If a vessel, seaworthy at the beginning of the voyage, is
afterwards stranded by the negligence of her master, the shipowner,
who has exercised due diligence to make his vessel in all respects
seaworthy, properly manned, equipped and supplied, under the
provisions of § 3 of the Act of February 13, 1893, c. 105, 27
Stat. 495, has not a right to general average contribution for
sacrifices made and suffered by him subsequent to the stranding in
successful efforts to save vessel, freight and cargo.
The main purposes of the Act of February 13, 1893, known as the
Harter Act, were to relieve the shipowner from liability for latent
defects, not discoverable by the utmost care and diligence, and, in
the event that he has exercised due diligence to make his vessel
seaworthy, to exempt him and the ship from responsibility for
damages or loss resulting from faults or errors in navigation or in
the management of the vessel; but the Court cannot say that it was
the intention of the act to allow the owner to share in the
benefits of a general average contribution to meet losses
occasioned by faults in the navigation and management of the
ship.
In determining the effect of this statute in restricting the
operation of general and well settled principles, the Court treats
those principles as still existing, and limits the relief from
their operation afforded by the statute to that called for by the
language of the statute.
Page 171 U. S. 188
This case comes here on a certificate from the United States
Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
The facts out of which the question arises are as follows:
On November 9, 1895, the British steamship
Irrawaddy,
upon a voyage from Trinidad to New York, with cargo, stranded on
the coast of New Jersey through the negligent navigation of her
master. Up to the time of stranding, she was properly manned,
equipped, and supplied, and was seaworthy.
The vessel was relieved from the strand November 20th as the
result of sacrifices by jettison of a portion of her cargo, of
sacrifices and losses voluntarily made or incurred by the
shipowners through the master, and through the services of
salvors.
The
Irrawaddy then completed her voyage and made
delivery of the remainder of her cargo to the consignees in New
York on their executing an average bond for the payment of losses
and expenses which should appear to be due from them, provided they
were stated and apportioned by the adjusters "in accordance with
established usages and laws in similar cases."
An adjustment was afterwards made in New York which allowed in
the general average account the compensation of the salvors, the
sacrifices of cargo, and the losses and sacrifices of the
shipowner.
The respondents thereupon paid $4,483.64, which was their full
assessment, except the sum of $508.29, charged against them in
respect of sacrifices of the shipowner, which they refused to
pay.
The district court made a decree in favor of the libelants, from
which decree the respondents duly appealed to this Court.
Upon these facts, the court desires instruction upon the
following question of law, namely:
If a vessel, seaworthy at the beginning of the voyage, is
afterwards stranded by the negligence of her master, has the
shipowner, who has exercised due diligence to make his vessel in
all respects seaworthy, properly manned, equipped, and supplied,
under the provisions of section 3 of the Act of February 13, 1895,
a right to general average contribution for
Page 171 U. S. 189
sacrifices made and suffered by him subsequent to the stranding,
in successful efforts to save vessel, freight, and cargo?
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The answer we shall give to the question certified by the
circuit court of appeals must be determined by the meaning and
effect which should be given to the Act of February 13, 1893, c.
105, 27 Stat. 445, known as the "Harter Act." Admittedly, upon the
facts conceded to exist in the present case, the owner of the ship
has no right to a general average contribution from the cargo
unless such right arises from the operation of that act.
We shall first inquire why it is that, apart from the act in
question, the owner of the ship is not entitled to a general
average contribution where the loss was occasioned by the fault of
the master or crew, and we find the rule is founded on the
principle that no one can make a claim for general average
contribution if the danger to avert which the sacrifice was made
has arisen from the fault of the claimant or of someone for whose
acts the claimant has made himself or is made by law responsible to
the co-contributors. We are not called upon either to trace the
history of the rule or to justify it as based on equitable
principles, as it is conceded on both sides that such is the
ordinary rule in the absence of statute or contract to modify
it.
