly wind would push the flotilla to shallower waters in the eastern part of the Bay. At approximately 4:15 p.m. the flotilla was grounded upon a rock in the eastern part of the Bay approximately 500 yards south of the bridge.
With the assistance of other tugs that had arrived at the scene during the events described above, the
Polaris
towed the flotilla to Anchorage No. 5 in the Bay and was released from further obligations at 6:20 p.m.
The owner, charterer, and two-person crew of the tug
Polaris
have initiated litigation to obtain a salvage award for the acts performed on July 3, 1984. Defendants have brought a motion for partial summary judgment urging this Court to clarify and limit the factors it may consider in making a salvage award. Before such a determination can be made, the Court must decide what law governs this case.
II. CHOICE OF LAW
Salvage awards are the subject of local,
national, and international laws.
When this Court sits as an admiralty court, it applies the general federal maritime law.
Southern Pac. Co. v. Jensen,
244 U.S. 205, 215, 37 S.Ct. 524, 528, 61 L.Ed. 1086 (1917). The Court must determine precisely what constitutes the federal maritime law in this case. Defendants contend that the Court is bound by The Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules of Law Relating to Assistance and Salvage at Sea, Sept. 23, 1910, 37 Stat. 1658 (1913), T.S. No. 576,
reprinted in
3A M. Norris,
Benedict on Admiralty
App. B-1 (7th ed. 1984), (sometimes referred to as The Brussels Convention of 1910; hereinafter the “Salvage Treaty” or “Treaty”). Plaintiffs argue that the maritime common law of the United States, exclusive of the Salvage Treaty, should be the guide. For the reasons outlined below, this Court is compelled to apply the Salvage Treaty.
The Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution makes clear that along with the Constitution and laws of the United States, “all Treaties ... made ... under the Authority of the United States ... shall be the Supreme Law of the Land.” U.S. Const, art VI, cl. 2. Article II explains that a treaty is made under the authority of the United States when it is signed by the President and ratified by two-thirds of the Senate. U.S. Const. art. II, sec. 2, cl. 2. As a result, once a treaty is ratified it is the law of the United States and is as binding as a federal statute.
See In Re Aircrash in Bali, Indonesia on April 22, 1974,
684 F.2d 1301, 1309 (9th Cir.1982) (upholding the applicability and constitutionality of the Warsaw Convention’s limitations on air carrier liability).
The Salvage Treaty was signed by the United States in 1910 at Brussels and was ratified in 1913. 37 Stat. 1658 (1913). Thus, if by its own terms the Salvage Treaty applies to the case before this Court, it must be given effect.
Warshauer v. Lloyd Sabaudo S.A.,
71 F.2d 146, 148 (2d Cir. 1934) (The Treaty is self-executing; it needs no implementing legislation.). The Court appreciates that the Salvage Treaty “has played little part in the development of American salvage law and has rarely been construed, discussed or cited,” G. Gilmore & C. Black,
The Law of Admiralty
534 (1975),
but that historical observation is not a justification for this Court to ignore the Treaty if it is applicable.
The scope of the Salvage Treaty is laid out in its Articles 1, 14, and 15. Article 1 provides that the Treaty will apply to salvage operations, regardless of where they occur, involving seagoing vessels and ves
seis of inland navigation.
Article 14 exempts from the Treaty’s coverage ships of war and Government ships.
There is no contention here that either the nature of the vessels involved or the location of the operation renders the terms of the Salvage Treaty inapplicable to this case.
Article 15 makes the Treaty applicable when any of the vessels involved belongs to a country that has signed the Treaty. However, it provides that it will not apply “where all the persons interested” are from the country in which the case is being tried.
There is a dispute in this case as to the meaning of the phrase “all the persons interested”; plaintiffs contend that all the persons interested are from the United States while defendants contend that they are not.
The Court can find no American authority interpreting the phrase, nor was it directed to any foreign authority that has provided an interpretation. Nevertheless, the Court is confident that in this case it would be error to conclude that all the persons interested are from the United States. The phrase certainly requires consideration of the nationalities of the plaintiffs. In this case the human plaintiffs are American citizens while the corporate plaintiff is part of an entity incorporated under the laws of one of the United States.
