The decision in
The City of Norwich, ante 118 U. S. 468, in
relation to the time when the value of the owner's interest in the
ship is to be taken for fixing the amount of his liability, applied
to a case where the offending ship did not sink in consequence of
the collision, but was afterwards sunk and wrecked in the same
voyage by the negligent navigation of those in charge of her, this
sinking being held to be the termination of the voyage.
Page 118 U. S. 521
The decision in the same case as to insurance repeated.
Limited liability may be claimed 1st, merely by way of defense
to an action, or 2d, by surrendering the ship or paying her value
into court. The latter method is only necessary when the shipowner
desires to bring all the credit ors claiming damage into concourse
for distribution.
Page 118 U. S. 523
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case grew out of a collision which occurred on the 25th of
March, 1876, on the high seas, 150 miles from Sandy Hook, between
the Norwegian bark
Daphne, belonging to the appellants and
bound to Marseilles, and the British steamship
Great
Western, belonging to the respondent and
Page 118 U. S. 524
others, and bound to New York. The
Daphne was injured
about $7,000 worth, and the court below found that the
Great
Western was in fault, and was worth $150,000, both before and
immediately after the collision; but that after the collision, and
on the same day, the steamer, while still on her voyage to New
York, was stranded and wrecked on the south coast of Long Island by
the careless navigation and fault of those in charge of her, and
from no cause connected with the collision. No freight was received
by her owners. On the 29th of March, they abandoned her to the
underwriters and received from them insurance to the amount of
34,000 as for a total loss. After this, the wreck and materials
saved were sold for account of the underwriters and by direction of
the owners, and realized $1,796.14. On the 27th of March, 1876, the
libel was filed in this case on account of the owners of the
Daphne, and Whitwill, the respondent, appeared and
answered, denying that the
Great Western was in fault and
claiming that if she should be found in fault, the owner's
liability was limited to the amount or value of his interest in the
vessel and her freight, and that this interest was of no value
whatever, and to this he added, by leave of the court during the
trial, the following words: "And he hereby surrenders the same to
the libellants." He also, during the trial, tendered an assignment
of his interest to the libellants, and offered to give another
assignment to a trustee for the benefit of the libellants under
§ 4285 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. The court
below held that the owners of the
Great Western were only
liable for the proceeds of the wreck, amounting to $1,796.14, and
gave a decree for that amount and interest, and for the costs of
the libellants in the district court.
The errors assigned for the reversal of this decree are
substantially as follows, to-wit:
First. That the limitation of the respondent's
liability to the value of the ship and freight in the condition in
which they were after the stranding and wreck is contrary to the
rule contained in § 4283 of the Revised Statutes.
Secondly. Because the insurance received by the owners
was not included in the value of their interest in the
Page 118 U. S. 525
ship liable to be surrendered in order to obtain a limitation of
liability, and was not taken into account in fixing the measure of
such liability.
Thirdly. Because the court allowed the respondent to
amend his answer by the words "and he hereby surrenders the same to
the libellants," and permitted him to give in evidence his written
surrender of his interest in the steamer to the libellants, and his
offer to make a like surrender to a trustee for the benefit of the
defendants.
Fourthly. Because without proof that the laws of Sweden
and Great Britain are the same on the subject, the only law
applicable to the case was the law of the forum, of which the
general admiralty law forms no part.
The points raised in the first and second assignments have been
already discussed and decided in the case of
The City of
Norwich, ante, 118 U. S. 468.
There is nothing peculiar in the present case, unless it be that
the
Great Western was not sunk or wrecked by means of the
collision, but afterwards, by the carelessness of her master or
crew. This can make no difference. We showed in the opinion
referred to that the termination of the voyage is the point of time
at which the value of the offending vessel is to be taken. The
voyage in the present case was not terminated until the vessel was
sunk and stranded on the Long Island coast. The carelessness of the
master and crew cannot vary the result. It is against their faults
and negligence that the law was intended to protect the ship owner,
provided the loss and damage sustained were caused without his
privity or knowledge.
