Chase, Administrator v. the American Steamboat Company

9 R.I. 419 | R.I. | 1870

Action of the case brought by the plaintiff as administrator of the estate of George Cook, deceased, to recover $50,000 damages for the benefit of the wife and children of the intestate, for causing the death of the intestate on the waters of Narragansett Bay, by a collision. The action was dismissed on motion of the defendants, on the ground that the state court had no jurisdiction, and the question now comes before this court on a motion for new trial, on the ground of alleged erroneous ruling.

The declaration contained two counts, one under section 16 of chapter 176 of the Revised Statutes, which provides that if the life of any person crossing upon a public highway with reasonable care shall be lost, by reason of the negligence or carelessness of such common carrier, (by stage-coach, railroad, or steamboat,) or by the unfitness, or negligence, or carelessness of their servants, the common carriers or proprietors shall be liable for damages for the injury caused by such loss of life, to be recovered in an action of the case for the benefit of the husband or widow or next of kin; such action for the benefit of the widow or next of kin to be brought by the administrator.

The second is on section 21 of chapter 176: "In all cases in which the death of any person ensues from injury inflicted by the wrongful act of another, and in which an action for damages might have been maintained at the common law, had not death ensued, the person inflicting such injury shall be liable to an action for damages for the injury caused by the death of such person, to be recovered by action of the case for the use of his or her husband, widow, children, or next of kin, in like manner and with like effect as in the preceding five sections provided."

The plea is the general issue.

The questions involved are, first, whether the United States courts, by the United States Constitution, have exclusive jurisdiction in a case like this, resulting from a collision of vessels in the bay, or whether the state courts have concurrent jurisdiction; and, second, whether, if the state courts would have jurisdiction in a case of ordinary injury, they would have it in a *426 case like the present, where the remedy is given by statute and was unknown to the old common law.

Origin of the Acts. — The consideration of the first of these questions is necessary to throw light upon, and aid in, the determination of the second.

Before the adoption of the constitution, the state had jurisdiction over the bay and over the coasts of the sea to the extent of the marine league; Lawrence's Wheaton, 321, 933; 6 Dane's Abr. 359, c.; 3 Hag. Ad. 290, 375; De Lovio v. Boit, 2 Gallis. 398; see 425; see opinion of Mr. Justice Johnson inRamsay v. Allegre, 12 Wheat. 614. This jurisdiction was exercised by its courts of common law. The vice admiralty court exercised an occasional jurisdiction in cases of prize and violations of the British revenue laws. However it may have been in other colonies, here the power of the vice-admiralty court was but little regarded. The colony legislature regulated the fees of the admiralty, and imposed penalties on its officers for violating it; and by act of 1746 the superior court of the colony was empowered to issue prohibitions to the admiralty courts.

Dane, a good authority on old New England laws and usages, observing that most of the statutes, c., were intended merely to regulate the plantation trade, the laws of which the colonies were continually violating, goes on to say that at the date of the Massachusetts charter, 1691, the admiralty jurisdiction was "exclusive on the high seas, the common highway of nations, without the territorial line, usually a cannon-shot from the shores; concurrent with the common law on the coasts between the shore and that line, and without the bodies of counties; and within them, only such admiralty limited jurisdiction the said prior statutes gave, and that was the colonial view of the subject," and after the act of 7 8 William III. ch. 22, to prevent frauds in trade, "the admiralty geographical sphere remained as before." Some have supposed the members of the convention who formed the United States Constitution had in view this extended admiralty jurisdiction when they provided that the judicial power should extend to "all cases of admiralty and marine jurisdiction." This is not probable, because this *427 extended jurisdiction was deemed by the colonies unconstitutional. . . . . "The king's commission to the governor of New Hampshire seems to have extended to all crimes and suspected offences and contracts, even to fresh waters and arms of rivers, c. The colonies never admitted an admiralty jurisdiction to be legal to this extent." 6 Dane's Abr. 357, 358.