The phrase must also encompass the defendants. However, plaintiffs and the defendants opposing this motion disagree as to how the phrase should be interpreted with respect to the defendants. Plaintiffs have urged the Court to treat only those defendants who have been served and have appeared before the Court as members of the class of all the persons interested.
The Court believes that to reinterpret “all the persons interested” as “all parties served” would be to violently restrict the scope of the Treaty. The phrase must at least encompass named defendants, and in this case two of the named defendants, Heerema Marine Contractors, S.A. and Vareos Shipping, S.A., are corporations formed under the laws of countries other than the United States.
There is no inequity to the plaintiffs in interpreting the Treaty so that it is invoked when a named defendant is from a different country. As the masters of their complaint, plaintiffs can avoid naming foreign defendants in order to elude the Treaty’s reach.
Cf.
13B C. Wright, A. Miller & E. Cooper,
supra
note 11, at 413-14 (a plaintiff may have an action dismissed as to a non-indispensable party to avoid diversity and preserve jurisdiction);
Ross v. Int’l Bhd. of Elec. Workers,
634 F.2d 453, 456 (9th Cir.1980).
More importantly, interpreting the phrase so as to favor liberal application of the Treaty by considering the nationality of. named defendants even though they have not appeared, is consistent with the Treaty’s intent to provide uniformity among nations in the resolution of salvage cases.
Such an interpretation also comports with the ordinary meaning of the phrase “all the persons interested” better than would an interpretation limiting its meaning to include only those persons who have been served and have appeared. In light of the intent of the Treaty and the peculiarity of the interpretation plaintiffs have urged upon the Court, the Court will interpret the phrase “all the persons interested” to include all named defendants.
Thus, this Court is convinced that the Salvage Treaty governs the resolution of this issue. The question remains as to what factors can be considered in making salvage awards under the Treaty.
III. THE CONSIDERATIONS IN A SALVAGE AWARD
The factors to be considered in making a salvage award are enumerated in Article 8 of the Treaty. It reads:
The remuneration is fixed by the court, according to the circumstances of each case, on the basis of the following considerations: (a) Firstly, the measure of success obtained, the efforts and deserts of the salvors, the danger run by the salved vessel, by her passengers, crew and cargo, by the salvors, and by the salving vessel, the time expended, the expenses incurred and losses suffered, and the risks of liability and other risks run by the salvors, and also the value of of the property exposed to such risks, due regard being had to the special apropriation (if any) of the salvor’s vessel for salvage purposes; (b) second, the value of the property salved.
Salvage Treaty, Art. 8.
The Treaty places an upper limit on the salvage award at the value of the property salved.
A.
Limits on the Factors to be Considered
Plaintiffs urge this Court to include within these categories of salvage award considerations both “the pubiic interest” and the value to defendants in being spared from liability to third parties such as the owners and users of the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge (a concept sometimes referred to as “liability salvage”).
No Américan Court has yet determined whether so-called liability salvage is a permissable consideration in making a salvage award under the Treaty or any other body of salvage doctrine. This Court feels compelled to conclude that it cannot be considered in this case as it is not within the contemplation of the Treaty. The Court is also compelled to exclude consideration of the public interest as a distinct factor in making the award.
Plaintiffs argue that the Court can interpret the Treaty so as to take into consideration the prevention of liability to defendants under both parts (b) of Article 8 as an aspect of the value of the property salved and under several of the other factors to which part (a) directs consideration. The Court disagrees: neither liability salvage nor the public interest may be considered as distinct factors under either part of Article 8.
