It was a proper case for contribution in general average for the
loss of a vessel where there was an imminent peril of being driven
on a rocky and dangerous part of the coast when the vessel would
have been inevitably wrecked, with loss of ship, cargo, and crew,
and this immediate peril was avoided by voluntarily stranding the
vessel on a less rocky and dangerous part of the coast, whereby the
cargo and crew were saved uninjured.
The cases upon this subject examined.
Where the cargo was taken out of the stranded vessel, placed in
another one, and the voyage thus continued to the home port, the
contribution should be assessed on the value of the cargo at the
home port.
The crew were entitled to wages after the ship was stranded,
while they were employed in the saving of the cargo.
A commission of two and one-half percent was properly allowed
for collecting the general average. It rests upon the usage and
custom of merchants and average brokers.
The defendants in error brought an action in the court below to
recover contribution in general average, on account of the alleged
voluntary stranding of the ship
Brutus owned by them, from
the plaintiffs in error, as owners of twenty bales of nutria skins,
which formed a part of her cargo at the time of the stranding.
The facts are minutely stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 51 U. S. 299
MR. JUSTICE GRIER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiffs below, Joseph Adams and others, brought this
Page 51 U. S. 300
action against Charles Barnard and others, in the circuit court
of New York, to recover contribution in general average for the
loss of their vessel called the
Brutus, on board of which
certain goods were shipped, and consigned to the plaintiffs in
error, and delivered to them on their promise to pay, provided
contribution were justly due.
On the trial, the circuit court gave certain instructions to the
jury, which were the subjects of exceptions, on the correctness of
which this Court is now called upon the decide.
As the facts of the case were not disputed, it will be proper to
state them, in connection with the instructions given by the court,
in order to avoid any mistake or misconception which might arise in
construing the terms of mere abstract propositions without relation
to the facts on which they were based.
On 8 October, 1843, the ship
Brutus was lying at
anchor, at the usual place of mooring vessels in the outer roads at
Buenos Ayres, about seven miles from the shore. The width of the
river at that place, between Buenos Ayres and Colonia on the
opposite shore, is about fifteen miles. The
Brutus had
taken her cargo on board for New York, consisting of nutria skins,
dry hides, horns, and jerked beef. The master was on shore, and she
was in charge of the first mate, with a crew consisting of twelve
persons in all. On the 7th, a gale had commenced, which on the 8th
had become dangerous. About four o'clock next morning the ship
began to drag her anchors, and the small bower anchor was let go.
About nine o'clock in the evening, the gale increasing, the best
bower anchor parted with a loud report. About ten o'clock, the
small bower parted, and the ship commenced drifting broadside with
the wind and waves. Endeavors were then made to get the ship before
the wind, which failed, on account of the chains keeping her
broadside to the sea, which was making a breach over her fore and
aft. The chains were then slipped, and the vessel got before the
wind, two men were put to the wheel, and one to the lead, and it
was determined "to run the ship ashore for the preservation of the
cargo and the lives of the crew." It was now about eleven o'clock
at night when the ship was got before the wind and under command of
the helm. The shore next to Buenos Ayres, towards which the ship
had been drifting, had banks and shallows extending out some three
or four miles. If the vessel had been driven on these by the
tempest, she would have been wrecked and lost, together with the
cargo and crew. On the Colonia side of the river were sunken rocks
several miles from the shore. "For the purpose of saving the cargo
and crew anyhow, and possibly the ship," she was steered up the
river, inclining a little towards
Page 51 U. S. 301
the Buenos Ayres side, with the intention of running her on
shore at a convenient place. After they had proceeded up the river
about ten miles, the mate discovered from the flashes of lightning
that the vessel was approaching a point called St. Isidro, off
which he perceived something black which he supposed to be rocks,
and "being afraid," or "thinking it impossible to get by" this
point without being wrecked and lost, he directed the course of the
vessel to be changed towards the shore, where he had seen what he
supposed to be a house, but which turned out to be a large tree.