In the address of the delegates in Congress in October, 1774, one of the complaints is, that the English stamp act had extended the admiralty jurisdiction "to matters arising within the bodyof a county," and authorized penalties by forfeitures to be recovered in that court. Journal, 47. And among the resolutions of Congress, October, 1774, is one that "the respective colonies are entitled to the common law of England," c. Ibid. 29. And in July, 1775, (Ibid. 190,) they renew their complaint against the English government of "enlarging the jurisdiction of the courts of admiralty and vice admiralty." And see Ibid. 144, c., 152.

The colony and state have always asserted their jurisdiction over Narraganset Bay, and the process of the state courts has always been served on it. By an act of the legislature, 1798, that part of the bay north of Field's Point was declared to be within the county of Providence, and southward of that point process of any county might be served.

Of course all this jurisdiction remains in this state and its courts, which has not been granted to the general government by the United States Constitution.

And the state legislature has (as stated in the argument of Mr. Sheffield) at various times regulated the fisheries in the bay, the speed of steamboats, the sale of liquors, and prohibited the pollution of its waters.

When the United States Constitution provides that the judicial power of the Union shall extend to all causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, is this grant of power to be interpreted by the state of the admiralty jurisdiction as it was anciently claimed by the admiralty in England, or by the actual state of the jurisdiction in England at the date of our Revolution, or by the extent of that jurisdiction as it was practiced in the colonies? *428

It is not necessary for the purposes of this case to go into the history of the controversy in England between the courts of common law and admiralty, which has been so fully gone into in the case of De Lovio v. Boit, 2 Gallis., 398, and in several cases before the United States Supreme Court.

So far as maritime torts are concerned, within which class the present case comes, it is admitted that the jurisdiction of the admiralty depends on the place.

So far as concerned the high seas, which were distinguished in the old English law from the narrow seas so called, and bays and arms of the sea, the jurisdiction was undisputed. But as to such parts of the arms of the sea as were within the jurisdiction of the counties, the courts of common law resisted the jurisdiction of the admiralty, and for a time at least entirely excluded them.

Dane says, (6 Abr. 356,) "According to 13 Rich. II. ch. 5, the bodies of counties includes all lands and waters within the realm of England; and the sea includes all waters without the realm; and . . . . the realm include the narrow seas and the coast." And see Jacob's Law Dict.; Bac. Abr. 1, (side p.) 623; 4 Inst. 134, 140; Comyn, Admiralty, E. 14 and F. 2; Judge Story, inUnited States v. Grush, 5 Mason, 300.

It is enough for the present case to state what is generally admitted, that at the time of our Revolution the common law courts had at least a concurrent jurisdiction in England with the admiralty, over marine torts committed in bays and arms of the sea.

What then is the effect of the Act of 1789? The language is, the district court shall "have exclusive original cognizance of all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction;" "saving to suitors in all cases the right of a common law remedy, when the common law is competent to give it."

Is the word exclusive here used in reference to the state courts, or to the other United States courts? If the question were a new question, it might be reasonably argued that the words in their connection, exclusive original, mean that the original jurisdiction in such cases is in the district, exclusive of the circuit *429 court. And such is Chancellor Kent's opinion. Kent Com. 1, (side p.) 304, note.

In several places in the act, where it is intended to exclude the state courts, the words "exclusive of the state courts," are carefully used. Seizures under the laws of trade, they being United States laws, would of course follow the jurisdiction of the United States courts.

But the Supreme Court of the United States have construed this word exclusive to refer to the state courts. It is important to consider that the jurisdiction of the state court depends on the Constitution and not on the Act of Congress; if Congress has not the power to give the United States courts exclusive jurisdiction, then this clause is entirely unnecessary; for the state courts would have the jurisdiction without it; and if the Constitution, either expressly or by implication, vests the exclusive jurisdiction in the United States courts, Congress could not give any portion of it to the state courts. And even if the word exclusive was used by Congress purposely to exclude the state courts, then the question arises, what does it mean to exclude? Does it only mean to exclude the state courts from exercising admiralty jurisdiction, or does it mean to exclude them from exercising any jurisdiction whatever over certain classes of cases? For example, if a policy of marine insurance is a maritime contract, is the state court therefore excluded from all jurisdiction over such a policy?

