ALLRED, District Judge.
On April 20, 1956, Samuel J. Thomas drove his Chrysler Sedan on board the Nellie B, a ferryboat owned and operated by Nueces County Road District No. 4 (hereafter called Road District). Thomas was accompanied by his wife, Inez, and by his brother, Leo, and Leo’s wife, Lena May Thomas. The Thomas-es had gone aboard the ferry as fare paying passengers to be conveyed across navigable waters from a landing slip at
Harbor Island, Texas, to Aransas Pass on Mustang Island.
Thomas drove his automobile in a normal manner into the center lane as directed by a ferry deckhand and stopped forward of the wheelhouse in the center lane. Thereafter the deckhand directed Thomas to move forward without giving him specific directions as to how far to go or where or when to stop. Thomas drove the car forward slowly and, apparently without using his brakes or stopping, ran into two sagging cables hanging across the end of the vehicle runways at the seaward end of the ferry. A defective pin in one of the shackles holding the cables sheared and the car plunged into the water, submerging with the four passengers. The two women were trapped in the car and drowned immediately. The two Thomas brothers managed to free themselves from the car and tried to swim to safety. Leo Thomas was finally rescued and survived but S. J. Thomas, although having been hauled to shore and administered artificial respiration, died a short time after his wife was drowned.
Thereafter an admiralty proceeding was filed in this court, against the Road District (A.D. 17-9), by Leo Thomas, individually (for the death of his wife and for his personal injuries) and by Fay Thomas Whitford (a daughter, of Samuel and Inez B. Thomas), individually and as administratrix of the estate of her parents. A total of $114,000 damages was sought. Thereupon the Road District instituted this proceeding for exoneration from, and/or limitation of, liability, claiming the benefit of sections 183-186 of 46 U.S.C.A., and the various statutes, acts and rules supplementary thereto.
The Road District alleged that the Thomas tragedy was not caused, or contributed to, by any fault, neglect or want of care on the part of the Nellie'B, or those in charge of her, or of the petitioner, but was solely due to fault and neglect on the part of the occupants of the automobile, particularly the driver, Samuel J. Thomas; that the accident occurred and the losses and damages resulted without fault and without privity or knowledge on the part of petitioner. It was further alleged that petitioner feared other persons might file suits or claims as heirs at law or legal representatives of Lena May Thomas.
No freight was pending but petitioner offered to give a stipulation for the amount or value of the District’s interest in the vessel and her pending freight, etc.; and, pending an appraisal, offered' an ad interim stipulation in the amount of $40,760. .This stipulation was authorized by the Chief Judge of this court, with a proviso that application might be-made to increase or diminish it later after the report of a commissioner who-was appointed at the time. Monition, issued and a time was set for the filing-of claims. Fay Thomas Whitford, individually and in her capacity as ad-ministratrix, and Leo Thomas filed' claims and answers to the petition for exoneration.
Upon pretrial the court ordered the-issue of exoneration and limitation of liability to be tried first, severing the-issue of damages and the value of the Nellie B and directing that they should, be heard later. The pretrial order further recited that it should be without prej'udice to the Road District’s right to-assert any and all defenses it might have to the claims asserted by the claimants.
After a hearing the court held that, the Road District was not entitled to-exoneration or limitation. Findings of' fact and conclusions of law were filed on December 9, 1958, and are summarized as follows:
(1) that the Nellie B was unsea-worthy in various respects, particularly (a) in not having an adequate number-of deckhands; (b) in not having a member of the crew with a lifeboatman’s certificate; (c) that the two cables at the-seaward end of the runways were insufficient; (d) that the two cables were sagging below the bumper of the car; (e) a pin in one of the-' shackles was defective.
The court further found that the persons in charge of the Nellie B were negligent in various respects, particularly in (a) failing to have at least two deckhands on board to spot the cars and direct drivers where to stop and to “chock” the wheels of automobiles on the ferry; (b) in failing to have a crewman on board with a lifeboatman’s certificate; (c) in using inadequate and defective cables across the end of the runways; (d) in failing to test the cables; (e) in failing to discover the defective pin in the shackle; and (f) in failing to discover the inadequacy of the cables. The court found that each of the items of unseaworthiness and acts of negligence was a proximate cause of the automobile going overboard, the drowning of the three people and of the injuries resulting therefrom.
The court further found that petitioner Road District was in privity and had knowledge of such unseaworthiness and negligence through Melvin Littleton, ferry superintendent chárged with general management of the ferry. At the same time the court further found that Samuel J. Thomas was guilty of contributory negligence which also was a proximate cause of the injuries involved in the claims.
