The present proceeding is an impleading petition for exoneration or indemnity against the United States of America brought by a respondent in a libel from whom the original libelant had sought damages for injuries to its derrick lighter Abbate, occasioned by a fire on a Hoboken pier on August 11, 1944. In the libel it was alleged that, while the lighter was discharging its cargo at the pier, the respondent, here the petitioner-appellant, carelessly permitted and caused a c'hisel truck it was operating ito collide with some metal drums on the pier containing highly explosive and inflammable material and that it caused and allowed a packing box on the truck to drag along the pier floor emitting sparks causing the fire which spread to the ship. Appellant now seeks to hold the United States of America on an impleading petition for any damages it may have to pay for the fire, alleging thait these drums contained nitrocellulose about to be loaded on a government vessel lying alongside the pier, consigned to the Administrator, War Shipping Administration, as principal, for account of the Government Purchasing Commission of the Soviet Government and about to be shipped to Murmansk, Russia, and that they were so improperly packed and stored and inspected by the government that the fire was due to the latter’s negligence. It alleges further that at the time it was performing steve-doring services for the United States under a contract whereby the latter agreed to indemnify it against any liability for property damage in excess of the sum of $250,-000 per accident; but it asserts, in addition, that irrespective of this agreement it is entitled to be completely indemnified be- *492 causé of -the active and affirmative negligence of the United States without any active or affirmative negligence on its part. The basis for suit against the government is alleged to be the Suits in Admiralty Act, the Tucker Act, or the Federal Tort Claims Act. But upon exception by the United States the district court found none of them adequate and dismissed the impleading petition. This appeal followed.
Appellee’s claim that this decree of dismissal is not appealable must be denied. The statute now provides that interlocutory decrees “determining the rights and liabilities of the parties to admirality cases” are appealable. 28 U.S.C.A. § 227, now § 1292(3); Beneverato v. United States, 2 Cir.,
Of the three, -the Suits in Admiralty Act presents the most interesting and novel-problems, as applied to the circumstances of this case. Passed in 1920, it came into being not only as a waiver of governmental immunity, but also as a limitation upon an earlier waiver; for an act of 1916, 46 U.S.C.A. § 8014 et seq., had been construed to permit seizure of government vessels ■in the merchant service upon process in ■rem, to the vast embarrassment of the governmental ventures. Canadian Aviator, Limited v. United States,
The grant of -authority for the suit here relied on is that portion of the second section which provides for a libel in personam where, “if such cargo were privately owned and possessed,” a proceeding in admiralty could have been maintained; and the argument is that these drums, from which the fire spread by reason of their condition, were “cargo” within the statutory meaning because they were about to be loaded upon a government steamer already tied up at the same pier. Indeed, much is now made of an incidental and general allegation, accompanying the assertions as to prospective loading of the nitrocellulose on the pier, that “certain of said drums had been loaded upon said steamer.”
It is perhaps strange that, although the remainder of this statute has been extensively litigated, there seems almost no litigation, and certainly no decision, dealing with the meaning of cargo in this connection. But we apprehend that it will be found as difficult as the remaining portions have already proved to be. In his careful consideration of the problem the district judge suggested as possible grounds for denying applicability of the statute that this was a land; not a maritime, tort, and that he knew of no rule of law making cargo subject to arrest “except only for charges upon it that may arise from its carriage” and that only Claims for such charges “could intelligently have been intended to be included” in the coverage of the Act. But we are constrained to have some doubt.
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as to these grounds. Following the .well-known demarcation of maritime from land torts, that it is the place of consummation of the tort, or impact causing the damage, it would seem to be found reasonably, if not unmistakably, upon the water, i e., where the fire struck the “Abbate.” Robinson on Admiralty 76-81; 1 Benedict on Admiralty 349-359, 6th Ed.; Brady v. Roosevelt S. S. Co.,
Nevertheless, we agree with the district judge upon the ground which ’he actually chooses, that ¡the liability referred to in the statute as arising from the government’s ownership of cargo must be one “directly connected with ¡the Government’s ownership and operation of a vessel,” citing American President Lines v. United States, D.C.S.D.N.Y.,
Several further considerations pointing the same way must be noted. First there is the proviso requiring “that such vessel is employed as a merchant vessel,” which has led to all the learning expended upon establishing the distinction between merchant vessels and other vessels of the government. See, e. g., The Western Maid,
On this basis no grounds of governmental liability under the Suits in Admiralty Act are disclosed here. The government ste'amer tied up at the dock and the “certain” drums already loaded upon it were mere bystanders at the accident. (This is the force of all the allegations of both the libel and the impleading petition; nor did appellant seek to amend to show anything different after it had received the court’s memorandum below.) And the drums on the pier, even if about to be loaded upon a vessel, cannot be considered cargo in any real sense having to do with navigation of government vessels. Here there seems no reason why the standard test of admiralty — location—should not be given its natural effect. Robinson on Admiralty 31 et seq.; 1 Benedict on Admiralty 349-352, 6th Ed. Accordingly we hold that this ground of exception was properly sustained.
Appellee has also claimed, alternatively, that in any event any claim under this Act was barred by the requirement that “suits hereunder shall be brought within two years after the cause of action arises.” 46 U.S. C. A. § 745. Appellant relies on the rather usual rule, 3 Moore’s Federal Practice 114.09, 2d Ed. 1948, that a claim for indemnity accrues only for the purpose of limitation when the indemnitee has been subjected to liability. Here, while the accident occurred on August 11, 1944, the impleading petition 'was filed on January 19, 1948, or with reasonable promptness after the bringing of the original libel on August 9, 1947. There are some district court decisions applying the stated rule to this particular limitation in the case of an agent’s claim for indemnity against the United States. Hidalgo Steel Co. v. Moore & McCormack Co., D.C.S.D.N.Y.,
The Federal Tort Claims Act, enacted August 2, 1946, seems clearly inapplicable. It grants a remedy on “any claim against the United States, for money only, accruing on and after January 1, 1945, on account of damage to or loss of property or on account of personal injury or death caused by the negligent or wrongful act or omission of any employee of the Government,” etc. 28 U.S.C.A. § 931, now restated in § 1346(b). Hence liability exists only for torts committed on or after January 1, 1945. Niagara Fire Ins. Co. v. United States, D.C.S.D.N.Y.,
Nor are immediate grounds of jurisdiction under the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C.A. § 41(20), now § 1346(a) (2), shown. The original libel asserted a claim against appellant of “approximately” $7,000. Appellant attempts to reach the $250,000 minimum expressed in the provision for reimbursement of its stevedoring contract with
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the United States by alleging generally ¡that claims of various third persons “aggregating far more than $250,000 have been asserted against petitioner independently of the present libel.” Such hypothetical and highly speculative liability would afford no ground for independent suit against the United States at this time. Grant v. United States,
Decree affirmed.
