Markle v. United States

8 F.2d 87, 1925 A.M.C. 1236, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1570
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedAugust 1, 1925
DocketNo. 83
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 F.2d 87 (Markle v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Markle v. United States, 8 F.2d 87, 1925 A.M.C. 1236, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1570 (S.D. Tex. 1925).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, District Judge.

This is a libel in personam, brought under the Suits in Admiralty Act (Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1923, §§ 1251%-1251%1), to recover damages for breach of contract to carry safely, as provided in the hill of lading, libelant alleges: (1) That the steamship Gaffney was owned by the United States and employed as a merchant vessel; (2) that the steamship Gaffney was within the jurisdiction of the United States, being upon the high seas and bound for a port in the United States; and (3) that in 1922 the United States contracted, through its duly authorized agents, to carry safely the cargo made the subject of this suit, and that it failed to comply with its contract, the cargo arriving in bad condition.

The respondent, invoking Blamberg Bros. v. United States, 260 U. S. 452, 43 S. Ct. 179, 67 L. Ed. 346, and the Isonomia (C. C. A.) 285 F. 516, challenges the jurisdiction of the court, because the vessel was not within the jurisdiction of this or any other court of the United States. Libelant, while admitting, for the purposes of this suit, the binding force of the Blamberg Case, asserts that it is without application, because this suit is a suit directly in personam, and not in substitution for a proceeding in. rem, and that therefore the provision of the act whieh fixes the jurisdiction in the District Court of the residence of plaintiff alone controls.

Great, and I think unwarranted, confusion has arisen with reference to this question through the failure of the courts, both inferior and supreme, to give to the plain language of section 2 of the statute (section 1251%a) its plain effect. As the case reaches me it is not res integra. If it were, I would have no hesitation in giving to the language of section 2 of the act, that such suits shall he brought in the District Court of the United States for the district in whieh the parties suing, or any of them, reside or have their principal place of business in the United States, or in which the vessel or the cargo charged with libel is found, its plain, effect, and I would sustain the jurisdiction of this court on the ground of the residence of the plaintiff, whether the libel is brought as a substitution for an in rem proceeding, or directly in personam, and this irrespective of where the ship happened to be.

[88]*88I must, however, pick my way over the fallen spars, and in and out of the judicial wreckage of the act made by prior decisions, if I would make safe port for myself on this venture. It must be conceded that there is no constitutional limitation preventing Congress from fixing both the jurisdiction and the venue of this class of cases, and, this concession being made, it would seem plain that the act grants the suitor three options as to place of jurisdiction in every suit brought under this act.

Had the courts, inferior and supreme, in the Blamberg and following cases given effect to the comprehensive language of section 2 of the act, rather than to an assumed purpose of Congress, deduced by some of the courts from general considerations and by the Supreme Court from section 1 of the act (section 1251 %), to impose limitations upon it, the question' now before me could be easily determined in favor of libelant.

These decisions, however, not only settle, though with due deference I think incorrectly, that it is jurisdictional to a suit in personam, in substitution of one in rem, that the vessel concerned be in the United States, or in one of her possessions, but leave in grave doubt the question whether a suit purely in personam under it, if indeed it can be entertained at all, is not subject to the same limitation; for, while the Supreme Court has not directly passed upon that question, it is difficult tot draw from its decisions in the Blamberg and Quinnipiac Cases, denying effect to the provision for suit in the residence of the plaintiff, except when the res is in a ,port of the United States, any other conclusion than that the act gives no pause of action, except in eases involving or growing out of a res, and when that res is in the United States or her possessions.'

If it is correct in stating, in the Blamberg Case, that the first section of the act limits it to vessels in ports of the United States or her possessions, and the second section is in pari materia, and the same limitation must be implied in its construction, and in the Quinnipiac Case that the Suits in Admiralty Act was passed to provide a suit in personam in lieu of the previous right of suitors to libel merchant vessels belonging -to the United States in rem, then it follows that the act does not authorize suits purely in personam, and that the jurisdictional clause, authorizing suits in the residence of plaintiff, is not to be construed as applying to such suits.

The District Court in the Blamberg Case, 272 F. 978, apparently believed that the act authorized suits both purely in personam and in personam in lieu of those in rem, and declared that the provision for suit in the district of his residence is a limitation upon plaintiff, rather than an enabling act. It puts its conclusion that suit was not maintainable in that ease, because the vessel was not within the jurisdiction of the United States, upon the ground that since in that case no action in personam would lie, and the suit was purely one in rem in fact, though not in form, it could not be considered that Congress had intended to give to a private suitor, as against the United States, any greater rights in such- suits than he would have had against a private respondent, and upon this supposed legislative intent it declined jurisdiction.

The Supreme Court affirmed the ease, but not upon this ground. It took the ground that the first section was limited to seizures of vessels in the United States, and the sec-' ond section, the fixing of jurisdiction, being in pari materia, must be also so limited. After the decision in the District Court of the Blamberg Case, and before its affirmance in the Supreme Court, the authorities stood in great confusion on the question whether, in such a suit as that in the Blamberg Case, it was necessary for the vessel to be in the jurisdiction of the litigation, or whether it was sufficient for it to be within the jurisdiction generally of the United States.

One side, of which The Isonomia, 285 F. 516 (Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit), is the best considered, gives complete effect to the reasoning of-Judge Rose that Congress had not intended to give any better right to a private suitor against the United States than he would have had in a suit in rem against a private individual, and therefore holding that a vessel must be within the jurisdiction of the court of suit. The other side, represented by Alsberg v. United States, 285 F. 573, Middleton & Co. v. United States (D. C.) 273 F. 199, and Eagle Oil Transportation Co. v. United States (no’ written opinion) 1923 A. M. C. 545, holding that jurisdiction would lie in the court of' plaintiff’s residence, if the offending vessel were anywhere in the United States.

The Supreme Court affirmed the Blamberg Case, using these words: “We hold the District Court was right in construing the second section of the statute as not authorizing a suit in personam against the United States as a substitute for a libel in rem, when the United States vessel is not in a port of the United States or of one of her possessions.”'

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Bluebook (online)
8 F.2d 87, 1925 A.M.C. 1236, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/markle-v-united-states-txsd-1925.