182 A. 196 | Vt. | 1936
This is an appeal from an award of the commissioner of industries, whereby the defendants were ordered to pay compensation to the plaintiff for the accidental death of her husband, Leon St. John. Of the questions certified to this Court, only the following are insisted upon:
3. Under the facts found by the commissioner, did the accident and employment come under the jurisdiction of the admiralty, and thereby exclude the jurisdiction of the commissioner?
4. Is the claimant entitled to compensation and burial expenses as provided by the Workmen's Compensation Law?
It is quite apparent that if the first of these questions is to be answered in the affirmative, the last one must be answered in the negative; and if the first one is to be answered in the negative, the last one must be answered in the affirmative. It is all a question of the existence and extent of maritime jurisdiction.
The findings of the commissioner show that the Thomsons, husband and wife, were residents of Mt. Vernon, N.Y. They spent a part of the summer of 1934 at the Champlain Club, a summer resort on Lake Champlain, in the town of Colchester, Vt. There they had and used an automobile and a twenty-six-foot motor boat, which was registered and numbered under the federal law, and was used for pleasure only. While in this State, they employed the St. Johns, Mrs. St. John to serve as maid, and Mr. St. John to serve as chauffeur and to do what was required of him with regard to the boat. He was not a skilled seaman, but was engaged to and did care for the boat, accompany his employers around the lake for fishing and other purposes, raise and lower the anchor, bring the boat to the wharf, and take it back to its mooring, and act as handy man around it — all as and when directed by the Thomsons. On July 6, 1934, the Thomsons, with two guests and accompanied by St. John, set out in the boat from the Champlain Club bound for South Hero. Before they reached their destination, the propeller shaft of the boat broke, and of course the boat was wholly disabled. The party paddled the craft to the Vermont shore, a rowboat was procured, and in it Mrs. Thomson went ashore and summoned help. She then returned to the motor boat in the rowboat. As she stepped aboard the former, she handed the painter of the latter to St. John to be made fast to the motor boat. A *68 little later it was discovered that the rowboat was not so attached and was drifting away. St. John dove overboard in an attempt to retrieve it and was drowned.
When he engaged with the Thomsons, he was informed by Thomson that he, Thomson, was insured under the Workmen's Compensation Law of Vermont. But it turns out that Thomson, who employed less than ten persons, had never notified the commissioner of his intention to operate under that act, as provided in P.L. 6502, though he had taken out insurance with the corporate defendant, and had filed a copy of his policy with the commissioner as required by P.L. 6562.
St. John's contract bound him to serve on the motor boat when so directed by the Thomsons, and to perform thereon such tasks as might reasonably be required of him. To this extent, his engagement was maritime in character, for it is admitted that Lake Champlain is a part of the navigable waters of the United States, and that the maritime jurisdiction granted to the federal government and its courts by the Constitution and statutes of the United States applies to it. It is also admitted that in the determination of the question whether or not a contract is maritime, the true test is the subject matter of the contract — "the nature and character of the work to be done." It is evident that St. John was engaged in maritime service when he lost his life. His immediate effort was being exerted to retrieve the rowboat. But this was an incident of a larger undertaking, which was to repair the boat and make her capable of continuing on her way. To this result, the rowboat was an important if not a necessary adjunct. As stated above, a repair man had been summoned. The use of the rowboat was the only feasible means of getting him from the shore to the craft, or of getting the party from the craft to the shore, if that became necessary. Not only their convenience was, but their safety might become, dependent upon it.
