Churchill v. The British America

5 F. Cas. 676, 9 Ben. 516
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 F. Cas. 676 (Churchill v. The British America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Churchill v. The British America, 5 F. Cas. 676, 9 Ben. 516 (E.D.N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

BENEDICT, District Judge.

On the 12th day of February, 187S, the above-named defendants. who are the owners of the American brig called the Carrie TVinslow, commenced an action in rem in this court against the British ship called the British America, to recover the sum of $201,000, being the damages alleged to have been sustained by reason of a collision between the two vessels above mentioned. [See Case No. 1,S95.] Tlie value of the British America being far less than the damages claimed, another action was commenced by the same libellants, against the owners of the British America, to recover of them in personam the same damages. This latter action was commenced in the southern district of New York, and as yet no service of process has been effected therein nor any appearance entered.

Thereafter the owners of the British America commenced this proceeding to obtain from this court a limitation of their liability to the value of their vessel at the time of the collision, and an injunction restraining the farther prosecution of suits against them to recover damages arising out of this collision. This proceeding was commenced by the filing of a libel in which, while denying any liability for the collision, the owners of the British America claim that in any event their liability is limited to the value of their vessel, and they tender a stipulation with sufficient sureties for the full value of the vessel at the time of the collision, whereby they agree to pay into court, for distribution in this action, the amount of such value, and they pray that in case it be found that the collision in question arose from fault on the part of the British America they may have the benefit of the limitation of liability according to the general maritime law, and as provided by section 4283 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. They further pray that a monition issue citing and admonishing all persons having claims against them arising out of the collision referred to, to appear and make proof of their respective claims, and that the value of said vessel may be apportioned by this court among the parties entitled thereto, and that an order may be made to restrain the further prosecution of all and any suit or suits against the said ship or her owners, in respect of any claim arising out of said collision, and that the depositions already taken in the action against the ship may be used on the trial of this action, and that such further relief may be granted as to the court shall seem meet.

Having filed their libel the owners of the British America now ask this court to ascertain by appraisement the value of the ship, and for leave to file a stipulation to represent the vessel according to the prayer of their libel, and .that the monition prayed for be now issued, and also that meanwhile, and until the hearing of the cause, an order be made restraining the owners of the Carrie Winslow and her cargo from prosecuting any suits against them to recover damages arising out of the collision in question. Notice of those several applications having been given to the proctors of the owners of the Carrie Winslow, and of the officers and crew, and of the owners of the cargo, an appearance for those parties has been entered in this proceeding by their proctor and they now oppose the present motion.

The ground taken in opposition is that the owners of the British America are not entitled to a limitation of their liability to the value of the vessel, and that the court has no jurisdiction to entertain the present proceeding or to grant the relief prayed for, by reason of the fact that the ship British America is a British vessel, and the collision referred to occurred on the high seas and without the territorial limits of the United States. In disposing of this objection the first question to be considered is, whether the statute of the United States, limiting the liability of ship-owners (section 4283, Rev. St.), has any effect to limit the liability attaching to the owners of this British vessel by reason of a collision occurring on the high seas and without the territorial limits of the United States.

My opinion in regard to the extra territorial effect of this statute of the United States has been recently expressed in the ease of Thomassen v. Whitwell [Case No. 13,929]; it is therefore sufficient here to refer to the opinion there delivered, for the reasons which have led me to the conclusion that the statute of the United States to which reference has been made, has no extra territorial effect and cannot be resorted to for the purpose of limiting the liability of a foreigner for a collision occurring on the high seas and beyond the territorial limits of the United States.

The question then arises whether there may be any rule of the general maritime law by which the extent of the liability of these ship-owners for the collision in question is fixed. And it must here be held — as in the case just cited it was held upon the authority of the supreme court of the United States — that there is a rule of the general maritime law, according to which the extent of the liability of ship-owners for collision upon the high seas may be determined, and which courts of admiralty are authorized in a proper case to apply.

But it is supposed that those conclusions are not sufficient to dispose of the present case, because of the fact that one of these vessels was American and the other British, and here the application is by British subjects to have enforced by an American court against American citizens a rule from which these applicants could derive no benefit in the courts of their own country, inasmuch as the English have enacted a statute, in terms made applicable to foreigners, which [678]*678deprives not only citizens but foreigners in the courts of that country of any benefit of the rule of the general maritime law.

Whether a foreigner, in such a matter as this, is entitled to ask at the hands of this court a greater exemption than is allowed him by the laws of his own-country, and whether it rests with the courts to take notice of the absence of reciprocity in statutory provisions respecting the limitation of the ship-owner’s liability, and whether the enactment of such a statute as the English statute above referred to, can have the effect to suspend the operation of the rule of the maritime law in regard to the citizens of that nation, and whether the rule of the maritime law can be given effect in a case like this between a British and an American vessel, are questions that have not been very fully argued before me, and cannot properly be finally disposed of upon this motion. It appears sufficient, therefore, for the present occasion, to say that it is not so clear to my mind that these ship-owners are witnout a right to resort to this cotut for the relief they seek, as to justify me in refusing them protection during the pendency of the litigation, provided such protection is a part of the relief that this court is competent to grant.

It has been contended that this court has no jurisdiction to entertain such a proceeding as this, and if the proceeding can be upheld, that the court is without power to issue a restraining order, such' as is sought to be obtained by the present motion.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 676, 9 Ben. 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/churchill-v-the-british-america-nyed-1878.