1. Delimiting “the value of the property salved.”
Plaintiffs cite
United States v. Cornell Steamboat Co.,
202 U.S. 184, 26 S.Ct. 648, 50 L.Ed. 987 (1906), for the authority that liability to third parties can be considered an aspect of the value of the property salved. The Court notes that the case is not an interpretation of the Treaty and so is of limited relevance to this discussion, and the Court doubts that the
Cornell
case can be taken for such a broad proposition. In
Cornell,
a ship delivering sugar caught fire in New York harbor. The salvor saved the sacks of sugar, and then collected a salvage award from the U.S. Government on the theory that because the duty on the sugar had already been paid to the Government, saving the sugar spared the Government from having to refund the duty which would not have been owed had the sugar not been unloaded.
Id.
at 192, 25 S.Ct. at 650.
This Court does not read
Cornell
for the proposition that any liability to a third party that a salvor prevents must be considered an aspect of the property salved. General salvage law and the Treaty recognize that freight and passenger money can be a subject of salvage and are therefore includable within the value of the property salved.
The liability for repaying the duty paid in
Cornell
is very much like the liability for repaying prepaid freight which the salvage law recognizes. Both are for a finite and predetermined amount closely related to the value of the tangible cargo on board the ship. Neither liability is as speculative or contingent as the possible liability to someone like the bridge owner would
be in this case. Thus,
Cornell
at most stands for a slight extension of the concept of salvable property in federal maritime common law to include prepaid duty. Moreover, it is not clear that even such a limited extension is the law under the Treaty. The Treaty was drafted after
Cornell
was decided, but no mention is made of prepaid duty either in Article 1 in the description of what can be salved, or in Article 8 describing the factors to be considered in making the salvage award.
Recent proposals to modify the Treaty by international agreement persuade this Court that the present Treaty does not include potential liability to third persons within the concept of the value of the property salved as used in Articles 2 and 8 of the Treaty. In light of recent maritime disasters in which supertankers have become disabled and threatened coastlines with ecological disaster, the Treaty has been criticized for its inability to appropriately encourage salvors to render aid and prevent an ecological disaster.
The shortcoming critics found in the Treaty is its requirement in Article 2 that a “useful result” be obtained in order for a salvor to even be eligible for a salvage award.
The language of Article 2 codifies the “no cure, no pay” rule which is an ancient and fundamental aspect of the law of salvage.
The problems critics found with the “no cure, no pay” rule was that salvors were provided with little or no incentive to prevent an oil spill when it was unlikely that the ship itself could be saved,
or when the value of the saved ship would be too small in relation to the efforts the salvors would undertake to prevent the spill. In short, the problem was that “useful result” was equated with arrived salved value (in this case, the value of the flotilla when it arrived at Mooring 5). When the arrived salved value was small (no cure), there could be no award at all (no pay) or the limit on the award would be so small as to make salvage efforts unprofitable.
To solve the problem the proponents of the Montreal Draft International Convention on Salvage (“Draft Convention”)
created in salvors a new duty to use their best efforts to prevent or minimize damage to the environment.
Those efforts may then be considered as a factor in determining the amount of the award, but the award is still subject to the limit set by the arrived salved value of the property.
However, the Draft Convention allows for special
compensation when a salvor attempts to minimize damage to the environment. Whether successful or not the salvor is entitled to compensation for his expenses,
and if successful in minimizing damage to the environment, he may receive up to double his expenses.
The special compensation is only available if the salvor is not entitled to a “conventional” salvage award (which may be arrived at after considering efforts taken on behalf of the environment) as large as his special compensation might be.
The perception of a problem and the Draft Convention solution indicate that the present Treaty does not include within the concept of the value of the property salved possible liability to third parties. If the Treaty did include such liability within the value of the property salved, there would have been no reason to tinker with it: a salvor who aided a damaged supertanker would have been able to come into court and argue for a salvage award up to the limit of the liability he would claim he prevented the shipowner from incurring. Clearly, the scholars who conceived the Draft Convention felt that the present Treaty does not allow the prevention of liability to be considered either as an aspect of the value of the property salved or as a cure or “useful result” as those terms are used in the Treaty.
The existence of a perceived need to revise the Treaty persuades this Court that it
cannot
consider the prevention of potential liability under the present Treaty, and the deliberations the revisers undertook convinees this Court that it
should not
read liability salvage into the Treaty. The proponents of the Draft Convention explicitly considered and rejected the concept of liability salvage when they chose instead to give enhanced rewards for minimizing damage to the environment.