About midnight the vessel struck the beach and the rudder was
knocked away. The foresail was then hauled up, but the staysail was
let remain to keep her head straight, and she continued to work
herself up until daylight. The place where she was stranded was a
level beach about two hundred yards above ordinary low water mark.
The ship was not wrecked, or broken up, though somewhat damaged,
and the cargo was not injured. The master chartered the bark
Serene, and transferred the cargo to her. But it was found
that, with the means to be obtained in that vicinity, it would have
cost more than the ship was worth to get her off the beach. She was
therefore sold. The
Serene afterwards arrived safely at
New York, under command of Captain Adams, former master of the
Brutus. In transshipping the jerked beef from the
Brutus to the
Serene, a portion of it got wet,
and when it arrived at the port of New York it was all found to be
worthless.
On these facts the court instructed the jury as follows:
"1. The evidence on the subject of the stranding consists in the
uncontradicted and unimpeached testimony of a single witness. He
was the acting master of the vessel at the time of the loss in
question. He states that when the vessel was without any means of
resisting the storm, and her going ashore upon a rocky and more
dangerous part of the shore was, in his opinion, inevitable, he did
intentionally and for the better security of the property and
persons engaged in the adventure, give her a direction to what he
supposed to be, and what proved to be, a part of the shore where
she could lie more safely. These facts, if credited by you,
constitute in judgment of law a voluntary sacrifice of the vessel,
and for such sacrifice the plaintiffs are entitled to recover in
general average."
This instruction forms the subject of the first exception, and
raises the most important question in the case.
The apparent contradiction in the terms of this instruction has
evidently arisen from a desire of the court to give the plaintiffs
in error, on the argument here, the benefit of the negation of
their own proposition,
viz., that if the loss of the
vessel
Page 51 U. S. 302
by the storm was inevitable, the stranding could not be a
voluntary "sacrifice entitling the plaintiffs to contribution." It
is because the form in which this proposition is stated is
equivocal and vague, when applied to the case before us, that the
negation of it appears to be contradictory in its terms. The court
should, therefore, not be understood as saying that, if the jury
believed the peril which was avoided was "inevitable," or that if
the jury believed that the imminent peril was not avoided, they
should find for the plaintiffs. But rather that if they believed
there was an imminent peril of being driven "on a rocky and
dangerous part of the coast," when the vessel would have been
inevitably wrecked, with loss of ship, cargo, and crew, and that
this immediate peril was avoided by voluntarily stranding the
vessel on a less rocky and dangerous part of the coast, whereby the
cargo and crew were saved uninjured, then they should find for the
plaintiffs. Looking at the admitted facts of this case in
connection with the instruction given, it is plain that the jury
could not have understood the court to mean anything else. And we
may add, moreover, that, in the argument here, the learned counsel
have not relied upon any verbal criticism of the instruction, but
have encountered fairly the proposition which we now consider as
maintained by the court below.
It cannot be denied by anyone who will carefully compare this
case with that of
The Hope, 13
Pet. 331, unanimously decided by this Court, and the cases of
Caze v. Reilly, 3 Wash.C.C. 298,
Sims v. Gurney,
4 Binn. 513, and
Gray v. Waln, 2 Serg. & R. 229, which
have received the "unqualified assent" of this Court, that whatever
distinctions may be taken as to the accidents and circumstances of
these cases, they do not materially or substantially differ from
the present, so far as the point now under consideration is
concerned, and that we are now called upon to reconsider and
overrule the doctrine established by those cases. But however they
may appear to be contrary to certain abstract propositions stated
by some text writers on this subject in England, and a case or two
in this country, the policy and propriety of overruling our own and
the three other decisions which have received our "unanimous
approval," even if we were not now satisfied with their
correctness, may well be doubted. There are few cases to be found
in the books which have been more thoroughly, laboriously, and ably
investigated by the most learned counsel and eminent judges. In
questions involving so much doubt and difficulty, it is of more
importance to the mercantile community that the law be settled, and
litigation ended, than how it is settled. No decision of a question
depending on such nice and subtle
Page 51 U. S. 303
reasoning will meet the approbation of every mind, and if the
cases we have mentioned have failed of this effect, it may well be
doubted if any reasons which could be given for overruling them
would prove more successful.