The third assignment of error cannot be maintained, because the
evidence referred to therein, which the court allowed to be given
on the trial, could not affect the result; nor was the amendment of
the answer material. The answer, as originally framed, set up the
defense that the liability of the respondent was limited to the
amount or value of his interest in the
Great Western and
her freight upon the voyage, and averred that that interest was of
no value. The issue being thus raised, the respondent was entitled
to have the decree against him in that cause limited to the amount
which should be shown, by the proofs on the trial, to be the value
of said steamer and
Page 118 U. S. 526
freight at the termination of the voyage. He did not need to
make any surrender or attempt at a surrender. A surrender of the
vessel, or payment of her proceeds or value into court, would have
been necessary in order to bring other creditors into concourse
with the libellants, but for the mere defense of that cause, it was
not necessary. This disposes of the supposed difficulty in making
an abandonment to the libellants after a surrender of abandonment
to the insurers -- a difficulty which we have already shown to be
groundless in the opinion referred to.
The fourth assignment of error is not well taken, because the
case was altogether decided according to the maritime law of this
country, which is the law of the forum.
The decree of the circuit court is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE MILLER,
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, and MR. JUSTICE GRAY, dissenting.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER, MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, MR. JUSTICE GRAY, and
myself are unable to concur in the opinion and judgment of the
Court in the three cases just disposed of. The importance of the
question decided justifies a statement of the grounds of this
dissent.
The principal question, stated generally, involved in all the
cases is whether, under §§ 4282 to 4285, inclusive, of
the Revised Statutes, being reenactments of §§ 1, 3, and
4 of the Act of March 3, 1851, limiting the liability of ship
owners so that for the losses specified it shall not in any case
exceed the amount or value of the interest of such owner in such
vessel and her freight then pending, that value shall be estimated
as including or excluding any sum received or receivable by the
ship owner on account of insurance upon his interest in the vessel
or freight.
Although that is the main question in all the cases now decided,
the circumstances which give rise to it in them respectively
Page 118 U. S. 527
differ in some important particulars, a consideration of which
will throw light upon the principle according to which it is to be
determined.
The case of
The Scotland (Dyer v. National Steam Nav.
Co.) was a libel
in personam in a cause of collision,
for the loss of the ship
Kate Dyer, run down on the high
seas by the fault of the steamship
Scotland, of which the
respondents were owners. A former appeal in the same case, decided
by this Court, is found reported under the name of
The
Scotland, 105 U. S. 24. The
Kate Dyer was sunk immediately, and the steamship
Scotland sunk soon after, from the effects of the
collision, and was a total loss, a portion of the wreck being
saved. It was held on the former hearing that the respondents were
entitled to the benefits of the statute limiting their liability.
The decree for the several libellants amounts in the aggregate to
$255,047.70. It is also found that the
Scotland, at the
time of the collision was worth �100,000, was insured to the
amount of �63,500, and that within nine months after the
collision the respondents had received the amount thereof, equal to
$299,867.42; but that the value of the articles saved from the
wreck is the sum of $4,927.85, which the decree ascertains to be
the amount for which alone the respondents are liable.
The case of
The Great Western (Thommessen v. Whitwell)
was a cause of collision, in which the loss of the bark
Daphne was found to be from the fault of the steamship
Great Western, of which the respondents were owners, the
libel being against them
in personam. The libellants were
domiciled subjects of the Kingdom of Norway and Sweden, and the
respondents of Great Britain. The libellants were found to have
sustained damages from the injuries to the bark by the collision in
the sum of $7,023.44, and the value of the steamship, both before
and after the collision, until her subsequent stranding, was from
$140,000 to $150,000. After the collision, while on the same voyage
to New York, the steamship was stranded and wrecked from a cause in
no way growing out of or connected with the collision, by the
careless navigation and fault of the persons in charge of her.
Immediately thereafter the owners of the steamship made an
abandonment of her to various underwriters,
Page 118 U. S. 528
who had insured her to the amount of �34,000, which was
paid by them to the owners as a total loss. There was saved from
the wreck materials which, on sale, realized to the owners
$1,796.14. The decree limited the liability of the respondents to
this amount.
