The George Hawley

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
The George Hawley, 242 F. 473 (5th Cir. 1917)
155 C.C.A. 249; 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1907
Batts, Pardee, Wadker

The George Hawley

Opinion of the Court

WADKER, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by libelants from a decree rendered in their favor against the steamship George Hawley and its cargo, the claimants thereof, and their surety on a release bond. The complaint against the decree is because of the alleged insufficiency of the amount awarded. The total amount awarded by the decree to the lil iants who were before the court when the decree was rendered, the claims of other libelants having been settled, was $10,000. Of this amount the sum of $479.17 was awarded to the officers and crew of the towboat Independent, $233.30 to the officers and crew of the towboat El Toro, $15 to George Ruppert, $49.95 to J. W. Tyler, and the balance, $9,222.58, to the Bisso Towboat Company, owner of the towboats El Toro arid Independent.

At about 6:4o o’clock in the evening of Friday, February 28, 1913, while the George Hawley was lying at the Valence street wharf in the port of New Orleans, loaded with cross-ties, and ready to start on a voyage, it listed to starboard, which was towards the wharf, with the result that water poured through portholes on the starboard side, *474which had been left open for ventilation, and the stern end of the ship sank until it reached the bottom of the river; its bow remaining afloat. The master of the vessel was not present at the time, having gone into the city to sign the bills of lading for the cargo. The watchman at the wharf saw what had occurred to the ship; telephoned to the office of the Bisso Towboat Company that a ship was sinking at the Valence street wharf, and suggested that a tug or tugs be sent right away. An officer of the Towboat Company replied that two of its tugs were on their way with tows, and ought to be just about there at that time. In a few minutes the watchman saw the tug Independent as it was passing in the river and hailed it. That tug promptly went to the assistance-of the Hawley. A little later the tug El Toro did the same. From that time until the morning of Tuesday, March 4th, both the tugs were engaged in rescuing the Hawley, except that each of them was away and doing something else during part of Saturday, March 1st. On the following Tuesday morning the Hawley was again afloat. The vessel and cargo were saved without very serious loss to- either. The Independent remained alongside until the morning of March 10th. On March 4th, 5th, and 6th it furnished steam to the Hawley for pumping, etc., required to restore the vessel and cargo to such condition that its officers and crew could resume control and operate it with its own power.

The appraised value of the Hawley was $195,000, and of its cargo $20,650 — a total of $215,650. It had about 300 tons of coal in its bunkers, worth over $600. The El Toro cost its owner about $75,000, and the Independent was bought for about $40,000. Each of them was well equipped for rendering salvage services, and was kept constantly ready to render such service when required. There were other vessels in the port of New Orleans capable of rendering the service which the two tugs mentioned rendered.

. The evidence in the case does not leave it open to question that a meritorious salvage service was rendered by the two tugs mentioned and their owner, officers, and crews, which was participated in by other parties, who have been settled with. The amount awarded for the part of that service which was rendered by the appellants should be enough to cover an adequate compensation for the labor and expense which the enterprise required of them, and also a reward allowed as a bounty in pursuance of the public policy of encouraging voluntary exertions for the saving of imperiled ships and their contents; the amount of such reward depending upon the special facts and merits of the service rendered. The Craster Hall, 213 Fed. 436, 130 C. C. A. 72. The evidence was such that it well would have supported an award of $7,000 or more for the service rendered by the two tugs, if they had been employed under a contract providing for the payment of what the service was reasonably worth, whether it was successful or not. This being so, a result of the decree as it was rendered is that it may be regarded as awarding about $2,200 as a reward to the owner of the tugs for the services they rendered. Our conclusion is that such an amount is greatly less than a suitable reward? in addition to adequate compensation, for the services rendered by the two tugs. It is true that it was accidental that the two tugs happened to be near by when the mishap *475occurred to the Hawley, and were able to go to its rescue probably sooner than the master of the vessel, if he had been present at the time, could have procured other aid if he had promptly sought it. But this does not detract from the merit of the service voluntarily and promptly rendered by the two tugs, and with successful results.

The amount to be allowed as a reward for rendering that service cannot properly be as great as it should have been if the service had been rendered in rough weather and near a dangerous coast, instead of in fair weather and in a safe harbor, or if the evidence had clearly shown, which it did not, that the bottom of the river at the place where the partly sunken vessel came in contact with it was so sloping or declivitous as to make it liable that such a heavy object resting upon it would slip off into deeper water, thereby greatly enhancing the peril of both the rescued and rescuing vessels. The evidence does not convince us that the work of saving the ship and its cargo, conducted as it was with adequate care and skill, exposed the rescuing vessels, or either of them, to any very serious hazards, or their officers and crews to unusual hardships or grave perils. At any rate, the salvage work was done without serious injury to either the vessels or the men engaged in it, and the result of it was that the Hawley and its cargo were rescued without any very serious damage which was attributable to what was done in saving them. In view of the value of what was saved and of the vessels which participated in the salvage service, of the time, labor, and expense involved in that service, of the risk of getting nothing in return in the event of the failure of the enterprise,, and of all the attending circumstances, our conclusion is that the total amount to be awarded to the appellants should be $17,500, instead of 810,000, the amount awarded by the decree appealed from, and that the additional amount here awarded should be allotted to the Bisso Towboat Company^, the owner of the two tugs, the Independent and the El Toro. The part of the amount awarded by the decree of the District Court which was allotted to the officers and crews of the two tugs were sums equal to three times the amount of their wages during the time they were employed in behalf of the Hawley. It is not made to appear that there was such inadequacy in these allowances as to call for a change of this feature of the decree.

The decree appealed from will be here modified, as above indicated, and, as so modified, is affirmed, with costs against the appellees.

Reference

Full Case Name
THE GEORGE HAWLEY
Cited By
3 cases
Status
Published