The General Cass

10 F. Cas. 169, 4 Chi. Leg. News 89
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJune 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 F. Cas. 169 (The General Cass) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The General Cass, 10 F. Cas. 169, 4 Chi. Leg. News 89 (E.D. Mich. 1871).

Opinion

LONGYEAR, District Judge.

Tbe question of jurisdiction raised by tbe third article of tbe answer, is:

I. As to tbe waters upon wbicb tbe service was rendered, tbe Saginaw river being wholly within a state, and a tributary merely, emptying into tbe lakes but constituting no part of them, or of their connecting waters.

2. As to tbe character of tbe craft, tbe same being a mere float or lighter, with no means of propulsion of its own, etc.

3. As to the necessity of enrollment and license in order to bring a vessel under tbe admiralty jurisdiction of this court.

First. Since tide water has been ignored as the test of admiralty jurisdiction, under tbe constitution and the judiciary act of 1789 [1 Stat. 73], tbe act of 1845 [S' Stat. 726], purporting to extend a limited jurisdiction in admiralty over the lakes and their connecting waters, no longer has any influence in determining tbe extent of admiralty jurisdiction over tbe northern and northwestern lakes and rivers. Tbe test of such jurisdiction as to tbe waters over wbicb it extends, now is, that they are public navigable waters. Tbe Genesee Chief, 12 How. [53 U. S.] 443; Tbe Eagle, 8 Wall. [75 U. S.] 25. Those waters are navigable in law which are navigable in fact, and those are public navigable waters wbicb are used, or are susceptible of being used, in their ordinary condition, as highways for commerce, over which trade and travel are or may be conducted in tbe customary modes of trade and travel on water. The Daniel Ball, 10 Wall. [77 U. S.] 557.

That Saginaw river, from Saginaw City to its mouth, upon which the towage services are claimed to have been rendered, fully answers the description above given, there is and can be no dispute. It is therefore public navigable water, and is clearly within the admiralty jurisdiction of this court.

Second. The true criterion by which to determine whether any water craft, or vessel, is subject to admiralty jurisdiction, is the business or employment for which it is intended, or is susceptible of being used, or in which it is actually engaged, rather than its size, form, capacity, or means of propulsion. The Kate Tremaine [Case No. 7,G22]; 1 Conk. Adm. 27-30; Ben. Adm. §§ 217-221.

A test is to be applied here similar to that above applied in determining the extent of' admiralty jurisdiction over the waters upon which vessels are used. If the business or employment of vessels appertain to travel, or trade and commerce on public navigable water, it is sufficient, and the jurisdiction attaches. This test is based upon principle, while any test based upon size, form, capacity or means of propulsion must, from the nature of the case, be entirely arbitrary. The former is also certain and reasonably well defined, and hence,, if .generally adopted must have the same application everywhere, while the latter admits of no well defined line of distinction, and, being arbitrary in its application, would be subject to the mere caprice of the different judges by whom it is applied.

The lumber of the Saginaw valley, as an article of commerce, passing down and out of the Saginaw river, on its way to the lumber marts of other states and countries, constitutes one of the greatest interests of its kind in the world, and in its transportation employs vessels of all sizes, forms and capacities, and all kinds of propelling power, from the insignificant scow, like the one here in question, to the largest sized vessels and steamers that float the lakes. The business and employment of each, irrespective of the • accidents of size, form, capacity or propelling power, appertains equally to trade and commerce, and all are therefore equally subject to the-jurisdiction of this court.

Large sized vessels cannot pass out of Sagb naw river with full loads on account of a bar or shoal at the mouth, where it empties into Saginaw Bay. Such vessels, consequently, after taking on part of a cargo in the river, pass out over the bar, and then complete their loading from scows or lighters, upon which it is brought to them. These lighters seldom belong to the vessels, but generally to either the lumber dealers upon the river, or — which is more often the case, and is understood to be the case here — to persons-who own neither vessel nor lumber, but who make this species of transportation their principal or sole business. They have no propelling power of their own, but depend entirely upon being’ towed to and fro by tugs and steamers. The business and employment, therefore, of these scows consisting, as it' does, in the transportation of lumber, an article of commerce, a part of the way on its road to market, by water, clearly appertains to trade and commerce, and thus far, at least, they are clearly within the jurisdiction. But it is said that because they have no propelling power of their own, they are not themselves engaged in navigation, and are. therefore not within the jurisdiction. I do not think this proposition a sound one, for various reasons.

The ajiplication of steam to navigation has upset many of the old theories upon which admiralty jurisdiction was based, and materially modified others. Before this event, commerce upon the water depended almost exclusively upon the utilization of the wind, by means of masts and sails. When steam power made its advent upon the water, it was as a stranger thrust in upon the maritime family,, and-the admiralty courts looked at it askant, and hardly knew where to place it, or whether to recognize it at all. But so rapidly did it gain in favor, and so soon did it obtain a commanding position in the commerce of thé world, that it was speedily taken in and domesticated in the admiralty fold, without further question, let or hin-.-[171]*171drance, on account of its not being graced with the traditional masts and sails, or of its being the mere invention of man, to take tlie place of tlie free winds of beaven.

The use of steam upon the water soon wrought other innovations upon ancient usage, among which was the .use of vessels commonly called barges, with no propelling power of their own — neither the traditional masts and sails, nor steam — having capacity merely, and none of the means of. navigation except the ordinary steering apparatus, depending for locomotion upon steam power, it is true, but applied by means entirely outside themselves. Commerce upon the lakes and rivers of this country is now .largely carried on in this class of vessels; and it is perhaps safe to assume that nearly one-lialf the vast carrying trade in iron, , copper, grain and lumber, upon the great lakes and their tributaries, is now carried on in them; and they are rapidly increasing in numbers and capacity.

This character of craft was also a stranger in the maritime family, and at first was also looked upon with distrust by the admiralty courts. But so prominent a place do these vessels now occupy, that like their progenitor. the steamboat, of which they are in fact, a mere excrescence, they too must be, as they already in fact have been, taken in and domesticated in the admiralty fold. And this jurisdiction is maintainable on principle, as well as from necessity. There is certainly no reason why it is not navigation, all the same whether a vessel is propelled by a steam engine placed within her hull, or by the same engine by means of a tow line. It is, in fact, one of the revolutions wrought by the use of steam, that it has abolished all distinctions as to propelling power in determining admiralty jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 169, 4 Chi. Leg. News 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-general-cass-mied-1871.