The remaining case of
The City of Norwich Place &
Others, libellants, Claimants of the Schooner General S. Van Vliet
and of the cargo, against The Norwich & New York Transportation
Company presents other features. The collision in this case
was caused by the negligence of the steamboat
City of
Norwich, owned by the appellees. Immediately after the
collision, the steamboat took fire, her deck and upper works were
burned off, and she sunk in about twenty fathoms of water. Her
cargo of merchandise was thereby totally lost. The steamboat itself
was raised by salvors, and taken to the port of New York, where she
was repaired. On May 9, 1866, less than a month after the disaster,
William A. Wright and others, owners of the schooner, filed in the
District Court for Connecticut a libel
in personam against
the appellees, as owners of the steamboat, and obtained a decree
for the loss of the schooner and her cargo for $26,657.28, which,
on appeal to this Court, was affirmed, and will be found reported
in
80 U. S. 13 Wall.
104. On August 23, 1866, while that suit was pending in
Connecticut, and after the steamboat had been raised, repaired, and
brought into the port of New York, two of the appellants, George
and Charles Place, as owners of part of the cargo on the steamboat,
filed their libel
in rem against her in the district court
of the Eastern District of New York. Other libels
in rem
by other owners of cargo were also filed. The steamboat was seized
under process in these suits, and the appellees intervened as
claimants, an appraisement was ordered, and a stipulation for the
appraised value in the sum of $70,000 having been given, the
steamboat was released to them. This appraisement was of the value
of the vessel, in her condition at the time after the repairs had
been made. Decrees were entered in favor of the libellants in all
these cases. In July, 1872, after the final decision by this Court
in the case of
Norwich and New York
Transportation Co. v. Wright, 13 Wall. 104, on
appeal from the Circuit Court for the District of
Page 118 U. S. 529
Connecticut, and after, the decrees in the District Court for
the Eastern District of New York in the proceedings
in
rem, the owners of the steamboat, the present appellees, filed
their petition in the last-named court, praying for the benefit of
the act limiting their liability. Such proceedings were thereupon
had that an appraisement was made of the value of the steamboat in
the condition and situation in which she was after the collision,
and before she was raised, and it was found to be $2,500; being the
difference between $25,000, her value when raised, and $22,500, the
amount expended in raising her. A decree was finally entered in the
circuit court, on appeal, limiting the liability of the appellees
to this amount, and it was distributed among the libellants, after
refunding to the appellees $1,008.41, part thereof, for their costs
in the litigation. The decree thereupon also perpetually enjoined
all the libellants who had obtained decrees in their favor in the
suits
in rem in the Eastern District of New York from the
enforcement of those decrees, and thus deprived them of their right
to recover against the stipulators, who had filed a stipulation in
the sum of $70,000 to answer the decrees in those causes. So that
in these cases the owners are exonerated from all personal
liability in excess of the sum of $2,500, but have received back
their vessel free and discharged from all liens established by the
decrees against her
in rem in the Eastern District of New
York. It is also found as a fact that when the collision occurred
the steamboat was insured against fire, but not against marine
disaster, and of the insurance money the appellees have recovered
and received from the underwriters the sum of $49,283.07.
It thus appears that in one case the owners of a vessel, whose
fault caused a loss to others of more than $250,000, escape all
liability over $5,000, having received more insurance than
necessary to pay the whole amount of the loss; in another, the
owners are repaid the whole value of the vessel in insurance, and
are exonerated from a decree against them of over $7,000 on payment
of less than $2,000, and in the other, the owners keep their vessel
discharged from all liens, and receive nearly $50,000 of insurance
with which to repair and restore her, and relieve themselves of all
liability on account of losses decreed
Page 118 U. S. 530
against them, to the amount of over $26,000, on payment of less
than $2,000. The question is whether these results can be justified
by a reasonable interpretation of the law limiting the liability of
ship owners.
The question is now for the first time decided by this Court.
None of its previous decisions have expressly or by implication
involved it. It is true, however, that in the opinion of the Court
in
Norwich Company v.
