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[G. URRUTIA v. PASIG STEAMER](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/ce49?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. 5583, Mar 19, 1910 ]

G. URRUTIA v. PASIG STEAMER +

DECISION

15 Phil. 521

[ G. R. No. 5583, March 19, 1910 ]

G. URRUTIA & CO., PLAINTIFF AND APPELLANT, VS. THE PASIG STEAMER AND LIGHTER COMPANY, DEFENDANT AND APPELLEE.

D E C I S I O N

TORRES, J.:

On May 19, 1909, the firm of G. Urrutia & Co. filed suit in the Court of First Instance of the city of Manila against The Pasig Steamer and Lighter Company,  alleging, among other particulars, that it is the owner of the steamer called Nuestra Senora del Pilar, registered in the port of Manila, provided  with  the proper licenses to  navigate and do business in the  waters of the  Philippines, its cash value being P80,000, the cargo it carried, on  the dates referred to in the claim,  being  P45,000; that the defendant  is the owner of the steamer San Juan, registered at  the port of Manila; that on or about the 6th of December,  1908, while a storm was raging, the said steamer Nuestra Senora del Pilar was proceeding toward the port of Legaspi, and twenty hours and thirty minutes after departure  of the vessel a steamship displaying signal flags was sighted in the direction of Malabrigo, on which account the former ship steered toward the latter and it was seen that it was the San Juan, and the signals were "M. Y." - I am disabled, can not navigate.   Will you tow me?   "E. L. D." - Secure anchorage.

That thereupon the steamer  Nuestra Senora  del Pilar, with great risk to the vessel, salved the San Juan and took her to a safe port, and that had it not been for the timely, prompt, and efficacious help rendered by the Nuestra Senora del Pilar, the San Juan and her cargo would have been totally lost; that the steamer salved had at the date of the salvage an actual and cash value of P100,000,, wherefore the just and adequate remuneration for the salvage service rendered by  plaintiff's  steamer amounted to the sum of P40,000, the payment of which having been demanded of the defendant since the 15th of January, 1909, the said defendant,  without objecting to the amount of the claim for the said service, does not pay the same  and has been delaying payment under flimsy pretexts, and therefore the plaintiff prays the court to render judgment in its favor for the sum of  P40,000, with legal interest  thereon from the 15th of January, 1909, and the costs.

The defendant, being summoned to appear,  filed a demurrer to the original complaint, alleging that the facts therein set  forth did not  constitute a cause of action  against the defendant and that there was a defect of plaintiff parties.

On the 30th of June  following the plaintiff presented a motion praying  that the' aforesaid  demurrer be  overruled and summons  issued to the  defendant; the court, by order of July 3, 1909, sustained the demurrer and declared that the plaintiff was entitled to amend the complaint by including therein the  officers  and crew of its ship as defendant parties, if they did not wish to be made plaintiffs.  Against this decision the attorneys for the plaintiff took  exception and by a writing of the 8th of the following July stated to the court that, in conformity with article 101 of the Code of Civil Procedure, they chose not  to amend their client's complaint by making the captain and officers  of the said steamer parties  thereto.

In view  thereof, the  court, by order of the same date, July 8, dismissed the complaint for the reasons it set forth, with the costs against the plaintiff.  To this decision the latter excepted and announced their intention to file a bill of exceptions in the ordinary manner; this  when filed was certified, approved, and forwarded to the clerk of this court.

The shipping firm owning the steamer Nuestra Senora del Pilar seeks to obtain compensation from  the owners of the steamer  San Juan for salvage services rendered  by the former  to the latter during  a  storm. The services were successfully rendered, at the request of the officers  of the ship salved, which was conducted by the Nuestra Senora del Pilar to a safe port, and the compensation is not refused by the owners of the San Juan.  The matter at issue, which is the  subject of the appeal, is  restricted to the question whether the company owning the Nuestra Senora del Pilar is compelled, in order to claim the  said compensation, to make the officers  and  crew of the  salving ship, Nuestra Senora  del Pilar, parties  plaintiff or defendant, as was decided affirmatively by the Court of First Instance.

Notwithstanding the fact that the case is not expressly provided for in the  legislation in force  in these Islands, especially in  the  Code of Commerce, inasmuch as  it is a question  of  such  an important service and of just compensation therefor, wherein the subjects  of  any  nation might be interested to such  an extent that the questions arising out of salvage services might become international, under the principles of the common law, it is proper for this  court to determine the question pending  between the parties in accordance with the laws of the United  States and the decisions of the courts of the same.
"Salvage is awarded  to encourage promptness, energy, efficiency, and heroic endeavor in saving  life and  property in peril  *   *  *"  (Vol.  24, Am.  & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 1222.)