Salt water, where the tide ebbs and flows, may be within admiralty jurisdiction, and admiralty courts may therefore have jurisdiction over offences committed on it; but suppose two citizens of a state step out into shallow water and fight a duel, are they not punishable by the laws of the state? Chief Justice Marshall answers the question in the affirmative. United States v. Bevans, 3 Wheat., 336, 339. So pari ratione of an assault or other offence.

In the trial of Bruce before the admiralty court for murder in Milford Haven, the opinion of the twelve judges was taken as to the jurisdiction. The jurisdiction was sustained, but most if not all of the judges seemed to think the common law had a *430 concurrent jurisdiction. 2 Leach's Crown Cases, 1093, case 353, cited in United States v. Bevan, 6 Wheat., 372 note. And Hale, (2 P.C. 12,) lays it down that the King's Bench had concurrent jurisdiction of felonies on the narrow seas, because, though out of the body of a county, they were within the realm.

So in cases of civil actions for torts: e.g. collision, if on the high seas or in harbor, the admiralty court may have jurisdiction to give damages for it, on account of its taking place on tide water; but it is believed that the courts of common law have always exercised jurisdiction in these cases. The cases which support the admiralty jurisdiction in this and other classes of cases, assert that jurisdiction in opposition to the common law decisions which excluded the admiralty, and do not undertake to assert an exclusive jurisdiction over that whole class of cases.

Suits for collision on the Thames were sustained at common law because held to be within the body of a county. Violet v.Blague, Cro. Jac. 514. And see 2 Hale, P.C. 16. In fact, the admiralty jurisdiction was denied there.

The Supreme Court of the United States, in New Jersey SteamNavigation Co. v. Merchants' Bank, 6 How. 344, 390, say, "The common law courts exercise a concurrent jurisdiction in nearly all the cases of admiralty cognizance, whether of tort or of contract, with the exception of proceedings in rem."

Judge Story, in his Commentaries on the Constitution, (edition of 1833,) vol. 3, § 1666, note, says, the admiralty jurisdiction "is exclusive in all matters of prize, for the reason that at the common law this jurisdiction is vested in the courts of admiralty to the exclusion of the courts of common law; but in cases where the jurisdiction of the courts of common law and the admiralty are concurrent, (as in cases of possessory suits, mariners' wages, and marine torts,) there is nothing in the constitution necessarily leading to the conclusion that the jurisdiction was intended to be exclusive; and there is as little ground upon general reasoning to contend for it. The reasonable interpretation of the constitution would seem to be, that it conferred on the national judiciary the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, exactly according to the nature and extent and *431 modifications in which it existed in the jurisprudence of the common law. Where the jurisdiction was exclusive, it remained so; where it was concurrent, it remained so. . . . . This latter class of cases can be no more deemed cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction than cases of common law jurisdiction." And Chancellor Kent holds to the same doctrine. See Kent's Com. 1, (side p.) 395, 400, citing the Federalist, No. 82, and Judge Washington's approval of it, in Houston v. Moore, 5 Wheat. 1. And in the oft cited case of De Lovio v. Boit, A.D. 1813, 2 Gallis. 398, 445, Judge Story, after excepting prize cases, says, that "in all others the common law has now acquired or claimed a concurrent jurisdiction." Judge Story was in that case asserting the concurrent — not exclusive — jurisdiction of the admiralty courts. And see pp. 422. 476, c.

If because admiralty has a jurisdiction in these cases, the common law courts therefore have none, it would sweep into the federal courts a very large portion of the litigation of the seaboard states.

These considerations may seem not pertinent to the case on hand, but they are of importance in determining what is the meaning of the saving clause in the Act of 1789. The defendants contend that the jurisdiction of the state court depends on this clause, and on this alone; that it is confined to the common law remedies as they existed before the adoption of the United States Constitution; and that therefore the act giving an administrator the right to recover damages for injury to a family by a death caused by the wrongful act of another, being a new right of action and not existing at common law, is not within the saving clause, and therefore the state court has no jurisdiction.

