This suit is a sequel to that which we disposed of in Burns Bros. v. Long Island Railroad Co., 2 Cir.,
It is obvious that the decree in the first suit determined no facts that stand in the path of the libellant’s recovery here; on the contrary, it might be argued that it had found all the facts necessary to hold the carfloat liable in rem, for we exonerated the Central Railroad only because none of its servants had been personally at fault. So far therefore as the decree could he treated at all as an “estoppel” — as opposed to a “bar” — it would appear to favor the libellant. At any rate it is only as a “bar” that the Central Railroad now invokes it. Whether the “cause of action” is the same is not clear as a matter of first impression. Tt is true that the injury and the means by which it was accomplished are identical; on the other hand one of the constitutive facts in the first suit (personal negligence of the owner) is not a necessary fact in the suit at bar. Courts have vacillated in defining a “cause of action,” some taking the view that it is the nexus of all those facts that must be proved to enable the plaintiff to recover; others, that it is only the interest — or “right”- — for whose invasion the plaintiff seeks redress. The following statement is an example of the *912 second view, and we must accept it as authoritative for us, regardless of any opinion we might have personally. “Upon principle, it is perfectly plain that the respondent suffered but one actionable wrong, and was entitled to but one recovery, whether his injury was due to one or the other of several distinct acts, of alleged negligence, or to.a combination of some or all of them. In either view, there would be but a single wrongful invasion of a single primary right * *. *. A cause of action does not consist of facts, but of the unlawful violation of a right which. the facts show.” 1 So defined, we, can see no escape from considering the “cause of action” at bar as the.'same as that-in the first suit. It is true that the first libel alleged that ;the Central Railroad, the owner, had been negligent, and that libel at bar alleges that the carfloat-was negligent; but, although that was an absurd and meaningless allegation, it would make no difference whose negligence caused the damage. If a “cause of action does not consist of facts, but of the unlawful violation of a right which the facts show,” there was in any event but one “causé of action” for only “a single ■primary right” was' invaded.
It would still remain true that the first decree would not be a bar, if the carfloat were to be regarded as the defending party in the case at bar, for to be a bar the first decree, must have been in a suit between the same parties. , As is well known, it has from the beginning been true that in suits
in rem
the vessel has been regarded as the tort-feasor. “The idea that guilt attaches to the thing by which wrong has been done lingered on in our criminal law till the nineteenth century. Till ,1846 the instrument which by its motion directly caused death was forfeit to the crown as a deodand.”
2
“In Edward the First’s time some of the cases remind us of the barbarian laws at their rudest stage. If a man fell from a tree, the tree was deodand. If he drowned in a well, the well was to be filled up. It did not matter that the forfeited instrument belonged to an innocent' person. ‘When a man killeth another with the sword of John at Stile, the sword shall be forfeit as deodand, and yet no default is in the owner.’ ”
3
It is of course true that such animistic notions have for most purposes long since disappeared; but it is hard to explain the •present law as to liens for collision on any other theory than as a vestigial devolution
4
out of the notion that anything that moves and kills a man shall be deodand to the king.
5
It was- only at a later stage that the law began to consider “fault” as a constituent of such a tort; and Story, J., could still say in 1827 of goods seized by the Treasury: “The thing is here primarily considered as the offender, or rather the offence is attached primarily to the thing; and this whether the offence be
malum prohibitum
or
malum in se.
The same principle applies to proceedings
in ram
on seizures in the admiralty.”
