The aid or benefit to a ship resulting incidentally and
indirectly from efforts to extinguish fire on a nearby wharf, put
forth for the purpose of saving property not related to her, will
not sustain a claim for salvage in the absence of ally request for
or acceptance of the service on her behalf. P.
274 U. S.
613.
Affirmed.
Error to a decree of the district court dismissing the petition
in a suit for salvage brought against the United States under the
Tucker Act.
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiff in error sued under the Tucker Act, c. 359, 24 Stat.
505, upon a claim for salvage on account of service alleged to have
been rendered the steamship
Leviathan, owned by the
defendant in error.
United States v. Cornell Steamboat
Co., 202 U. S. 184,
202 U. S. 189.
On defendant's motion, the court, May 7, 1925, dismissed the
petition on the ground that it fails to state a cause of action.
The case is here on writ of error to that court.
J. Homer
Fritch, Inc. v. United States, 248 U.
S. 458.
The petition alleges the following: August 24-25, 1921 at
Hoboken, there was a fierce and extensive fire on
Page 274 U. S. 612
Pier 5. The
Leviathan lay bow in at the south side of
Pier 4. She could not be towed out. She had only a skeleton crew,
and it would have required a large number to man her and many hours
of preparation to get up sufficient steam and move her by means of
her own engines. The fire started at half after 6 in the evening,
and was not extinguished until 7 in the morning. A part of the
time, it covered the whole length of Pier 5, the bulkhead, and
adjacent houses. The wind was from the south, and tended to carry
the fire across the slip and onto the
Leviathan. Her port
side as considerably scorched, and several times fire broke out on
her superstructure. Ammunition was stored in a building near the
bulkhead, and the possibility of an explosion added to the danger.
Plaintiff's
Steamers Commissioner and
Chapman
Brothers were powerful boats, specially built, equipped, and
manned for salvage and firefighting service. The former, from 7
until half after 9 in the evening, and the latter from about 7 in
the evening until 7 in the morning, continuously fought the fire.
They played heavy streams of water on the burning pier, where the
fire threatened the
Leviathan. And, by way of conclusion,
it is stated that:
"The service was a direct aid and benefit to the steamer
Leviathan in preventing the spread of flames from Pier 5
to that vessel, and, had it not been for the said service, great
damage to, if not total loss of, the said steamship would have
resulted."
Limiting the general statement by the specific, in accordance
with the context (
United States v. Union Pacific R. Co.,
169 F. 65, 67, and cases cited), the substance of the allegation is
that plaintiff in error, by preventing the spread of the fire from
the pier to the
Leviathan, rendered her direct aid and
benefit.
There is no claim that the
Leviathan, or any one in her
behalf, requested or accepted assistance from plaintiff in
Page 274 U. S. 613
error, or that its fireboats played any water on that vessel, or
did anything to extinguish fire thereon, or to give her any
assistance, other than that involved in fighting the fire on and
about Pier 5. The distance between and
Leviathan and that
fire is not stated, and there is nothing to indicate that she did
not have adequate protection from other sources. Indeed, the
circumstances disclosed by the petition rather tend to show that
she did not need any assistance from plaintiff in error.
While salvage cannot be exacted for assistance forced upon a
ship (
The Bolivar v. The Chalmette, Fed.Cas. No. 1,611, 1
Woods, 397), her request for or express acceptance of the service
is not always essential to the validity of the claim. It is enough
if, under the circumstances, any prudent man would have accepted.
The Annapolis (In the Privy Council, Lushington), 355,
375. Plaintiff in error claims as a volunteer salvor, going at his
own risk to the assistance of the ship on the change of reward in
case of success, and not as one employed rendering service for pay
according to his effort or the terms of his contract.
The
Sabine, 101 U. S. 384,
101 U. S. 390.
It did not communicate with or enter into the service of the
Leviathan. Its fireboats did not put water upon her. The
fires that started on her were put out by other means. All effort
of plaintiff in error was put forth directly for the purpose of
extinguishing fire at and about Pier 5, and to save property not at
all related to the
Leviathan. The elimination of that fire
contributed mediately to her safety. But, whatever the aid or
benefit resulting to her, it was incidental and indirect, for
which, in the absence of request for or acceptance of the service,
a claim for salvage cannot be sustained.
The Annapolis, supra;
The City of Atlanta, 56 F. 252, 254;
The San
Cristobal, 215 F. 615; 230 F. 599.
Judgment affirmed.