19 F. Cas. 474 | D. Maryland | 1857
This cause has occupied the attention of the court for several days, and has been fully and ably argued by the several counsel engaged in it; and since the adjournment of the court yesterday, I have examined the various authorities to which I had been referred, and the several cases cited by the counsel: and I will now announce the conclusion to which I have arrived. This is a libel filed by the libellants, (a company incorporated by the state of Pennsylvania, and who are engaged in rowing canal boats from the end of the tide water canal, at Havre de Grace, to Philadelphia, through the Chesapeake & Delaware canal,) to recover damages for an injury which the steam tow-boat “Superior” (one of the boats of their line) received from a pile placed in the Susquehanna river by the resi>ondeuts, or their agents. The evidence showed, that on Sunday morning, the 11th of May. 1856, the said tow-boat left her wharf at Havre de Grace, with thirty-one canal boats in tow, for the Chesapeake & Delaware canal; that she had just got into the stream, and had shaped her course down towards the bay. when she suddenly received a shock, by striking against something in the water, and was found immediately to leak so rapidly that the bilge-pumps could not free her; and that, to prevent her sinking in deep water, the captain immediately cast loose from the canal boats, and run the steamer to the wharf at Havre de Grace, where he had wintered his boat the previous winter, and whei-e she sank in five minutes. That he attached her to the wharf with two ropes and four hawsers, new. and of the strongest kind, but that in the course of an hour and a half, she
Four defences have been taken by the respondents to the recovery7 of the claim of the libellants in this case; three deny any right of recovery at all, and the fourth and last one denies the right of libellants to recover the whole amount of the claim (some $11,000) set forth in their libel.
The first defence taken is, that this court has no jurisdiction of this case, and that if respondents are liable at all, it is only in a court of common law, in an action of trespass on the ease. The learned counsel for the respondents contended that the remedy, if a suit had been brought in a court of common law. would be an action on the case, and not trespass; in such a case this court would have no jurisdiction. That the torts of which courts of admiralty have jurisdiction, are those where the agency of man is immediate and direct in their commission, and does not embrace cases where the injury is only consequential. Now, it is laid down in all the elementary writers on admiralty jurisdiction in this country, that in all cases of contract, the jurisdiction of the admiralty court depends upon the subject matter of the contract, and in all cases of torts, the jurisdiction depends upon the locality. And that over marine torts, the admiralty courts have jurisdiction. I need only refer, for this position, to Conk. Adm. p. 21; Ben. Adm. § 308, and to the case of Waring v. Clarke [5 How. (46 U. S.) 441], which also decided that not only torts “super altum mare (as in England.) but those upon tide-water, “infra corpus eomitatus,” belong to the jurisdiction of the admiralty courts. Now, what are torts? For a true and concise definition, I refer to the second volume of Bouvier’s Institutes, one of the best elementary books we have. On page 491 of that volume, in treating of wrongs, the writer makes this explanation: “Tort, a term of signification somewhat similar to wrong, is an unlawful act, injurious to another, independent of contract. Torts may be committed with force, as a trespass^ which may be an injury to the person, such as assault, battery and imprisonment; or they may be committed without force; torts of this latter kind are to the absolute or relative rights of persons, or to personal property in possession or reversion, or to real property corporeal, or incorporeal in possession or revexsion; these injuries may be either by nonfeasance, malfeasance or misfeasance.” A marine tort, then, is an unlawful act, injurious to another, independent of contract, happening or being committed upon the sea or upon tide-water. Such was, no doubt, the view taken by Judge Grier, in the case of Vantine v. The Lake [Case No. 16,-878]. That was the case of a vessel (the Lake) entering a dock in which a smaller vessel was at that time lying, and which dock contained a rise in the bed of the stream, in which but little water was left at low tide, so that when the tide went out, a vessel lying there would careen over on its side; and that this was known to the consignees of the vessel, who had directed her to be placed in the dock; when the tide went out, the Lake fell over on the smaller vessel and injured it, and for which damages thus caused, the libel was filed. Judge Grier held the Lake responsible, and decreed aecordingly. A similar case would be, where a vessel was anchored in the stream, near a port much frequented by vessels, and showed no light or signal at night; and another vessel, in the darkness of night, passing in or out of said port, without any want of care, should run against the anchored vessel, and be thereby injured. The vessel at anchor, and her owners, would certainly be responsible. I have no doubt, thei’efore, that this court has jurisdiction of the case.
The next defence is, that as this steamer was towing on Sabbath, and the injury was received on that day, there can be no recovery in this case, because said steamer was acting in violation of the law of Maryland, passed in 1723. which, in its 10th section, provided: “That no pei-son whatsoever shall work, or do any bodily labor on the Sabbath day, commonly called Sunday, works of necessity and charity always excepted.” The evidence
The next objection taken to the recovery of this claim by libellants is. that the contractors for building the bridge are the re
Now, the evidence in this case, in my opinion, clearly shows that the steamer was injured by running upon a sight-pile, which had been placed in the river by the direction and for the use and convenience of the engineers of the respondents, and was not placed there by the contractor, in the execution of his contract for building the bridge. It was clearly, therefore, the negligence of the engineers in not removing tills pile, when they had ceased to use it; and for the injury resulting from this negligence of their agents, I think the respondents are answerable. The only question remaining, is the amount of damages to which the libellants are entitled. The rule of damages which has been laid down by the supreme court in collision cases, seems to me to be a just one in this case. I refer to the case of Williamson v. Barnett, 13 How. [54 U. S.] 101. I shall allow the libellants the following items: Furniture lost, $500.00; cost of raising steamer, $1,567.36; net earning for 60 days, which it would take to raise and rejjair her, $1,-890.00; necessary repairs, to place her in as good a condition as before the accident, $2,-890.00; cost of taking her to Baltimore, estimated at $153.00, — $7,000.36. For which sum I will sign a decree. I do not think that, under all the circumstances, the libel-lants were justified in' selling her at Havre de Grace; and I therefore decline to allow them the amount claimed by them, growing out of that sale, and the small amount realized from it. I think her leak might have been stopped, so far as to have enabled the libellants to bring her round to Baltimore, where she could be taken upon the railway and repaired; and the intelligent gentlemen who examined her at the request of the li-bellants, recommended this course, and gave it as their opinion, that there would be but little risk in bringing her to Baltimore.