The San Pedro

223 U.S. 365, 32 S. Ct. 275, 56 L. Ed. 473, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2240, 1999 A.M.C. 1514
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 19, 1912
Docket155
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 223 U.S. 365 (The San Pedro) 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 San Pedro, 223 U.S. 365, 32 S. Ct. 275, 56 L. Ed. 473, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2240, 1999 A.M.C. 1514 (1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lurton

delivered the opinion of the court.

In an independent libel proceeding instituted in the *371 District Court by the owner of the steamer George W. Elder, against the Metropolitan Lumber Company, the claimant of the steamer San Pedro, the libellant, recovered a decree for services rendered in towing her to port after she had been injured in a collision with the steamer Columbia off the coast of California. This decree was rendered at a timé when there was pending in the same court a separate proceeding for limitation of liability brought by the Metropolitan Lumber Company, as owner of the San*Pedro.

■ Before coming to the substantial questions, we may notice certain objections to any judgment which shall operate to set aside the decree in favor of the appellees. It is said that the appellant does not assail the decree in respect to its merits or the amount of the allowance; that nothing but further delay, expense and inconvenience will result if appellees are required to present and again prove the claim ill the liability cause; and, finally, it is said that the pendency of the other suit was not pleaded until the case was about to be heard upon immaterial objections to the commissioner’s report.!

Conceding all that can be said about the expense, delay and inconvenience which will .result if the salvage claimants are to be required to present their claim in the limited liability base, yet far greater confusion must result if such objections aré enough to defeat the manifest object .of the fifty-fourth rule. This court, in furtherance of the apparent purpose, of Congress to limit the liability of vessel owners (Revised Statutes, §§ 4283-5), has, ,by. that rule, prescribed how an owner may avail himself of the benefit of the statute. The very nature of the proceeding is such that it must be exclusive of any separate suit against an owner on account of the ship. The monition which issues when the vessel has been surrendered, and a stipulation entered into to pay the value into court, requires, every person to assert his claim in that case.

*372 The appellant, owner of the San Pedro, appears to have proceeded strictly in compliance with the fifty-fourth admiralty rule. There was a due appraisement of the San Pedro and her pending freight and a stipulation entered into, with sureties, for the value so appraised, and a monition duly issued, requiring all persons to present their claims and make proof. In that situation, the jurisdiction of the court to hear and determine every claim in that proceeding became exclusive. It was then the duty of every other court, Federal or state, to stop all further proceedings in separate suits upon claims to which the limited liability act applied.

Nor is the issuance of an injunction necessary to stop proceedings in separate or independent suits upon such claims. Power to grant an injunction exists under § 4285, Revised Statutes, when necessary to maintain the exclusiveness of the jurisdiction; but when the procedure provided by rule 54 has been followed and a monition has issued “against all persons claiming damages . . . citing them to appear before said court and make proof of their respective claims,” etc., it is the duty of every other court, when the pendency of such a liability petition is pleaded, to stop. The very nature of the proceeding and the monition has the effect of a statutory injunction. •Indeed, that is the express declaration of the statute.

The view we take of the statutory injunction declared by § 4285,. Revised Statutes, and of its application to caSes where the vessel has been surrendered and a stipulation entered into as provided .by admiralty rule 54, as a proceeding tantamount to a “transfer” of the ship as authorized by § 4285, Revised Statutes, is fully supported by the leading case of Providence & N. Y. S. S. Co. v. Hill Mfg. Co., 109 U. S. 578, 594, 599, 600 and 601. That was a suit in a state court against the owner of a steamship to recover for goods lost by the burning of a steamer. While the suit-was pending the owner filed his petition *373 in the proper District Court for the benefit of the limited liability statute. The proceedings seem to have been conducted in accordance with admiralty rule 54, but, in addition, the. petitioners made application, as permitted by that rule, for an order restraining the prosecution of “all and any suits” against the owner in respect of claims subject to the provisions of the act. The owner and defendant in the suit pending in the state court thereupon, by plea, set up the limited liability suit as a reason why the state court should proceed no further. This was overruled. Later the defendant therein pleaded the final decree in the liability suit as a bar to any decree in the state court against him, as owner. This, too, was disregarded,.and a decree rendered against the owner for the claim for damages caused by the burning of the steamer and the plaintiff’s goods. This was affirmed in the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts and brought here upon ■writ of error. After a consideration of the meaning and purpose of vthe limited liability act of 1851 (March 3, 185Í, 9. Stat. 635, c. 43), §§ 4283, 4284 and 4285, Revised Statutes, and of admiralty, rule 54, the court said (p. 594):

“We have deemed it proper to examine thus fully the foundation on which the rules, adopted in December term, 1871,- were based, because, if those rules are valid and binding (as we deem them to be), it is hardly possible to read them in connection with thé act of 1851 without perceiving that after proceedings have been commenced in the proper district court in pursuance thereof, the prosecution pari passu of distinct suits in different courts, or even in the same court by separate claimants, against the ship owners, is, and must necessarily be, utterly repugnant ,to such proceedings, and subversive of their object, and purpose,”

Later, the court added (pp.,599, 600):

“ Proceedings under the act having been duly instituted in .this court, it acquired full, jurisdiction of the subject- *374 matter; and having taken such jurisdiction, and procured control of the vessel and freight (or their value), constituting the fund to be distributed, and issued its monition to ■all parties to appear and present-their claims, it became the duty of all courts before which any of such claims were prosecuted, upon being properly certified of the proceedings, to suspend further action upon said claims.”

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“The operation of the act, in this behalf, cannot be regarded as confined to cases of actual ‘transfer,’ (which is merely allowed as a sufficient compliance with the law), but must be regarded, when we consider its reason and equity and the whole scope of its provisions, as extending to cases in which what is required and done is tantamount to such transfer; as where the value of the owners’ interest is' paid into court, or secured by stipulation and placed under its control, for the benefit of the parties interested.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 U.S. 365, 32 S. Ct. 275, 56 L. Ed. 473, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2240, 1999 A.M.C. 1514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-san-pedro-scotus-1912.