It is not necessary in the examination of this case again to
repeat the history of this doctrine of general average, from the
early date of the
"Lex Rhodia de jactu" through the civil
or Roman law, and the various ordinances and maritime codes of
European states and cities, down to the present day. The learned
opinions delivered in the cases to which we have alluded leave
nothing further to be said on that portion of the subject. We shall
therefore content ourselves with stating the leading and
established principles of law bearing on the point in question, in
order that we may have some precise data with which to compare the
facts of the present case, and test the value of the arguments with
which the instructions of the circuit court have been assailed.
The law of general average has its foundation in equity. The
principle, that "what is given for the general benefit of all shall
be made good by the contribution of all," is recommended not only
by its equity, but also by its policy, because it encourages the
owner to throw away his property without hesitation in time of
need.
In order to constitute a case for general average, three things
must concur:
1st. A common danger; a danger in which ship, cargo, and crew
all participate; a danger imminent and apparently "inevitable,"
except by voluntarily incurring the loss of a portion of the whole
to save the remainder.
2d. There must be a voluntary jettison,
jactus, or
casting away, of some portion of the joint concern for the purpose
of avoiding this imminent peril,
pericula imminentis evitandi
causa, or, in other words, a transfer of the peril from the
whole to a particular portion of the whole.
3d. This attempt to avoid the imminent common peril must be
successful.
It is evident from these propositions, that the assertion so
much relied on in the argument, namely, "that if the peril be
inevitable there can be no contribution," is a mere truism, as the
hypothesis of the case requires that the common peril, though
imminent, shall be successfully avoided. Those who urge it must
therefore mean something else. And it seems, when more carefully
stated, to be this,
"that if the common peril was of such a nature, that the
'jactus,' or thing cast away to save the rest, would have
perished anyhow, or perished 'inevitably,' even if it had not been
selected to suffer
Page 51 U. S. 304
in place of the whole, there can be no contribution."
If this be the meaning of this proposition, and we can discover
no other, it is a denial of the whole doctrine upon which the claim
for general average has its foundation. For the master of the ship
would not be justified in casting a part of the cargo into the sea,
or slipping his anchor, or cutting away his masts, or stranding his
vessel, unless compelled to it by the necessity of the case, in
order to save both ship and cargo, or one of them, from an imminent
peril which threatened their common destruction. The necessity of
the case must compel him to choose between the loss of the whole
and part; but, however metaphysicians may stumble at the assertion,
it is this forced choice which is necessary to justify the master
in making a sacrifice as it is called of any part for the whole.
Hence the answer of every master of a vessel, when examined, will
be, "I considered the destruction of both ship and cargo
"inevitable," unless I had thrown away what I did." "The goods
thrown away would have gone to the bottom anyhow." If the case does
not show that the jettison was "indispensable" in order to escape
the common peril, the master would himself be liable for the loss
consequent therefrom. It is for this reason that the ordinances of
Marseilles require that the master should have a consultation with
the supercargo and crew as to the absolute necessity of the
measure, and as evidence that it was not done through the vain
fears, cowardice, or imprudence of the master. But the right to
contribution is not made to depend on any real or presumed
intention to destroy the thing cast away, but on the fact that it
had been selected to suffer the peril in place of the whole, that
the remainder may be saved. The anchor lost by voluntarily slipping
the cable may be recovered, the goods jettisoned may float to the
shore and be saved, and yet, if the anchor or goods had not been
cast away, they would have been "inevitably" lost and there would
have been a total loss of both ship and cargo.