6
This language he quoted in United States' v. The Brig Malek Adhel,
When the plaintiff has two- alternative remedies available to him upon the same “cause of action,” he may not reserve one and sue .upon the other, and a judgment for the defendant upon one will be a bar tó a later suit upon the other; 11 but obviously this rule ought not to apply when at the time of the first action only , one of the two remedies was available to the plaintiff. Therefore, “where a judgment is rendered in favor of the defendant because •the plaintiff seeks a form of remedy which is not available to him, the plaintiff is not precluded from, subsequently maintaining an action in which he seeks an available remedy.” 12 If we regard the “cause of action” at bar as the same as that in the first suit, as we must,' the present libel in rem was an alternative remedy to the libel in personam, so that this appeal comes down to whether a libel in rem was “available” to Burns Bros, in the first suit, since, if it was, it could have been joined with the libel in personam under the 14th Admiralty Rule. It is perhaps interesting that this would have been equally the critical issue, were the test of identity between “causes of action” the identity of the two congeries of'constitutive facts, and not the “interest” invaded; for, although the “cause of action” in the first suit would then have been different from that in the second, § 65(2) of the Restatement would apply.
There can be no question that while the carfloat was in the possession of the New Jersey District Court in the reorganization proceeding of the Central Railroad, Burns Bros, co.uld not have arrested her; the most that it could have- done was to apply: to that court for leave to do so ; and, it is impossible to know what would have been the result. On whom should the burden rest of proving that the reorganization judge would have granted such an application? It seems to us that it should rest upon the Central Railroad. As things stood, the remedy in rem was not *914 “available” -to Burns Bros., and for that reason the decree in the first suit was not a bar. If Burns Bros, is to be charged as though the remedy was “available,” that can be done only because it was guilty of laches in .failing to make the remedy “available”; and laches is a defence and must be proved. The decree ■ against the car-float should be affirmed.
The second question is that presented by the appeal of Burns Bros, which, as we have said, is because the running of interest upon its claim against the carfloat was stopped at the date of petition filed in the reorganization of the Long Island Railroad. The judge’s theory as to this was that, since the carfloat was only “secondarily” liable, the claim against it could not be larger than that against the Long Island Railroad, which was “primarily” liable. If the carfloat had been a guarantor of the Long Island Railroad, that would of course have been true, for her liability would then have been no more than to pay whatever was the claim against the principal, the Long Island Railroad. But in the admiralty, as at common-law, every tort-féasor is liable in solido; and the rule allowing contribution between the two does not affect the liability of each to the party injured. 13 The same is true where, instead of contribution, one of the two tort-feasors may demand exoneration of the other, because the fault of the other' is imputed to him without fault on his part. That is the situation at bar for the fault of the Long Island Railroad is imputed to the carfloat without fault on her part. The right of exoneration is as irrelevant to the liability of the carfloat to Burris Bros., as would be the carfloat’s right of contribution, if she and the Long Island Railroad had each been guilty of fault. The occasion is comparable to an action against a principal, liable for the tort of an agent who has become insolvent. The principal may charge the agent for the whole amount because the agent is bound to exonerate him; 14 but no impairment of the principal’s right of exoneration has any effect upon the right of the injured person to a full recovery upon the liability imputed to the principal. The liability of the carfloat was not affected by the partial default of the Long Island Railroad to Burns Bros.; any more than it would be by its complete default. The Central Railroad has not argued that its reorganization in the New Jersey District Court resulted in a discharge of the lien of collision upon the carfloat, and for that reason we have not considered it.
Decree affirmed on the appeal of the Central Railroad of New Jersey.
Decree reversed on the appeal of Burns Bros, and interest allowed until entry of decree.
Notes
Baltimore S. S. Co. v. Phillips,
. Holdsworth, Vol. II, 46, 47.
. Holmes, The Common Law, pp. 24, 25; See also Pollock & Maitland, Vol. II, pp. 470-473.
. Holmes, The Common Law, pp. 27-33.
. Fitzlierbert’s Abridgement, “Corone,” plaoitum 403.
. The Palmyra,
. United States v. The Little Charles, 26 Fed.Cas. page 979, No. 15,612.
. The Barnstable,
. §§ 901 et sea., Title 33, U.S.C.A.
. Bailey v. Sundberg, 2 Cir.,
. § 65 (1) Restatement of Judgments.
. § 65(2) Restatement of Judgments.
. The Atias,
. § 401, Comment c, Restatement of Agency.
