20 F. Cas. 16 | S.D.N.Y. | 1872
This libel and petition are filed under the rules in admiralty (55, 56, 57, ánd 58) prescribed by the supreme court at the December term, 1871. as rules of practice under the act of March 3, 1851, entitled “An act to limit the liability of ship owners, and for other purposes.” 9 Stat. 635. The petition avers, that the petitioners are a Rhode Island corporation, and were the owners of the steamship Oceanus, a vessel which belonged to a line of steam propellers owned and run by said corporation, for the carriage of freight and passengers between Providence, in Rhode Island, and the city of New York, and was enrolled at the office of the collector of customs in Providence; that, on the 23d of May, 1868, the Oceanus set sail from Providence, on one of her regular trips in said line, having on board a large and valuable cargo, belonging to several owners or freighters, who had shipped the same therein, to be carried on freight to New York, and there delivered to various consignees, according to the respective directions accompanying the same; that the vessel, with her cargo, arrived at New York on Sunday, the 24th of May, and made fast to the dock, in her usual berth, at pier 27, North river, and on that day discharged her passengers and their baggage, but none of her cargo; that, shortly after noon, on that day, a fire broke out in the buildings at or near the head of the pier where the vessel lay, which spread with great rapidity down the pier and soon reached the vessel, which was thereby burned to the water’s edge, and almost the whole of her cargo was destroyed; that small portions of her cargo were discharged in a damaged condition, but wholly unmerchantable, and having lost the form of merchandise in which they were shipped, and no freight was earned or received by the petitioners on any portion of the cargo; that the remains of the steamer, left by the fire, did not exceed $5,000 in value, and were shortly afterwards sold for that sum; that the said fire so happening to and on board of said vessel was not caused by the design or neglect of the petitioners, the owners of said vessel, but the same happened, and the same, and the loss, damage, injury and destruction resulting therefrom to said vessel and cargo, were done, occasioned and incurred without the privity or knowledge of the petitioners; that, nevertheless, certain persons, thereinafter named, being, or claiming to have been, owners, shippers or consignees of portions of said cargo so burned and destroyed on said vessel, have sued the petitioners in the courts of the state of New York, within the Southern district of New York, for the loss and destruction of such portions of said cargo; that the petitioners, desiring to contest their liability, and the liability of said vessel, for the loss, destruction, damage and injury occasioned by said fire, and also to claim the benefit of limitation provided for in the third and fourth sections of said act, are ready and willing and offer to pay' into court the amount of their interest in said vessel and freight, or to give a stipulation, with sureties, for the payment thereof into court,
On the filing of this petition, this court made an order, directing that an appraisement of the amount or value of the interest of the petitioners in the said vessel, and her freight for said voyage, be made by the clerk of this court, on proof to be presented before him, and after hearing the petitioners, and such of the parties who have commenced said actions within this district, against the petitioners, as may appear before him; and that, for that purpose, the clerk cause notice of the time and place of such appraisement and hearing to be served upon the attorneys in said actions of the said respective parties; and further ordering, that, in the mean time and until the report of the clerk in the premises, the said parties, and each of them, their
A motion is now made on the part of the plaintiffs in one of the said suits, to vacate the said order.
1. It is claimed, in support of said motion, that the proceeding instituted by said petition is not a matter of exclusive admiralty jurisdiction, but is a matter over which the state court in whicha such suit is pending has concurrrent jurisdiction with this court. The exclusive original cognizance, given to the district courts, of all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, by the 9th section of the act of September 24, 1789 (1 Stat. 76, 77), is there qualified only by this provision — “saving to suitors, in all cases, the right of a common-law remedy, where the common law is competent to give it.” Now, it is not doubtful, that the state court is competent to enforce, by the remedy of a suit in personam against the owners of this vessel, according to the course of the common law, the claim of such plaintiffs. But that is not the remedy which the proceeding now instituted in this court is primarily brought to enforce. This proceeding is substantially a suit in rem against the vessel and its pending freight, to which all persons claiming for a loss of cargo are to be summoned in as parties, in order to give to the owners of the vessel the benefit of the provisions of the act of congress limiting their liability. The proceeding, in that view, is one of admiralty and maritime ■ jurisdiction, which no state court can. administer. The common-law remedy in .the state courts, on behalf of each of the several plaintiffs, cannot co-exist with the rights conferred on the owners of the vessel by the act of congress; and the enforcement of' such rights, under the 4th section of the act, by the taking, by the owners of the vessel,1 of appropriate proceedings to apportion the'sum for which they are liable among the several owners of property shipped on board :of the vessel, on the same voyage, who haye suffered the loss of such property, without the privity or knowledge of such owners, of .the vessel, cannot be had through any form of common-law remedy which the common law is competent to give. A state court hás no jurisdiction whatever over such a proceeding as that instituí-' ed by this petition... The 4th section of the act, in saying that . the appropriate proceedings may be taken “in- any court,” to make such apportionment,' and that it shall be a sufficient compliance' with the act, on the part of the owner of the vessel, if he shall transfer his interest in thevessel and freight, for the benefit of the. claimants, to a trustee to be appointed “by any . court of competent jurisdiction,” manifestly,.in view' of -the maritime subject-matter, 'and of the character of the proceeding, which is not ’. a common-law remedy, competent to be given by the- common law, refers to a competent federal court, and not at all to a state court. That the state courts have not the requisite jurisdiction, and that the district courts, as courts of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, have jurisdiction of such a proceeding as this, is determined by the supreme court, in the case of Norwich & N. Y. Transp. Co. v. Wright, 13 Wall. [80 U. S.] 104. The res being brought into this court, to be distributed among those entitled to share in it, it necessarily follows that this court must first adjudicate, as to each claimant, whether he is at all entitled to share in it, provided the ship owner chooses to raise the question, independently of any limitation of liability, that neither he nor his vessel is at all liable to such claimant in the premises. But this is incidental to the main purpose of the proceeding. In making the apportionment provided for by the 4th section of the act, the amount of each claim that is to share must be ascertained by this court. This involves the conclusion, in respect to any claimant, that he is not entitled to anything. There would be no justice in requiring the ship owner to admit a claim at tlie amount claimed, or at any other amount, as a condition of allowing him to bring the proceeding in this court, when, in the suit in the state court, he may, as he has a right to do, be asserting that he is not liable at all, as well as asserting that, if liable at all, he is only liable according to the limitation provided by the act of congress.
