Upon a careful examination of the proofs in this case, I am satisfied that the libellant should be allowed to recover no more than the value of his vessel at the time of the accident, together with the damage to his property on board, and the necessary cost of pumping her for a period of time sufficient to enable him ' to ascertain the extent of the injuries the boat had sustained, and to learn the cost of repairing such injuries.
Under the circumstances proved, common prudence would have dictated an abandonment of the vessel; instead of which she was placed in the hands of a ship carpenter, who put extensive repairs upon her, including changing her from a poop-decked to a flush-decked vessel. His bill was not paid by the owner, but the vessel was libelled ' by the carpenter, and she was bought in by him because no one would bid more than the amount of his bill. This circumstance, with others that appear in the evidence, indicate that justice will be done by applying here the rule that money imprudently expended for the raising and repairing a vessel injured by a collision, and exceeding her value at the time of the accident, cannot be collected of the wrong-doers. The Empress Eugenie, 1 Lush. 138; Williams & B. Adm. Jur. 79.
The libellant’s recovery will, therefore, bo limited to the value of his vessel at the time of the accident, which, upon the evidence, was nine hundred dollars. To this is to be added the sum found by the commissioner as the damage to property on board. $58, and also the sum expended for pumping the vessel for five days, as that period of time would doubtless be abundant to ascertain the extent of the injuries and the cost of repairing them. In making this determination I have not overlooked a suggestion that it does not necessarily follow, from the fact that in the end the cost of repairs proved to exceed the value of the vessel, that, therefore, it was imprudent to undertake to repair. But the facts proven here indicate that in this case it was imprudent, and if any doubt existed as to the prudent course, it could easily have been removed by the precaution of having careful and detailed estimates made at the time by competent persons. The boat was an old one. She was not only repaired, but altered in form and made better than before. It was certainly open to question whether she was worth repairing at all. Under such circumstances the owner should have fortified his determination to repair by the opinion of experts formed at the time, after due examination.
The report of the commissioner is therefore set aside, and a decree will be entered in accordance with this opinion.