The "Atlas."

93 U.S. 302, 23 L. Ed. 885, 3 Otto 302, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1386
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 27, 1876
Docket47
StatusPublished
Cited by167 cases

This text of 93 U.S. 302 (The "Atlas.") 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
The "Atlas.", 93 U.S. 302, 23 L. Ed. 885, 3 Otto 302, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1386 (1876).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Clifford

delivered the opinion of the court.

Owners of ships and vessels are not liable, under existing laws, for any loss, damage, or injury by collision, if occasioned without their privity or knowledge, beyond the amount of their interest in such ship or vessel and her freight pending at the time the collision occurred.

Subject to that provision in the act of Congress, the damages which the owner of the injured vessel is entitled to recover are estimated in the same manner as in suits for injuries to other personal property, and the claim for compensation may, in certain cases, extend to the loss of freight, necessary expenses in making repairs, and unavoidable detention.

Restitutio in integrum is the leading maxim in such casesj and where’ repairs' are practicable, the rule followed by the admiralty courts, in such a case is, that the damages assessed *308 against the respondent shall be' sufficient to restore the injured vessel to the condition in which she was at the time the injury was inflicted. The Clyde, Swabey, 24; The Gazelle, 2 W. Rob. 280; The Baltimore, 8 Wall. 385; Williams & Bruce, Prac. 77; 1 Pars on Ship. 538; TTie Pactolus, Swabey, 174.

Sufficient appears in the record to show that the libellants became the insurers of the cargo of the canal-boat named in the libel, consisting of linseed, in the sum of $14,500, for a voyage from the port of New York to the port of New Brunswick, in the State of New Jersey;, that the canal-boat, with her cargo on board, was taken in tow at the port of departure by the steam-tug called the “Kate;” that the steam-tug, with her tow, including the canal-boat and two other vessels, proceeded in safety to New Brighton, where the whole, flotilla remained until the next -morning, when they started for the port of destination, the steam-tug heading north-west by north, and taking her course across the kills directly for Port Johnson, on the Jersey shore; that the steam-tug with the canal-boat and the two other vessels in tow kept that course until she was within one hundred and fifty yards of the shore, when the master, being then- in the pilot-house, heard the whistle of a steamboat about one-tenth of a mile distant; that it was a single blast, being the signal that the respective boats as they approached should pass to port; that the master of the steam-tug having the canal-boat in tow answered the signal by blowing his whistle twice, which is the proper signal that the boats should pass to starboard, it being unsafe for him, owing to the state of the tide and the conformation of the adjacent shore, to attempt to pass the approaching vessel on the port side; that the signal given was the-proper one; and the charge is, that the master of the steam tug immediately starboarded his helm, and that the approaching vessel, which -proved to be the steam-tug the “ Atlas,” within a minute ran into the steám-tug having the. canal-boat in tow, with great force and violence, staving her in from her plank-shear to the third plank below her- water line, which caused the steam-tug- and canal-boat' she had in tow to sink, .-whereby the cargo of the canal-boat became a total loss; and the libellants also charge, that the loss was wholly •occasioned through .the fault, negligence, and want of skill of *309 those in charge of the approaching steam-tug. The Friends, 4 Moore, P. C. C. 319.

Process was served, and the claimants appeared and filed an answer, setting up the several defences alleged in the record. Testimony was taken on both sides, and, the parties having been fully heard, the District Court entered an interlocutory decree that the damages claimed by the libellant were caused by the mutual fault of the steam-tug “ Kate ” and the steamboat “ Atlas,” and that the libellants do recover against the steamboat “ Atlas ” one-half of the damages by them sustained by reason of the collision, and that the cause be referred to a commissioner to ascertain the amount.

Pursuant to the decretal order, the commissioner reported that the whole amount of the damages to the date of the report was $13,617.02, and that the libellants were entitled to recover one-half of that sum; to wit, $6,808.51.' Exceptions were filed by the libellants to that report, upon the ground that they are entitled to the entire amount of the damages sustained; but the court overruled the exception, confirmed the report, and entered a final deeree in conformity with the report. Both parties appealed to the Circuit Court, where the parties having been again fully heard, the Circuit Court entered a final decree affirming the decree of the District Court, and both parties appealed to this court.

Since the appeal was entered here, the parties have been fully heard, and they have filed in the cause a written stipulation vto the effect following: 1. That the claimants insist only that the deeree of the Circuit Court should be affirmed, the parties agreeing that the collision occurred through the mutual fault of the steamboats “ Atlas ” and “ Kate.” 2. That the libellants admit that both the steamboats were in fault, but insist that they are entitled to recover for their full loss, and that the decree, being for a moiety only, should be reversed on that account, and that a decree- should be entered for the entire damages that the owners of the cargo of the canal-boat sustained by the collision.

Other questions involved in the record being waived; the court will confine its attention to the single inquiry, whether the ruling of the court below in overruling the exception of *310 the libellants to the report of the commissioner is or is not correct.

Satisfaction to the libellant for the injury sustained is the time rule of damages in a cause of collision, by which is meant that the measure of compensation shall be equal to the amount of injury received, and that the same shall be calculated for the actual loss occasioned by the collision, upon the principle that the sufferer is entitled to complete indemnification for his loss, without any déduction for new materials used in making repairs, as' is prescribed in the law of marine insurance. Complete recompense for the injury is required; nor is the guilty party in such a case entitled to deduct from the amount of the damages any sum which the libellant has received from- an underwriter on account of the same injury, the rule being, that a wrong-doer in such a case cannot claim the benefit of the contract of insurance if effected by the person whose property he has injured. Maude & P. on Ship. (3d-ed.) 465; Flanders on Ins. 591.

Instead of that, the law is well settled, that the reception of the'amount of the loss from the insurers is no bar to an action subsequently commenced against the wrong-doer to recover compensation for t-heinjury occasioned by the collision. Mason v. Sainsbury, 3 Doug. 61.

Authorities to that effect are numerous; and it was expressly decided by the judges, in Yates v. Whyte et al., 4 Bing. N. C.

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Bluebook (online)
93 U.S. 302, 23 L. Ed. 885, 3 Otto 302, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-atlas-scotus-1876.