1. A writ of prohibition will not be issued to a district court
of the United States sitting in admiralty wherein a libel claiming
damages was filed against a steamer for drowning certain seamen of
a vessel with which, as she was navigating the public waters of the
United States, the steamer, as was alleged, wrongfully
collided.
2. That court, having jurisdiction of the steamer and of the
collision which is the subject matter of the snit, is competent to
decide whether, under the circumstances, it may estimate the
damages which one person has sustained by the killing of
another.
The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion of the
Court.
Page 104 U. S. 516
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an application by the owner of the British steamer
Leversons for a writ of prohibition to restrain the
District Court of the United States for the District of Maryland,
sitting in admiralty, from proceeding further in a cause begun in
that court against his vessel to recover damages for the drowning
of certain persons in consequence of a collision on the Chesapeake
Bay between the steamer and the schooner
David E. Wolf,
caused by the fault of the steamer.
Sec. 688 of the Revised Statutes gives this court authority to
"issue writs of prohibition to the district courts when proceeding
in admiralty." The writ thus provided for is a common law writ,
which lies to a court of admiralty only when that court is acting
in excess of or is taking cognizance of matters not arising within
its jurisdiction. 6 Bac.Abr. 587, tit. Prohibition, K. Its office
is to prevent an unlawful assumption of jurisdiction.
The judicial power of the United States extends to "all cases of
admiralty and maritime jurisdiction" (Const., art. 3, sec. 2), and
Congress, by sec. 563, subd. 8, of the Revised Statutes, committed
the exercise of this power in most cases primarily to the district
courts. Admiralty jurisdiction extends to maritime contracts and
service and to torts or injuries of a civil nature committed on
navigable waters.
The Belfast, 7
Wall. 624. The district courts have the power to hear and decide
all cases arising under this jurisdiction, and when a prohibition
is applied for, the question presented is not whether a libellant
can recover in the suit he has begun, but whether he can go into a
court of admiralty to have his rights determined.
The collision which caused the injury now complained of was
certainly a subject of admiralty jurisdiction. It occurred between
two vessels while navigating the public waters of the United
States, and was a maritime tort. For damages to the
Page 104 U. S. 517
vessels or their cargoes, caused by the collision, a suit could
unquestionably be maintained in the district court of any district
where the vessel should be found. The question in the present suit
is whether the vessel is liable to the libellants for pecuniary
damages resulting from a loss of life in the collision, and that,
as we think, a court of admiralty may properly decide. The suit is
for damages growing out of the collision. Having jurisdiction in
respect to the collision, it would seem necessarily to follow that
the court had jurisdiction to hear and decide what liability the
vessel had incurred thereby. Suppose the courts of common law had
never decided that an action could not be maintained at common law
for damages caused by the death of a human being, would anyone
doubt the power of courts of admiralty to determine whether such an
action could be brought in that jurisdiction? It is no doubt true
that down to within a comparatively recent period, the courts of
admiralty both in England and in this country have followed the
rule of the common law in respect to such actions, and have decided
that damages for such wrongs were not recoverable; but since Lord
Campbell's Act in 1846, 9 & 10 Vict., c. 93, it has been
provided by statute in England and in most of the states of the
Union that suits may be brought in the courts of common law for the
benefit of those having a pecuniary interest in the life of one who
has been killed by the wrongful act of another to recover such
damages as they may have sustained in consequence of the wrong that
has been done, and we think it is clearly within the power of the
courts of admiralty to determine whether this legislation has not
wrought a corresponding change in the laws which govern their
jurisdiction.
We have not overlooked the fact that in
Smith v. Brown,
Law Rep. 6 Q.B. 729, decided in 1871, the Court of Queen's Bench in
England, evidently with some hesitation, restrained the Court of
Admiralty from proceeding with such a suit, but in
The
Franconia, 2 P.D. 163, decided in 1877, Sir Robert Phillimore
declined to follow that case, and his action was sustained in the
Court of Appeal by a divided court. The English Court of Admiralty
has asserted its jurisdiction in
The Guldfaxe, Law Rep. 2
Ad. & Ec. 325,
The Explorer, id., 289,
Page 104 U. S. 518
and
The Franconia, supra. We think this case is a
proper one for the application of the rule followed by the Court of
Queen's Bench in
The Charkieh, 8 Q.B. 197, where the
suggestion on an application for a prohibition was that, in a case
of collision between the
Charkieh and the
Batavier, the Court of Admiralty had no jurisdiction,
because the
Charkieh was the property of the Khedive of
Egypt, and was a ship of the Egyptian branch of the Turkish navy,
carrying the Ottoman naval pennant; but Lord Chief Justice
Cockburn, who participated in the decision of
Smith v.
Brown, said, after stating the claims that were made,
"There therefore is a further question whether or not a vessel
belonging to a foreign potentate, but not used as a vessel of state
or a vessel of war, is entitled to the immunity which ships of war,
and ships used for the purposes of government, enjoy. This is a
question peculiarly within the province of the Court of Admiralty
to decide. Why are we to find that the Court of Admiralty cannot
deal with it? If it entertains the suit, there is an appeal to the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, a court of the highest
authority. I feel disinclined to grant a rule for a prohibition in
a case where the facts are in doubt and the court whose
jurisdiction is sought to be impeached is just as competent to
determine the question as we are. . . . But both facts and the law
are within the jurisdiction of the Court of Admiralty, and that
court is perfectly competent to decide them."
And Blackburn, J.:
"It does seem to me that the Court of Admiralty has jurisdiction
to determine the facts and to decide whether international and
maritime laws do allow the circumstances stated to be a defense to
a claim against the
Charkieh, and if that court be wrong,
the Privy Council can set it right, and their decision would be
final. I do not see how it can be said that the Court of Admiralty
is exceeding its jurisdiction in entertaining the suit as a
question of international law, and, taking that view of it, I think
the court ought not to be prohibited."
All the judges concurred in refusing the writ.
So here, the Court of Admiralty has jurisdiction of the vessel
and the subject matter of the action, to-wit, the collision. It is
competent to try the facts, and, as we think, to determine
Page 104 U. S. 519
whether, since the common law courts in England, and to a large
extent in the United States, are permitted to estimate the damages
which a particular person has sustained by the wrongful killing of
another, the courts of admiralty may not do the same thing. If the
district court entertains such a suit, an appeal lies from its
decree to the circuit court, and from there here if the value of
the matter in dispute is sufficient. Under these circumstances, it
seems to us clear that the admiralty courts are competent to
determine all the questions involved and that we ought not to issue
the prohibition asked for.
Petition denied.