To sue and not to be sued — that, insists the Board of Commissioners is the answer. The question in this admiralty case is whether the Board of Commissioners can avoid liability for a maritime tort it is alleged to have committed by pleading sovereign immunity. This question has troubled both the state and federal courts in Louisiana since the Dock Board was created 1 and has led to a maze of occasionally puzzling decisions, the general tenor of which is that *354 the Board may be sued in contract 2 but not in tort. 3 We, on the other hand, hold that the Board is not entitled to the defense of sovereign immunity in a tort action and therefore deny the Board’s motion to dismiss.
A. ELEVENTH AMENDMENT
Any discussion of sovereign immunity must begin with the Eleventh Amendment:
“The Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.”
While the Amendment only speaks of suits in law or equity, the Supreme Court early held that the Amendment also applied to suits in admiralty. Ex Parte Madrazzo,
Because the Eleventh Amendment bars otherwise meritorious causes of action, it has been construed narrowly. Suits against counties, municipalities and other lesser governmental agencies and corporations which have an existence independent of the state have not been held to be within the purview of the Eleventh Amendment. County of Lincoln v. Luning,
The Board of Commissioners has recently been recognized as having the status of a state agency with a separate legal identity from the State of Louisiana and not the status of a “second self” of the state. C. H. Leavell & Co. v. Board of Commissioners of the Port of New Orleans,
B. SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY
A party may be subject to a court’s jurisdiction and still escape liability for his torts by invoking the doctrine of sovereign immunity. Based on the medieval notion that the king can do no wrong, sovereign immunity precludes a litigant from asserting an otherwise meritorious cause of action against a sovereign or a party with sovereign attributes unless the sovereign consents to the suit.
In recent years this doctrine has come into disfavor and has been severely restricted both by legislative action 7 and judicial decision. 8 A residue of immunity stubbornly clings to Louisiana jurisprudence and the Board urges this Court to apply a line of case which appears to clothe the Board with immunity for its alleged torts. 9
*356
It is well settled that an admiralty court in proper exercise of its jurisdiction does not defer to state law in determining whether a cause of action cognizable in admiralty can be asserted. Workman v. New York City,
It is likewise settled that where an admiralty court has jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter, sovereign immunity will not defeat an otherwise meritorious lawsuit brought against a state agency for its alleged torts. Workman v. New York City, supra. In Workman, the Supreme Court rejected the attempt by the city, a municipal corporation, to bar the plaintiff’s suit for damages occasioned by the city fire department’s maritime tort by invoking the state rule holding the city immune from tort suits. The Court held that
“ * * * in the maritime law, the public nature of the service upon which a vessel is engaged at the time of the commission of a maritime tort affords no immunity from liability in a court of admiralty, where the court has jurisdiction. This being so, it follows that as the municipal corporation of the city of New York, unlike a sovereign, was subject to the jurisdiction of the court, the claimed exemption from liability asserted in the case at bar, because of the public nature of the service upon which the fire-boat was engaged — even if such claim for the purposes of the case be conceded —was without foundation in the maritime law, and therefore afforded no reason for denying redress in a court of admiralty for the wrong which the courts below both found to have been committed.” At 570,21 S.Ct. at 219 . (Emphasis added.)
This principle was recently reaffirmed in Adams v. Harris County, Texas,
This rule is based on the strong federal interest in uniformity of admiralty and on the desire to provide redress for wrongs suffered. In Workman, Mr. Chief Justice White pointed out that to engraft local doctrines of sovereign immunity onto admiralty law would lead to
“[t]he practical destruction of a uniform maritime law *' * * [since if] the principles of the general mari *357 time law giving relief for every character of maritime tort where the wrongdoer is subject to the jurisdiction of admiralty courts can be overthrown by conflicting decisions of state courts, it would follow that there would be no general maritime law for the redress of wrongs, as such law would be necessarily one thing in one state and one in another; one thing in one port of the United States and a different thing in some other port.”179 U.S. at 558 ,21 S.Ct. at 214 .
The law would likewise vary depending on whether, say, a vessel collided with a privately-owned bridge or similar maritime structure or a publicly-owned one.
To allow immunity would lead to another evil — the denial of justice.
“This must be the inevitable consequence of admitting the proposition which assumes that the maritime law disregards the rights of individuals to be protected in their persons and property from wrongful injury, by recognizing that those who are amenable to the jurisdiction of courts of admiralty are nevertheless endowed with a supposed governmental attribute by which they can inflict injury upon the person or property of another, and yet escape all responsibility therefor.” At 559,21 S.Ct. at 214 .
This latter evil is clearly demonstrated by situations such as that in Board of Commissioners v. Gypsum Transp. Ltd.,
Other than the tottering, tread-worn assertion that the sovereign can do no wrong, this Court can find no valid reasons supporting the doctrine of immunity sufficient to offset the strong reasons stated by the Supreme Court in Workman for not recognizing the state immunity doctrines in a court of admiralty. Since, for purposes of this motion, we assume that plaintiff’s cause of action is meritorious, we refuse to defeat it by holding the Board of Commissioners immune from suit for their alleged torts. Accordingly, it is the order of the court that the motion of the Board of Commissioners to dismiss the complaint because the Board is immune from suit be, and the same is hereby, denied.
Notes
. The Board of Commissioners for tlie Port of New Orleans was created by Act No. 70 of 1896.
. George A. Fuller Co. v. Coastal Plains, Inc.,
. Hammond v. Bd. of Commissioners, unreported decision in C.A. 71-83 (E.D.La. May 6, 1971); Bd. of Commissioners v. Gypsum Transportation, Ltd.,
.
But see,
Hartwig Moss Ins. Agency v. Bd. of Commissioners,
. The Board’s broad powers are more fully set forth in George A. Fuller Co., Inc. v. Coastal Plains, Inc.,
.
See,
George A. Fuller Co., Inc. v. Coastal Plains, Inc.,
. See, e. g., La.Const. Art. 3, § 35, allowing the legislature to waive the immunity of the state and its subdivisions by appropriate legislation. The Federal Tort . Claims Act, 60 Stat. 812, 842 (1946), waives the immunity of the I’nitod States for many classes of lawsuits.
.
Sec, e. g.,
Larson v. Domestic & Foreign Commerce Corp.,
. See cases cited in fn. 3. It is not completely clear that the Board is immune from tort liability even under state law. While many cases dogmatically assert that the Board is immune from tort suits but not from contract suits, we perceive no reasons for this distinction. While it can be argued that one who enters into a contract incurs the obligation to be sued for its breach, United States v. Southern Scrap Material Company, Ltd., unreported decision in Adm. 6403 (E.D.La. March 26, 1965), it can likewise be argued that one who constructs a bridge incurs the obligation of being liable to those injured by Bis negligence. In fact this reasoning may even be more relevant in the tort area since a party contracting with another party that is immune from suit can consider the difficulty in enforcing the contract before entering into the contract while a party suddenly injured by another party’s negligence has little opportunity to plan his conduct so as to avoid immune tortfeasors. Indeed, the Supreme Court in Keifer & Keifer v. R. F. C.,
. In almost all the cases on this subject the Court has found, an admiralty court has never apjdied state immunity law
to
defeat an otherwise meritorious cause of action against an agency or political subdivision of the state. In re M/T Alva Cape,
