The above four libels -were filed on October 10 and 11, 1889, by the insurers of different portions of the cargo on board the barken tine Nicanor, to recover from the ship the several amounts which the insurers had paid, or, as alleged, were liable to pay, on account of their insured cargo owners, for their proportion of salvage with which the cargo had become chargeable in consequence of the stranding of the Nicanor upon the Jersey coast on the 2d of September, 1889, it being-alleged that the stranding occurred solely by the negligence of the vessel. The answers, filed on October 12th, deny the material allegations of the complaint; and the defense, in brief, was — First. That there was no negligence, and that the stranding arose from the effect of an unknown temporary inshore current, caused by previous north-east winds, after-wards hauling to the southward; and also by a single white electric light at the Longport Hotel, on the beach, being mistaken for the fixed white light at Absecom, a few miles to the northward; Second. That the claims of the salyors* had been paid and discharged by the ship through advances from her agents; that the payments made by the libelants were made to these agents after the delivery of the cargo to the owners, on the execution of the usual average bond; and that such payments were made voluntarily, with full knowledge of all the facts, in partial settlement of that demand; and that no action, under such circumstances, would lie to recover back moneys thus voluntarily paid, even if the stranding was caused by negligence.
The vessel having been arrested by the marshal, and being in custody, the causes were brought to an immediate hearing. On the trial, it appearing that no payment on account of salvage had been made by the second libelant above "named, the New York Mutual, that action was discontinued. The causes have been submitted on the proofs taken in the other three cases.
From the pleadings and proofs it appears that the Nicanor, loaded chiefly with hides .and wool, bound from Montevideo to New York,
The master had made an agreement with the representative of the wrecking company to pay such salvage as should be fixed by the New York Board of Underwriters. On September 6th the matter was heard by that board, and on the same day $15,000 awarded in full for salvage compensation. The libelants had knowledge of the agreement, and, by their representatives, attended the hearing before the board, and acquiesced in its decision. On the same day, J. P. Whitney & Oo., the consignees and agents of the ship in this port, upon the master’s request and order, paid to the wrecking company the full amount of the award, and took its receipt in full to themselves as “agents of the bark Nicanor.” Within a few days thereafter they procured the signatures of the various consignees of cargo to ail average bond, in the usual form, which recites the stranding of the vessel, and the assistance rendered bv the wrecking company ; and thereupon the cargo owners “covenant severally with J. IN Whitney & Go., owners, or agents of the owners, of said vessel, that the losses and expenses, or so much thereof as, upon an adjustment by Currie & Whitney according to the laws and usages of this port, should he a charge upon the cargo, should be paid to Whitney & Go., upon notice of the adjustment.” Within the following two weeks the cargo was all discharged, and delivered to the consignees. The average adjustment was completed on October 4th, and notice thereof was at once given to the libelants. In the general average there was included, in addition to the salvage award, $1,261.24 for ropes and sheaves of the vessel, for
As respects the master’s negligence as the cause of the stranding, the case is by no means free from difficulty. It is not necessary, however, to consider that branch of the case, because I am satisfied that the libelant’s claims are brought within that class of voluntary pa - ments in which suits to recover back the moneys paid are not allowed. The rule is well settled that the payment of a money demand, mado voluntarily, and with knowledge of the facts, arid not in consequence of any fraud, misrepresentation, or mistake, nor under any duress or oppression of person or property, is binding, and cannot be recovered back. A known defense, in such cases, must be made before payment, and even a protest will be of no avail. Radich v. Hutchins, 95 U. S. 213; Mariposa Co. v. Bowman, Deady, 228; Glass Co. v. City of Boston, 4 Metc. 187; Flower v. Lance, 59 N. Y. 603, 610; Quincey v. White, 63 N. Y. 370, 376.
The present case is not within any of the exceptions to the general rule. The libelants, at the time of their payments, had knowledge of all the material facts. The master’s statement before the board of underwriters, at which the libelants were represented, was, in substance,
The rule cited has, of course, no application to independent demands that may be counter-claimed or offset or recouped against each other; such as a claim for freight by the ship, on the one side, and a counter-claim for damage to the cargo by the ship’s negligence, on the other. In such cases, each party has his option as to the time and mode of litigafiug his demand. Here there were no such independent demands or causes of action at the time the payments were made.
