Wilkins v. Foss Launch & Tug Co.

147 P.2d 524, 20 Wash. 2d 422, 1944 A.M.C. 759
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1944
DocketNo. 29217.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 147 P.2d 524 (Wilkins v. Foss Launch & Tug Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkins v. Foss Launch & Tug Co., 147 P.2d 524, 20 Wash. 2d 422, 1944 A.M.C. 759 (Wash. 1944).

Opinion

Robinson, J. —

This appeal presents a single but difficult question of law. Two small vessels, while navigating in Puget Sound, came into collision. One was damaged, and her owner brought a tort action at law against the owner of the other. The trial judge, having heard the evidence, announced that he would enter findings holding that both vessels were negligently navigated and enter judgment of dismissal. Thereupon, the plaintiff contended that he was entitled to have the divided damage rule of the admiralty courts applied.

The difference between the rules hitherto applying in admiralty and law actions was concisely stated in the opinion pronounced by the supreme court of the United States in 1893 in the case of Belden v. Chase, 150 U. S. 674, 37 L. Ed. 1218, 14 S. Ct. 264:

*423 “The doctrine in admiralty of an equal division of damages in the case of a collision between two vessels when both are in fault contributing to the collision, has long prevailed in England and this country. The Max Morris, 137 U. S. 1. But at common law the general rule is that if both vessels are culpable in respect of faults operating directly and immediately to produce the collision, neither can recover damages for injuries so caused. Atlee v. Packet Co., 21 Wall. 389.”

The court squarely held, in that case, that the common-law rule should be applied. This court has so held in tort actions at law arising out of a collision between two vessels in navigable waters, in Novak v. Fishermen’s Packing Corp. (1935), 184 Wash. 526, 52 P. (2d) 336; Sea Products Co. v. Puget Sound Nav. Co. (1937), 191 Wash. 276, 71 P. (2d) 43; and so, also, has our ninth circuit court of appeals in Puget Sound Nav. Co. v. Nelson, 41 F. (2d) 356. In that case, decided in 1930, the court said, in its opinion prepared by Judge Rudkin, formerly a chief justice of this court:

“The appellee contends further that contributory fault or negligence on the part of a plaintiff is no bar to a recovery in an action of this kind. The settled rule is otherwise.
“Counsel further contends that this is essentially a case in admiralty and that we should review it as upon an appeal in admiralty. But the appellee electing to prosecute his remedy at law, as he had a right to do, and having done so, we are not now at liberty to review the case as if brought in admiralty. In many cases a plaintiff has a remedy at law and a concurrent remedy in equity or admiralty, but if he proceeds on the law side of the court he cannot, on appeal or writ of error, insist that the case should be reviewed as if brought on the equity or admiralty side of the court.”

The trial court, in dismissing the instant case, relied upon the decisions above cited, and others to the same effect. The appellant says, in his brief, that: “The doctrine relied upon by the trial court had its origin in Belden v. Chase, . . . ” But his own quotation from the opinion in that case shows that this statement is inaccurate, for *424 it contains a citation to the case of Atlee v. Packet Co., 88 U. S. 389, 395, 21 L. Ed. 619, in which the court had said, nineteen years before:

“In the common-law court the defendant must pay all the damages or none. If there has been on the part of plaintiffs such carelessness or want of skill as the common law would esteem to be contributory negligence, they can recover nothing. By the rule of the admiralty court,, where there has been such contributory negligence, or in other words, when both have been in fault, the entire damages resulting from the collision must be equally divided between the parties. This rule of the admiralty commends itself quite as favorably in its influence in securing practical justice as the other; and the plaintiff who has the selection of the forum in which he will litigate, cannot complain of the rule of that forum.”

Furthermore, the so-called doctrine was current and well-understood in the state courts long before the decision in Belden v. Chase. We cite and quote illustrative examples:

“It is an undoubted rule, that, for a loss from mutual negligence, neither party can recover in a court of common law; and, so general is it, that it was applied in Hill v. Warren, 3 Stark. 377; s. c. E. C. L. R. 390, to the negligence of agents, respectively appointed by the parties to superintend the taking down of a party-wall. Courts of admiralty, indeed, decree according to the circumstances, so as to apportion the loss; but certain it is, that a court of law,' whether for its inability to adapt its judgment to the merits of such a case, or whether for any other cause, refuses to interfere at all. ...” Simpson v. Hand (Pennsylvania, 1840), 6 Wharton, 311, 321, 36 Am. Dec. 231, 232.
“But we are satisfied that the Chancellor did err in instructing the jury that they should apportion the damages equally between the owners of the two boats, in case they should believe that both were in fault. . . .
“We are aware that this is the rule in the Admiralty Courts of England, which are governed by the civil law, in cases of a conflict between ships, sailing on the ocean. It is also the rule by the ordinances of many of the kingdoms of continental Europe. And in others, in such cases, the damages are apportioned according to the degree of fault.
“But neither of these rules are adopted by the common *425 law courts of England; but on the contrary, if the conflict and injury was purely accidental and unavoidable, or if the officers of both vessels were in fault, neither can recover. And the common law rule is the rule by which this court and the courts of Kentucky are to be governed.” Broadwell v. Swigert (Kentucky, 1846), 7 B. Monroe, 39, 41, 45 Am. Dec. 47, 49.
“It is proper to say, however, that the admiralty rule adopted by the court below, by which the loss in such a case is divided equally between the parties, does not prevail in the courts of common law, and is inconsistent with common-law principles. When the negligence or fault of the injured vessel contributes to produce the injury, so that the injury results directly from the negligence or fault of both vessels, the common law does not undertake to say how much of it is due to one and how much to the other, and leaves the loss where it falls.” Union Steamship Co. v. Nottinghams (Virginia, 1866), 17 Grattan, 115, 123, 91 Am. Dec. 378, 381.
“The rules of admiralty on the subject of collision do not concur in all respects with those of the common law.

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Bluebook (online)
147 P.2d 524, 20 Wash. 2d 422, 1944 A.M.C. 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkins-v-foss-launch-tug-co-wash-1944.