The Steamer St. Lawrence

66 U.S. 522, 17 L. Ed. 180, 1 Black 522, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 510
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 17, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by89 cases

This text of 66 U.S. 522 (The Steamer St. Lawrence) 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 Steamer St. Lawrence, 66 U.S. 522, 17 L. Ed. 180, 1 Black 522, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 510 (1862).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice TANEY.

This is an appeal from the decree of the Circuit Court for the southern district of New-York, sitting as a court of admiralty.

The case as presented by the transcript is this: The appellees in the summer and fall of 1855 were requested by John Graham, the owner of the steamer St. Lawrence, who resided in New York, to make sundry repairs to the vessel, and to furnish materials for that purpose.. The steamboat was then lying in the harbor of New" York, which was her home port. The libel states that at the time these repairs were made, and materials found, the laws of New York gave them a lien for the amount on the vessel; and they pray that the steamer may be condemned and sold to satisfy their claim. The application for process against the vessel was founded upon the 12th rule of admiralty practice, prescribed by this court in 1844, (3 How.,) which authorized this mode of proceeding, where the local law gave a lien upon the vessel for supplies on repairs in a domestic- poH- This rule was altered at December term, 1858, and process in rem denied to the party unless a lien was given by the maritime law. The alteration took effect on the 1st of May, 1859, (21 How.,) and the libel in this case was filed, while the former rule was still in force.

There is no question as to' the amount due, the proctor for the claimants having assented to the report of the commissioners. But the claimants allege in their answer, that these materials were furnished and repairs made upon the personal credit of Graham, and t-hat the libellants accounted with him, and took his notes for the amount after the work was done. They allege further, that they afterwards purchased the vessel from Graham in good faith, and without notice of this claim; and insist, that as the lien claimed is not created by the maritime, law, but solely by a statute of New York, it cannot be *526 enforced in a court of admiralty, because a statute of a State cannot enlarge the jurisdiction of a court of the United States.

With reference to the last mentioned objection, it may be proper to notice it, more particularly as it is founded upon a misconception of the object and effect of the rules above mentioned.

The objection is founded upon the assumption,' that these rules involve a question as to the extent of the admiralty jurisdiction granted by the Constitution. And as the court could not, consistently with its duty, refuse to exercise a power with which it was clothed by the Constitution and laws, the appellants insist that the alteration made by the rule in 1858 must be regarded as an admission that the court had fallen into error when it adopted the rule of 1844, and had exercised a jurisdiction beyond its legitimate boundary; and if the admiralty court had not the right to enforce a State lien in a ease of this kind, the rule then in force could not enlarge its jurisdiction, nor authorize, the decree of the Circuit Court which supported and enforced this lien.

The argument would be unanswerable, if the alteration related to jurisdiction; for the court could not, consistently with i1s duty, refuse to exercise a power which the Constitution and law had clothed'it, when its aid was invoked by a party who was entitled to demand it as a matter of right.

But there is a wide difference between the power of the court upon a question of jurisdiction and its authority over its mode of proceeding and process. And the alteration in the rules applies altogether to the character of the process to be used in certain cases, and has no relation to the question of jurisdiction.

Judicial power, in all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, is delegated by the Constitution to the Federal Government in general- terms, and courts of this character had then been established in all commercial and maritime nations, differing, however, materially in different countries in the powers and duties confided to them; the extent of the jurisdiction conferred depending very much upon the character of the government in which they were created; and this circumstance, *527 with the general terms of the grant, rendered it difficult to define the exact limits of its power in the United States.

This difficulty was increased by the complex character of our Government, where separate and distinct specified powers of sovereignty are exercised by the United States and a State independently of each other within the same territorial limits. And the reports of the decisions of this court will show that the subject has often been before it, and carefully considered, without being able to fix with precision its definite boundaries; but certainly no State law can enlarge it, nor.can an act of Congress or rule of court make it broader than the judicial power may determine to be its true limits. And this boundary is to be ascertained by a reasonable and just construction of the words used in the Constitution, taken in connection with the whole ins trument, and the purposes for which admiralty and maritime jurisdiction was granted to the Federal Government..

Yet Congress may undoubtedly prescribe the forms and mode of proceeding in the judicial tribunals it establishes to carry this power into execution; and may authorize the court to proceed by an attachment against the property, or by the arrest of the person,-as the Legislature shall deem most expedient to promote the purposes of justice.

A brief history of the legislation of Congress upon this subject will explain the grounds upon which the rule of 1844 was adopted, and also the reason that induced the court to change it; and will also show that ño question of jurisdiction was supposed to be. involved in the adoption of the original rule, nor in the change that was afterwards made.

After the passage of the judiciary act of 1789, Congress, at the same session, passed the act prescribing the process to be used in the different courts it had just established, (1 Stat., 93;) and by that act directed that, in the courts of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, the forms and modes of proceeding should be according to the course of the civil law.

This, act left no discretionary power in the admiralty courts, or in the Supreme Court, in relation to the modes and forms of proceeding. And it is-evident, that if the courts of admiralty in this country used the process in rem, or process by *528 attachment of the property, in. all cases in which it was authorized in countries governed by the civil law,, it would unavoidably in some cases come in collision with the common law courts of the State where the parties resided, and where the property was situated, and where other parties besides, the owners or builders, or equippers of the ship, might have an interest in, or a claim upon, the property, which they had a right to assert in the courts of the State.

But this difficulty was soon seen and removed. And by the act of May 8, 1792, (1 Stat., 275,) these forms and modes of proceeding are to be according to the principles, rules, and usages which belong to courts of admiralty, as contradistinguished from courts of common law.

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

Related

No. 93-1426
19 F.3d 1136 (Seventh Circuit, 1994)
Zych v. Unidentified, Wrecked & Abandoned Vessel
19 F.3d 1136 (Seventh Circuit, 1994)
Paley v. Coca Cola Company
209 N.W.2d 232 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1973)
Dowling v. Isthmian S.S. Corporation
184 F.2d 758 (Third Circuit, 1950)
Garrett v. Moore-Mccormack Co., Inc.
317 U.S. 239 (Supreme Court, 1943)
Doherty v. Kalmbach
87 F.2d 539 (D.C. Circuit, 1936)
In re King
11 F. Supp. 351 (W.D. Tennessee, 1935)
Detroit Trust Co. v. the Thomas Barlum
293 U.S. 21 (Supreme Court, 1934)
Woodbury v. Andrew Jergens Co.
61 F.2d 736 (Second Circuit, 1932)
The Denelfred
59 F.2d 213 (E.D. Michigan, 1932)
Panama R. v. Johnson
289 F. 964 (Second Circuit, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 U.S. 522, 17 L. Ed. 180, 1 Black 522, 1861 U.S. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-steamer-st-lawrence-scotus-1862.