Winso v. The Cornelius Grinnell

30 F. Cas. 309
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 15, 1864
StatusPublished

This text of 30 F. Cas. 309 (Winso v. The Cornelius Grinnell) 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
Winso v. The Cornelius Grinnell, 30 F. Cas. 309 (S.D.N.Y. 1864).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, District Judge.

This is a libel for salvage, brought by the owners of the steamship Saxon against the sailing ship Cornelius Grinnell, for services rendered to the latter by the Saxon, near Five Fathom Bank, to the eastward of Cape May, on the 3d of April, 1863. Two questions are raised on the pleadings and proofs: (1) Whether the services rendered come within the rule of compensation applicable, to salvage rewards; and (2) if so, what amount should be allowed.

The peculiar character of the case will be best presented by a somewhat detailed statement of the facts which appear proved by the evidence. The New York and London packet ship Cornelius Grinnell, of New York, valued for the purposes of this case at not less than $22,500, having on board a cargo of the value of at least $100,000, with a large number of passengers and a full crew, left London for New York on the 13th of March. 1863. On Saturday, the 2d of April, at about 10 o’clock a. m., she hove to in a severe gale of wind, her master supposing that he was off Fire Island, south of Long Island. The ship lay to till the next morning at 4 o’clock, her head being kept east southeast, the gale continuing severe. After 4 o’clock she was run in west southwest, as it was then supposed, towards New York. Between 12 and 1 o’clock she made land, which [310]*310was then thought to be the New Jersey shore. She was then headed off east southeast, and in half or three quarters of an hour struck in shoal water. She then wore ship to the westward, and immediately anchored in ñve and a half fathoms of water. She lay here, with her head to the wind, which was blowing fresh from the northeast, accompanied with rain, for about an hour, her officers being ignorant of their real position, when the steamship Saxon, owned by the libellants, and running regularly between Philadelphia and Boston, was discovered passing on her trip to Boston. The captain of the Grinnell immediately set signals of distress, and the Saxon bore down for him. When within hailing distance, Captain Spencer, of the Grinnell, inquired of the master of the Saxon if he could tell him where he was. The latter replied that he was on Five Fathom Bank, off Cape May. Captain Spencer then told him that he had struck on a shoal, had a considerable number of passengers on board,' and asked him if he would take him to a port of safety. Captain Matthews of the Saxon replied that he would try. Thereupon, after the proper orders, the Grinnell’s cable was slipped, and the Saxon took a hawser from her for the purpose of taking her in tow. In attempting to get the ship off before the wind, under her jib and foretopsail, the hawser broke from inevitable accident, and without fault on the part of either ship. The hawser parted near the Grinnell’s knight heads, and, though every effort was made to haul it in on the steamer, it got foul of her screw, though her engines were stopped as soon as they could be. Some twenty or thirty fathoms of it were found on the screw after she reached Boston. After the hawser parted, the captain of the Saxon ordered the Grin-nell to make sail and follow him. which was done, the two ships steering towards the mouth of Delaware Bay. After sailing five or six miles the steamer stopped her engines to let the Grinnell come up, when Captain Matthews told the master of the Grinnell that he should have to get another hawser to him before night, as it would be ebb tide before they reached the mouth of the bay, and he could not get him to a safe anchorage without it Captain Spencer then asked him if he could not take him to sea. The captain of the Saxon said he could, and thereupon the steamer led the way. and the Grinnell followed out to sea clear of all shoals, when the Grinnell, on notice from the captain of the Saxon that she was all clear, hauled up on her course for New York. The Saxon went on her way to Boston. The ships parted about 8 o’clock, Sunday evening, April 8, having been together about five hours. When the Grinnell arrived in New York she was found to be in good condition, no damage having been suffered in the gale. While getting the hawser fast, the sea running high, the Grinnell in pitching, as the Saxon came across her bow, came down on her, staving the boat of the latter, carrying away her rail, and cutting a hole in her deck. This damage to the Saxon was repaired for $260. Beyond this, and the winding of the hawser about the screw, the Saxon received no injury while engaged in rendering assistance to the Grinnell. Before her arrival at .Boston, however, she suffered serious injury, to repair which, including loss for her detention during the repairs, cost her owners more than $25,000. The weather continued stormy after she left the Grinnell, and, the evening of the day after, she encountered a heavy gale. She kept her best steam on, and arrived at Pollock Rip, in her usual route, at about 5 o’clock Tuesday morning, about an hour before dead low water. In attempting to cross the Rip, the steamer struck, and was very badly injured, and had to be towed to Boston. Had she not been detained by the services she rendered the Grinnell, she would undoubtedly have reached the Rip at about high water, and passed over it in safety. The Saxon was a valuable steamer, worth over $100,-000, and had a cargo on board valued at $400,000. To the south and west of Five Fathom Bank, where the Grinnell lay, are shoals, some of which are said not to be laid down on the charts, and as the wind and current were moving in a southwesterly direction, if the Grinnell had parted her chains, she would have been in considerable danger of being wrecked, especially if the gale had increased to a point of great severity. In case of such increase of the gale, she would have been in some danger of parting her cable had she not been rescued. The Saxon was the only regular steam packet which was due at that point about that time, though government transports occasionally passed up and down the coast in that vicinity.

Upon these facts the two.questions already referred to arise, which have been elaborately discussed by counsel, and they are, obviously, as heretofore stated: (1) Were the services rendered by the Saxon to the Grinnell salvage services, and therefore entitled to salvage compensation? (2) If they were salvage services, what compensation is the Saxon entitled to?

Upon the first point, the court is satisfied that the service rendered was in the nature of salvage. The Grinnell was saved by 'the timely interposition of the Saxon, from a position of considerable peril. She was at anchor in the neighborhood of dangerous shoals, upon which there was at least some danger of her drifting, in the event of the parting of her cables. One severe gale had just been encountered, which had driven her into the position of danger where she then lay: and though this storm had hilled, it was not entirely over. The sea was high and the wind fresh; and another severe gale visited the coast within a few hours after [311]*311she was taken out- to sea by the Saxon. The evidence is not entirely clear as to the degree of severity of the succeeding gale at Five Fathom Bank, hut, judging from the ordinary range of such storms, it is fair to conclude, from the evidence, that it was felt in considerable violence at this point. It is true the Grinnell might have rode out this gale, but the captain was ignorant of. his position, and the pilots who cruise the waters in that vicinity were thirty miles away at Delaware breakwater, and not likely to reach the neighborhood of Five Fathom Bank in such weather.

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30 F. Cas. 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winso-v-the-cornelius-grinnell-nysd-1864.