6. Owner's Rights.—
The owner's title to his wrecked ship or cargo remains in him until divested by his own act or by operation of law and he has the right to enter upon lands of another, upon which it may be cast, for the purpose of removing it; if prevented from so doing he may have his action of trover for its conversion or a replevin for possession.[31] In case his property was insured and abandoned to his underwriters, they become the full owners thereof and entitled to all his rights on the premises. These rules apply alike to ship and to cargo and to all the parts thereof. In Murphy v. Dunham, 38 Fed. 503, may be found an interesting discussion in regard to a wrecked cargo of coal. Dunham owned the schooner Burt which was lost in Lake Michigan with about 1,375 tons of coal on board. Murphy bought this cargo from the underwriters who had paid a total loss thereon. About two years afterwards, Dunham located the wreck and raised a quantity of the coal which he sold for the best price obtainable. These proceedings were without any license or authority from Murphy, who had purchased the cargo, and he then sued Dunham for tortious conversion. The court held that Murphy had a valid title and that Dunham was a trespasser in interfering with it; nevertheless if Dunham had promptly libeled it for salvage, his conduct not being marred by bad faith, the admiralty would have awarded him a substantial reward; but as he had assumed to dispose of it at private sale, he must answer in damages, although not as a willful trespasser or one acting in bad faith; he was accordingly held to respond for the value of the coal in the port where he sold it, less the actual and necessary expenses of its recovery. The Albany, 44 Fed. 431, is another opinion in regard to the rights of the owners of ship and cargo; as a result of that disaster, the cargo was plundered by wreckers and sold to many persons in the vicinity; the underwriters recovered it by actions in replevin wherever it could be found.