Pouppirt v. Elder Dempster Shipping, Ltd.

122 F. 983, 1903 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 316
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedMarch 28, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 122 F. 983 (Pouppirt v. Elder Dempster Shipping, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pouppirt v. Elder Dempster Shipping, Ltd., 122 F. 983, 1903 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 316 (E.D. Va. 1903).

Opinion

WADDILL, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The vice in the legal position thus taken by proctors for respondent is patent, and grows out of their treating this case, where the tort sued for was committed upon the high seas, as if committed upon a British ship, exclusively within the British jurisdiction, and between British subjects. The position is possibly a correct one in cases of torts so [985]*985committed. But it has no application to a case like this, brought to recover for injuries sustained by an American passenger on board of a foreign ship on the high seas. The fallacy of respondent’s position is fully shown in The Chartered Mercantile Bank of India, etc., v. The Netherlands India Steam Navigation Company, Limited, 10 Q. B. 521, 536, 537, 544, 545. This was an action brought by the owner of certain goods, shipped under a bill of lading in the defendant’s vessel, called the Crown Prince, and lost in a collision on the high seas, between that vessel and the Atjeh, another vessel of the defendants. Brett, L. J., speaking for the court in that case, said:

“Therefore it seems to me on the question of fixing the defendants with liability for the negligence of the captain and crew of the Atjeh, who are admitted to be the servants of the defendants, that the defendants cannot escape liability by saying their ship was not registered as a British ship, but that she was registered as a Dutch ship. She was, nevertheless, an English ship, and the defendants are liable according to English law. But I will assume that both ships are Dutch ships. Nevertheless, whatever might have been the Dutch law, if this case had been tried in Holland, it seems to me the defendants are still liable. The negligence on the part of the servants of the defendants did not take place in Holland; it did not take place within the sole territorial jurisdiction of a foreign country. This case is not like The M. Maxham, 1 P. D. 107, where the ship in Spain ran against a pier or quay in Spain. In that case, whatever the cause of action was, it arose entirely in Spain, and the -action was an action in tort, and the well-known rule applies that for any tort committed in a foreign country within its own exclusive jurisdiction an action of tort cannot be maintained in this country unless the cause of action would be a cause of action in that country, and also would be a cause of action in this country. Both must combine if the tort alleged was committed within the exclusive jurisdiction of a foreign country. But the negligence complained of in this action took place upon the high seas, which is the common ground of all countries. Therefore that rule with regard to the exclusive jurisdiction of a foreign country does not apply. The case comes to this, whether an action for a tort committed on the high seas between two foreign ships (for I assume for this purpose that both are foreign ships) an action can be maintained in this country, although it is not a tort according to the laws of the courts in that foreign country. From time immemorial, as far as I know, such actions have been maintained in the court of admiralty, and the rule of the liability of the shipowner for the acts of his servants has been invariably employed, and, inasmuch as the rule of exclusive jurisdiction cannot apply, it seems to me that if a foreigner in this country can be served with a writ for an act of his servants done on the high seas, which are as much within the jurisdiction of England as they are within the jurisdiction of any other country, an action can be maintained in a court of common law.”

In the same case, Lindley, L. J., speaking on the same subject, said:

“What reason is there for saying that Dutch law, as distinguished from English law, or the general maritime law, is td govern such a case? The reason alleged is that, each ship being Dutch, the law of the flag, i. e., the Dutch law, regulates the persons on board each ship, and determines the rights and liabilities of her owners both towards the captains and crews and towards the owners of the cargoes on board. This reason is based on a very common and fruitful source of error, viz., the error of identifying the ships with portions of the territory of the states to which they belong. The analogy is imperfect, and is more often misleading than the reverse, as I have endeavored to point out before. Keg. v. Keyn, 2 Ex. D. 93-94. In this particular case the analogy appears to me more misleading than usual. I am not aware of any decision in this country to the effect that where two ships come into collision on the high seas the rights and liabilities of their respective owners have been held to depend on the laws of the respective [986]*986flags of the ships. The law applicable in this country to cases of collision on the high seas is the maritime law as administered in England, and not the laws of the flags. See The Johann Friederich, 1 Wm. Rob. 35; The Leon, 6 P. D. 148; and Foote on Priv. International Law, pp. 398, 403. According to the maritime law, the defendants, as principals of the captain of the Atjeh, are clearly liable for the consequences of his negligence.”

The contention that the courts of admiralty of Great Britain do not take cognizance of torts for injury to the person committed upon British ships, within the jurisdiction of that country, becomes more or less an unimportant inquiry, if the above position is correct, as this court will not be controlled in its action in that regard. In passing, however, it may be said that the authorities do not appear to be entirely free from conflict. The following English cases seem to support the doctrine of the admiralty jurisdiction in such cases: The Sylph, L. R. 2 A. & E. 24; The Guld Faxe, L. R. 2 A. & E. 325; The Beta, L. R. 2 P. C. 447. And originally, and independently of statute, the courts of admiralty of Great Britain took jurisdiction of cases arising in tort committed upon the high seas. The Ruckers, 4 C. Rob. 73; The Hercules, 2 Dod. 353; The Lagan or Mimah, 3 Hagg. A. D. N. 418; The Volant, 1 Wm. Rob. 383.

The cases questioning this jurisdiction have largely arisen upon the construction of the effect of the seventh section of the British admiralty act of 1861, the language used being: “The High Court of Admiralty shall have jurisdiction over any claim for damages done by a ship.” And the controversy has been over the words, “damage done by any ship,” the claim being to limit the meaning of those words to injuries done by the ship itself, as distinguished from its navigators, personally. The cases chiefly relied on by respondent to support its contention are those of The Vera Cruz, 10 A. Cas. 59-72; The Theta [1894] Prob. Div. 281. While these cases are, in some respects, favorable to the view contended for, in their essential features they afford but little support to the same.

The first-named case was one to recover damages,’ under Lord Campbell’s act, for the loss of the life of libelant in a collision exclusively within the jurisdiction of Great Britain, and it was held that the admiralty court of Great Britain, under the act of 1861, above referred to, did not have jurisdiction in rem to entertain such actions.

The latter case was an action in rem against the ship, and not against her owners, to recover damages for an injury sustained by falling into a hatchway of a ship moored to a British dock. This case turned upon the construction of the seventh section of the act of 1861, above referred to.

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