In the absence of an act of Congress or a statute of a state
giving a right of action therefor, a suit in admiralty cannot be
maintained in the courts of the united states to recover damages
for the death of a human being on the high seas or on waters
navigable from the sea which is caused by negligence.
If a suit
in rem can be maintained in admiralty against
an offending vessel for the recovery of damages for the death of a
human being on the high seas or on waters navigable from the sea
which is caused by negligence when an action at law is given
therefor by statute in the state where the wrong was done or where
the vessel belonged (which is not decided), it must be commenced
within the period prescribed by the state statute for the beginning
of process there, the time within which the suit should be
commenced operating as a limitation of the liability created by
statute, and not of the remedy only.
The following is the case, as stated by the Court.
This is a suit
in rem begun in the District Court of
the United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania on the
25th of February, 1882, against the steamer
Harrisburg by
the widow and child of Silas E. Rickards, deceased, to recover
damages for his death, caused by the negligence of the steamer in a
collision with the schooner
Marietta Tilton on the 16th of
May, 1877, about one hundred yards from the Cross Rip light ship in
a sound of the sea embraced between the coast of Massachusetts and
the Islands of Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket, parts of the State
of Massachusetts. The steamer was engaged at the time of the
collision in the coasting trade, and belonged to the port of
Philadelphia, where she
Page 119 U. S. 200
was duly enrolled according to the laws of the United States.
The deceased was first officer of the schooner and a resident of
Delaware, where his widow and child also resided when the suit was
begun.
The statutes of Pennsylvania in force at the time of the
collision provided that
"Whenever death shall be occasioned by unlawful violence or
negligence, and no suit for damages be brought by the party injured
during his or her life, . . . the husband, widow, children, or
parents of the deceased, and no other relative, . . . may maintain
an action for and recover damages for the death thus occasioned. .
. . The action shall be brought within one year after the death,
and not thereafter."
Brightly's Purdon's Dig., 11th ed., 1267, §§ 3-5; Act
April 15, 1851, § 18; Act April 6, 1855, §§ 1,
2.
By a statute of Massachusetts relating to railroad corporations,
it was provided that
"If, by reason of the negligence or carelessness of a
corporation, or of the unfitness or gross negligence of its
servants or agents while engaged in its business, the life of any
person, being in the exercise of due diligence, . . . is lost, the
corporation shall be punished by a fine not exceeding five thousand
nor less than five hundred dollars, to be recovered by indictment,
and paid to the executor or administrator for the use of the widow
and children. . . . Indictments against corporations for loss of
life shall be prosecuted within one year from the injury causing
the death."
Mass.Gen.Stats. 1860, c. 63, §§ 97-99; Stat. 1874, c.
372, § 163.
No innocent parties had acquired rights to or in the steamer
between the date of the collision and the bringing of the suit.
Upon this state of facts, the circuit court gave judgment
against the steamer in the sum of $5,100 for the following
reasons:
"1. In the admiralty courts of the United States, the death of a
human being upon the high seas, or waters navigable from the sea,
caused by negligence, may be complained of as an injury, and the
wrong redressed, under the general maritime law."
"2. The right of the libellants does not depend upon the
Page 119 U. S. 201
statute law of either the State of Massachusetts or
Pennsylvania, and the limitation of one year in the statutes of
these states does not bar this proceeding."
"3. Although an action in the state courts of either
Massachusetts or Pennsylvania would be barred by the limitation
expressed in the statutes of those states, the admiralty is not
bound thereby, and in this case will not follow the period of
limitation therein provided and prescribed. The drowning complained
of was caused by the improper navigation, negligence, and fault of
the said steamer, producing the collision aforesaid, and the
libellants are entitled to recover."
"4. As there are no innocent rights to be affected by the
present proceedings, and no inconvenience will result to the
respondents from the delay attending it, the action, if not
governed by the statutes aforesaid, is not barred by the
libellant's laches."
15 F. 610.
From that decree this appeal was taken.
