Wilder's Steamship Co. v. The Brigantine "Lurline"

11 Haw. 83
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Haw. 83 (Wilder's Steamship Co. v. The Brigantine "Lurline") is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilder's Steamship Co. v. The Brigantine "Lurline", 11 Haw. 83 (haw 1891).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

WHITING, J.

Circuit Judge Perry heard this case below and decreed that the libellant is entitled to salvage in a certain amount, and the libellant appeals to this Court.

The decision appealed from is as follows:

This is a libel for salvage brought by the Wilder Steamship Company, Limited, a Hawaiian corporation, for itself and others interested as salvors, against the brigantine “Lurline,” her tackle, apparel, furniture and ballast.

From the evidence adduced at the trial, I find the facts to be as follows:

[84]*84About 1.30 o’clock on the morning of December 5th last, the Lurline, being then at anchor in the harbor of Kahului, Maui, parted her chains during a storm, and was driven towards the shore by the wind and waves, and at about 2 o’clock of the same morning went on the reef. At the time, the wind was from the north, i. e., towards the shore, the sea rough and breaking, and rain falling. The swell, after landing the vessel in shallow water, continued moving her inwards over the reef until at about 6 o’clock of the same morning, when Robert English, pilot of that har’bor, went aboard, she was about forty or fifty feet beyond the line of deep water. From that time until the arrival of the Likelike, the Lurline was carried six or seven feet still further in. Shortly after the vessel struck, Captain Brown of the Lurline sent a boat ashore to notify the pilot that he was wanted on board, but, owing to the darkness and to the state of the sea, the pilot- delayed going out until daylight, when, with a crew of six men from shore, he rowed to the Lurline. She then,had two stern lines out, fastened to what is known in that harbor as stern mooring number two. Efforts had already been made by the captain, and were thereafter continued, to pull the ship off with the aid of the donkey-engine aboard by hauling on the stern lines first, and later on the bow lines which the pilot had, before coming aboard, made fast from the Lurline’s bow to what are known as the bow moorings; but without success, for it was found by those on board that there was danger, if too much strain was put on the lines, either of the donkey-engine breaking away from its fastenings, or of the hawsers parting. Moreover, after heaving for some time on the stern lines, the. stern mooring to which said lines were fast, yielded to the strain and dragged for some distance towards the Lurline, rendering further heaving on these lines of little avail. This attempt was, therefore, given up, and the bow lines merely kept as nearly taut as possible to prevent the ship from going further on the reef.

At about 9 o’clock that morning, D. Center, who represents to some extent the owner of the Lurline, went on board. While [85]*85there, and before the arrival of the Likelike, he suggested to Captain Brown that the steam-plows of the Hawaiian Commercial and Sugar Company might be used on shore .as a means with which to pull the Lurline from her position on the reef into deep water; but Captain Brown apparently did not think the plan a good one and dismissed it from his mind without much consideration.

In his efforts, Captain Brown made use of all the tackle belonging to the ship and also of such as was sent to him from the shore. He continued doing all that could be done to prevent the vessel’s going further towards the beach until shortly after Center’s arrival on board, when libellant’s steamship Likelike came into harbor on her way to Honolulu on one of her regular trips. By this time the storm had abated and the swell had gone down; a little wind came occasionally in puffs; the sea was smooth; but the weather was still threatening.

Captain Andrews of the Likelike at once went aboard the Lurline and offered assistance, which Captain Brown accepted. After inquiring what hawsers the Lurline had on board, Andrews returned to the Likelike, coming again shortly thereafter to the Lurline. He then mentioned to Brown the subject of compensation, said that his price was $5000, and handed to Brown a bill for that sum for signature and approval. Brown protested, urging that the value of the vessel before going ashore was not more than $4000, and that the compensation demanded was “outrageous and piratical.” Center avIio was also present, inquired of Andrews whether a reduction could not be had at the Honolulu office to $2000 or $2500. Andrews replied that he could not say as to that, that the officers of the company in Honolulu might make the reduction if they saw fit, and concluded by saying “$5000 or no hawser.” Brown, believing that his ship was, to use his own language, “in extremis,” “in imminent danger of loss,” and that no other assistance was available, yielded and signed the paper. The agreement between the two captains was however, that that sum was to be paid only if the Lurline was taken from her position on the reef and safely towed to [86]*86Honolulu harbor, and that unless all of this was done, nothing was to be paid to the Likelike for her services.

The Lurline’s seven-inch hawser was then made fast to her stern and to the Likelike. After the latter had pulled for a few minutes and moved the Lurline three or four feet, the hawser parted. A second attempt was then made, the hawser being on this occasion made fast to the bow of the Lurline; but after one-quarter of an hour’s strain, it again parted. The Likelike took in her six-inch line which she had had out to the bow moorings, and both that, and the seven-inch hawser of the Lurline were made fast to the latter’s stern. After another brief attempt, it was found impossible to move the Lurline, the water being low. The lines were made taut by the Likelike and held thus until the next high tide which came at 11 or twelve o’clock the following night.

At 9 or 10 o’clock in the morning, the Lurline, as she lay on the coral bank, was drawing seven feet of water forward, five feet in the middle, and eight feet aft.

Erom the time the Lurline struck the reef until the lines from her were made fast to the Likelike and held taut, the former vessel thumped on the rocky bottom, more heavily while the storm lasted, even to the extent of shaking the masts and rigging considerably, and less so after the weather moderated. The strain on the lines from the Likelike practically put an end to the severe thumping, so that the injury to the Lurline’s hull may be said to have been received between the hours of two and nine that morning. The injury, as found upon an examination of the vessel while on the marine railway in Honolulu, was as follows:

The keel, which was a solid piece of wood two feet deep and fourteen inches thick, was split and chafed for a distance of sixty-four feet, and in some places worn away right up to the garboard plank, so that an entire new keel was necessary. The old keel had been fastened with one and one-quarter-inch bolts, more plentiful than in the ordinary vessel. Where the keel [87]*87was worn away, all of the bolts were completely bent. Tbe four-inch garboard plank was very badly cbafed and in two-places broken. On the starboard side, five planks on tbe bottom, were bruised and cbafed for a distance of forty feet commencing at tbe keel and counting towards tbe bilge. In places, the oakum bad started. Tbe shoe was gone tbe entire length of tbe vessel. Tbe stern post was started, the upper rudder brace, broken, both pintles bent, and tbe wood lock gone.

At about 1:30 or 2 p. m. of that Saturday tbe crew of tbe Lurline, being six men, together with tbe pilot’s crew of six.

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11 Haw. 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilders-steamship-co-v-the-brigantine-lurline-haw-1891.