Take the case of
Caze v. Reilly. A vessel is completely
surrounded by the enemy's cruisers. It is impossible to save both
ship and cargo from capture and a total loss. A part or the whole
of the cargo is thrown overboard, and thus the vessel escapes. This
is an admitted case for contribution. And it is no answer to the
claim of the owners to say,
"Your cargo was 'inevitably' lost; as it was situated it was
worthless, and consequently you sacrificed nothing for the common
benefit. Besides, a portion of it floated on shore and was saved
from capture, or was fished from the bottom without sustaining much
injury; the throwing it overboard was the best thing that could be
done for it under the circumstances, as without that it would have
been
Page 51 U. S. 305
'inevitably' lost."
But suppose, as in the case referred to, the ship cannot be
saved by casting the cargo into the sea, but the cargo, which is of
far greater value, can be saved by casting the vessel on the land,
or stranding her. Is it any answer to her claim for contribution to
say that
"her loss was 'inevitable,' she was in a better situation on the
beach than in the hands of the enemy, or at the bottom of the sea,
or wrecked upon rocks, and therefore there was no such sacrifice as
would entitle her to contribution?"
We cannot comprehend why this argument should have no weight in
the first case which is an admitted case of contribution in all the
books, and yet that it should be held as a conclusive obstacle to
the recovery in the latter. The replication to this objection in
the first instance, and the conclusive one, is
"the vessel and cargo were in a common peril, where both or all
could not be saved; the vessel alone, or the vessel and part of the
cargo, have been saved, by casting the loss upon the cargo, and
this constitutes the very hypothesis on which the doctrine of
general average rests."
Why, then, should there be a difference in principle where the
cargo is damaged or lost by being cast into the sea, and the ship
saved, and the case where the ship is damaged or lost by a
voluntary stranding, or by being cast on the land and the cargo
saved, is a question which has never yet been satisfactorily
answered. In fact, we do not understand the counsel to contend for
the doctrine of
salva navi, or that the
Brutus
was not entitled to contribution because she could not be got
afloat at a less cost than her value. The principle on which the
counsel relied is that enunciated in the opinion of the court in
Walker v. United States Ins. Co., 11 Serg. & R. 61.
"It is not enough," says the learned judge,
"that there be a deliberate intent to do an act which may or may
not lead to a loss; there must be a deliberate purpose to sacrifice
the thing at all events, or at the very least to put it in a
situation in which the danger of eventual destruction would be
increased."
But, as we have already seen, the intention to destroy the
jactus, or thing exposed to loss or damage for the benefit
of the whole, makes no part of the hypothesis upon which the right
of contribution is founded. Indeed, the speciousness of this
assertion seems to have its force from the use of the word
"sacrifice" in its popular and tropical, instead of its strict or
technical meaning. The offering of sacrifices was founded on the
idea of vicarious suffering. And when it is said of the
jactus, that it is sacrificed for the benefit of the
whole, it means no more than that it is selected to undergo the
peril, in place of the whole, and for the benefit of the whole. It
is made (if we may use another theological phrase) the "scapegoat"
for
Page 51 U. S. 306
the remainder of the joint property exposed to common
destruction. The
"jactus" is said to be sacrificed not
because its chance of escape was separate, but because of its
selection to suffer, be it more or less, instead of the whole,
whose chances of safety, as a whole, had become desperate. The
imminent destruction of the whole has been evaded as a whole, and
part saved, by transferring the whole peril to another part.
If a cargo of cotton, about to be captured or sunk, be thrown
overboard in part or in whole and the ship thus saved, the fact
that the cotton floated to the shore and was saved, and therefore
was in a better condition by being cast away than if it had
remained to be captured or sunk, cannot affect its right to
contribution, though it may diminish its amount. The loss or damage
arising from its assuming the peril, that the ship may escape, may
be truly said to be the real "sacrifice," in the popular use of the
phrase. Its value is not measured by its hopes of safety, for by
the hypothesis it had none; but its right to contribution is
founded on its voluntary assumption to run all the risk, or bear
the brunt, that the remainder may be saved from the common peril.