Nor is it necessary to inquire into the origin or nature of the
law of general average. That has been so recently and thoroughly
done in
Ralli v. Troop, 157 U. S. 386,
that it is sufficient to refer to the opinion of MR. JUSTICE GRAY
in that case.
Not only is the shipowner excluded from contribution by
Page 171 U. S. 190
way of general average when the loss arises from the ship's
fault, but he is legally responsible to the owner of the cargo for
loss and damages so occasioned. And it is the well settled law of
this Court that a common carrier by sea cannot, by any stipulation
with a shipper of goods, exempt himself from responsibility for
loss or damage arising from the negligence of the officers or crew;
that it is against the policy of the law to allow stipulations that
will relieve a carrier from liability for losses caused by the
negligence of himself or his servants.
Liverpool Navigation Co.
v. Phenix Ins. Co., 129 U. S. 397.
Further, it has frequently been decided by this Court that in
every contract for the carriage of goods by sea, unless otherwise
expressly stipulated, there is a warranty on the part of the
shipowner that the ship is seaworthy at the time of beginning her
voyage, and not merely that he does not know her to be unseaworthy
at the time of beginning her voyage, or that he has used his best
efforts to make her seaworthy, and that his undertaking is not
discharged because the want of fitness is the result of latent
defects.
Richelieu Navigation Co. v. Boston Insurance Co.,
136 U. S. 408;
The Ed. J. Morrison, 153 U. S. 199;
The Caledonia, 157 U. S. 124.
In this condition of the law, the so-called "Harter Act" was
approved on February 13, 1893, wherein, after providing, in the
first and second sections, that it shall not be lawful for any
owner, agent, or master of any vessel transporting merchandise or
property from or between ports of the United States and foreign
ports to exempt himself from liability for loss or damage arising
from negligence in the loading or proper delivery of such property,
or to insert in any bill of lading any covenant or agreement
whereby the obligations of the owner to exercise due diligence in
manning and equipping the vessel, and to make such vessel seaworthy
and capable of performing her intended voyage, should be in anywise
lessened, weakened, or avoided, it was, in the third section,
enacted as follows:
"That if the owner of any vessel transporting merchandise or
property to or from any port in the United States of America shall
exercise due diligence to make the said vessel
Page 171 U. S. 191
in all respects seaworthy and properly manned, equipped, and
supplied, neither the vessel, her owner or owners, agents, or
charterers shall become or be held responsible for damage or loss
resulting from faults or errors in navigation or in the management
of said vessel, nor shall the vessel, her owner or owners,
charterers, agent, or master be held liable for losses arising from
the danger of the sea or other navigable waters, acts of God or
public enemies, or the inherent defect, quality, or vice of the
thing carried, or from insufficiency of package, or seizure under
legal process, or for loss resulting from any act or omission of
the shipper or owner of the goods, his agent or representative, or
from saving or attempting to save life or property at sea, or from
any deviation in rendering such service."
The argument on behalf of the shipowner is clearly expressed by
the learned judge of the district court in the following terms:
"There is no doubt, I think, that the liability to indemnify the
cargo owner is the sole ground of the exclusion of the shipowner's
claim to general average compensation for his expenses in rescuing
the adventure from a peril caused by bad navigation. It therefore
seems necessarily to follow that, in cases where all such liability
is abolished by law, as it is under the circumstances of this case
by the Harter Act, no such exclusion can be justified, and that
where no such liability exists on the part of the ship or her
owner, his right to a general average contribution from the cargo
arises necessarily by the same principles of equitable right that
apply in ordinary cases of general average. Where due diligence has
been exercised to make the ship seaworthy, and a common danger
arises upon the voyage by 'fault or error in the navigation or
management of the ship,' the third section of that act declares
that 'neither the vessel nor her owner, agent, or charterer shall
become or be held responsible for damage or loss resulting
therefrom.' The previous liability of the shipowner to the cargo
owner for faults of navigation is thus abolished in all cases
coming within the act. In such cases, faults in the navigation or
management of the ship are no longer, by construction
Page 171 U. S. 192
of law, faults of the owner, as heretofore, and the ship and her
owner are now no more liable to the cargo owner for his damages
therefrom than the latter is liable to the shipowner for the
resulting damages to the ship. Both are alike strangers to the
fault, and equally free from all responsibility for it, and hence
all expenditures or losses voluntarily incurred for the common
rescue are no longer made in the discharge of an individual legal
obligation or in diminution of a fixed liability resting upon one
of the parties only, but are truly a sacrifice, voluntarily
incurred and for the common benefit, as much and as truly so when
made by the shipowner as when made by the cargo owner alone. On
principle, therefore, in such cases, the one is as much entitled to
a general average contribution for his sacrifice as the other. . .
