Potomac Steam-Boat Company v. Baker Salvage Company


Potomac Steam-Boat Company v. Baker Salvage Company
by Samuel Blatchford
Syllabus
800569Potomac Steam-Boat Company v. Baker Salvage Company — SyllabusSamuel Blatchford
Court Documents

United States Supreme Court

123 U.S. 40

Potomac Steam-Boat Company  v.  Baker Salvage Company

This is a libel in rem, in admiralty, in a cause of salvage, filed by the Baker Salvage Company, a corporation of Virginia, against the steamer Excelsior and her cargo, in the district court of the United States for the Eastern district of Virginia. That court awarded to the libelant, by a decree made on the twenty-first of February, 1884, the sum of $5,600, as salvage, being 3 1/2 per cent. on $160,000; the value of the Excelsior having been found at $150,000, and the value of her cargo at $10,000. 19 Fed. Rep. 436. The claimant appealed to the circuit court, which, on the nineteenth of May, 1884, affirmed the decree of the district court, with interest on the $5,600 from the date of the decree of the district court, until paid, at the rate of 6 per cent. per annum, and the costs of suit.

The circuit court found the following facts and conclusions of law:

'On the afternoon of the fourth of December, 1882, at five o'clock, the steamer Excelsior, Capt. T. E. Baldwin, of the Potomac Steam-Boat Company, plying between Norfolk, Va., and Washington, D. C., touching at Old Point, Fortress Monroe, left her dock at Norfolk, steamed down the Elizabeth river and into Hampton roads, heading the usual course to make a landing at Old Point wharf. She had on board a competent crew, and an average number of passengers; the agreed value of the steamer being one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and of her cargo ten thousand dollars. As the Excelsior was heading the aforesaid course in Hampton roads, at or near six P. M., the United States steam-tug Fortune came into collision with her, by an accident. The Fortune struck the Excelsior, which is of wood, on the starboard bow, making a hole in her hull at least 8 by 10 feet; and, it being apparent that the Excelsior must otherwise sink in deep water, from the quantity she was making in her hull through the hole in her bow, she was promptly headed for the shore, going ashore on the south side of Hampton bar at about its middle point, about two miles from Old Point wharf, three or four miles from Sewell's Point, between half a mile and a mile from the Soldiers' Home shore, the nearest shore, and within a hundred yards of the channel, where she sank, full of water, with a hole extending from her hurricane deck far down under water, lying almost head on to the shore, in water ranging in depth from six to seven feet at her bow to from ten to twelve feet at her stern.

'After ascertaining the above soundings, and landing his passengers at Old Point Comfort, Capt. Baldwin, of the Excelsior, proceeded to the same point, and sent the following telegram to the Baker Salvage Company, at Norfolk, Virginia:

'DECEMBER 4, 1882.

"Send assistance, with steam-pumps, to Excelsior, on Hampton bar. Get here by low water.'

'Subsequently Capt. Baldwin sent another telegram, as follows:

"DECEMBER 4, 1882.

"Del'y guarantied. Bring steamer Resolute, a diver, with appliances.' 'The first of these telegrams was received at the telegraph office, in Norfolk, at 8:02 P. M., and the other at 9:15 P. M., on the evening of the collision.

'The Baker Salvage Company, through the agency of its superintendent and general manager, Capt. E. M. Stoddard, at once, and vigorously, set to work, in response to the telegrams, to render the aid asked for; and, at or about ten P. M., a fully-equipped expedition, under the command of Capt. Stoddard, left Berkeley, opposite Norfolk, at the intersection of the southern and eastern branches of the Elizabeth river, where the wharves of the Baker Salvage Company are located, for the purpose of relieving the Excelsior. The expedition consisted of the powerful wrecking steamer Resolute, Hobbs, master, with her stationary steam-pump, capable of pumping four hundred tons per hour, with the schooner Scud in tow, having on board a portable steampump capable of pumping one hundred tons per hour, and a full complement of wrecking material and appliances, the whole manned by a crew of ten seamen, experienced in wrecking operations, and accompanied by a skilled diver, with diving apparatus. Capt. Stoddard, making all reasonable haste, and in the exercise of his judgment, did not attempt to go along-side of the Excelsior that night, not knowing her exact position on Hampton bar, and being unable to identify her lights, but went directly to Old Point wharf, where he arrived about one o'clock on the morning of December 5th, when it was floodtide there. Between that hour and daylight he secured the services of a number of laborers at Old Point, whose services he anticipated would be needed to remove the cargo, thus materially advancing the work for which he had come. At daylight on the morning of the fifth of December, Capt. Stoddard, with the expedition above described, went to the Excelsior, and found her lying, as above described, submerged to her main deck, with a hole in her bow, and full of water, water standing on her main deck aft at high tide, and about two feet below her guards at low tide.