Wright, 13 Wall. 104,
80 U. S. 117,
in stating the rule of the maritime law of the states of
continental Europe, limiting the liability of ship owners to their
interest in their ship and its freight, the passage from Pardessus
is quoted, Droit Commercial, part 3, tit. 2, c. 3, § 2, as
follows:
"The owner is bound civilly for all delinquencies committed by
the captain within the scope of his authority, but he may discharge
himself therefrom by abandoning the ship and freight, and if they
are lost, it suffices for his discharge to surrender all claims in
respect of the ship and its freight,"
and, it is added by the court, "such as insurance," &c. The
court then further said:
"The same general doctrine is laid down by many other writers on
maritime law, so that it is evident that by this law the owner's
liability was coextensive with his interest in the vessel and its
freight, and ceased by his abandonment and surrender of these to
the parties sustaining loss."
But the question of including insurance in the estimate of the
value of the owner's interest in the ship and freight, and whether
it followed the surrender of the latter to the parties sustaining
loss, was not directly involved, and the expression of an opinion
to that effect must be taken to be casual, and
obiter
dictum merely. Inasmuch, act of Congress of 1851, which is the
law of the case, may be supposed to have adopted the rule of
liability fixed by it, in view of what was believed to be the rule
of the general maritime law of continental Europe, the quotation
from Pardessus, and the application of it to the instance of
insurance, as an incident which is involved in the surrender of the
ship or in the estimate of its value, is not without significance.
It is some evidence, indeed, of the very view of the rule of the
maritime law which may have been in the contemplation of Congress
when it passed the act
Page 118 U. S. 531
of 1851, and proof to that extent of the meaning of that act.
And this is rendered more reasonable from the fact that Baron
Parke, in
Brown v. Wilkinson, 15 M. & W. 396, seems to
have taken the same view as to the foreign maritime law. In that
case, he said it was contended by counsel that the effect of the
statute, 53 Geo. III. c. 159, § 3,
"was to give to British shipping all the protection which the
navigation of some foreign states extended to theirs, and this
protection goes to the extent of permitting the owners at the end
of the voyage, to give up the vessel in its then state, by way of
satisfaction to the parties injured, and if it be lost, the owners
are altogether exempt, on abandoning the benefit of insurance, if
any, and salvage."
If, now, on a more critical and extended inquiry into the
maritime law of the modern states of continental Europe, it should
appear that the opinion of Pardessus, as quoted in the case above
cited, was not universally accepted, and that the codes and
commentators of various of those states differ in their legislation
and interpretation of the general maritime law on the subject, it
would not necessarily follow that Congress, in passing the act of
1851, may not have intended to adopt the rule as stated by
Pardessus, and those who agreed with him, rather than that now
insisted on as more generally prevailing.
There was, in fact a controversy among writers on commercial and
maritime law, both in France and Germany on the point. The opinion
of Pardessus coincided with that of Valin, while Emerigon, who was
followed by Boulay-Paty and others, maintained the opposite
opinion. This controversy was settled for French law by an
amendment to article 216 of the Code de Commerce, which expressly
excluded insurance from the abandon of ship and freight, in
exoneration of the ship owner from his liability, though the debate
seems to be reopened as a consequence of additional legislation by
Art. 17 of the law of December 10, 1874, which, in case of loss of
the ship through becoming unnavigable or otherwise, allows
subrogation in favor of hypothecation creditors. It also appears
that the Prussian Code, adopted in 1794, and continued in force
until 1862, provided expressly that, "when the ship has been
insured, the right against the insurer must also be ceded to
creditors," and,
Page 118 U. S. 532
applying the principle to the particular case now under
consideration, Kaltenborn, in a treatise on the subject, published
at Berlin in 1851, says:
"The Roman law, which held the owner absolutely liable, with all
his property, is nowhere put in practice, and was not current as
early as the Middle Ages. Indeed, the Consulate of the Sea, cc.
183, 224, 236; the law of Wisbuy, reasoning from Arts. 13 and 68;
that of the Hanse Towns, reasoning from article 2, Title X, render
the owners, as a rule, answerable only to the extent of the ship's
value, and the modern maritime laws free the owners, by the abandon
of the ship and their several shares in the vessel, from all
further liability for the ship enterprise, particularly for the
acts and contracts of the captain. In the ship are included all
gains arising during the voyage, as well as the insurance. Should
the ship and the freight have perished, it is sufficient for
exoneration of the owners if all claims and causes of action having
reference to the vessel and freight are abandoned by them."
