The Tolchester

42 F. 180, 1890 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 134
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedFebruary 5, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 42 F. 180 (The Tolchester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Tolchester, 42 F. 180, 1890 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 134 (D. Md. 1890).

Opinion

Mobuis, J.

This proceeding was begun by the Tolehester Excursion Company, of Baltimore city, a Maryland corporation, which filed its libel for a limitation of liability on the 80th December, 1889, alleging that it was the owner of the steamer Tolchester on the night of 28th July, 1889, when a collision occurred between that steamer and a small sailboat in the .harbor of Baltimore. The libel further alleges that suits have been instituted in the state courts of Baltimore city against said company by persons claiming to have suffered loss and damage by said collision, for an amount in the aggregate exceeding the value of the steamer and her pending freight. The company, in its libel, denied its liability for any damage resulting from the collision, desiring to contest its liability therefor, and also, if liable, prayed to have the benefit of a limitation of its liability, setting out the facts and circumstances on which it relies, and praying for an order for the appraisement of the steamer and freight, and to be allowed to give a stipulation with sureties for the payment thereof iuto court when ordered, and for a monition warning all persons having claims arising out of the collision-to present the same, and for an order restraining the further prosecution of all suits against the company in respect of all such claims. On January 3, 1890, the court ordered the appraisement to be made; and on January 7th stipulation for $23,150, the amount of the appraised value of the vessel and freight, was given and filed in court. On the 1.3th of .January, it was ordered that notice should be served on the parties who had instituted suits, to show cause why the monition and injunction prayed for in the libel should not be granted, and why they should* not be restrained from prosecuting their suits in the state courts. * '• -

[182]*182The parties upon whom this notice was served are now opposing the granting of the prayer of libelant’s petition, and .for cause they show: (1) That the collision occurred in the harbor of Baltimore, within the limits of the city, and, as respondents contend, was caused by the wrongful act and neglect of libelant and its officers and agents; that the persons who were in the small sail-boat at the time of the collision were Mary Kolb, John Pietz, Annie Kolb, Louis A. Deering, and Mary Weiner, and that the owner of the boat was Frederick Isaacson; that the suits instituted are for the damage to the sail-boat, and for the personal injuries received by Annie Kolb and Louis A. Deering, and also suits under the statute of Maryland for the death of Mary Kolb and John Pietz, who were drowned, and a suijj by the father of Annie Kolb for loss of her services, and that Mary Weiner, who was drowned, left no one living wfho, under the Maryland statute, would be entitled to bring suit for her death. And the respondents allege that these suits embrace every claim which could possibly arise from the collision against the steamer or her owners. They allege that while it was true, when the libel was filed, that the amounts claimed as damages in the suits in the state courts exceeded the amount for which the steamer and her freight has been appraised, since the appraisement and the stipulation therefor was filed in this court the amounts claimed in the suits in the state courts was on January 16th reduced, so that now the aggregate amount claimed is only $22,000, which is less than the appraised value of the interest of libelant in the steamer and freight, and that therefore the libelant is not entitled to proceed to limit its liability. (2) They further show that the steamer was employed exclusively as an excursion steamer, in the internal commerce- of Maryland, and therefore the libelant is'not entitled to a limitation of its liability. (3) They further show' that, in view of the doubt whether claims for damages arising from death by negligence given by the state statute can be made the basis of a suit in the admiralty, this court should refrain from interference until it shall appear that the libelant cannot be protected by pleading the defense of limited liability in the state court.

1. The first objection to the jurisdiction of this court is that the aggregate of the claims for which suit can be brought, conceding that it is a fact that there is no one living who is entitled, under the state statute, to sue for the death of Mary Weiner, does not, as now reduced, exceed the value of the steamer and freight. In our opinion, this question is to be determined by the jurisdictional facts as they existed at the time when the’ court assumed jurisdiction. It may, perhaps, be conceded that the libelants’ proceeding, in its inception, was ex parte, and that up to the time ,of filing the stipulation the court had nothing upon which it could act, and that the libelant might, as of course, have dismissed its libel; but, after the stipulation was filed, there was placed under the court’s, control a fund for distribution in which all parties interested are entitled to share. That fund could not be withdrawn without the consent of all interested; and whether or not the court is entitled to retain that fund., and to exercise the jurisdiction invoked; must be determined by the facts, existing at the time it was placed in the court’s control. If [183]*183at that time the court’s jurisdiction was properly invoked, and it was then the duty of the court to keep it, and adjudicate all the questions as to its distribution, it does not seem possible that the jurisdiction could be divested by the subsequent reduction of the damages claimed in the suits in the state courts. The libelant had acquired a right to have this court proceed with the case, and this court cannot now refuse to do so. Cooke v. U. S., 2 Wall. 218; Mollan v. Torrance, 9 Wheat. 537.

2. The jurisdiction of this court and the applicability of the act of congress is disputed upon the contention that the only power of congress to pass the limited liability act is derived from the commerical clause of the constitution, which is limited to commerce with foreign nations and among the several states. The Tolchester is a large steamer, enrolled and licensed under the laws of the United States for the coasting trade, and licensed to carry 1,200 passengers, and when the collision happened was starting on a voyage on the Patapsco river and Chesapeake bay, within Maryland waters. She was usually employed by her owners on the Patapsco river,’the Chesapeake bay, and Susquehanna river. She was, before the collision, under a contract to make a trip to Fortress Monroe, in Virginia, which she performed after the collision. She was held by her owners for any employment she could get on the Chesapeake bay or any of its tributaries. While on her usual voyages, and on the voyage she had started on when the alleged tort was committed, she was navigating among vessels of all nations. The matters in dispute do not arise upon a contract relating to the purely internal commerce of a state. The claims arise out of an alleged tort committed upon a highway of commerce navigable from the ocean. The Belfast, 7 Wall. 624. As to torts committed upon the Patapsco river, there can be no question that this court has admiralty jurisdiction. It has frequently been held that, by the legislation with regard to the limitation of the liability of ship-owners for such torts, congress has simply declared that the rule prevailing in the admiralty courts of other countries shall prevail in ours, and has merely authorised the admiralty courts to adopt appropriate methods for securing the benefits of that maritime rule to ship-owners of the United States, and of other nations as well. In Norwich Co. v.

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42 F. 180, 1890 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-tolchester-mdd-1890.