See
O’May,
supra
note 16, at 1423-24; Coulthard,
supra
note 18, at 50-51. This Court will not disregard the conclusions of an international body of experts without a very good reason for so doing, and the Court finds no such reason in this case.
Thus, this Court is compelled to reject the concept of liability salvage in interpreting the Treaty. The avoidance of potential liability to third parties is not an aspect of the property salved which can be considered under Articles 2 or 8, nor does it fall within the list of salvageable items described in Article 1. So concluding, however, does not end the discussion, for there is still the question of whether or not the prevention of liability to third parties can be considered under any of the other factors described in Article 8.
2. Delimiting the other Article 8 factors.
Plaintiffs argue that two separate lines of cases, one English and one American, support their contention that preventing liability to third parties is a factor to be considered in making a salvage award.
Plaintiffs cite the English eases of
The
Whippingham,
48 Ll.L.L.R. 49 (1934),
The Buffalo,
58 Ll.L.L.R. 302 (1937), and
The Gregerso,
1 Q.B. 274 (1973), in support of their contention that the Court should consider the prevention of harm to third parties as a factor in making the salvage award. This Court finds those cases unpersuasive. In the first place, they are not cases decided under the Treaty and thus reflect the state of British maritime law independent of the Treaty, not the law of the United States either with or without the Treaty. More importantly, they are cases in which the issue of liability is mentioned so casually as to be the most unpersuasive kind of dicta. Thus, this Court agrees with Judge Sheen who said of the three cases and their impact on English law,
It seems to me that those dicta amount to no more than this: If the circumstances are such that, if it were not for the salvage services the shipowner might find himself liable in damages to others, that fact should have some bearing upon the amount of the salvage award because it makes the service of greater benefit to the shipowner.
Sheen,
supra
note 21, at 1405-06. The Court notes that the benefit to the shipowner is not currently one of the independent factors of which the Treaty allows consideration in making an award.
Plaintiffs rely on
Tidewater Salvage, Inc. v. Weyerhaeuser Co.,
633 F.2d 1304 (9th Cir.1980), and cases it cites in which American courts have granted salvage awards for clearing derelicts off the seas,
for the proposition that the public interest is a factor in determining the amount of a salvage award. In so relying, plaintiffs have confused the rules of salvage with the policy which those rules seek to implement.
Tidewater
does contain language explaining that salvage awards are given because public policy requires that rewards be held out to encourage mariners to come to the aid of other mariners in distress,
id.
at 1306;
thus, the public interest is a factor motivating the existence of salvage awards in the first place. However, that is not to say that the public interest, per se, is to be a distinct factor in the calculation of each award.
The authors of the Treaty, fully aware of the purposes of salvage awards,
enumer
ated the factors to be considered in making a salvage award so as to accomplish those purposes and serve the public interest. In so doing they precluded, and obviated the need for, the consideration of the public interest as a distinct factor in the making of each subsequent award under the Treaty-
It is not for this Court to arrogate itself to the position of an international law-making body and read additional factors for consideration into the Treaty.
Thus, this Court declines to consider the prevention of liability to third parties, the public interest, or “benefits to the shipowner” as distinct factors in arriving at a salvage award under the Treaty.
B.
Clarifying the Factors to be Considered
Within its own terms the Treaty requires this Court to consider some factors closely resembling those plaintiffs would have the Court consider under the labels of the prevention of liability to third parties or the public interest. Article 8 instructs the Court to consider,
inter alia,
“the danger run by the salved vessel, by her passengers, crew and cargo, by the salvors, and by the salving vessel.” Article 8 also invites the consideration of “the risks of liability and other risks run by the salvors.”
In assessing the danger to which the vessels, crew and cargo were exposed, the presence of the bridge can be considered.
However, it is the danger to the vessel from the bridge, not the danger to the bridge from the vessel, that is relevant. Thus, while expert testimony on the likely effect a collision with the bridge would have had on the barges and rig may be admissible, testimony as to the effect such a collision would have had on the bridge would not be germane.