This was the law of Prussia in 1851, when the act of Congress of
that year on the subject was passed, and continued to be so until
March 1, 1862, when the Prussian Code was superseded by that of the
Germanic Confederation, which omitted any provision on the subject,
overruling the proposals of the Prussian delegates to the
contrary.
This statement of the contemporary law of modern continental
Europe on the point is condensed from the very able and learned
brief in these cases, prepared and submitted by Mr. Harrington
Putnam, one of the counsel, who supports it by elaborate extracts
and translations from foreign writers on the subject, whose
citations have not in any way been questioned or impugned by
opposing counsel, and have therefore been relied on as accurate. He
states the further fact that, besides Holland, two other countries
-- Belgium, by a law of June 19, 1885, and Finland, Maritime Code
of 1874, Art. 17 -- have expressly enacted that the insurance shall
not be comprised in the ship owner's abandon to creditors. The
inference is that there was nothing in the maritime law of
continental Europe in 1851 which justifies the conclusion that
Congress must have intended to exclude insurance from the surrender
required of the
Page 118 U. S. 533
ship owner to limit his liability, but, on the contrary, the
argument is strong, if not convincing, from the examples of
European codes, that it would require express language to effect
that exclusion, if such was the intention.
But whatever bearing the foreign law may be thought to have upon
the meaning of the statute, it is clear that the latter must be
interpreted in the light of the antecedent domestic law which it
modified and displaced. What that was is not a matter of
dispute.
The passage of the Act of March 3, 1851, was no doubt due to the
decision of this Court in the case of
New
Jersey Steam Navigation Co. v. Merchants' Bank, 6
How. 343, where it was held that in admiralty, as at common law,
the owners of a steamboat were liable
in personam for the
loss by fire of specie carried by their boat, notwithstanding a
contract of exemption, the loss having occurred from want of
ordinary care on the part of those engaged in the navigation of the
vessel.
Accordingly, it was provided, in the first section of the Act of
March 3, 1851, that owners of vessels should not be liable for
losses by fire, of goods carried by them, unless such fire was
caused by the design or neglect of the owner himself, with a
proviso, now omitted from the corresponding § 4282 of the
Revised Statutes, that the parties, nevertheless, might extend or
limit the liability of ship owners by "making such contract as they
please."
A reference to the debates in Congress upon the bill during its
progress will show that this was the only provision which excited
any comment, and while allusion was made to English legislation on
the subject of limiting the liability of ship owners, and to the
statutes of Massachusetts and Maine on the same subject, there was
no mention whatever made of any supposed rule of general maritime
law prevailing on the subject in continental Europe, and no
explanation of the expected operation and effect of the provision
fixing the limit of liability at the value of the interest of the
owner in the ship and freight, and of the effect of a surrender of
the vessel and freight in exonerating the ship owner from any
recovery beyond that limit.
In all cases of liability covered by the statute, there were
Page 118 U. S. 534
provided by the existing law of admiralty jurisdiction a remedy
against the vessel itself
in rem when it could be seized,
and the alternative remedy
in personam against the owners.
There was no limit to their liability, but, as in other cases of
personal liability, all property of the defendants was subject to
process in payment of the judgment or decree. The procedure
in
rem has for its object the enforcement of a liability which by
the maritime law is a lien upon the vessel, which is a
jus in
re, and is treated as a proprietary right, capable of being
realized by judicial process.
Ward v.
Chamberlain, 2 Black 430;
Vandewater
v. Mills, 19 How. 82;
The
Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558. And in cases of torts, as
well as in many cases of contract, where the general owner has
entrusted a special owner or charterer with authority to bind the
ship, but not himself, the vessel is treated by the maritime law as
an actor and juridical person, capable of committing wrongs, and is
pursued as a delinquent without regard to ownership or agency.
The China, 7
Wall. 53;
Malek Adhel, 2
How. 210. And when the liability is not only a lien on the vessel,
but a claim against the owner personally, if satisfaction is not
secured by process
in rem, the deficiency may be made good
by proceedings
in personam.
