A measure was in this case deliberately taken, by which the vessel was preserved. That measure was necessarily attended with the certain destruction of the plaintiff’s lime. It may then be assumed that the sacrifice of that, was the price of the safety of the vessel. Had the lime thus sacrificed any value ? If it had, the plaintiff is entitled to contribution, upon the principles of general average. Benecke on average, 110, Phillips’ edition, lays down the law to be, that if but for the voluntary destruction of part, the whole would certainly and unavoidably have been lost, no claim for contribution could be
’ If the lime, in the condition in which it then was, could by no possibility be saved it was of no value, and the owner lost nothing by the course pursued. The possibility of preservation is generally to be presumed. The impossibility of saving that, which had been destroyed, it may in most cases be difficult to establish by proof, yet, unless it be made to appear to the satisfaction of a jury, the claim of contribution, which is a favored one, is to be sustained. Where the peril admits of a selection, and the part destroyed might have been saved by the sacrifice of the part preserved, it is a case for contribution ; for the part sacrificed might have been selected for preservation. Benecke cites no authority in support of the rule before stated, but it is based upon the principle upon which general average is founded, which is, that something valuable is sacrificed for the safety of what remains.
It is remarkable that among a people so highly commercial as the English, very few judicial decisions on general average can be found. Abbot, afterwards Lord Tenderden, in his learned treatise on merchant ships and seamen, 327, says, “ the determination of English courts of justice, furnish less authority on this, subject, than on any other branch of maritime law, there being only three reported cases of questions between the parties liable to contibution in the first instance, and very few questions between thé party so liable and the insurer, from whom indemnity has been sought.” Nor has the question been often the subject of judicial investigation in this country. Two such cases only have been cited in the argument. The one was in New-York, Bradhurst v. The Col. Ins. Co. 9 John. 9. There a ship in a case of extremity was run on shore. The ship was lost, but the cargo saved. It was held not to be a case of general average. The ship was not voluntarily sacrificed to preserve the cargo, but in a case of extreme peril, she was run on shore, as a measure by which it was hoped that both might be preserved. The other is Nicker
We are of opinion, that if in this case there was no possibility of saying the plaintiff’s lime, he has no claim for contribution. Upon this question the jury have not passed, and there must be a new trial, that it may be settled.
If the jury should be of opinion, that there was a possibility that the lime might have been saved, we are satisfied with the correctness of the principles, upon which the plaintiff’s claim for contribution was settled at the former trial.
New trial granted.