2. It is also contended that, although the 55th rule in admiralty provides that the district court shall, “on the application of the said owner or owners, make an order to restrain the further prosecution of all and any suit and suits against said owner or owners, in respect of any such claim or claims,” the supreme court had no power to make any such rule, in view of the inhibition contained in the 5th section of the act of March 2, 1793 (1 Stat. 334, 335). That section reads as follows: “Writs of ne exeat and of injunction may be granted by any judge of the supreme court in cases where they might be granted by the supreme or a circuit court; but no writ of ne exeat shall be granted unless a suit in equity be commenced, and satisfactory proof shall be made to the court or judge granting the same, that the defendant designs quickly to depart from the United States; nor shall a writ of injunction be granted to stay proceedings in any court ot a state; nor shall such writ be granted in any case without reasonable previous notice to the adverse party, or his attorney, of the time and place of moving for the same.” By the act of February 13, 1807 (2 Stat. 418), power is given to the district judges to grant writs of injunction in eases before the circuit courts of their districts, under the restrictions prescribed by act of congress. The provision of the act of 1793, in regard to staying proceedings in a court of a state, is no broader or more stringent than the provision of the same act in regard to giving notice of
3. To the objection urged, that the rules oC the supreme court transcend the act of 1851, in conferring the right to test the question of complete exemption, as well as of limited liability, and in confining the jurisdiction to the federal tribunals, and in providing for restraining the prosecution of pending suits, it is sufficient to say. that this court would not take it upon itself to impugn the validity of rules so carefully considered as these manifestly have been, at least, unless there was a manifest repugnance in them to the constitution or some act of congress. Independently of this, the views before stated serve to show that the provisions of the rules do not transcend the act of 1851, or the power of the supreme court, under the 6th section of the act of August .23, 1S42 (0 Stat. 518).
4. The petition, being filed, setting forth a case within the act of 1851, it must necessarily rest with this court to adjudicate, if and when issues are raised on such petition, whether such a case in fact exists. If it does not exist, the petition will be dismissed, and the pending suits will proceed. If it does exist, this court will administer the relief prayed for by the petition. It is for this court to determine whether the case is one of limited liability, within the 3d section of the act, and it is to determine that question on issues framed on the petition, in the orderly manner of adversary litigation, in which the full right of review and appeal to which any party may be entitled, will be secured to him.
5. It is contended, that the 3d section of the act of 1851 cannot apply to the present case, one of loss by fire, on the ground that, under the 1st section of that act the ship owner is not liable for any loss by fire un-Jess such fire is caused by his design or neglect; that, if the fire in this case was not caused by the design or neglect of the corporation, it is not liable at all, and there is no case for the operation of a limited liability, under the 3d section; and that, if the fire in this case was caused, as is insisted, by the neglect of the corporation, it must necessarily have been occasioned with the privity or knowledge of the corporation, and so not be within the 3d section. But it by no means necessarily follows, that because the fire happening to or on board the vessel was caused by the neglect of the corporation, so as not to give to it the benefit of the total exemption provided for by the 1st section, the loss by such fire of property shipped on board of the vessel was not a loss occasioned without the privity or knowledge of the corporation, so as to deprive it of the benefit of the limited liability provided for by the 3d section. The solution of the question must depend on the facts of the case as developed by judicial process, and may be in some degree influenced by questions growing out of the contracts of the parties, in reference to the liability of the ship owner, under the proviso of the 1st section of the act.
The motion is denied.
[From 15 Int. Rev. Rec. 194.]