Matsuno v. The American Schooner Concord

3 D. Haw. 227
CourtDistrict Court, D. Hawaii
DecidedJune 28, 1907
StatusPublished

This text of 3 D. Haw. 227 (Matsuno v. The American Schooner Concord) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matsuno v. The American Schooner Concord, 3 D. Haw. 227 (D. Haw. 1907).

Opinion

Dole, J.

The libel in this esae complains that on the 27th day of August, A. D. 1905, at about two o’clock in the morning, while the libelant was engaged in fishing in his own boat, anchored off the harbor of Honolulu, he was run into by the libellee, whereby libelant’s boat was overturned and injured, [228]*228all of his loose property in the boat lost and he himself thrown into the water where he remained some time until he was rescued, by which he vyas made ill so that he was unable to attend to his business for about a month, which collision occurred through the negligence of the libellee; and claims for the loss and injury to his property and his own loss of time and medical expenses, the sum of $368.30.

James Lyle and K. S. Sorenson intervened as owners of the schooner Concord and answered the libel admitting the collision and disclaiming all negligence1, and claiming that the collision occurred through the negligence of the libelant in being without a riding light at the time of the accident; that he made no effort to avoid the collision which he saw was imminent ; that he was anchored in the course of vessels approaching the port of Honolulu from the windward and that he was trespassing upon American waters in being at the place and engaged in fishing; and therefore from all of these grounds is not entitled to damages.

The claimants, in their answer, article 9, aver that “ the libelant is not a citizen of the Hnited States and had no legal right to engage or be engaged in fishing at the time and place referred to.” Their counsel, in his brief, referring to this defense, says, “Our position, as already stated, is that the libelant being engaged unlawfully in fishing, was in no better position than an ordinary trespasser. From which situation two things follow. First, that the libellee could be held liable only on proof of actual malice, or wantonness, and second, that it is incumbent upon the libelant, before he can recover, to prove that he used more than ordinary care and caution to avoid injury.” In his brief he adopts the reasoning and conclusions of the New York courts and quotes the following as laying down the principle upon which he relies: “ Negligence is a violation of the obligation which enjoins care and caution in what we do. But this duty is relative, and where it has no existence between particular parties there can.be no such thing as negligence in the legal sense of the term. A man is under no obligation to be cau[229]*229tious and circumspect towards a wrongdoer ” (Richmond v. Bronson, 5 Denio, 55), and lie says that the case of Needham v. Railroad, 31 Cal. 409, quotes this citation approvingly. Upon inspection of this case, I find on pages 417, 418, 419, 420 and 421, a careful discussion of the New York case which was sustained by the court of appeals, and, as the court in the Needham case says, “ scorns to have become the settled law of that state.” In the discussion of this case and of the law, as laid down by the New York courts, the court in Needham v. Railroad, supra, most vigorously dissents from such a view of the law and denounces it as “the false reasoning of the New York courts,” and refers to a Connecticut case, Isobel v. Railroad Co., 27 Conn. 404, as exposing the fallacy of the New York decisions. In this connection the following quotation from Hamilton v. Goding, 55 Me. 419, 428, is pertinent: “ No man can set up a public or private wrong committed by another as an excuse for a wilful or unnecessary or even negligent injury to him or his property.”

Considering this line of defense on its merits, it is not even clear that the libelant was trespassing in fishing at the locality stated. The organic act (act of April 30, 1900: 31 Stat. L., p. 141) provides that the sea fisheries of the Territory are free to citizens of the United States. Sec. 95. Certain of these, including the locality of the fishing operations referred to, the court may judicially notice, were free previously to the enactment of the organic act to citizens of the Hawaiian Islands and subjects as well, and during the brief period between the initiation of annexation and its completion by the enactment of the organic act, such freedom was enjoyed by residents of the United States as well as by citizens. Thus, after the enactment making such fisheries free to citizens of the United States, it can hardly be contended that the old fishing privilege by residents who were not citizens was thereby cut off without some further enactment which would forbid such freedom to residents not citizens or an authoritative notice to that effect. The fishing by residents, not citizens, has been continued from [230]*230the time of the enactment of the organic act until the present time, — a period of seven years, without protest,— has been conducted with enterprise and industry, and has contributed largely to the food products of the Territory and to the comfort of its population. In any case, no man may justify negligence whereby injury is done another by charging the other to be a trespasser, although it may be that in some circumstances such trespass would have a relation to the amount of damages which the injured party might be entitled to.

I find that this defense is untenable.

Philadelphia, etc., R. R. Co. v. Philadelphia, etc., Towboat Co., 64 U. S. 209; Pueblo v. Smith, 3 Colo. App. 386, 391; Spofford v. Harlow, 85 Mass. 176; B. & O. R. Co. v. Hellenthal, 88 Fed. Rep. 120, 121.

Counsel for the libellee strongly urges that the boat of the libelant, being anchored and engaged in fishing seaward from the bell buoy, was in the fairway leading to the channel of the port of Honolulu and therefore that a fairway being a course of navigation, if the libelant did carry a light such as he claimed he did but not the kind of light required by law, and if he used more than ordinary care and caution to avert the injury, both vessels being in fault, he was in the wrong and the libellee was only liable for half of the damages; but if the libelant, obstructing the fairway, had no light the libel should be dismissed because the boat not being seen until the schooner was close upon her, the schooner was at most guilty only of an error of judgment m extremis; and if the libelant, obstructing the fairway, did not use the requisite degree of care to avert the collision then whether he maintained an insufficient light or no light, the libel should be dismissed because libelant’s own negligence was the last proximate cause of the injury.

There seems to he no consensus of legal information as to the exact meaning of the word “fairway.” In The Oliver, 22 Fed. Rep. 848, it is said that “a fairway is water on which vessels of commerce habitually move.” This definition is too vague, standing alone, to be of any practical value. The Cen[231]*231tury Dictionary says that “a fairway is the part of a road, river, harbor, etc., where the navigable channel for vessels lies,” which agrees with the use of the word in the'federal laws. Article 25 of an act to prevent collisions, of June 7, 1897 (30 Stat. L., chap 4, p. 101) says, “ In narrow channels every steam vessel shall, when it is safe and practicable, keep to that side of the fairway or midchannel, which lies on the starboard side of such vessel.” This repeats the language of the act of 1885, using the word “fairway” as a synonym for midchannel.

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Related

The Nichols
74 U.S. 656 (Supreme Court, 1869)
Hamilton v. Goding
55 Me. 419 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1867)
People v. Bagnell
31 Cal. 409 (California Supreme Court, 1866)
Richmond v. Bronson
5 Denio 55 (New York Supreme Court, 1847)
Spofford v. Harlow
85 Mass. 176 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1861)
Isbell v. New York & New Haven Railroad
27 Conn. 393 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1858)

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Bluebook (online)
3 D. Haw. 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matsuno-v-the-american-schooner-concord-hid-1907.