Law of Tug and Tow and Offshore Contracts
Page 573
CHAPTER 14
Admiralty jurisdiction
Historical background
14.1 As has been seen above in , before the advent of the steam tug, towage, as an operation distinct from a towage service rendered to a vessel in distress in the context of salvage, was exceptionally rare. The Court of Admiralty had long exercised jurisdiction in salvage cases (see the magisterial analysis of the sources and origins of this jurisdiction given by Lord Esher MR in The Gas Float Whitton (No. 2) [1896] P 42 at p. 47 et seq.). However, with the development of towage as a separate field of marine operation, quite distinct from salvage, an important lacuna in the jurisdiction of court became apparent: the Admiralty Court had no jurisdiction to deal with ordinary towage cases. As Dr Lushington stated (in The Wataga (1856) Swa 165 at p. 167, adopted by the Court of Appeal in The Heinrich Bjorn (1885) 10 PD 48 at p. 52):The court, prior to the statute, had jurisdiction over salvage and damage but, under limitation as to locality, it had not over simple towage which was only then coming into use.