Coowners representing 85 per cent of the interest in the Oil Screw Vessel Liberty, Official No. 256,332, docked at the city of San Diego, filed in the superior court in San Diego County a complaint for partition by sale of the vessel and distribution of the proceeds to all the coowners. Manuel S. Madruga, the owner of the remaining 15 per cent interest, named as defendant in the complaint, filed a demurrer stating among other grounds that the superior court had no jurisdiction of the subject matter and that exclusive jurisdiction was in the federal court. The respondent court overruled the demurrer and announced that it would proceed by requiring the defendant to answer the complaint. Thereupon the minority owner and defendant in the partition proceeding applied for the writ of prohibition directing the respondent court to refrain from further proceedings. The alternative writ issued. The jurisdictional question is submitted on the petition and the demurrer thereto.
The action in the respondent court is one for partition by sale of the vessel as personal property and for distribution of the proceeds to the several coowners in accordance with their stated individual interests, pursuant to sections 752a et sequitur of the Code of Civil Procedure. It is alleged that there are no liens or encumbrances against the vessel. Partnership and accounting problems are not involved.
It is the petitioner’s position that the jurisdictional question has been determined favorably to his contention by this court’s decision in
Fischer
v.
Carey
(1916),
Section 2 of article III of the United States Constitution provides that the judicial power of the United States courts shall extend “to all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction.” The Act of September 24, 1789, section 9, chapter 20 (1 Stats. at L. 73, 77 Jud.Code, § 24(3), 28 U.S. Code, § 41 (3)), provided that the United States District Courts
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should have “exclusive original cognizance of all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction . . . saving to suitors, in all eases, the right of a common law remedy, where the common law is competent to give it.” By decision this saving clause has been deemed to refer to the existing right to proceed against parties in personam, as in contract or tort. (See
North Pac. Steamship Co.
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.
(1917),
Section 41(3) of the Judicial Code was subsequently repealed and in 1948 section 1333 (28 U.S.C.) was substituted. In 1949 Congress amended section 1333 (63 Stats. 101) to provide that the district courts have original jurisdiction exclusive of the state courts of any civil case of admiralty or maritime jurisdiction “saving to suitors in all cases all other remedies to which they are otherwise entitled.” Thus at this time there is no necessity to resolve the question whether the reservation of the original section referred only to remedies known to the common law. The question is whether there is now available to coowners of a vessel a partition proceeding in the state courts.
In
Fischer
v.
Carey, supra
(
Decisional law that admiralty has jurisdiction in partition by -the sale of a vessel does not necessarily determine that the state does not have concurrent jurisdiction when the remedy therefor exists. On the contrary there is authority to the effect that the state has concurrent jurisdiction in equity to partition a vessel by sale when there is disagree
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ment among the coowners as to how the ship should be employed. The leading case
(Andrews
v.
Betts
(1876), 8 Hun. (15 N.Y.) 322), and others following it were treated in
Fischer
v.
Carey, supra,
The answer here is resolved by the 1949 amendment to the Judicial Code saving to suitors all other remedies to which they are “otherwise entitled.” The amendment elari'fies the intent to preserve to the state concurrent jurisdiction where a remedy is provided under state law which is available to the plaintiffs. In
Jordine
v.
Walling
(1950),
The peremptory writ is denied and the alternative writ is discharged.
Gibson, C. J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Sehauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
Traynor, J., concurred in the judgment.