. The application of this new relation of nonresponsibility under
the Harter Act to cases of general average does not in fact make
the least change in the principles of general average contribution.
The rule remains as before -- that he by whose fault, actual or
constructive, the ship and cargo have been brought into danger
cannot recover an average contribution for his expenses in
extricating them. And so the counter-rule remains as before -- that
the interest which, being without fault, makes sacrifices for the
common rescue is entitled to an average contribution from what is
thereby saved. Prior to the Harter Act, the shipowner, under our
law, was constructively in fault for bad navigation, and hence fell
within the former rule. The Harter Act, by abolishing his
constructive fault and freeing him from all responsibility,
withdraws him from the former rule and entitles him to contribution
under the latter."
82 F. 472, 474-477.
We are unable to accept this view of the operation of the act of
Congress.
Plainly the main purposes of the act were to relieve the
shipowner from liability for latent defects not discoverable by the
utmost care and diligence, and, in event that he has exercised due
diligence to make his vessel seaworthy, to exempt him and the ship
from responsibility for damage or loss resulting from faults or
errors in navigation or in the
Page 171 U. S. 193
management of the vessel. But can we go further and say that it
was the intention of the act to allow the owner to share in the
benefits of a general average contribution to meet losses
occasioned by faults in the navigation and management of the
ship?
Doubtless, as the law stood before the passage of the act, the
owner could not contract against his liability and that of his
vessel for loss occasioned by negligence or fault in the officers
and crew, because such a contract was held by the federal courts to
be contrary to public policy, and in this particular the owners of
American vessels were at a disadvantage as compared with the owners
of foreign vessels, who can contract with shippers against any
liability for negligence or fault on the part of the officers and
crew. This inequality, of course, operated unfavorably on the
American shipowner, and Congress thought fit to remove the
disadvantage not by declaring that it should be competent for the
owners of vessels to exempt themselves from liability for the
faults of the master and crew by stipulations to that effect
contained in bills of lading, but by enacting that if the owners
exercised due diligence in making their ships seaworthy and in duly
manning and equipping them, there should be no liability for the
navigation and management of the ships, however faulty.
Although the foundation of the rule that forbade shipowners to
contract for exemption from liability for negligence in their
agents and employees was in the decisions of the courts that such
contracts were against public policy, it was nevertheless competent
for Congress to make a change in the standard of duty, and it is
plainly the duty of the courts to conform in their decisions to the
policy so declared.
But we think that for the courts to declare, as a consequence of
this legislation, that the shipowner is not only relieved from
liability for the negligence of his servants, but is entitled to
share in a general average rendered necessary by that negligence
would be in the nature of a legislative act. The act in question
does undoubtedly modify the public policy as previously declared by
the courts, but if Congress had intended to grant the further
privilege now contended for, it
Page 171 U. S. 194
would have expressed such an intention in unmistakable terms. It
is one thing to exonerate the ship and its owner from liability for
the negligence of those who manage the vessel; it is another thing
to authorize the shipowner to do what he could not do before --
namely, share in the general average occasioned by the
mismanagement of the master and crew.
What was the reasoning on which the courts proceeded in holding
that it was against public policy to permit shipowners to contract
for exemption from liability for the negligence of their agents?
