5. Who May Be Salvors.—

Generally, any one not under obligation to render the service, may rank as a salvor, and, conversely, those obliged to work, cannot claim any reward. Sailors on the ship in peril cannot be salvors until released from their engagement or an abandonment of the ship. A passenger cannot earn salvage by mere labor on a vessel in peril, for this is his duty, yet for extraordinary services he may have a salvage award. Such was the case of the Great Eastern when she had been disabled by a gale and was lying helpless in the trough of the sea. Among the passengers was a civil engineer who ingeniously devised and after twenty-four hours' labor carried out a plan for steering her so that she was able to make port. The court awarded him about $15,000. So, in the Fair American, captured by a French privateer and in charge of a prize-crew, her cook succeeded in recapturing and bringing her into port by exertions outside his line of duty, and ranked as a salvor accordingly.

A pilot acting within the line of his duty, however he may entitle himself to extraordinary pilotage compensation as distinct from ordinary pilotage for ordinary services, cannot be entitled to claim salvage, but a pilot is not disabled from becoming a salvor if he performs salvage services outside the scope of his duties. He stands in the same relation to the property as any other salvor (Hobart et al. v. Drogan, 10 Peters 108).