The E. B. Ward

16 F. 255
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 16 F. 255 (The E. B. Ward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The E. B. Ward, 16 F. 255 (circtedla 1883).

Opinion

Billings, J.

This is a suit brought by the widow of Peter Peterson, deceased, the father and mother of Gustaf Leander Joussen, deceased, and the mother and sister of Erick Anderson Holm, deceased, claiming damages against the steam-ship E. B. Ward, Jr., which they have respectively suffered by the death of a husband, a son* and a son and brother, tortiously produced by a collision between the bark Henrick with the E. B. Ward, Jr., through the fault of the latter. The collision and deaths took place upon the high seas and within the territory of no nation. One of the colliding vessels, the Henrick, was a Swedish vessel, and the other, the E. B. Ward, Jr., was a vessel of the United States, the home port of which is the port of New Orleans. The damages are laid doubly: (1) As the damages suffered by and surviving from the deceased person; and (2) the damages suffered by and accruing, directly to the libelants, respectively, by the death of their respective relatives. There is no allegation of loss of service after the tortious» act and before death. There is also a claim [257]*257for the loss of personal effects belonging to each of the deceased relatives.

1. So far as relates to the damages suffered by the intestates, which are claimed to have survived to the libelants respectively. The statute of Louisiana stands alone, so far as I have been able to consult the modern statutes, in continuing, in case of a wrongfully-caused death to the next of kin, a right of action for damages caused to a deceased person. The statutes of alb the other countries and states, so far as they have created or allowed actions arising out of the death of other persons, have been for loss or injury which the living members of the family suffered themselves by the death of the family head or family member. The statute of Louisiana (Civil Code, art. 2314) merely qualifies, or rather, so far as concerns husband, wife, children, and parents, supplants, the civil and common-law maxim, actiones per-sonales moriuntur cum persona. I do not think this change in the quality of an action for damages was designed to or could affect the case of persons who as libelants were subjects of the kingdom of Sweden and there domiciled, having no relation to the state of Louisiana, and when the cause of action arose wholly outside of that state. This question would be precisely the same and must have the same answer in the courts of common law and the courts of admiralty. The operation of the statute was intended to be confined to establishing a rulo of survivorship for the government of the community who constitute the state of Louisiana, and could not inelude a cause which did not concern its inhabitants and did not originate within its territory; and, least of all, could it give a lien upon or authorize an action against a vessel. Whitford v. Panama R. Co. 23 N. Y. 465; Mahler v. Tramp. Co. 35 N. Y. 352.

2. The claim for damages suffered directly by the libelants brings up the whole question whether, in case of the death of a person tortiously caused upon the high seas, in the courts of admiralty of the United States an action may bo maintained by next of kin for damages which that death wrought to them. I cannot find that the supreme court of the United States has committed itself at all upon this question. In the Prohibition Case, Ex parte Gordon, 104 U. S. 515, they affirm the jurisdiction, — the power of the admiralty courts to decide this question, — but they guardedly abstain from saying as to whether there could be a recovery. But the courts of common law always had the jurisdiction, and the right to recover was, nevertheless, always denied. Nor has this question been adjudicated in any [258]*258of the district or circuit courts. In The Sea Gull, decided by Chief Justice Chase, page 145 of his Reports, and in The City of Houston, decided by myself, and affirmed by Judge (now Justice) Woods, tlie death happened and the damage arose within the body of the county, upon waters where the statute law of a state within which those waters were situated gave the right of action. The cause of action therefore, existed by force of the territorial statute, and since it constituted a tort, and was upon navigable waters and occurred in a case of collision, the court of admiralty could enforce it in a proceeding in rem.

It is needless to multiply authorities when all are concurrent. But it may be stated that both in the common law and in the admiralty, in the courts of England and th'e United States, except in cases affected by statutes, it has been uniformly held that the death of a person could not constitute a cause for a civil action.

No stronger case could be put than that of Ins. Co. v. Brame, 95 U. S. 759. That case arose in Louisiana. The plaintiffs in error had insured MeElroy’s life. Brame tortiously killed him, whereby the plaintiffs were compelled to pay, and did pay, the amount insured upon his life, and under the law of Louisiana, which provides that (Civil Code, art. 2315) “every act whatever of man that causes damage to another, obliges him by whose fault it happens to repair it,” brought an action for damages, and yet the court rejected the plaintiff’s demand to be indemnified. The ground upon which the decision is put is that the damages of the insurance company were too remote to be allowed. If the supreme court, in construing such a statute, adopt, not the conclusion of the common law, but the reason upon which that conclusion is based, it must follow that'the force of the reason would be the same, and the conclusion the same, in a case coming before it from courts of admiralty. It is equally true that among the Saxons and the tribes of Germany and at Rome, such an action was, to a certain extent, permitted. Ruth. Inst. Nat. Law, book 1, c. 17, § 9; Grotius, Lit. 2, c. 17; and Puff. Law of Nat. book 3, c. 1, § 7.' Puffendorf, perhaps, lays down the limits within which the early law permitted an individual action or suit more clearly than any other writer. He says:

“The unjust slayer was obliged to defray the charge of physicians and ehirurgeons, and to give to those persons whom the deceased was, by a full and perfect duty, bound to maintain, as wife, children, and parents, so much as the hope of their maintenance shall be valued at.”

[259]*259The doctrine of England and the United States, in refusing all private redress, seems to have been established at the early inception of constitutional government in that kingdom. So early as the fourth of James 1., which was in 1607, we find it held by Taneield, J.:

“If a man beat the servant oi J. S., so that lie dies of that battery, the master shall not have an action against the other for the battery and loss of service, because the servant dying of the extremity of the battery it is now become an offense to the crown, and drowns the particular offense and private wrong offered to the master before, and his action is thereby lost.” Higgins v. Butcher, Yelv. 90.

In Baker v. Bolton, 1 Camp. 493, which was an action by a husband for damages for the death of a wife, Lord Ellenboeough stated the law to be that in a civil court the death of a human being cannot be complained of as an injury.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States Fidelity & Guar. Co. v. Reed Const. Corp.
149 So. 2d 578 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1963)
Rundell v. La Campagnie Generale Transatlantique
100 F. 655 (Seventh Circuit, 1900)
City of Houston
5 F. Cas. 773 (S.D. New York, 1873)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 F. 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-e-b-ward-circtedla-1883.