If, as we have said, the jurisdiction of the state courts does not depend entirely on the act of Congress, then this clause would not affect the question of concurrent jurisdiction, except as showing the sense of Congress that the word exclusive was not intended to take it away, and should not be so construed.

We may well admit there are whole classes of cases where the federal courts have jurisdiction entirely exclusive of state courts, namely, cases of prize, seizures under the United States revenue *432 laws, and cases arising under United States statutes where the statute gives them the jurisdiction; cases in which the United States Constitution expressly gives them jurisdiction, and other cases in which by implication their jurisdiction is exclusive or may be made so by Congress.

If, in any of the cases in which the state courts retain jurisdiction, there is danger of our foreign relations being affected, Congress may provide for their removal into the federal courts. See McLeod's case, Dec. Joint. Com. 314, 489, 836.

But even if the jurisdiction of the state courts does depend on this proviso, what is the meaning of it? Is it confined to common law remedies as they actually existed in 1789, and does it prevent the states from granting any new right or remedy to be pursued according to the course of the common law?

The reasonable construction, as it seems to us, is that it intends to vest in the United States courts the whole jurisdiction the admiralty courts of England and the colonies exercised, or generally, the whole admiralty jurisdiction, (by whatever rule defined,) exclusive where it was exclusive and concurrent where it was concurrent, but that in these latter cases the courts of common law could not proceed by admiralty process; in other words, that if the suitor chose to resort to an admiralty remedy he must do it in an admiralty court. Mr. Justice Miller, in the opinion of the United States Supreme court in TheHine v. Trevor, 4 Wal. 555, and Mr. Justice Field, in TheMoses Taylor, 4 Wal. 411, while holding that the admiralty jurisdiction was exclusive in the federal courts, place the ground of those decisions on the fact that the proceedings provided for in the state laws, which were declared void in those cases, were admiralty proceedings, were proceedings in rem. Mr. Justice Field observes that the remedy by the state law was in no sense a common law remedy. The vessel was made defendant without mentioning the owners, c. And he well observes that it could not have been the intention of Congress to give the suitor all such remedies as might afterward be enacted by state statutes, for that would enable them to make the jurisdiction concurrent in all cases, and so defeat the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal *433 courts. And Mr. Justice Miller observes, "It is not a remedy in the common law courts that is saved, but a common law remedy. A proceeding in rem. is not a common law remedy," c. The objection here is, not that a new right was given, but that it was to be enforced by the process peculiar to the admiralty courts.

In Waring v. Clarke, 5 How. 441, 457, Mr. Justice Wayne, in delivering the opinion of the majority of the United States Supreme Court, and replying to the argument that the admiralty jurisdiction was confined to the cases in which it formerly existed in England, says that the construction would, in effect, take away from the courts the interpretation of the provision, and would prevent all future legislation on the subject, and therefore this limitation could not have been intended.

The argument seems to us to be equally strong, that Congress could not intend by this proviso to confine the remedy to the common law as it anciently existed, and to prevent the extension of a right or all alteration of process or form of remedy. If so, what would be the effect in New York, and those states which have, by their new codes, abolished all the old common law forms and remedies?

The intention, therefore, must be, giving the clause a liberal construction, to save the remedy or right of action in those courts which proceed according to the course of the common law as distinguished from the course of admiralty, and there is nothing in the opinions we have cited, against this construction.

Judge Nelson, in the United States Supreme Court, (N.J.S.Nav. Co. v. Merchants Bank, 6 How. 344, 390,) says, "The saving clause was inserted probably from abundant caution lest the exclusive terms in which the power is conferred on the district courts might be deemed to have taken away the concurrent remedy which had before existed. This leaves the concurrent powerwhere it stood at common law."

And the United States Supreme Court, in The Eagle, 8 Wal. 15, in speaking of the saving clause in the additional Act of 1845, which saves "to the parties the right of a concurrent remedy at the common law where it is competent to give it, and *434 any concurrent remedy which may be given by the state laws," hold that this saving clause "is in effect the same as in the Act of 1789."

We have here the opinion of the whole court without dissent, giving a construction to the saving clause in the Act of 1789, agreeing with the construction we have given to it, and which we consider the most reasonable. A new trial must therefore begranted.