The fact that goods thrown overboard are in no worse, or even in a
better, condition as to chances of safety, than if they had
remained on board, or that the stranded vessel is in a better
condition than if she had been wrecked or sunk, cannot affect the
right to contribution of that part which was selected to suffer in
place of the whole.
Having made these remarks, by way of vindicating the cases
referred to, and noticing the arguments by which they have been
assailed, let us briefly compare the facts of this case with the
principles we have stated, and inquire, first, what was the common
peril? and second, was any portion of the joint adventure saved
from it by the transfer of the risk or loss to another?
The common peril, which in this case was sought to be avoided,
was shipwreck, or the destruction of vessel, cargo, and crew. The
ship lay at anchor; she was assailed by a violent tempest, her
cables broken, her anchors gone, and she was being driven by the
force of the gale broadside upon the shallows extending three miles
out from the shore at Buenos Ayres. In order to save the cargo and
crew, it is determined to put on sail, and run up the river to find
a safe place to strand the vessel. They proceed ten miles up the
river, when they encounter another peril at Point St. Isidro. To
avoid being wrecked on the rocks, the course of the vessel is
immediately changed, and she is steered directly for the shore, and
run upon a sandy beach, where she is left high and dry by the tide.
The cargo is saved without injury, but the ship is on the land,
where she
Page 51 U. S. 307
is comparatively valueless, on account of the expense which must
be incurred to replace her in her element. By the will and
directions of the master, she has become the victim, and borne the
loss, that the cargo might escape from the common peril. It is true
she has not been wrecked or lost, as she inevitably would, had she
been driven on the flats at Buenos Ayres by the tempest, or been
foundered on the rocks off Point St. Isidro, but she has
voluntarily gone on shore, which was death to her, while it brought
safety to the cargo. And we are of opinion she has the same right
to demand contribution that the owners of the cargo would have had
against her, had it been cast into the sea to insure her
safety.
There is therefore no error in the instruction given by the
court below on this point.
2. The second and third instructions excepted to have reference
to the place at which the goods are to be valued for the purpose of
adjusting the general average.
The reasons given by the learned judge in these instructions are
amply sufficient to show their propriety. The adventure was
continued, notwithstanding the disaster, and terminated at New
York. The goods were not returned to the shippers, and consequently
no contribution could be collected at Buenos Ayres. The fact that
the
Brutus was left on the strand, and the adventure
continued till the cargo reached its destination in another vessel,
cannot affect the case. The place where average shall be stated is
always dependent, more or less, on accidental circumstances,
affecting not the technical termination of the voyage, but the
actual and practical closing of the adventure. We see nothing in
the circumstances to take this case out of the general rule, that
contribution should be assessed on the value at the home port.
3. The third exception relates to the allowance of the wages of
the crew after the ship was stranded.
But as they were employed as mariners and
quasi-salvors
of the cargo, laboring for the joint benefit of the adventure, we
think the exception is not supported. Their services were essential
to the entire saving of the cargo. Their duties did not cease with
the stranding, and they were entitled to wages while their services
were required for that purpose. If the same services had been
rendered by strangers, the expense would have been properly charged
as a result of the disaster, in stating the average. That the same
services were rendered by the crew after the
Brutus was
stranded, and the voyage as to them technically broken up, cannot
affect the case. Even if their obligation to the ship had ceased,
still their services to vessel and cargo entitled them to their
wages and support as a general charge.
