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Etheridge v. Jones

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1847
30 N.C. 100 (N.C. 1847)

Opinion

(December Term, 1847.)

Under our wreck laws, the master, owner, merchant or consignee of wrecked vessels or other property has a right to take possession of them and dispose of them as he may think proper, without any responsibility to the wreck master for commissions or in any other respect.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Law of CURRITUCK, at Fall Term, 1846, Pearson, J., presiding.

Heath and Jordan for plaintiff.

A. Moore for defendants.


The plaintiff was, by the County Court of Currituck, duly appointed a commissioner of wrecks for District. No. 4, and in 1845, while acting as such, the brig Moon was wrecked within that district. The plaintiff demanded of the defendant Kinsey, who was the captain, to be allowed to take into his custody the goods then on the beach, and such as might thereafter be saved from the wreck. This was refused by the captain, who told him he could save the goods for the owners himself, and did not need his assistance. The plaintiff never did take any of the goods into his custody, but they were all reshipped by the captain, and the other defendants assisted him in so doing. The action is brought under the act of the General Assembly passed at their session of 1844-45, ch. 58.

The court instructed the jury that the plaintiff had no right to any commissions, as he had neither taken the wrecked goods into his possession nor had he sold them. But under the act of Assembly he had a cause of action against the defendants for any interference with his rights and privileges as commissioner, and that the refusal to let him take into his charge and custody the wrecked goods was such an interference. Under this (101) charge the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff and from the judgment thereon the defendants appealed.


The whole case turns upon the construction to be given to the act under which the action is brought. We do not concur with his Honor in the view he has taken of it. Section 4 of the act is as follows: "In future the commissioners of wrecks shall be the only proper persons to take charge of, advertise or sell any vessel, cargo or other wrecked property that may be stranded or cast on shore in their respective districts: Provided, that the owner, captain, merchant or consignee, or their agent, may, in the absence of the commissioner etc., take charge of, or sell, or remove, such vessel, cargo or other wrecked property." Section 5, under which this action is brought, provides, "and any person who shall interfere with the rights and privileges of any commissioner shall be liable to such commissioner, in an action on the case, for such damages as the commissioner shall sustain by reason of such interference." The act is obviously intended to prevent any officious intermeddling, with property so situated, by irresponsible persons. The commissioner is the officer of the law to take the property into possession and see justice done the owners. If others have assisted in saving it, in his absence, he may demand it of them, and a refusal on their part to deliver it is a violation of his rights, for which an action may be sustained. But by the proviso, in section 4, recited above, the master, or owner, or merchant, or consignee, is not such an officious intermeddler; to each is reserved the right, in the absence of the commissioner, to take charge of the stranded property. From the case we gather that the captain did take possession of the goods in the absence of the commissioner, (102) for it states "that the commissioner demanded of the defendant Kinsey, who was the captain, to be allowed to take into his custody the goods, etc." If they were not already in the possession of the captain, where was the necessity of any demand? If, however, the goods were not actually in the possession of any one, and the captain or owner had refused to suffer the plaintiff to take them into his custody, and had himself taken possession, we do not believe his act would have been a tortious one. The act of Assembly is badly drawn, and we must give to it such a construction as we think the Legislature intended and which is to be gathered from all the language they use and the purposes of the act. The goods, then, were rightfully in the possession of the defendant Kinsey, who was, pro hac vice, the owner. Does the act require him to deliver them up to the commissioner upon his demand? Surely not; to what purpose should he do it? The latter part of the same section provides that "every commissioner shall receive for selling any wrecked property 5 percent, etc., and in case of the removal of any wrecked property by the owner, merchant, consignee, or their agent, from the custody of any commissioner without a sale, the commissioner shall receive 2 1/2 per cent, etc." This 2 1/2 per cent commissions are given to the commissioner as a compensation for his trouble and the responsibility incurred by him in taking possession or custody of the property. He did not take possession or have the custody of the property, and therefore his Honor in his charge properly instructed the jury that he was not entitled to any commission. But he further instructed them that he was entitled to an action against the defendants for interfering with his rights. What rights? The only right interfered with was the right, as it is alleged, to take the property out of the possession of the captain. And for what purpose? Not to secure them, not to sell them, but simply to entitle him to his commission of 2 1/2 per cent; for the captain, if he had surrendered them, was at liberty, by (103) the act, immediately to withdraw them from the commissioner. Surely such was not the meaning of the Legislature. They could not have intended to take from the unfortunate owner a portion of that which the sea had spared, and he had saved, to present it as a douceur to one who had rendered no services and incurred no liability in saving the goods.

If the principle contended for in this case on the part of the plaintiff be correct, it will lead to this result, that all the commissioner has to do is to arrive after the goods have been all saved by the captain or owner, demand the possession, and if delivered to him, he immediately redelivers them back and pockets his commissions; if refused, he does not pocket the commissions, eo nomine, but damages to their amount, for the rule of damages would be the loss he would sustain by the nondelivery.

We cannot believe such to be the true construction of the act. The interference intended to be punished by the law, in damages, is an unlawful interference. The act of the captain in taking possession of the wrecked property, in this case, was a lawful act, and he was not bound to surrender them to the plaintiff on his demand. His refusal to do so was no interference with any right or privilege secured to the plaintiff, and the other defendants who acted under his authority are protected by his immunity. The act was intended, not for the benefit of the commissioners of wrecks, but for that of the owners of the property. If, when the goods are stranded, there is no one of the persons enumerated in the act present, the law places the property in the hands of the commissioner, and no one can rightfully withhold it; if the captain or owner is present, and chooses to save the property without the aid of the commissioner, it cannot (104) be the intention of the act to forbid their so doing, or to punish them if they do.

PER CURIAM. Judgment reversed, and venire de novo awarded.


Summaries of

Etheridge v. Jones

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1847
30 N.C. 100 (N.C. 1847)
Case details for

Etheridge v. Jones

Case Details

Full title:JOHN B. ETHERIDGE v. WALTER R. JONES ET. AL

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1847

Citations

30 N.C. 100 (N.C. 1847)