The subject matter of the Act of March 3, 1851, was the personal
liability of ship owners to answer for the losses specified, and
its limitation. It does not deal with the liability of the vessel
itself to answer
in rem for such losses, as it had no
occasion to do, for the sole purpose of the act was to limit the
personal liability of owners, so that it should not exceed the
value of the ship and freight. It left the vessel, therefore, to be
proceeded against
in rem precisely as before, leaving that
procedure entirely untouched and unaffected. There is nothing
whatever in the statute to forbid parties having suffered from its
fault from prosecuting the offending vessel as a
res to
the full extent, as previously authorized by the maritime law, and
with all the necessary consequences. On the contrary, the act
proceeds throughout on the assumption of that right and liability.
It only adds that, in cases where the owners are not personally
guilty of the alleged wrong, on taking the steps pointed
Page 118 U. S. 535
out in the law, there shall be no recovery against them
personally in excess of the value of their interest in the ship and
freight. The act only operates as a limitation upon the personal
liability of the owners, as distinguished from the liability of the
offending vessel itself.
This seems to us very clear, and yet, in the case of
The
City of Norwich, the libellants have been perpetually enjoined
from prosecuting their decrees actually obtained against the
steamboat
City of Norwich, because the owners have
obtained under the statute a release from their personal liability
on account of its wrong. It is not to the purpose to say that, in a
proceeding against the vessel, its appraisement included the cost
of raising and repairs put upon it by the owners, which ought not
to have been included, for that is a question which could only
properly have been litigated in the case in which the decree
complained of was rendered. Besides, it is difficult to see on what
grounds an owner can rightfully complain, who has voluntarily
raised his sunken vessel and repaired her, that those having
maritime liens upon her seek to enforce them; or how he can claim,
as against them, a prior or any lien on his own vessel for raising
and repairing her. And we think it is quite plain that it was an
error in the decree appealed from to deprive the libellants, who
had obtained their decrees against the vessel, from prosecuting
them to their legitimate results, when the whole force of the
statute authorizing the proceeding is expended in a limitation of
the recovery in suits against the owner
in personam.
It is not to be assumed, however, that because the proceeding
in rem remains unaffected by the act of 1851, the personal
liability of owners in proceedings against them
in
personam is restricted to the same extent as it would be if
the proceeding
in rem were declared to be the sole remedy,
for that would be to declare that, in all the cases within the
purview of the act, when a proceeding
in rem could be
brought against ship or freight, or the proceeds of either, there
should be no personal liability of the owner, and no proceeding
in personam against him. But the statute does not proceed
upon the idea that, in such cases, the personal liability of the
owner is
Page 118 U. S. 536
altogether superseded by the proceeding
in rem, but
only that it is restricted within certain expressed limits, on
compliance with certain definite conditions. In all cases the owner
must surrender the vessel and its pending freight, or their value,
whereas, in many -- such as suits for pilotage and for damage by
collision -- no process
in rem against freight is given by
the 14th and 15th rules in admiralty, such as is authorized by the
12th and 13th in suits by materialmen and for mariners' wages. So
that the statute is not to be treated as if it confined the
recovery of the party suffering loss strictly to what he might
obtain by a proceeding
in rem against the vessel alone. It
therefore does not conclude the inquiry to say that, in a
proceeding
in rem against the vessel, the libellant had no
lien which he could follow on any policies of insurance taken out
by the owners, or the proceeds of any such when payable or paid.
The question still recurs, what does the statute of Congress
require the owner to give up or account for, as a condition of his
release from personal liability for the loss and wrong suffered by
the libellant?
For the same reason, it is irrelevant and immaterial to say that
the policy of insurance, taken out by the owner on his interest in
the ship or freight, is a contract of personal indemnity,
collateral to his ownership, which does not pass by operation of
law with a transfer of the title to the thing which is the subject
of the insurance, and to the benefit of which those having liens on
the thing are not entitled, in case of its loss, on the principle
of subrogation. All that may be true; but, if it is, it
nevertheless remains to ascertain whether, recognizing the owner's
independent right to recover for his own use insurance accruing to
him by the loss of its subject, the statute has not said that he
shall not have the privilege of release and exoneration from his
personal liability for injuries inflicted by his agents and
representatives, except upon the condition, as a price for its
purchase, that he shall voluntarily surrender, as the value of his
interest in the vessel and freight, whatever they have procured for
him of pecuniary advantage, including the insurance money
recoverable for their loss.