By stipulation all the evidence heard on the issues of exoneration-limitation was incorporated as part of the record in support of, and defense against, the Thomas claims. From that evidence and the record as a whole, the court makes the same findings as to unseaworthiness, negligence and proximate cause. In addition to the specific acts of negligence outlined above, the court finds, upon further reflection, that the ferry deckhand who directed the driver to move forward was negligent in failing to give him further instructions and in failing to direct him when and where to stop; and that eách and all of said acts of negligence, except failing to have a crewman with a lifeboatman’s certificate, was a proximate cause of the. tragic incident giving rise to the Thomas claims.
Also, upon further reflection and reconsideration of the evidence, the Court finds that S. J. Thomas, driver of the automobile, was not guilty of contributory negligence, nor was his negligence a proximate cause of the Thomas deaths and other injuries. The previous holding, announced from the bench at the conclusion of the exoneration-limitation hearing was without consideration of the high degree of care which a ferry, although not an insurer, owes to its passengers; and, while a passenger is required to use ordinary care for his own safety, the fact that the Thomas car, easing along, after being directed to move forward by the ferry’s deckhand, slipped off the deck, does not indicate that the driver reasonably should have foreseen that the thing that did happen, or some similar event, likely would occur. On the contrary, it appears more likely that S. J. Thomas, having been directed to move forward without further instructions at the time, had the right to believe that he would be directed when and where to stop; and that his failure to apply his brakes, or to apprehend his danger was due to this omission on the part of the deckhand rather than any failure on his own part to exercise ordinary care.
Leo Thomas claims damages for (1) his personal injuries and (2) the death of his wife. Fay Thomas Whitford, individually and as administratrix, claims damages for (1) the death of her mother and father; (2) the loss of the car; and (3) alternatively to the death claim, damages for conscious suffering of the parents prior to death.
The death claims are based principally upon the Texas death statute, Article 4671, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes. The claims for personal injuries and loss of the car are based upon general admiralty law and the provisions of (1) 46 U.S.C.A. § 491, and (2) Section 1 of the Harter Act, 46 U.S.C.A. § 190. ,
The Road District pleads: First, that the District is not liable for tort under the statute under which it was created
and the decisions of the Texas courts; Second, that the Texas Death Statute, upon which claimants rely, does not create a right of action for death against counties and road districts; and (3) alternatively, the contributory negligence of Samuel J. Thomas bars all claims except those of Leo Thomas for his personal injuries.
In reply Claimants say (1) the Road District waived its sovereign immunity, if any it had, when it instituted the limitation-exoneration proceeding; (2) the Texas death statute imposes liability for negligent death upon the owner of any railroad, steamboat or other vehicle (including ferries) for the conveyance of goods or passengers, even though such owner is a county or road district; and (3) that, although contributory negligence is a complete defense under all cases decided under the Texas death statute, yet, when it is made the basis for a proceeding in admiralty, the admiralty rule applies and contributory negligence does not bar recovery but merely operates to reduce the recovery.
First: the Road District’s Claim of Sovereign Immunity for Tort Not Resulting in Death:
This is based upon two theories: (1) the fact that the section
of the statute
under which the Road District was organized provides, “no such road district * * * shall ever be held liable for torts;” and (2) the fact that a road district, being for all practical purposes a subdivision of the county,
is not liable for its torts since a county is not liable,
unless liability is created by statute, either in express terms or by necessary implication.
The short answer to this contention, at least so far as the claims for tort not resulting in death are concerned, is the deeply rooted principle that a state cannot deprive a party of redress
in admiralty
against a municipality for the negligence of its servants. 1 Benedict 77, § 34, citing Workman v. New York City, 179 U.S. 552, 21 S.Ct. 212, 45 L.Ed. 314. There is a distinction between
immunity from process,
which goes to the question of jurisdiction, and
immunity from liability,
which deals with the substantive law of admiralty.
Where the Court has jurisdiction, as here,
the state may not deprive an admiralty court of the right to redress a wrong, Workman v. New York City, supra, 179 U.S. at page 566, 21 S.Ct. at page 217; or deprive a person of any substantial admiralty rights. Pope & Talbot, Inc. v. Hawn, 346 U.S. 406, 409, 74 S.Ct. 202, 98 L.Ed. 143.
Second: Does the Texas Wrongful Death Statute Apply to Counties and Road Districts Operating a Ferry?
