Pope v. McCrady Rodgers Co.
This text of 164 F.2d 591 (Pope v. McCrady Rodgers Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Morris Preston Pope, a member of the crew of the motor vessel Patsy, met his death in November, 1942, from injuries sustained in an explosion and fire on that vessel. At the time the Patsy was in the Monongahela River near Monessen, Pennsylvania. On December 30, 1946, approximately four years and two months following Pope’s death, his wife, as administratrix of Pope’s estate, filed a libel in personam against Pope’s employer, the respondent, claiming damages for his death. The respondent filed exceptions to the libel which the trial judge sustained, 70 F.Supp. 780.
[592]*592The trial judge, was undoubtedly right. Although the action was brought on the admiralty side of the court, recovery could only be had under the Jones Act 1 since there is no action for wrongful death under the admiralty law. The Harrisburg, 1886, 119 U.S. 199, 7 S.Ct. 140, 30 L.Ed. 358. The parties agree with this proposition and the libellant makes her claim under that statute.
The Jones Act, by reference,2 incorporates certain provisions of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, including the one as to time limitation. That limitation period is now three years.3 3 This action, as stated' above, was begun more than four years after the injured man’s death.
The libellant makes an ingenious argument to'escape the bar of the statute. It is argued on her behalf that this action is brought in admiralty and that actions are barred in admiralty not by a self-operating statute of limitations, but on the ground of laches. In this case, says the libellant, there is a reasonable excuse for not bringing the action earlier; hence the laches doctrine does not bar recovery.
If the basis of this action were a claim known to the admiralty law there would be much in what the libellant says. We would then be confronted with the question whether an excuse offered for tardiness was sufficient to defeat the time test usually adopted in cases not- covered by an express statutory provision, that is, the analogy of the statute of limitations. But here the libellant’s suit is upon a right created by statute. Both under the Employers’ Liability Act, itself,4 and the Jones Act, with its incorporation of limitations from the other statute, the time provision has been regarded as part of the right itself. The Supreme Court says of it in Engel v. Davenport, 1926, 271 U.S. 33, 38, 46 S.Ct. 410, 412, 70 L.Ed. 813: “This provision is one of substantive right, setting a limit to the existence of the obligation which the Act creates.” The theory quite evidently is that the right given by the statute is one which may be enforced upon the condition that proceedings to recover the' damages are begun within the stipulated time. If they are not, a plaintiff cannot recover because there is no enforceable claim left upon which to sue. This concept is the usual one applied to limitations provisions in statutes for death by wrongful act. Restatement, Conflict of Laws §§ 397, 605 (1934).
The precise point here involved seems not to have been passed on ¡by a Circuit Court of Appeals. Among the District Courts the authority is uniform in applying the bar of the statute regardless of whether the action was commenced on the admiralty side or as an ordinary action at law.5
The result thus reached by the District Courts is the only possible one upon the theory of limitations applied to this type of action by the Supreme Court and in death •by wrongful act claims generally. Apart from legal concepts, any other result would [593]*593indeed be startling. If a plaintiff sues in an action at law to gain benefits under the Jones Act the three year statute applies, as libellant admits in this case. It would certainly be an incongruous result if, by heading a paper “in admiralty” and calling it a “libel” instead of a “complaint” the unequivocal language of limitation could be escaped. There are instances where litigants get advantage in one court that they do not have in another as anyone knowing the history of actions at law and suits in equity knows full well. But when the entire foundation of one’s claim is an enactment by a legislative body which, itself, contains a limitations provision, it cannot be thought that the legislature would have chosen to give people different rights under its legislation depending upon the court in which they seek enforcement.
The order of the District Court will he affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
164 F.2d 591, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3187, 1948 A.M.C. 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pope-v-mccrady-rodgers-co-ca3-1947.