'The Excelsior's cargo had not been reached by the water, being stored about amid-ships, which was higher than the stern. Capt. Stoddard at once had an interview with Capt. Baldwin, in the presence of the purser of the Excelsior. Capt. Baldwin asked what it was going to cost to get the ship off and deliver her at the railroad. Stoddard replied, 'I do not know;' to which Baldwin replied, 'This is not a salvage service;' to which Stoddard replied, 'Call it what you please, so I get my pay;' to which Capt. Baldwin replied, 'It is no salvage service;' and they both agreed to submit to arbitration the amount to be received for the service by the Baker Salvage Company, in case the two companies could not agree upon a sum.

'At this point, viz., about seven o'clock on the morning of the 5th, Capt. Stoddard began the direct operations upon the Excelsior and her cargo, for their relief. He brought the Scud along-side the Excelsior, for the purpose of removing the steamer's cargo to Old Point wharf, and, placing the diving apparatus aboard the Excelsior, set the diver to work to ascertain minutely the exact extent of the wound that had been sustained by the steamer in the collision; and, while this was going on, he returned to Old Point wharf in the Resolute, and brought off the laborers above mentioned, who had been employed to assist in the removal of cargo, and lumber to be used by the diver in battening up the hole. The work of removing the cargo to Old Point wharf was continued throughout the day, until, after three trips of the Scud, in tow of the Resolute, it was successful between 4 and 5 o'clock of the afternoon of the fifth of December, without loss, the work being done under the management and at the risk of the Baker Salvage Company, the second officer of the Excelsior supervising the same, hurrying up the laborers, keeping their time, and seeing that nothing was stolen. The diver, who began his operations about seven A. M. of the fifth of December, as aforesaid, worked steadily until the night of that day, battening up the hole with plank and covering the same with canvas. Resuming his work at an early hour the next morning, he completed it by one P. M. of the same day, the 6th.

'On the afternoon of the 5th, after the removal of the cargo to Old Point wharf had been completed, and the Scud anchored for safety inside Hampton bar, with but one man left aboard of her as a guard, the Resolute came alongside the Excelsior on her starboard or weather side, put out fenders, made fast so as to be in position to use her stationary pump, and began to assist in the work of setting up the portable pump on board of the Excelsior. The work of setting up this portable pump was continued until nine P. M., the pump and all attachments being furnished by the Baker Salvage Company, only the steam for running it being supplied by the donkey engine of the Excelsior, while the Resolute was lying on the Excelsior's starboard side or windward side, as aforesaid. Between 7 and 8 o'clock on December 5th, it began to blow a fresh or strong breeze from the east or south-east, so as to induce the master of the Excelsior to request that the Resolute lie along-side of the steamer, for the protection of the lives of those aboard of her, in case her joiner work should be carried away, and she should begin to break up. The Resolute thus continued to lie on the starboard or weather side of the steamer, it being impracticable to shift her position to the lee side in such a breeze, and with such a sea on; and, while lying thus, she afforded considerable protection to the Excelsior, acting as a break water to her, and incurred considerable risk herself. This wind, which produced quite a rough sea, lasted from between 7 and 8 o'clock on the evening of December 5th, until about one o'clock on the following morning, during which time a portion of the crew of the Resolute had to be constantly at work putting in new fenders between the steamers as others would be crushed by the chafing, and keeping them in position; to do which it was necessary to go between the two steamers upon their guards, with no little danger to life or limb. Steam was also kept up on the Resolute all night, for immediate use, in case of emergency.

'Soon after daylight on the morning of the 6th, work was resumed; the diver and gang battening up the hole, the crew of the Resolute, under the superintendence of Capt. Stoddard, getting ready the stationary pump on board the Resolute, and completing the work of setting up the portable pump on board the Excelsior that had been begun the previous evening. The latter was completed about 9 A. M. of this day, the 6th, as aforesaid, and was set to work to lower the water in the hold of the steamer, and thus assist the diver in his work of covering the planking with canvas, by drawing the canvas in. The stationary pump was ready by 12 M.; and, the diver completing his work of battening soon after that, both pumps were set to work at their full capacity, so that, at or near 2:03 P. M., the hull of the Excelsior had been so far freed from water that the tug Olive Baker, that had been previously engaged to assist in the work, and had a line attached, hauled the steamer afloat. Capt. Stoddard at once started to Norfolk with the Excelsior, having her in two of the steam-tugs Olive Baker and Olive Branch, and the wrecking steamer Victoria J. Peed; while the Resolute kept along-side, pumping every twenty minutes, to keep the hull free from water. Great care was exercised in towing the steamer across Hampton roads, and up the river to Norfolk, as the hole in her bow was only covered with pine boards, one inch thick, and one thickness of No. 1 canvas, which might be knocked off by any hard substance floating in the water that might come in contact with it. The work was successfully accomplished, however, and by five P. M., of December 5, 1882, the Excelsior had been safely docked in Norfolk. The salvage service was thus successfully completed within less than 45 hours after the aid of the salvors had been invoked, and that without a single error of omission or commission on their part. The work was done with an energy, skill, fidelity, and courage that admit of no question. The officers and crew of the Excelsior rendered all the aid in their power to the salvors.

