1 Cal. 162 | Cal. | 1850
By the Court,
This was a proceeding under the “ act providing for the collection of demands against vessels “ and boats.” The first section enacts that “ every boat and “ vessel used in navigating the waters of this state” shall be liable to be proceeded against by attachment, in the manner prescribed.
The Sea Witch belonged to the port of New York, was a transient ship, had been in the harbor of San Francisco but a few days, and was intended for the New York and China trade. She was never otherwise used in navigating the waters of this state than by sailing into the harbor of San Francisco from the ocean. The question is, whether she is one of that class of vessels designated in the act. We think she is not.
The remedy given by the act, being strictly a statutory remedy, and of a character not recognized by the common law, and requiring no personal notice to the person proceeded against, ought not to be extended to cases which do not clearly fall within the language of the statute. Courts hold that such statutes should be strictly construed. (2 Cow. Rep. 419, 420; 15 Mass. Rep. 205, 206.)
If a ship whose employment is on the high seas, because she enters the harbor of San Francisco, is to be considered as belonging to the description of vessels mentioned in the statute, then every vessel that may, from any cause, be found upon waters within the territorial limits of the state, must be embraced within the meaning of the act. But such construction would, under the words “ used in navigating the waters of this state,” be sense
In the Steamboat Orleans v. Phoebus, (11 Peters, 175,) it was decided, that the admiralty had no jurisdiction over a vessel not engaged in maritime trade and navigation, though on her voyages she may have touched at one terminus of them in tide water, her employment having been substantially on other waters, and that the true test of the admiralty jurisdiction was, whether the vessel was engaged, substantially, in maritime navigation or in interior trade, not on tide waters. In that case the steamboat, although the terminus of her voyage was upon tide water, was used exclusively in trade and navigation upon the waters of the Mississippi and its tributary streams, and was not employed or intended to be employed in navigation or trade on the sea or on tide waters, and it was held that the admiralty jurisdiction did not attach. In the case before us the Sea Witch, although her terminus was upon waters within the territorial
"We think that the Sea Witch was not a “ vessel used in navigating “ the waters of this state” within the meaning of the attachment act, and the judgment should therefore be reversed.
Ordered accordingly.