Page 119 U. S. 204
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE, after stating the case as above
reported, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question to be decided presents itself in three aspects,
which may be stated as follows:
1. Can a suit in admiralty be maintained in the courts of the
United States to recover damages for the death of a human being on
the high seas, or waters navigable from the sea, caused by
negligence, in the absence of an act of Congress or a statute of a
state giving a right of action therefor?
2. If not, can a suit
in rem be maintained in admiralty
against an offending vessel for the recovery of such damages when
an action at law has been given therefor by statute in the state
where the wrong was done, or where the vessel belonged?
3. If it can, will the admiralty courts permit such a recovery
in a suit begun nearly five years after the death, when the statute
which gives the right of action provides that the suit shall be
brought within one year?
It was held by this Court, on full consideration, in
Insurance Co. v. Brame, 95 U. S. 756,
"that by the common law no civil action lies for an injury which
results in death."
See also Dennick v. Railroad Co.,
103 U. S. 11,
103 U. S. 21.
Such also is the judgment of the English courts, where an action of
the kind could not be maintained until Lord Campbell's Act, 9 &
10 Vict. c. 93. It was so recited in that act, and so said by Lord
Blackburn in
The Vera Cruz, 10 App.Cas. 59, decided by the
House of Lords in 1884. Many of the cases bearing on this question
are cited in the opinion in
Insurance Co. v. Brame. Others
will be found referred to in an elaborate note to
Carey v.
Berkshire Railroad, 1 Cush. 475, in 48 Am.Dec. 616, 633. The
only American cases in the common law courts against the rule to
which our attention has been called are
Cross v. Guthery,
2 Root, 90;
Ford
Page 119 U. S. 205
v. Monroe, 20 Wend. 210;
James v. Christy, 18
Mo. 162, and
Sullivan v. Union Pacific Railroad, 3 Dillon
334.
Cross v. Guthery, a Connecticut case, was decided in
1794, and cannot be reconciled with
Goodsell v. Hartford &
New Haven Railroad, 33 Conn. 55, where it is said:
"It is a singular fact that by the common law the greatest
injury which one man can inflict on another, the taking of his
life, is without a private remedy."
Ford v. Monroe, a New York case, was substantially
overruled by the Court of Appeals of that state in
Green v.
Hudson River Railroad, 41 N.Y. 294, and
Sullivan v. Union
Pacific Railroad, decided in 1874 by the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of Nebraska, is directly in conflict
with
Insurance Co. v. Brame, decided here in 1878.
We know of no English case in which it has been authoritatively
decided that the rule in admiralty differs at all in this
particular from that at common law. Indeed, in
The Vera Cruz,
supra, it was decided that even since Lord Campbell's Act, a
suit
in rem could not be maintained for such a wrong.
Opinions were delivered in that case by the Lord Chancellor
(Selborne), Lord Blackburn, and Lord Watson. In each of these
opinions, it was assumed that no such action would lie without the
statute, and the only question discussed was whether the statute
had changed the rule. In view, then, of the fact that in England,
the source of our system of law and from a very early period one of
the principal maritime nations of the world, no suit in admiralty
can be maintained for the redress of such a wrong, we proceed to
inquire whether, under the general maritime law as administered in
the courts of the United States, a contrary rule has been or ought
to be established.
In
Plummer v. Webb, 1 Ware, 75, decided in 1825, Judge
Ware held, in the District Court of the United States for the
District of Maine, in an admiralty suit
in personam,
that
"the ancient doctrine of the common law, founded on the
principles of the feudal system, that a private wrong is merged in
a felony is not applicable to the civil polity of this country, and
has not been adopted in this state,"
(Maine), and that
"a libel may
Page 119 U. S. 206
be maintained by a father, in the admiralty, for consequential
damages resulting from an assault and battery of his minor child, .
. . after the death of the child, though the death was occasioned
by the severity of the battery,"
but the suit was dismissed because upon the evidence it did not
appear that the father had in fact been damaged. The case was
afterwards before Mr. Justice Story on appeal, and is reported in 4
Mason 380, but the question now involved was not considered, as the
court found that the cause of action set forth in the libel and
proved was not maritime in its nature.
