This is a suit in admiralty, brought by the libelant, a citizen of Michigan, against the steam-vessel F. & P. M. No. 2, owned and employed in navigation by the Flint & Pere Marquette Railroad Company, to recover the value of a raft of logs, which, on the eighteenth day of September, 1886, were being towed by a tug from a point on the east shore of Lake Michigan to Ludington. The libel alleges that the raft or boom of logs was being towed into the harbor of Ludington; that the steamer, in entering the same port, negligently ran into the raft, striking it with such force as to break the boom, and scatter the logs; and that, in consequence of the collision, many of the logs floated out into the lake, and were lost. The libel further alleges, and the answer admits, that the steamer w-as duly enrolled and licensed for the coasting trade, and employed in navigation and commerce upon the lakes within the admiralty jurisdiction of the United States. The defense made by the answer is that the collision occurred through the negligence of the tug which had the logs in tow. A motion is now made by the respondent to dismiss the libel for want of jurisdiction. As the place where the collision happened was upon public navigable waters, no issue arises concerning the question of locality as a ground of jurisdiction. The point presented is whether the raft of logs in question is the subject-matter of maritime jurisdiction, so as to enable the owner to maintain a suit in admiralty against the steamer, to recover for the injury and loss sustained.
In the case of The W. H. Clark,
In the case of A'Raft of Cypress Logs,
Thackeray v. The Farmer,
In Jones v. The Coal Barges,
But, admitting that a raft of lumber or logs is not the subject of salvage service, as was held in Tome v. Lumber, supra, because, as is said in some of the cases, “salvage,” in the sense in which the term is used in the maritime law, can only be claimed for the rescue of a ship or its cargo or portions of the same; and conceding that the right of possession of such property must be asserted in a common-law action, and not in a suit in admiralty; admitting also the law in relation to contract service to be as stated in the cases cited from
'The jurisdiction of the admiralty in cases of tort, depends upon locality. Conk. Adm. 21. This collision occurred upon navigable waters, over which, confessedly, the admiralty has jurisdiction. Asa subject of commerce, the raft or boom of logs was being transported from one port to another in tow of the tug. Its relation to the tug was somewhat in the nature of cargo. Both the raft and the steamer which inflicted the injury were, at the time, actually engaged in navigation. The decision in Jones v. The Coal Barges turned upon the construction placed on the act of 1845, which confined the jurisdiction of admiralty courts on the lakes and rivers, to “matters of contract and tort in, upon, or concerning steamboats and other vessels of twenty tons burden and upwards, enrolled and licensed for the coasting trade." But, since that decision, the jurisdiction of courts of admiralty has been greatly extended. In the case of The Eagle,
In Ex parte Boyer,
In the case of The Rock Island Bridge,
In Atlee v. Packet Co.,
In the case of The Arkansas, 17 Fed. Rep. 383, it was decided, in a well-considered opinion by Judge Love, that where a vessel is injured by collision with a structure unlawfully placed in the navigable channel of a river, the party creating the obstruction may be sued for the injury in an action in personam, in a proper court of admiralty; but the owners of the vessel cannot, in such a case, proceed in rem against the solid structure, whatever it may be, because there can be no maritime lien
In Muntz v. Timber. 15 Fed. Rep. 555, it was decided that a raft of timber is subject to the jurisdiction of the admiralty court, in the matter of salvage.
Many other cases might be cited, showing the extension, in various directions, of the admiralty jurisdiction, since the days of the old tidewater doctrine,—cases that include injuries to barges in tow of other vessels, ferry-boats, scows, yachts, pleasure boats, and other craft which would have had no recognition as “ships or vessels,” iii the earlier history of admiralty law in this country. But further discussion of the question seems superfluous, as I have no doubt, in the present state of judicial decision on the subject, this court, as a court of admiralty, has jurisdiction of the controversy set forth in the libel and answer in this case.
