Online Encyclopedia

JETSAM FLOTSAM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 548 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JETSAM

FLOTSAM  and LIGAN, in
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English law, goods lost at sea, as distinguished from goods which come to
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land, which are technically designated
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wreck . Jetsam (the same word as jettison, from
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Lat. jactare, to throw) is when goods are cast into the sea, and there sink and remain under
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water; flotsam (floatson, from float, Lat. flottare) is where they continue floating on the
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surface of the waves; ligan (or lagan, from
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lay or lie) is where they are sunk in the sea, but tied to a cork or
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buoy iii order to be found again . Flotsam, jetsam and ligan belong to the
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sovereign in the absence only of the true owner . Wreck, on the other hand (i.e. goods cast on
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shore), was by the
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common law adjudged to the sovereign in any case, because: it was said by the loss of the
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ship all
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property was gone out of the
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original owner . This singular distinction which treated goods washed ashore as lost, and goods on and in the sea as not lost, is no doubt to be explained by the
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primitive practice of plundering wrecked
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ships .

End of Article: JETSAM FLOTSAM
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