We find no other reported case in which this subject was at all
discussed until
Cutting v. Seabury, 1 Sprague 522, decided
by Judge Sprague in the Massachusetts District in 1860. In that
case, which was
in personam, the judge said that
"The weight of authority in the common law courts seems to be
against the action, but natural equity and the general principles
of law are in favor of it,"
and that he could not consider it "as settled that no action can
be maintained for the death of a human being." The libel was
dismissed, however, because on the facts, it appeared that no cause
of action existed even if, in a proper case, a recovery could be
had. The same eminent judge had, however, held as early as 1849, in
Crapo v. Allen, 1 Sprague 185, that rights of action in
admiralty for mere personal torts did not survive the death of the
person injured.
Next followed the case of
The Sea Gull, Chase's Dec.
145, decided by Chief Justice Chase in the Maryland District in
1867. That was a suit
in rem by a husband to recover
damages for the death of his wife caused by the negligence of the
steamer in a collision in the Chesapeake Bay, and a recovery was
had, the Chief Justice remarking that
"There are cases, indeed, in which it has been held that in a
suit at law no redress can be had by the surviving representative
for injuries occasioned by the death of one through the wrong of
another, but these are all common law cases, and the common law has
its peculiar rules in relation to this subject, traceable to the
feudal system and its forfeitures,"
and
"it better becomes the humane and liberal character of
proceedings in admiralty to give than to withhold the remedy when
not required to withhold it by established
Page 119 U. S. 207
and inflexible rules."
In his opinion, he refers to the leading English case of
Baker v. Bolton, 1 Camp. 493, where the common law rule
was recognized and followed by Lord Ellenborough in 1808, and to
Carey v. Berkshire Railroad, 1 Cush. 475, to the same
effect, decided by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in 1848, and
then says that "in other states, the English precedent has not been
followed." For this he cites as authority
Ford v. Monroe,
supra, decided in 1838, but which, as we have seen, had been
overruled by
Green v. Hudson River Railroad in 1866, only
a short time before the opinion of the Chief Justice was delivered,
and
James v. Christy, 18 Mo. 162, decided by the Supreme
Court of Missouri in 1853. The case of
The Highland Light,
Chase's Dec. 150, was before Chief Justice Chase in Maryland about
the same time with
The Sea Gull, and while adhering to his
ruling in that case, and remarking that
"The admiralty may be styled, not improperly, the human
providence who watches over the rights and interests of those 'who
go down to the sea in ships, and do their business on the great
waters,'"
he referred to a Maryland statute giving a right of action in
such cases, and then dismissed the libel because on the facts no
liability was established against the vessel as an offending
thing.
Afterwards, in 1873, MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD, then the judge of
the District Court for the Southern District of New York, sustained
a libel by an administrator of an infant child who took passage on
the steamer
City of Brussels with his mother at Liverpool,
to be carried to New York, and while on the voyage was poisoned by
the carelessness of the officers of the vessel, and died on board.
The City of Brussels, 6 Benedict 370. The decision was
placed on the ground of a breach of the contract of carriage.
The next case in which this jurisdiction was considered is that
of
The Tonawanda, 34 Leg.Int. 394, decided by Judge
McKennan in the Circuit Court for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania in 1877, and before the judgment of this Court in
Insurance Co. v. Brame, supra. In that case,
Page 119 U. S. 208
the ruling of Chief Justice Chase in
The Sea Gull was
approved, and the same authorities were cited, with the addition of
Sullivan v. Union Pacific Railroad supra.
In
The Charles Morgan, 2 Flip. 274, before Judge Swing
in the Southern District of Ohio on the 24th of October, 1878, the
subject was again considered. That was a suit
in rem, by
the wife of a passenger on a vessel to recover damages for the
death of her husband, and in deciding upon the sufficiency of a
plea to the jurisdiction, the judge, after quoting a remark of Mr.
Justice Clifford in
Steamboat Co. v.
Chase, 16 Wall. 532, that "difficulties, it must be
conceded, will attend the solution of this question, but it is not
necessary to decide it in this case," retained the libel
because,
"as the case at bar will probably go to the Supreme Court of the
United States, it will be better for all parties that the appeal
should be taken after a trial upon its merits."