It is, of course, an established principle of maritime law that, in the absence of statute there is no remedy for death,
but that admiralty courts will recognize and apply state death acts.
Claimants here pitch their cause of action for death principally upon Article 4671, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes, reading as follows:
“Article 4671. 4694, 3017, 2899 Cause of action
“No agreement between any owner of any railroad, street railway, steamboat, stage-coach, or other vehicle for transporting passengers or goods, or any industrial or public utility plant, or other machinery, and any person, corporation, trustee, receiver, lessee, joint stock association or other person in control of, or operating the same, shall release such owner, person, trustee, lessee,
corporation
or joint stock association from any liability fixed by the provisions of this article. An action for actual damages on account of the injuries causing the death of any person may be brought in the following cases:
“1. When an injury causing the death of any person is caused by the wrongful act, neglect, carelessness, unskilfulness, or default of another
person,
association of persons, joint stock company,
corporation
or trustee or receiver of any person, corporation, joint stock company, or association of persons, his, its or their agents or servants, such persons, association of persons, joint stock company, corporation, trustee or receiver, shall be liable in damages for the injuries causing such death. The term ‘corporation,’ as used in this article, shall include all municipal corporations, as well as all private and public and quasi public corporations, except
counties
and common and independent school districts.
“2. When an injury causing the death of any person is caused by the wrongful act, neglect, carelessness, unskilfulness, or default of the
proprietor, owner,
charterer or hirer of any industrial or public utility plant, or any railroad, street railway,
steamboat,
stage-coach,
or other vehicle for the conveyance of goods or passengers,
or by the unfitness, wrongful act, neglect, carelessness, unskilfulness or default of his, their or its servants or agents, such
proprietor, owner,
charterer or hirer shall be liable in damages for the injuries causing such death.
“3. When an injury causing the death of any person is caused by the wrongful act, neglect, carelessness, unskilfulness or default of the receiver, trustee
or other person in charge of or in control of
any railroad, street railway, steamboat, stage-coach, or other vehicle for the conveyance of goods or passengers, or any industrial plant, public utility plant, or any other machinery, or by the wrongful act, neglect, carelessness, unfitness, unskilfulness or default of his or their
servants
or
agents,
such
receiver, trustee, or other person
shall be liable in damages for the injuries causing such death, and the liability here fixed against such receiver, trustee, or other person shall extend to all cases in which the death is caused by reason of any bad or unsafe condition of the railroad, street railway or other machinery under the control or operation of such receiver,
trustee or other person, and tq all other cases in which the death results from any other reason or cause for which an action may be brought for damages on account of personal injuries, the same as if said railroad, street railway or other machinery were being operated by the owner thereof. Acts 1860, p. 32; G.L. vol. 4, p. 1394; Acts 1887, p. 44; G.L. vol. 9, p. 842; Acts 1913, p. 288; Acts 1921, p. 212.”
The District contends (1) no Texas statute or decision makes it liable for death; and (2) since paragraph 1 above excepts counties from the definition of “corporations,” the death statute simply does not create a cause of action or a remedy for death caused by the negligence of a county or any subdivision thereof, including a road district. Claimants contend, on the other hand, that paragraph 1 applies only to death actions in general and that paragraph 2 of the statute creates a cause of action and a remedy against the proprietor or owner of a railroad, steamboat, stagecoach or other common carrier, including a ferry, whether owned by a county, a corporation or private person.
Although the Texas death statute has been applied by the federal courts in admiralty cases involving private parties,
no maritime case, federal or state, has ever discussed its application to the State, or a county or subdivision thereof. Nor has any case, maritime or otherwise, ever discussed the application of paragraph 2 of the statute to the. State or-one of its political subdivisions as the operator, owner, etc., of a railroad, ferry or other common carrier. This, therefore, would be a proper case for a stay until the parties could secure a construction of this seriously doubtful question of state law if it were possible and practicable-; but more than two years have elapsed since the accident occurred and a state action would' be barred under the applicable Texas statute of limitation.
This Court, therefore, must decide what construction the state courts would place on the death act. under the facts here.
The Texas courts
have
consistently refused to hold either the State,
a county,
or other political subdivision of the state,
(other than cities), liable for negligent or wrongful death. The reasons for denial of liability in these death cases are the same as those assigned for refusal to hold the State or its political subdivisions liable for the
torts
of officers, agents or employees: (1) the general rule that, in the absence of a statute assuming liability, neither the State,
nor a county
is liable for the torts of its officers, agents or employees; and (2) generally that the activities of the State were
governmental
in nature;
(3) that counties are organized under general laws and are political subdivisions of the state;
(4) that water improvement, irrigation, navigation, drainage,
levee and improvement district, etc., are political subdivisions of the State,
performing governmental functions and standing upon the same footing as counties.