The Court also declines to allow consideration of the danger of lawsuits by third parties who might have been injured absent the salvors’ assistance (such as the bridge owner or shipping lane users) under the rubric of danger to the vessel, crew, and cargo. It is a well-founded principle of salvage doctrine that “the ‘peril which can be properly considered in determining a salvage award is not to be estimated in the light of subsequent or contingent events, but of the facts which surround the salvage service at the time it is rendered.’ ”
B. V. Bureau Wijsmuller v. United States,
702 F.2d 333, 340 (2d Cir.1983) (quoting 3A M. Norris,
supra
note 17, § 249). The possibility of lawsuits by third parties, is an event too contingent to be considered by this Court in determining the amount of the salvage award. As Justice Story said, “Salvage is a compensation for the rescue of the property from present, pressing, impending perils; and not for the rescue of it from possible future perils____ It is allowed because the property is saved; not, because it might have been otherwise lost upon future contingencies.”
The Emulous,
F.Cas. 4480 (C.C.Mass.1832). There is no indication that the Treaty has been or should be treated any differently so as to expand the concept of danger to include the danger of potential lawsuits.
Thus, just as the Court would not consider evidence that, for example, the vessels were saved
from a storm that occurred a week after the salvage operation if admission of such evidence were sought, so the Court will not consider evidence about lawsuits that might have been filed but for the salvor’s assistance.
To conclude otherwise would be to tamper with an international agreement for no good reason.
Article 8 of the Treaty allows consideration of “the risks of liability and other risks run by the salvors.” Plaintiffs correctly point out that a salvor may be liable for damage inflicted by property in their care, 3A M. Norris,
supra
note 17 § 120, and argue that “[h]ad plaintiffs been unsuccessful in their attempts to save the flotilla and had it crashed into the bridge, they would undoubtedly have been named as defendants in actions for the damage that resulted.” Plaintiffs’ Memo, at 11. The Court considers the likelihood of being named in a lawsuit irrelevant in the consideration of a salvage award; the Treaty speaks of liability, not vulnerability to suit.
The Court has serious doubts as to whether the plaintiffs would have any liability simply for failing to bring the flotilla under control. Liability would have to be based on negligence evidenced by the lack of ordinary skill in the salvage attempt, 3A M. Norris,
supra
note 17, § 122, and mere failure does not necessarily constitute negligence.
However, the salvor certainly ran some risk of liability in the endeavor. In order to consider those risks, the Court would entertain evidence as to what the perception of risk was to the plaintiffs before and during the salvage operation. In adopting an analysis of the risk of liability that is subjective and from the prospective perspective of the plaintiffs, the Court is being faithful to the underlying purpose of considering the risk to the salvor at all. That purpose is to encourage rescues even in the face of danger by enhancing the award when such danger is present.
See
3A M. Norris,
supra
note 17, §§ 264-66; C. Black & G. Gilmore,
supra
note 17, at 562. Thus, after-the-fact testimony as to what the damage to the bridge might have been had the flotilla not grounded is irrelevant to the Court’s assessment of the risk of liability run by the salvors.
IV. CONCLUSION
While it has been cynically suggested that reciting the many factors to be con
sidered in making a salvage award merely “serves the useful purpose of indicating that the variables are so many and so incapable of exact measurement that it will probably be fruitless for either party to take an appeal merely on the ground that the award was incorrectly computed,” C. Black & G. Gilmore,
supra
note 17, at 559, the Court believes that clarifying some aspects of these factors is important so that the parties can better evaluate their cases.
In rejecting the consideration of the prevention of liability to third parties and the public interest as independent factors, the Court is not only faithfully interpreting the Treaty as it is now written, but is maintaining a position on the issues which is consistent with that taken by the reformers of the Treaty.
However, having clarified the factors that will be considered in making the salvage award, the Court notes that it is still left with considerable discretion in how those factors are to be weighed
so that a fair salvage award that will serve the interests of the parties and the public can be awarded.
IT IS SO ORDERED.