The libelants urge that their causes of action are essentially for damages on account of the negligence of the ship in stranding, which imposed upon the cargo owners an obligation to pay their contributory shares of the salvage. But there was no physical damage to the cargo. The only damage to the cargo owners was a possible liability to pay a ■ salvage contribution. As respects the right to recover in this action, that liability is to be judged, not according to what might have happened as a consequence of the stranding, but according to the circumstances as they actually existed at the time when the payments were made, viz., from September 25th to October 5th. If, at that time, the cargo owners were under no legal liability to pay any salvage contribution, as I find the fact to be if the stranding arose through negligence, then there was no legal damage, and the payments would be voluntary, in the legal sense, and cannot be recovered hack.
There is no question that the wrecking company, in the absence of any other agreement, might have held the vessel and cargo, either in their own possession, or under arrest by suit in rem, until the ship and cargo owners had either paid or secured their respective shares; and on such payments the amounts paid could doubtless have been recovered back from the ship, if the stranding was caused by her negligence. But the circumstances here" are quite different. Before the salvage service was begun, the master, on September 2d, agreed with the wrecking company that the latter should “assist the vessel now in distress, and leave the amount of compensation to the New York' Board of Underwriters, binding himself and owners to abide by said award.” The wrecking company relied upon this agreement. No person in its behalf accompanied the vessel beyond quarantine; no possession of vessel or cargo was maintained; no salvage suit was instituted; and, two days after arrival, the master performed his agreement by paying the salvors in fall, through the ship’s agents, who, upon his order and request, advanced the money therefor. Thereupon the ship had a lien upon the cargo for such contributory shares as, under the facts of the case, the cargo owners might be hound to pay, if anything; and, if the ship had required payment of
I cannot sustain the contention that J. F. Whitney'& Co. stand as independent assignees of the salvors’ lien. There was no such assignment. Their payment was made to discharge the salvors’ lien, not to preserve it. They did, indeed, act in the general interest, and for the benefit of all parties, but only in the same sense as the master acted in the general interest. It was for the interest of vessel and cargo alike that the claim of salvage should be settled without litigation, and without the detention and delays incident to the arrest of the ship and cargo. The vessel was a foreign one, belonging in Nova Scotia. J. F. Whitney & Co. were her consignees and agents. All the papers in the case, the receipt taken on paying the wrecking company, and the bond taken from the cargo owners, as well as the testimony, show that they acted expressly as “agents of the ship and owners,” and on the master’s direction. Their acts were legally the acts of their principals, the owners of the vessel. The insurers also specially insisted that Whitney & Co. had no authority to pay in their behalf. For their advances upon the master’s order to pay the whole salvage, they had a claim and right of action against the owners, whether the cargo paid its share or not; but they had no lien on the ship, as against their principals. The Esteban, 31 Fed. Rep. 920; White
IS'o reasons are suggested why the rule as to voluntary payments should not be applied to maritime transactions as much as in other cases. The reasons in favor of this rule as respects actions in rem are even stronger than in ordinary cases; for implied liens are not favored, except in so far as they stand upon the grounds of commercial convenience or necessity, which cannot be pleaded in favor of actions like these. To recognize an implied lien for the repayment of moneys voluntarily paid would tend to the prejudice and insecurity of subsequent bona fide purchasers and incumbrancers; since such a lien, if sustained at all, would exist for a reasonable time to enforce it. These risks ought not to be increased or multiplied except upon strict necessity. In this very case, the charterer, after these payments, took the ship into possession, put her up as a general ship, and received a large amount of cargo, before notice of these demands. Were the vessel to be held, and her owners prove irresponsible, the result would be a heavy loss inflicted on the charterer for the benefit of those who had voluntarily paid a demand without raising objections, which, upon their present contention, constituted a known defense. The claims now made come too late. The libels must be dismissed, with costs.