Cities were made liable for negligent or wrongful death as “municipal corporations” by an amendment adopted in
1921
since the Texas courts had held that they were not “corporations” within the meaning of the death act.
This accounts for the provision in paragraph 1 of the statute in its present form that the word “corporation” shall include municipal corporations and excluding counties and school districts from such definition. But, even after their inclusion in the statute, it was held that cities are not liable for injuries or death caused through the negligence of their officers, employees or servants in the exercise of
governmental functions
although they are liable when acting in a
proprietary capacity.
Strange as it may seem, under the Texas decisions, a
city
is liable for negligence in the
building, maintenance or operation of highways
but a
county
is not; it being held as to cities that the function is proprietary
but as to counties it is governmental.
The reason for the distinction seems to be that counties and like
quasi
corporations are created by the legislature under general laws without reference to the wishes of their inhabitants and thus for .essentially public purposes, while towns and cities are incorporated through special charters which are .enacted at the request of those most directly benefited by them.
It is clear from all the Texas cases that neither the State nor any of its political subdivisions are liable for tort committed in the exercise of
governmental
functions. The fact that the State consents to be sued is not an admission of liability.
“There is a total and absolute absence of liability on the part of the State for the tortious acts of its officers, agencies and employees; and not merely a ‘defense of sovereign immunity from liability,’ which the State may waive,” Dickerson v. State, Tex.Civ. App., 169 S.W.2d 1005, 1009.
This absence of liability applies in death cases irrespective of the fact that neither the State
nor the particular political subdivision
is specifically included, along with counties and school districts, in the exception from the definition of “corporations” in the Texas death statute.
Clearly Road District is not liable under that statute if, as a political subdivision of the State, it was exercising a
governmental
function in operating the Nellie B as a ferry. Under Texas Law this Court holds that the District was such political subdivision and was engaged in a governmental function as an agency of the State, for the following reasons:
First: The building, operation and maintenance of highways are governmental functions of both the State
and the county.
Second: The county is a political subdivision of the state, created pursuant to general law and constitutional authority.
Prior to the establishment of the State Highway Department in 1917, roads and highways were, in practice, the exclusive responsibility of counties and their political subdivisions, including road districts which had (and still have) the right to issue bonds and levy taxes to retire them for, among other purposes, “the construction, maintenance and operation of macadamized, graveled or paved roads and turnpikes, or
in aid thereof.”
Pursuant to this constitutional power, Article 752a-752w was enacted and the Road District was created thereunder. The validity of such road districts has been recognized by the courts.
Third: Article 2351, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes, is one of many articles dealing with “Powers And Duties” of the commissioners’ court of a county. Among these powers and duties are (1) the establishment of precincts and justice courts; (2) establishment of
‘‘public ferries
whenever the public interest may require;” (3) the laying out, establishment, change and discontinuance of
public roads and highways;
(4) the building and repairing of bridges; (5) the appointment of road overseers and apportionment of hands (for working the roads); and (6) the exercise of “general control over all
roads, highways, ferries
and bridges in their counties.” All the foregoing powers and duties are
governmental
in nature. The power to establish ferries makes it the
duty
of the commissioners’ court to do so whenever the public interest may require; and carries with it the power for the county to
create
and
operate
a public ferry, or provide and maintain the
agency
by which it is to be operated; ordinarily this is by means of licenses or franchises granted to individuals or corporations but not superior to the commissioners court to establish and operate a ferry; and this power is a
governmental
function.
The close relationship of ferries to roads and highways, and “in aid thereof,” is shown by the many powers and duties of the commissioners court enumerated above. It is found again in Title 116, Vol. 19, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statute, “Roads, Bridges And Ferries,” Articles 6663 through 6812a, containing five Chapters. The 5th Chapter deals with “Bridges And Ferries,” Articles 6798-6812a, authorizing the licensing of public ferries
by the commissioners court
in the public interest, the giving of bond,
the rates to be charged, etc., the duties of a licensed ferryman, penalties, etc. All this shows the
governmental
nature of the county’s powers and duties with reference to ferries — all derived from, and under authority of, the State.