Page 51 U. S. 308
4. The two and a half percent allowed for collecting the general
average rests upon the usage and custom of merchants and average
brokers. It is a duty arising out of the unforeseen disaster, and
resulting directly from it. Usually there are contributions to be
paid out, as well as received, by the ship-owner. It is a
troublesome duty, not embraced in their obligation as mere
carriers. The usage is therefore not unreasonable. The objection,
that it is paying the owners for merely collecting their own debt,
is founded on the accidents or peculiar circumstances of this case,
and does not affect the general principle on which this usage is
based.
The judgment of the circuit court is therefore
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE DANIEL dissenting.
The decision just pronounced, so far as it goes, must of course
be regarded as settling the law of this Court upon the subject of
general average, that decision being in complete accordance with
the decision of
Columbian Assurance Co. v.
Ashby and Stribling, 4 Pet. 139; the single case
from this Court previously maintaining the doctrine announced by
the court in the case before us. But, however the decision now made
may control the question of general average in the courts of the
United States, as it must do, being the revised and reaffirmed
doctrine of this tribunal, still, with the sincerest respect
entertained for the opinions of my brethren, and with unaffected
diffidence as to the conclusions of my own mind, I have been unable
to yield to this doctrine my assent. I cannot but regard the
doctrine here affirmed as opposed to the course of opinion the
settled and undisputed opinion in the greatest maritime and
commercial nation in the world, and as subversive of the
fundamental principle in which the law of average has its origin.
That principle, which is traced by all writers and courts to the
Rhodian law, is thus propounded by Lord Tenterden, in his work on
Shipping p. 342: "Namely, the general contribution that is to be
made by all parties towards a loss sustained by some for the
benefit of all." The same writer p. 344 says that goods must be
thrown overboard; the mind and agency of man must be employed. If
the goods are forced out of the ship by the violence of the waves,
or are destroyed in the ship by lightning or tempest, the merchant
alone must bear the loss. The goods must be thrown overboard for
the sake of all. The same writer remarks p. 348, that, though the
rule mentions goods only, its principle extends also to the ship
and its furniture.
Mr. Benecke, in his Treatise on Average p. 96, tells us that
general average has been described in the English courts to
Page 51 U. S. 309
comprise "all loss which arises in consequence of extraordinary
sacrifices or expenses incurred for the preservation of the ship
and cargo." After speaking of the enumeration of instances of
general average in some of the Continental nations of Europe, he
continues:
"Although these laws and the corresponding ones of other states
do not make use of the term 'sacrifice,' yet their definitions
imply that nothing short of a sacrifice shall be deemed a general
average. All these laws may therefore be said to establish the same
general principle -- namely, that a sacrifice made for the
preservation of the ship and cargo is general average."
Again he says p. 97:
"As to the term sacrifice, it is clear and generally admitted,
that a damage, to deserve the appellation of a sacrifice, must have
been purposely undergone, and by the agency of man, for the benefit
of the whole, and that every damage not purposely undergone,
although the ship and cargo may be benefited by it, gives no claim
to restitution."
Again, it is said with great force and propriety, that the
special sacrifice must be something done and not suffered; there
must be the will and agency of the party making it. That it should
be for the purpose, and with the intent,
causa et mente,
of the preservation of the common concern. Although the examples of
this sacrifice put are usually instances of
jactus, the
principle embraced applies equally to the ship as to the cargo;
thus Benecke, p. 144, says:
"The case of voluntary stranding being implied in the general
rules, most of the foreign ordinances omit to mention it expressly.
The Prussian law is in this respect more explicit than the others.
If the captain, say sections 1820 and 1821, in order to preserve
the cargo, run the vessel intentionally ashore, the damage thereby
occasioned to the ship and cargo as well as all incidental charges,
belong to the general average. But if it appear clearly from the
circumstances, that the stranding was resorted to merely for the
purpose of saving the lives or liberty of the crew, the damage,
even if the whole cargo be saved, is held to be particular average.
The ancient laws, says Benecke, as well as the opinions of the
English and foreign lawyers, are also in favor of this distinction.