Our decision in
Insurance Co. v. Brame was announced on
the 21st of January, 1878, but was evidently not brought to the
attention of the judge, because, while citing quite a number of
cases to show that the weight of authority was in favor of the
English rule, he makes no reference to it. Indeed, it is probable
that the volume of the reports in which it appears had not been
generally distributed when his opinion was filed.
It thus appears that prior to the decision in
Insurance Co.
v. Brame, the admiralty judges in the United States did not
rely for their jurisdiction on any rule of the maritime law
different from that of the common law, but on their opinion that
the rule of the English common law was not founded in reason, and
had not become firmly established in the jurisprudence of this
country. Since that decision, the question has been several times
before the circuit and district courts for consideration. In
The David Reeves, 5 Hughes, 89, Judge Morris, of the
Maryland District, considering himself bound by the authority of
The Sea Gull, which arose in his district, and had been
decided by the Chief Justice in the circuit court, maintained
jurisdiction of a suit
in rem by a mother for the death of
her son in a collision that occurred in the Chesapeake Bay. He
conceded, however, that this was contrary to the
Page 119 U. S. 209
common law and to the admiralty decisions in England, but as the
question had never been passed on in this Court, he yielded to the
authority of the circuit court decision in his own district.
The case of
Holmes v. Oregon & California Railway,
5 F. 75, was decided by Judge Deady, in the Oregon district, on the
28th of February, 1880, and he held that a suit
in
personam could be prosecuted in admiralty against the owner of
a ferry boat engaged in carrying passengers across the Wallamet
River, between East Portland and Portland, for the death of a
passenger caused by the negligence of the owner. He conceded that
no such action would lie at common law, but as in his opinion the
civil law was different, he would not admit that in admiralty,
"which is not governed by the rules of common law," the suit could
not be maintained. His decision was, however actually put on the
Oregon statute, which gave an action at law for damages in such a
case, and the death occurred within the jurisdiction of the state.
Judge Sawyer had previously decide, in
Armstrong v.
Beadle, 5 Sawyer 484, in the Circuit Court for the District of
California, that an action at law under a similar statute of
California would not lie for a death which occurred on the high
seas and outside of the territorial limits of the state. In
The
Clatsop Chief, 8 F. 163, Judge Deady sustained an action
in rem against an offending vessel for a death caused by
negligence in the Columbia River and within the State of
Oregon.
In
The Long Island North Shore Passenger & Freight
Trans. Co., 5 F. 599, which was a suit for the benefit of the
act of Congress limiting the liability of the owners of vessels,
Judge Choate, of the Southern District of New York, decided that in
New York, where there is a statute giving a right of action in
cases of death caused by negligence, claims for damages of that
character might be include among the liabilities of the owner of
the offending vessels. In that case, the injury which caused the
death occurred within the limits of the state. In the opinion it is
said (page 608):
"It has been seriously doubted whether the rule of the common
law that a
Page 119 U. S. 210
cause of action for an injury to the person dies with the person
is also the rule of maritime law. There is some authority for the
proposition that it is not, and that in admiralty, a suit for
damage in such a case survives.
The Sea Gull, 2 L.T.R. 15;
Cutting v. Seabury, 1 Sprague 522,
The Guldfaxe,
19 L.T.R. 748;
The Epsilon, 6 Benedict 379, 381. But
however it may be in respect to the original jurisdiction of
admiralty courts, I see no valid reason why the right of a person
to whom, under the municipal law governing the place of the
transaction and the parties to it, the title to the chose in action
survives, or a new right to sue is given for damages resulting from
a tort, the admiralty courts, in the exercise of their jurisdiction
in personam over marine torts, should not recognize and
enforce the right so given."
This case was decided on the 12th of February, 1881, and on the
21st of the same month, Judge Brown, of the Eastern District of
Michigan, in
The Garland, 5 F. 924, held that a suit
in rem could be maintained by a father for the loss of the
services of his two sons killed in a collision in the Detroit
River. In his opinion he said:
"Were this an original question, . . . I should feel compelled
to hold that this libel could not be maintained. But other courts
of admiralty in this country have furnished so many precedents for
a contrary ruling, I do not feel at liberty to disregard them,
although I am at a loss to understand why a rule of liability
differing from that of the common law should obtain in these
courts."