Fourth: In addition the
evidence
clearly shows that the operation of the ferry bears a close relationship to, is in aid of, and necessary to, the construction, maintenance and operation of highways, both state and county. State Highway 35 and numerous county highways lead to Aransas Pass on the Texas coast, 20 miles northeast of Corpus Christi. Private interests formerly maintained a wooden causeway across flats and water from Aransas Pass to a point on Harbor Island where automobiles and passengers were transported by ferry over the navigable waters of Corpus Christi Bay to Port Aransas on Mustang Island. For many years this was the only means of reaching Aransas Pass from the mainland. It still is the shortest and most practicable route.
In 1950 the private owners decided not to operate the causeway and ferry any longer. Mass meetings were held and the Road District was created by the commissioners court of Nueces County for the purpose of taking over and operating the causeway and three ferry boats, including the Nellie B. $400,000 in tax bonds were issued by the Road District, $250,000 being used to purchase the ferry and causeway and the balance for the improvement and building of new approaches. More than $319,000 of these tax bonds are still outstanding. The causeway and ferry system is managed by the County Engineer under authority from the commissioners court of Nueces County.
After the county took over the causeway and ferry system an asphalt highway was built along Mustang Island and on to Padre Island on the south. A causeway from the Mainland to Padre Island has made it possible for several years, including 1956 when the Thom-ases drowned, to make a complete circle by automobile from the mainland on the south up Padre and Mustang Islands, over the ferry to Harbor Island and thence by the causeway to Aransas Pass; or to make the same circle from the opposite direction. This has resulted in substantially increased automobile traffic at one dollar per car (the same amount charged by the private owners); but there has been little, if any, profit from ferry and causeway revenues. The outstanding bonds still are being paid off by tax money.
There can be no doubt, therefore, that under both the law and the facts the Road District was operating the Nellie B on the occasion in question in aid and as part of the highway system and in the exercise of its governmental functions; and that the Texas courts would hold that it is not liable here under the death statute.
Third: Did the District Waive its Sovereign Immunity by Instituting This Exoneration-Limitation Proceeding?
It must constantly be kept in mind that the Texas decisions as to sovereign immunity are not based, as are most of the cases from other jurisdictions, upon the fact that the State or its political subdivisions are not
subject to process,
but simply
that there is no liability, that the Texas Death Act does not apply to the State or its political sub
divisions for negligence in carrying out governmental functions.
Claimants’ very right to recover here is rooted in the Texas death act as a supplement to the general maritime law and not as a remedy to enforce a preexisting right rooted in admirality.
The state act must fix liability else there is none, either at common law or in admiralty; and when admiralty adopts the state statute “as a rule of right to be administered within its own jurisdiction, it must take the right subject to the limitations which have been made a part of its existence. * * * The liability and the remedy are created by the same statutes, and the limitations of the remedy are, therefore, to be treated as limitations of the right.” The Tungus, 358 U.S. 588, at page 594, 79 S.Ct. 503, at page 507
So, in reality, the situation here is just that there is no death statute under which claimants can recover against the District since it was engaged in a governmental function in operating the ferry.
The cases cited by Claimants in support of their contention that the District waived its immunity are distinguishable because: (1) they involved torts and rights ordinarily enforceable under admiralty law, the only impediment being that the sovereign was
not subject to process;
and it was held that the sovereign had waived its immunity from process by intervention,
or voluntary appearance;
and (2) none of them involved death claims based, as here, upon state law in which the admiralty is bound by the construction of the state courts.
Claimants’ contention here is similár to that rejected in Tungus “that a court in a case such as this may disregard completely the conditions which the State has put upon the right it has created, and may apply instead the full corpus of the maritime law, free of any qualifications- imposed by the State. If death occurs upon navigable waters within a State, the argument runs, the law should seize only upon the blunt fact that there is some kind of state statute providing some kind of a right of action for death caused by some kind of tor-tious conduct. That, it is said, is enough to fill the ‘void’ in the maritime law, which then becomes applicable in all its facets, without further inquiry as to what it is that the State has actually enacted.” 358 U.S. at pages 591-592, 79 S.Ct. at page 506.
The net effect of Claimants’ contention is that a petitioner for exoneration-limitation, admits
complete
liability once the petition is denied; for, claimants • say, by bringing the proceeding, the Road District admits application of the death statute to it, even though that statute, as construed by the courts of the State that gives it life, does not apply. But, if filing of the petition is a bar to the defense that the statute does not apply at all, why could it not be argued just as-logically that it operates as a waiver of the defense of contributory negligence, either as a complete bar or to reduce the amount of the recovery ?