"The  owner of the salving vessel  has  always been considered  as entitled to salvage reward for  the use  of his vessel in  rendering salvage services, though  he  was not present  when the  salvage service was rendered."   (Idem, p. 1195.)
The action and cooperation of the officers  and crew of the  salving vessel  was  meritorious and  worthy  of  all praise, yet the use and service of the vessel, as an indispensable instrument for  the salvage, was of the utmost importance, taking into consideration the danger to which the ship and the crew were exposed; therefore the latter and  the owner of the  salving  vessel are  unquestionably entitled to the remuneration which they have  earned.

It sometimes happens that not all the  officers and members of the crew remain  in the service of  the shipowner, but that, after rendering  the salvage services, they depart for other distant countries, and it is difficult to reunite them or to rely upon the acquiescence of the absent ones; it is not right that  the  shipowner  should be  prevented by  this circumstance  from availing  himself of his  right to claim so just  a  remuneration before the courts,  when  he  whose obligation it is to pay it refuses to do so extra]udicially or does not heed the efforts of the creditor to obtain compensation, notwithstanding the justice of his claim.

Granting that the officers and members of the crew were entitled to  a certain part of the remuneration, if the owner of the salving vessel makes claim for proper compensation in the courts, the theory  and jurisprudence of  the  courts of the United  States in North America do not compel him to make the said officers and crew parties to  the suit, nor do they prescribe  the dismissal  of the shipowner's action, but they permit him to continue the suit without prejudice to any rights  the  former may have to a part of  the said remuneration which is allotted proportionately in the discretion of the court.

For want of an express law in  these Islands governing the matter, and since this court is obliged to decide the present litigation in accordance  with the jurisprudence of the courts  of the United States,  we cite the following pertinent extracts  from two  decisions of  the United States Supreme Court.

Justice  Clifford,  of the Supreme Court  of the  United States, who wrote the opinion in the case of The Blackwall (10 Wall. (U. S.), 1,12, 13), says:
"Salvors are not  deprived  of a remedy because another set of salvors neglect or refuse to join in the suit, nor will such neglect or refusal benefit the Hbelants by giving them any claim to a larger compensation, as the non-prosecution by one set of salvors inures, not to the libelants prosecuting the claim, but to the owners of the property saved.

"Cases may also be found where co-salvors who neglected to appear and become parties to the suit until the decree was pronounced were allowed to petition the court for such compensation out of the fund in the registry of the court, and where their claim received a favorable adjudication.

"Objection is also made that the  owners of a vessel can not promote a salvage suit unless they participate in the salvage service; or  if they may promote such a  suit, that they can not participate in  the reward  decreed for the salvage service except for the risk and damage to  which their property was exposed in rendering the salvage service. Such an objection was made in the  case of The Camanche, before cited, but the court overruled the objection, and that ruling is adopted and applied  in this case."
The same Justice Clifford,  who delivered the opinion in the case of The Camanche  (8 Wall. (U. S.), 448, 474,  and 476), among other things also says:
"Remuneration for salvage service is  awarded to the owners of vessels, not because they are present, or supposed to be present when  the service is rendered, but on account of the danger to which the service  exposes their property and the risk which they run of loss in suffering their vessels to engage in such perilous undertaking;  *  *   *

"Next proposition of the claimants is that the libelants, even if they may be regarded as salvors, were not the sole salvors, and consequently that the decree of the circuit court ought not to be affirmed, as it would not be a bar to a subsequent suit for  the same services if instituted by their employees.

"All persons interested may appear, on the return of the monition, and become parties to the suit, or, by some proper proceeding,  have their rights adjudicated; and  in many cases, even after the decree upon the merits is pronounced, they may appear at any time before the fund is distributed and claim any  interest they may have  in the proceeds of the property libeled,  if any, in the registry of the court, *    *    *."
Considering  the  doctrine established by the  decisions quoted, and  in  view of the fact that the plaintiff firm has chosen not to make the  captain, officers, and  crew of the steamer Nuestra Senora del Pilar parties in its claim,  this court decrees that the trial shall continue  in all due form, without prejudice to the said officers and  crew exercising the rights that pertain to them, whenever they may deem proper.

For the foregoing reasons, and following the procedure observed in  the United States, it is in  our opinion  proper to reverse, and we hereby reverse, the order of dismissal of the 8th of July, together with the previous order sustaining the demurrer, and  the judge of  first  instance, to whom this decision shall be communicated, shall proceed  with the present litigation in accordance with law.  So ordered.

Arellano, C. J., Mapa, Johnson,  Carson, and Moreland, JJ., concur.

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