His decision was, however, finally put on a statute of Michigan
which gave an action at law for such damages.
In
The Sylvan Glen, 9 F. 335, Judge Benedict, of the
Eastern District of New York, dismissed a suit
in rem on
the ground that the statute of New York giving an action for
damages in such cases created no maritime lien. This case was
decided on the 4th of October, 1881. At November term, 1882, of the
Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, Judge Billings
decided in
The E. B. Ward, Jr., 16 F. 255, that a suit
in rem could not be maintained for damages for the death
of a person in a
Page 119 U. S. 211
collision on the high seas through the fault of a vessel having
its home port in New Orleans, as the statute of Louisiana did not
apply to cases where the wrongful act which caused the death
occurred outside of the state. Afterwards, in June, 1883, Judge
Pardee, of the circuit court for the same district, decided
otherwise.
The E. B. Ward, Jr., 17 F. 456. In his opinion,
he said, p. 459:
"Upon the whole case, considering the natural equity and reason
of the matter and the weight of authority as determined by the late
adjudicated cases in the admiralty courts of the United States, I
am inclined to hold that the ancient common law rule, '
actiones
personales moritur cum persona,' if it ever prevailed in the
admiralty law of this country, has been so modified by the
statutory enactments of the various states and the progress of the
age that now the admiralty courts 'are permitted to estimate the
damages which a particular person has sustained by the wrongful
killing of another,' and enforce an adequate remedy."
At all events, as the question is an open one, it is best to
resolve the doubts in favor of what all the judges consider to be
"natural equity and justice." He also was of opinion that, as the
offending vessel was wholly owned by citizens of Louisiana, and the
port of New Orleans was her home port, the Louisiana statute
applied to her, and that the court of admiralty could enforce such
a right of action in a proceeding
in rem. See also The
E. B. Ward, Jr., 23 F. 900.
The case of
The Manhasset, 18 F. 918, was decided by
Judge Hughes, of the Eastern Virginia District, in January, 1884,
and in that it was held that a suit
in rem could not be
maintained by the administratrix against a vessel, under the
statute of Virginia which gave an action for damages caused by the
death of a person, even though the tortious act was committed
within the territorial limits of the state, but that the widow and
child of the deceased man had a right of action, by a libel
in
rem, under the general maritime law, which they could maintain
in their own names and for their own benefit. In so deciding, the
judge said:
"The decision of Chief Justice Chase in the case of
The Sea
Gull, supra, establishes the validity of such a libel in this
circuit. I would maintain
Page 119 U. S. 212
its validity independently of that precedent. Such a right of
action is a maritime right, conferred by the general maritime law;
Domat, Civil Law, lib. 2, pt. 1, tit. 8, § 1, art. 4; Grotius,
lib. 2, c. 17, § 13; Ruth. Inst. 206; Bell, Prin.Sc.Laws, p.
748, § 2029; Ersk. Inst., bk. 4, tit. 4, § 105, and is
not limited as to time by the twelve-months limitation of the state
statute."
The last American case to which our attention has been called is
that of
The Columbia, 27 F. 704, decided by Judge Brown of
the Southern District of New York during the present year. In
giving his opinion after referring to the fact that, as he
understood, the question was then pending in this Court, the judge
said:
"Awaiting the result of the determination of that Court, and
without referring to the common law authorities, I shall hold in
this case, as seems to me most consonant with equity and justice,
that the pecuniary loss sustained by persons who have a legal right
to support from the deceased furnishes a ground of reclamation
against the wrongdoer which should be recognized and compensated in
admiralty."
In
Monaghan v. Horn, in re The Garland, 7 Can.Sup.Ct.
409, the Supreme Court of Canada held that a mother could not sue
in her own name in admiralty for the loss of the life of her son on
the ground that no such action would lie without the aid of a
statute, and the statute of the Province of Ontario, where the
wrong was done, and which was substantially the same as Lord
Campbell's Act, provided that the action should be brought in the
name of the administrator of the deceased person. No authoritative
judgment was given as to the right of an administrator to sue in
admiralty under that act. This was in 1882, before
The Vera
Cruz, supra, in the House of Lords.