In Tungus and Halecki the Court accepted a construction by the Court of Appeals that New Jersey courts would apply the comparative negligence rule in.
admiralty cases brought under the death statute of that state. Claimants’ counsel urge this court to prophesy that the Texas courts would adopt the same construction of the Texas statute. This would be a violent presumption since Texas always has adhered to the rule that contributory negligence absolutely bars recovery and that the comparative negligence doctrine does not exist except by statute in certain cases;
and the Court of Appeals for this Circuit has denied recovery under the Texas statute in admiralty death cases where contributory negligence was shown to be a proximate cause.
But, if the Road District, by bringing this proceeding, waived the right to claim that it is not covered by the Texas statute, why, by the same reasoning, did it not waive the right to plead contributory negligence either as a complete bar or to reduce the recovery proportionately ?
This court does not believe that any or all of these results flow from the filing of an exoneration-limitation proceeding. There was no waiver by the Road District of the right to plead that the statute does not apply and its complete immunity from liability for death.
Is the District Liable for Death Under Federal Statutes Dealing With Safe ' Carriage of Passengers and Baggage?
Claimants also contend that the district’s liability “is governed by. general admiralty law and federal statutes applicable to the transportation of passengers and property upon the navigable waters of the United States,” under section 491 of title 46, reading as follows:
“§ 491. Liability of master and owners for damage to passengers
“Whenever damage is sustained by any passenger or his baggage, from explosion, fire, collision, or other cause, the master and the owner of such vessel, or either of them, and the vessel shall be liable to each and every person so injured, to the full amount of damage if it happens through any
neglect
or
failure
to comply with the provisions of title 52 of the Revised Statutes, or through
known
defects or imperfections of the steaming apparatus or of the hull; and any person sustaining loss or injury through the carelessness, negligence, or willful misconduct of any master, mate, engineer, or pilot, or his neglect or refusal to obey the laws governing the navigation of such steamers, may sue such master, mate, engineer, or pilot, and recover damages for any such injury caused by any such master, mate, engineer, or pilot. R.S. § 4493.”
Claimants say that the District is liable to them under the foregoing section by reason of the unseaworthiness of the Nellie B’s hull and her failure to have a sufficient and competent crew,
but do
not point to any specific section of title 52 alleged to have been violated.
No section of that title expressly deals with unseaworthiness and the implied warrant of seaworthiness does not run to a passenger.
The District says that section 491, supra, applies only to steamships, not to ferries. Section 361, however, defines steam vessels as being “Every vessel subject to inspection propelled in whole or in part by steam or by any other form of mechanical or electrical power * * * within the meaning of and subject to all the provisions of this Act. * * * ”; and Section 362 provides that “AH steam vessels navigating any waters' of the United States which are common highways of commerce or open to general or competitive navigation, excepting public vessels . of the United States, vessels of other countries, and boats propelled in whole or in part by steam for navigating .canals, shall be subject to the provisions of title 52 of the Revised Statutes.” This would seem to be broad enough to include ferryboats, but no specific section of title 52 is shown to have been violated and no case has been cited expressly holding that section 491 creates a right or remedy for wrongful death of a passenger. For all that the cases dealing with death of a passenger show, the right of action could have been based upon a state statute, or the Death On the High Seas Act.
None of the cases, except those dealing with limitation of liability, (Hines v. Butler, The Pacific Mails, supra), discuss the provisions of title 52. While the question is close, especially in view of the attitude indicated by the Supreme Court in the recent state-operated ferry case,
the court holds that the claims for injuries not resulting in death arise in and are governed by maritime law while the claims for death, which occurred upon navigable waters within the State’s jurisdiction, come under the Texas death statute. It follows:
(1) Claimants are not entitled to recover for the death of any of the Thomas family; (2) Claimant Leo Thomas is entitled to recover for his personal injuries, physical pain and mental suffering, as well as any impairment of earning capacity, but not for the death of his wife, her medical expenses, funeral bill,
etc.; (3) Claimant Fay Thomas Whit-ford, as executrix of the estate of her parents, is entitled to recover for (A) the value of the automobile; (B) the pain and suffering of her parents before their death.
In view of the finding that Samuel J. Thomas, the driver, was not guilty of contributory negligence, constituting a proximate cause of the tragedy, petitioner’s action for contribution by his estate is dismissed.
The Court will hear further evidence in Corpus Christi on July 15, 1959, as to the amount of damages.
The Clerk will notify counsel of the entry of this memorandum.