And it is, as far as I have been able to learn, the practice of all
countries."
The same will, the same positive action, the same purpose, and,
it may be added, the same predicament or position of the actors,
must exist in each class of cases. There must be intent and act,
prompted by, and tending to, a practicable, or at least a probable
result, and not mere endurance or submission to uncontrollable
necessity in either case.
Thus, says Benecke
"When a vessel is purposely run ashore (p. 143), and afterwards
got off with damage; the question
Page 51 U. S. 310
whether repairs of such damage belong to general or particular
average depends entirely upon the circumstances of the case. If the
situation of the vessel were such as to admit of no alternative; so
that, without running her ashore she would have been unavoidably
lost, and that measure were resorted to for the purpose of saving
the lives or liberty of the crew, no contribution can take place,
because nothing, in fact, was sacrificed. But if the vessel and
cargo were in a perilous, but not a desperate situation, and the
measure of running her ashore deliberately adopted, as best
calculated to save the ship and cargo; in that case the damage
sustained, according to the fundamental rules, constitutes a claim
for restitution."
And Mr. Phillips, in his work on Insurance, Vol. I, 338, and in
a note to Stevens on Average, p. 81, lays down the law both in
England and in the United States to be this, that
"the voluntary stranding of the ship is general average, but not
the mere steering her to a less dangerous place for stranding, when
she is inevitably drifting to the shore."
I am wholly unable to perceive how, in conformity with the rules
and principles above cited as constituting the foundation of
general average, contribution could justly be claimed in this
instance for the loss of the ship. For there is not a scintilla of
proof in this cause tending to show a design to sacrifice the ship,
or anything else, nor tending to prove that the course pursued was
one which, under any circumstances, could possibly have been
avoided. On the contrary, the testimony establishes, as far as it
is possible to establish any facts, that the stranding was the
effect of the
vis major, of an inevitable necessity --
that every effort was made to avoid this necessity, and that the
only act of the mind apparent in the case was the determination, to
repeat the language of Mr. Phillips, already quoted, "merely to
steer her to a less dangerous place for stranding, when she was
inevitably drifting to the shore," a determination not less for the
benefit of the ship than for that of the cargo, and one falling
within the general scope of the duty and discretion of every master
or seaman.
There is no contrariety in the testimony in this case. The
single witness, the mate, who was examined, states most explicitly
the hopeless and desperate condition of the vessel; she had lost
all her anchors, was in the midst of a hurricane, and drifting to
the shore under a force which the witness explicitly says nothing
could resist. He therefore did not elect to run her ashore, or to
make her a sacrifice for the general good; he only sought to save
her as far as possible from danger or injury. It appears to me to
be no slight paradox to assert, that a man is the positive and
controlling agent in the
Page 51 U. S. 311
accomplishment of an effect which he merely suffers, and which
is forced upon him by a power that he is wholly unable to resist or
influence, and that it is equally paradoxical to declare, that we
elect and seek a sacrifice or a peril from which we are most
anxiously fleeing. The cases at
nisi prius in the federal
courts, and in the courts of the states referred to, leave this
matter pretty much in equipoise, if indeed they do not incline to
the side of the question here maintained. We have Story and
Washington and Tilghman opposed to Kent and Gibson and Kennedy;
with this consideration attending the decisions of the Supreme
Court of Pennsylvania, that they are the most recent, and have been
made upon an examination and review of the cases which they have
overruled. Repeating the assurance of entire deference entertained
for the opinion of my brethren, and of the sincerest diffidence of
the conclusions of my own mind, yet being unable to concur in those
opinions, I have no claim to share in their merits if they are
right, and if they are incorrect, my position with respect to them
should be equally understood.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern
District of New York, and was argued by counsel. On consideration
whereof, it is now here ordered and adjudged by this Court, that
the judgment of the said circuit court in this cause be, and the
same is hereby, affirmed, with costs and damages at the rate of six
percentum per annum.