Such being the state of judicial decisions, we come now to
consider the question on principle. It is no doubt true that the
Scotch law "takes cognizance of the loss and suffering of the
family of a person killed," and gives a right of action therefor
under some circumstances. Bell, Prin.Laws of Scot., 7th ed., p.
934, § 2029;
Cadell v. Black, 5 Paton 567;
Weems
v. Mathieson, 4 Macqueen 215. Such also is the law of
France,
Page 119 U. S. 213
28 Merlin, Repertoir 442,
verbo Reparation Civile,
§ iv.;
Rolland v. Gosse, 19 Sirey (Cour de Cassation)
269. It is said also that such was the civil law, but this is
denied by the Supreme Court of Louisiana in
Hubgh v. New
Orleans & Carrollton Railroad, 6 La.Ann. 495, where Chief
Justice Eustis considers the subject in an elaborate opinion after
full argument. A reargument of the same question was allowed in
Hermann v. New Orleans & Carrollton Railroad, 11
La.Ann. 5, and the same conclusion reached after another full
argument.
See also Grueber's Lex Aquilia 17. But however
this may be, we know of no country that has adopted a different
rule on this subject for the sea from that which it maintains on
the land, and the maritime law, as accepted and received by
maritime nations generally, leaves the matter untouched. It is not
mentioned in the laws of Oleron, of Wisbuy, or of the Hanse Towns,
1 Pet.Adm.Dec. Appx., nor in the Marine Ordinance of Louis XIV, 2
Pet.Adm.Dec. Appx., and the understanding of the leading text
writers in this country has been that no such action will lie in
the absence of a statute giving a remedy at law for the wrong.
Benedict Adm., 2d ed., § 309; 2 Parsons' Ship. & Adm. 350;
Henry, Adm.Jur. 74. The argument everywhere in support of such
suits in admiralty has been not that the maritime law, as actually
administered in common law countries, is different from the common
law in this particular, but that the common law is not founded on
good reason and is contrary to "natural equity and the general
principles of law." Since, however, it is now established that in
the courts of the United States no action at law can be maintained
for such a wrong in the absence of a statute giving the right, and
it has not been shown that the maritime law, as accepted and
received by maritime nations generally, has established a different
rule for the government of the courts of admiralty from those which
govern courts of law in matters of this kind, we are forced to the
conclusion that no such action will lie in the courts of the United
States under the general maritime law. The rights of persons in
this particular, under the maritime law of this country, are not
different from those under the
Page 119 U. S. 214
common law, and as it is the duty of courts to declare the law,
not to make it, we cannot change this rule.
This brings us to the second branch of the question, which is
whether, with the statutes of Massachusetts and Pennsylvania above
referred to in force at the time of the collision, a suit
in
rem could be maintained against the offending vessel if
brought in time. About this we express no opinion, as we are
entirely satisfied that this suit was begun too late. The statutes
create a new legal liability, with the right to a suit for its
enforcement, provided the suit is brought within twelve months, and
not otherwise. The time within which the suit must be brought
operates as a limitation of the liability itself as created, and
not of the remedy alone. It is a condition attached to the right to
sue at all. No one will pretend that the suit in Pennsylvania, or
the indictment in Massachusetts, could be maintained if brought or
found after the expiration of the year, and it would seem to be
clear that if the admiralty adopts the statute as a rule of right
to be administered within its own jurisdiction, it must take the
right subject to the limitations which have been made a part of its
existence. It matters not that no rights of innocent parties have
attached during the delay. Time has been made of the essence of the
right, and the right is lost if the time is disregarded. The
liability and the remedy are created by the same statutes, and the
limitations of the remedy are therefore to be treated as
limitations of the right. No question arises in this case as to the
power of a court of admiralty to allow an equitable excuse for
delay in suing, because no excuse of any kind has been shown. As to
this, it only appears that the wrong was done in May, 1877, and
that the suit was not brought until February, 1882, while the law
required it to be brought within a year.
The decree of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause
remanded, with instructions to dismiss the libel.