8. Distribution of Liability for Payment.—

The vessel, cargo, and freight money saved are to contribute to the payment of the salvage award according to their relative values at the port of rescue. As between the ship and cargo, each is liable for its own proportion alone. The salvor cannot recover the entire salvage from either, but only the proportion for which respondent is liable. As was said by Justice Story in Stratton v. Jarvis, 8 Peters 4:

It is true that the salvage service was in one sense entire; but it certainly cannot be deemed entire for the purpose of founding a right against all the claimants jointly, so as to make them all jointly responsible for the whole salvage. On the contrary, each claimant is responsible only for the salvage properly due and chargeable on the gross proceeds or sales of his own property pro rata. It would otherwise follow that the property of one claimant might be made chargeable with the payment of the whole salvage, which would be against the clearest principles of law on this subject.

Where a ship is saved and unable to continue her voyage and carry out her contracts of affreightment, the freight is one of the things of value saved, but in determining the value of the freight saved for the purpose of assessing a salvage award against it, "the freight to be considered is only such proportion of the freight earned by the entire voyage as the distance at which the salvage service was rendered from the port of departure bears to the whole voyage." The Sandringham, 10 Fed. 556.