'The point at which the Excelsior was lying is on the south side of Hampton bar, about midway between its north-eastern and south-eastern extremities, and on the northern border of Hampton roads; the locality an exposed one, vessels ashore there being exposed to all winds from the east round to the south-west, and winds from the east come right in from the Atlantic ocean, through the capes onto the bar, with no breakwater, except that furnished by the ripraps and the small shoals about it. The weather, as it actually existed during the greater protion of the time of the salvage service, was moderate, with light winds, and no very heavy sea; but, on the evening of the fifth of December, a strong breeze set in from the east or south-east, between seven and eight o'clock, which lasted until one o'clock on the morning of the 6th, causing the water to be rough, and creating considerable apprehensions for the safety of the Excelsior. This constantly threatened danger was increased by the fact that the Excelsior is an expensively furnished bay and river steamer, standing very high out of the water, and composed almost entirely, above her main deck, of light joiner work, liable to be carried away by winds and waves, with guards from two to three feet wide at her stern, to ten or twelve feet wide at her wheel-houses, under which, in her then present position, the waves struck with great force, since she could not rise with them, liable to tear up her guards, and to cause her slender joiner work to give way and the steamer to break up. These things rendered dispatch necessary.

'The Baker Salvage Company, the libelant, is a body politic and corporate, with its principal office located at Norfolk, in the state of Virginia. Its business is that of wrecker and salvor, in which it is extensively engaged; its operations being conducted in the Atlantic ocean and Gulf of Mexico, and along the coasts of those waters and the waters tributary thereto, wherever its services may be needed. The capital embarked in the said business is about one hundred thousand dollars, and it keeps constantly on hand, and in readiness for immediate use in its business, a number of powerful steamers and sailing vessels, proper for wrecking services, with a full equipment of the best and most improved wrecking apparatus and gear, such as steam-pumps and connections, diving apparatus and gear, hoisting engines, anchors, chains, and cables of unusual size, falls, with a competent force of seamen, navigators, and divers, who have attained skill from their experience in wrecking operations. This immense equipment is kept up at an average expense of five thousand dollars per month during the busy months,-say, eight months in the year,-and at an average of two thousand five hundred dollars during the balance of the year, and that, exclusive of interest on the large amount of capital invested, being the mere running expenses.

'In addition to the wrecking steamers Resolute and Victoria J. Peed, and the schooner Scud, with all the wrecking appliances and apparatus, its own property, which the Baker Salvage Company had employed in this service, it had also chartered, and used to assist in the work, the steam-tugs Olive Branch, Olive Baker, and Nettie. The Baker Salvage Company had exposed to dangers incident to this salvage service at least fifty thousand dollars' worth of its valuable property, which, in the case of destruction, must have been a total loss, since insurance companies will only insure property so engaged at exorbitant rates, if at all. And the court finds that the libelant is entitled, for its salvage service in this cause, to the sum of five thousand six hundred dollars, with interest thereon from the twenty-first as conclusive of the merits of any 'and the court finds the law to be that this is a case of salvage;' 'that the alleged contract which the claimant attempts to set up is no bar to a meritorious claim for salvage, in admiralty; that the libelant, the salvor, is entitled to be rewarded for the salvage service in proportion to the personal risk run by its employes while engaged in this salvage service, to the danger to which its valuable wrecking equipment was exposed while engaged in this service, to the danger from which the large and valuable property of the claimant has been relieved, to the labor expended by the salvors in rendering the salvage services, and the promptness, skill, and energy with which those services were rendered.'

The claimant of the Excelsior and her cargo has appealed to this court, and assigns for error (1) that the circuit court, in its finding of facts, has ascertained and stated, as proved, an agreement between the libelant and the claimant for a quantum meruit for the work and labor done by the libelant, and ought not to have decreed salvage therefor; (2) that the award is excessive in amount. T. S. Garnett, Jr., for appellant.

W. H. C. Ellis, for appellee.

BLATCHFORD, J.

Notes edit

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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