The language of the statute Rev.Stat. § 4283, Rev.Stat., is
that "the
Page 118 U. S. 537
liability of the owner of any vessel," &c., in the cases
described, "shall in no case exceed the amount or value of the
interest of such owner in such vessel and her freight them
pending." By § 4285 it is enacted
"that it shall be deemed a sufficient compliance on the part of
such owner with the requirements of this title . . . if he shall
transfer his interest in such vessel and freight, for the benefit
of such claimants, to a trustee; . . . from and after which
transfer all claims and proceedings against the owner shall
cease."
It was decided in the case of
The Scotland,
105 U. S. 24, that
it is not necessary that ship owners should surrender and transfer
the ship in order to entitle them to the benefit of the law. That
is only one mode of relief. In the alternative, they may retain
their interest in the ship, abiding a decree for the value of the
ship and freight as ascertained by the court upon the proofs. But
this double method of executing the purpose of the statute does not
imply and difference in the estimated amount of the possible
recovery. The limit of that, in every case, is the value of the
owner's interest in the ship and freight, and is the same whether
he makes an actual transfer, or whether he submits himself
personally to the payment of the ascertained amount.
The question, then, upon the statute is reduced to this: whether
the insurance money payable or paid to the owner, in case of the
loss of or damage to the ship, is to be included in the estimate of
the value of the owner's interest in it. And that question turns,
as we think, on another, and a very simple one: whether the value
of the owner's interest in his lost or damaged ship, in the sense
of the statute, means its money value to him, computed with
reference to every pecuniary advantage and benefit it brings to
him, or whether it means the price brought by the material things
which remain when put to sale to the best bidder, leaving him still
in possession of all those legal rights springing out of and
supported by his interest in it, which, as a case of insurance, or
a right of action against the cause or instrument of its loss, may
result in restoring to him in money its full original value. It is
true that the act declares that a transfer of the owner's interest
in the ship and
Page 118 U. S. 538
freight shall be sufficient compliance with its conditions, and,
by construing this with narrow and literal exactness, this transfer
may be confined to the mere wreck and physical remnant of the
broken ship, or, if sunk to the bottom of the sea, the mere
spes recuperandi. But this construction, we think,
haeret in cortice. The whole language of the act must be
taken together, and nothing less will satisfy its meaning or its
policy than such a transfer or payment as will include the full
money value to the owner of his interest in the ship, which the
statute requires him to sacrifice in order to purchase the immunity
which it bestows on that condition alone; for the policy of the act
was to encourage investments in ships by limiting losses from the
risks of navigation to the amount and value of the investment, and
that includes the insurance recovered by force of a premium which,
when paid, constitutes part of the investment, the insurance money
itself being the produce of the investment, which restores it when
lost or impaired. Insurance adds to the ship a value of its own, by
imparting to the subject of insurance the quality of reproducing
itself or its value in case of injury or loss. it was the policy of
the act to encourage the shipping interest by a protection against
the unlimited personal liability of ship owners for the acts and
defaults of their agents and representatives, with reasonable
regard to the rights and interests of others engaged in the same
pursuit, and not to put a premium on its destruction by taking away
from ship owners a principal motive for regarding either their own
or the interests of others, and the language of the statute seems
to us, not only to bear such a meaning, but fairly to imply it; for
certainly every pecuniary advantage or profit which the ownership
of a thing actually secures by necessary operation of law may be
estimated to ascertain the value of the thing to its owner. The
insurance, which in case of damage or loss repairs and restores the
vessel, or stands in its place, and is its produce and earning,
being the purchase money paid for it by virtue of the contract
which assumes the risks insured against, is strictly an accessory
of the ship insured, as much so as the freight which she earns, and
the express mention of the latter, as part of the
Page 118 U. S. 539
interest to be transferred, is not to be held as excluding
insurance because not expressly mentioned, for the reason that the
mention of freight is sufficient to characterize the nature of the
owner's interest to be valued, as including, not merely the
material remnants of the broken or sunk vessel
in specie,
but as well that which it produces, and which is in truth her
representative, and of which it is the meritorious cause and
consideration; for the insurance is the price paid by the insurer
to the insured as the purchase
pro tanto of the thing
insured, when damaged or lost, and, in the hands of the owner, or
due to him, still remains as the value of an interest in the ship
as that existed when damaged or lost, and ought to be accounted for
as part of that value, as much so as freight paid, though no longer
freight money in kind, must still be valued and accounted for by
the owner who has received it. The insurance money is the interest
of the owner in the ship reduced to money, and therefore most
accurately measures its value; for, in cases of total loss, actual
or constructive, all interest of the owner, even though it be a
mere
spes recuperandi, on payment of the insurance money,
passes by operation of law to the insurer. Yet that very interest,
thus the property, on abandonment or payment of a total loss, the
title to which passes to the insurer, is the same interest the
value of which, by the terms of the statute, must be decreed to the
libellant to exonerate the owner from personal liability to any
additional extent.