It is urged by the claimant that inasmuch as St. John's duties were predominantly on shore, his unimportant duties afloat should be disregarded and not allowed to characterize his contract of employment at all. This position is untenable. Northern Coal Dock Co. v. Strand,
Prior to the announcement on May 21, 1917, of Southern PacificCo. v. Jensen,
This case is one of the five to four decisions of the Supreme Court. This very fact gives assurance that it was carefully studied and considered. The conclusions of the majority, are, of course, until modified or reversed, the law of the land and entitled to respect as such. *71
The Jensen case was followed in Clyde Steamer Co. v. Walker,
The Jensen case was approved in Chelentis v. LuckenbachSteamship Co.,
The Jensen case was followed in Peters v. Veasey,
The doctrine of the Jensen case was reaffirmed in KnickerbockerIce Co. v. Stewart,
The Jensen case was endorsed in Great Lakes Dredge Dock Co.
v. Kierejewski,
We pause here to consider the claim that the Jensen case was modified by Grant Smith-Porter Ship Co. v. Rohde,
The case is clearly distinguishable from the case in hand and is no departure from the Jensen case. The Court expressly says that "this conclusion accords with Southern Pacific Co. v.Jensen,
In State Industrial Commission v. Nordenholt Corp.,
Western Fuel Co. v. Garcia, Admr.,
Whatever else might be said of this case, it is enough for present purposes to call attention to the fact that it involved a tort action and not one based upon contract, and that it was not intended to modify the Jensen case in any particular as applied to cases like the one in hand. This appears from the citations therein to the Jensen case.
It may not be amiss to suggest, in passing, that Sousa was killed on August 5, 1916, since which time, Congress passed the Merchant Marine Act, 41 Stat. 988, providing jurisdiction in admiralty of suits for damages from certain deaths caused by wrongful act and occurring on navigable waters, which supersedes *74
the application of the death statutes of the several states.Lindgren v. United States,
The Jensen case stands unaffected by these cases. Washington v.W.C. Dawson Co.,
Both cases involved the constitutionality of the act of Congress of June 10, 1922 (28 U.S.C.A. §§ 41 (3), 371). The Supreme Court held that the act was unconstitutional. There, as here, it was claimed that the Jensen case and the other cases following it had been modified by subsequent decisions of that court — especially Western Fuel Co. v. Garcia, supra; GrantSmith-Porter Ship Co. v. Rohde, supra, and State IndustrialCommission v. Nordenholt, supra.
The court proceeded to analyze the previous cases including the three just referrred to and asserted: "None of the later causes depart from the doctrine of Southern P. Co. v. Jensen, andKnickerbocker Ice Co. v. Stewart * * *."
This case was decided February 25, 1924.
In Robins Dry Dock Repair Co. v. Dahl,
In Miller's Indemnity Underwriters v. Braud,
Messel v. Foundation Co.,
In Sultan Ry. Timber Co. v. Department of Labor Industriesof the State of Washington (Eclipse Mill Co. v. Department ofLabor Industries),
Northern Coal Dock Co. v. Strand,
London Guaranty Accident Co. v. Industrial AccidentCommission of the State of California,
In Employers' Liability Assur. Corp. v. Cook,
In Baizley Iron Works v. Span,
It was claimed in the Supreme Court as it is claimed here, that the matter involved was of a local nature without direct relation to navigation or commerce, and that an application of the state law would not prejudice the characteristic features of the maritime law. The Court held otherwise, saying: "But so to hold would conflict with principles which we have often announced. * * * Repairing a completed ship lying in navigable waters has direct and intimate connection with navigation and commerce as has been often pointed out by this Court."
The Jensen case was again approved in Kellogg Sons v. Hicks,
And finally in Minnie v. Port Huron Terminal Co.,
A careful consideration of the foregoing cases, decided by the court in which is vested the authority of speaking the *79 last word in cases like the one before us, convinces us that the Jensen case and those following it govern the case in hand, and constrains us to hold that the commissioner of industries had no jurisdiction to make an award under the Workmen's Compensation Act.
We find no occasion for discussing the other questions debated in the briefs.
Judgment that the order of the commissioner of industriesawarding compensation to the claimant, Bertha St. John, for andon account of the accidental death of her husband, Leon St. John,should be, and the same hereby is, annulled, set aside, and heldfor naught. Let the result be certified to the commissioner ofindustries.