Steam Vessel Moses Taylor v. Hammons

32 How. Pr. 460
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 15, 1866
StatusPublished

This text of 32 How. Pr. 460 (Steam Vessel Moses Taylor v. Hammons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steam Vessel Moses Taylor v. Hammons, 32 How. Pr. 460 (U.S. 1866).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Field

delivered the opinion of the court. This case arises upon certain provisions of á statute of California regulating proceedings in civil cases in the courts of [472]*472that state (Laws of California, of 1851, p. 51). The sixth chapter of the statute relates to actions against steamers, vessels and boats, and provides that they shall be liable—■ 1st. For services rendered on board of them, at the request of, or on contract with their respectice owners, agents, masters or consignees ; ‘2d. For supplies furnished for their use upon the like request; 3d. For materials furnished in their construction, repair or equipment; 4th. For their wharfage and anchorage within the state; 5th. For non-performance or mal-performanee of any contract for the transportation of persons or property, made by their respective owners, agents, masters or consignees; 6th. For injuries committed by them to persons or property; and declares that these several causes of action shall constitute liens upon the steamers, vessels and boats, for one year after- the causes of action shall have accrued, and have priority in the order enumerated, and preference over all other demands. The statute also provides, that actions for demands arising upon any of these grounds, may be brought directly against the steamers, vessels or boats, by name; that process may be served on the master, mate or any person having charge of the same; that they may be attached as security for the satisfaction of any judgment which may be recovered; and that if the attachment De not discharged, and a judgment be recovered by the plaintiff, they may be sold, with them tackle, apparel and furniture, or such interest therein as may be necessary, and the proceeds applied to the payment of the judgment.

These provisions, with the exception of the clause designating the order of priority in the liens, and their preference over other demands, were enacted in 1851; that clause was inserted by an amendment in 1861).

In 1863, the steamship Moses Taylor, a vessel of over one thousand tons burthen, was owned by Marshall O. Roberts, of the city of New York, and was employed by him in navigating-the Pacific ocean, and in'carrying passengers and freight between Panama and San Francisco. In October of that year, the plaintiff in the court below, the defendant in [473]*473error in tins court, entered into a contract with Roberts, as owner of this steamship, by which, in consideration of one hundred dollars, Roberts agreed to transport him from Hew York to San Francisco, as a steerage passenger, with reasonable dispatch, and to furnish him with proper and necessary food, water and berths or other conveniences for lodging, on the voyage. The contract, as set forth in the complaint, does not in terms provide for transportation on any portion of the voyage by the Moses Taylor, but the case was tried upon the supposition that such was the fact, and we shall, therefore, treat the contract as if it specified a transportation by that steamer on the Pacific, for the distance between Panama and San Francisco. For alleged breach of this contract the present action was brought, under the statute mentioned, in a court of a justice of the peace, held within the city of San Francisco. Courts held by justices of the peace, were at that time by another statute, invested with jurisdiction of these cases, where the amount claimed did not exceed two hundred dollars, except where the action was brought to recover seamen’s wages for a voyage performed in whole or in part, without the waters of the state (Laws of California of 1853, p. 287, and of 1856, p. 133).

.The agent for the Moses Taylor appeared to the action, and denied the jurisdiction of the court, insisting that the cause of action was one over which the courts of admiralty had exclusive jurisdiction, and also traversed the several matters alleged as breaches of the contract.

The justice of the peace' overruled the objection to his jurisdiction, and gave judgment for the amount claimed. On appeal to the county court, the action was tried de novo upon the same pleadings, but in all respects as if originally commenced in that court. The want of jurisdiction there, and the exclusive cognizance of such causes of action by the courts of admiralty, were again urged, and were again overruled, and a similar judgment to that of the justice of the peace was rendered. The amount of the judgment was too small to enable the owner of the steamer to take the case by [474]*474appeal to the supreme court of the state. That court has no appellate jurisdiction in cases where the demand in dispute, exclusive of interest," is under three hundred dollars, unless it involve the legality of a tax, impost, assessment, toll or municipal fine (Constitution of the State, art. 6, § 4, as amended 1862). The decision of the county court was the decision of the highest court in the state which had jurisdiction of the matter in controversy. From that court, therefore, the case is brought here by writ of error.

The' case presented is clearly one within the admiralty and maritime juris diction of the federal courts. The contract for the transportation of the plaintiff was a maritime contract. As stated in the complaint, it related exclusively to a service to be performed on the high seas, and pertained solely to the business of commerce and navigation. There is no distinction in principle between a contract of this character and a contract for the transportation of merchandize. The same liability attaches upon then execution, both to the owner and the ship. The passage money in the one case, is equivalent to the freight money in the other. A breach of either contract is the appropriate subject of admiralty jurisdiction.

The action against the steamer by name, authorized by the statute of California, is a proceeeding in the nature and with the incidents of a suit in admiralty. The distinguishing and characterestic feature of such suit is, that the vessel or thing proceeded against itself, is seized and impleaded as the defendant, and is judged and sentenced accordingly. It is this dominion of the suit in admiralty over the vessel or thing itself, which gives to the title made under its decrees' validity against all the world. By the common law process, whether of mesne attachment or execution, property is reached only through a personal defendant, and then only to the extent of his title. Under a sale, therefore, upon a judgment in a common law proceeding, the title acquired can never be better than that possessed by the personal defendant. It is his title, and not the property itself, which is sold.

The statute of California, to the extent in which it autho[475]*475rizes actions in rern against vessels for causes of action cognizable in the admiralty, invests her courts with admiralty jurisdiction, and so the supreme court of that state has decided in several cases. In Averill agt. The Steamer Hartford (2 Cal. 308), the court thus held, and added that “ the proceedings in such actions must be governed by the principles and forms of admiralty courts, except where otherwise controlled or directed by the act.”

This jurisdiction of the courts of California, was asserted and is maintained upon the assumed ground that the cognizance by the federal courts “ of civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction,” is not exclusive, as declared by the ninth section of the judiciary act of 1789.

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Bluebook (online)
32 How. Pr. 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steam-vessel-moses-taylor-v-hammons-scotus-1866.