An effort was made in argument by counsel to restrict the
meaning of the words "the interest of such owner," as used in
§ 4283, so as merely to distinguish between the several
liabilities of part owners; but there is no foundation for this.
The words are used as well with reference to the interest of a
single owner as of part owners, where there are more than one. It
means, we are constrained to believe, and naturally suggests not
merely the naked title of the owner to the physical materials which
constitute the ship, or its wreck, or its remnants, but every
interest in, attached to, or growing out of it, capable of
pecuniary valuation and measurement, so as to include every right
of action accruing to its owner, by contract
Page 118 U. S. 540
or by operation of law, growing out of its ownership, or any
damage or loss previously occasioned to it by others; embracing
rights of actions against others for torts causing the injury, if
any there be, and upon policies of insurance or other contracts of
indemnity, taking effect in consequence of or notwithstanding the
loss. Suppose, for instance, that, after the collision which gave
to the libellants the lien and right to proceed against the
offending vessel for the loss and damage, the latter had been
effectually sold, while still pursuing her voyage, and the title
transferred to a purchaser, would not the purchase money, either in
the hands of the vendor when paid, or in those of the vendee until
paid, notwithstanding the subsequent total loss of the ship itself
during the same voyage before reaching her home port, be the
measure of the value of the owner's interest to the full amount of
which the injured party might recover? It seems to us there can be
but one answer to that question, and that in the affirmative. It
seems to us equally clear that no distinction can be drawn between
the case just supposed and that of insurance. For the policy of
insurance in cases of total loss is analogous to a contract of
sale, by which the ship, or what remains of her, or the hope of her
recovery, become, on the happening of the contingency, the property
of the insurer, and the insurance money payable, the price, as upon
a conveyance. In both cases, the interest of the owner is
transferred from the thing to the money which represents it, and
stands in place of it, and the money is the measure of the value of
the interest of the owner in the thing, for it is the price and
equivalent paid for it. We cannot bring ourselves to think that
that Congress intended, by limiting the personal liability of the
ship owner, in cases where previously his whole fortune was
responsible for the wrongs committed through his agents and
representatives, to the value of his interest in the ship, which
was the instrument of the injury, to permit the innocent party
suffering the damage to go entirely without redress, when the
vessel in fault, by disaster subsequently happening during the
whole period of the same voyage, has been totally lost, and the
owner, by a contract in force when the wrong was done, receives
Page 118 U. S. 541
full compensation by way of insurance for the loss he has
incurred, and has thus restored to him the offending vessel, not
indeed
in specie, but in value. It seems to us it is the
meaning of the statute that the owner shall receive no pecuniary
benefit from his interest in the vessel doing the wrong which shall
not inure to the compensation of him who has suffered the loss
which it has caused. And that meaning Congress has taken pains to
express by the use of the word "interest" as the subject which, or
the value of which, the owner must surrender and transfer or
account for, as the price of his immunity from personal liability,
because it is appropriate to convey the idea, being large enough to
embrace, not the mere legal title to the vessel or the wreck and
remnant of her which may be saved from the perils of the voyage,
but every claim and benefit which constitutes to the owner its
substance and value, capable of measurement in money.