Was it not that such a State of the law would impel the shipowners
to exercise care in the selection of those for whose conduct they
were to be responsible? This being so, can it be reasonably
inferred that Congress intended, when relieving shipowners from
liability for the misconduct of their agents, to confer upon them
the further right to participate in a general average contribution,
and that to the detriment of the shippers? Such an interpretation
of the statute would tend to relieve shipowners, to some extent at
least, from care in the selection of the master and crew, and it
would likewise operate to influence the master in deciding, in an
emergency, whether he would make a case of general average by
sacrificing the vessel, in whole or in part. If he knew that the
owner would participate in a contribution occasioned by a loss, he
would be the less likely to exert himself and crew to avoid the
loss.
It is said that it has been decided by the English courts that
when, by a contract in the bill of lading, the shipowner is
exonerated from liability for loss caused by the fault of the
master or crew, he is entitled to share in a general average
contribution.
An examination of the cases cited has not convinced us that
there has been any such final decision by the English courts. The
case of
The Carron Park, 15 P.D. 203, does indeed hold
that the relation of the goods owner to the shipowner was altered
by the contract, that the shipowner was not to be responsible for
the negligence of his servants in the events which have happened,
and that therefore the shipowner's claim for general average was
allowed. On the other hand,
Page 171 U. S. 195
in the case of
The Ettrick, 6 P.D. 127, the shipowner
claimed the benefit of a general average contribution rendered
necessary by reason of negligence in navigation, and put his claim
on the ground that, having availed himself of the limited liability
laws by paying into court the �8 a ton which is the
limitation fixed by the statutes of Great Britain, he was thereby
relieved from his liability on account of the negligence in the
navigation, and stood in the position of an innocent party entitled
to share in the contribution. But the Court of Appeals held
otherwise, and Sir George Jessel, M.R., said:
"The ground upon which the shipowner puts his claim is this: he
says that the payment of �8 per ton not only prevents his
being answerable in damages for any more, but is equivalent to
saying that he shall be in exactly the same position as if no
negligence had been committed, and nothing had been done by him or
his agents that would give rise to any liability. But I cannot read
the act so. All it says is that he shall not be answerable in
damages for any greater amount. It does not make his acts right if
they were previously wrongful. It does not give him any new rights
as far as I can see. . . . It seems to me that he could have no
such right, for the statute does not destroy the effect of all that
had been done, as it simply diminishes or limits the liability in
damages. If that is so, of course, there is an end of the
case."
But whatever may be the English rulings as to the effect of
contract immunity from negligence as entitling the shipowner to
claim in general average, we do not think the cases are parallel.
By the English law, the parties are left free to contract with each
other, and each party can define his rights and limit his liability
as he may think fit. Very different is the case where a statute
prescribes the extent of liability and exemption.
Upon the whole, we think that in determining the effect of this
statute in restricting the operation of general and well settled
principles, our proper course is to treat those principles as still
existing and to limit the relief from their operation
Page 171 U. S. 196
afforded by the statute to that called for by the language
itself of the statute.
Our conclusion accordingly is that the question certified to
us by the Court of Appeals should be answered in the negative, and
it is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, with whom was MR. JUSTICE McKENNA,
dissenting.
I am constrained to dissent from the opinion of the Court in
this case. While I freely concede that the owner of a ship is not
by the general maritime law entitled to a general average
contribution where the loss is occasioned by the fault of the
master or crew, I regard the third section of the Harter Act as
introducing a new feature into the law of carriage by sea and as
eliminating altogether the question of negligence in navigation.
This section provides in substance that if the owner shall exercise
due diligence to make his vessel in all respects seaworthy and
properly manned, equipped, and supplied, he shall not "be held
responsible for damage or loss resulting from faults or errors in
navigation or in the management" of his vessel.
As the steamer
Irrawaddy was stranded on the coast of
New Jersey, confessedly by the negligent navigation of her master,
it will not be contended that she or her owners became liable to
the owners of the cargo for any damages thereby occasioned. It is
said, however, that while the Harter Act may be appealed to in
defense of any action by the cargo against the ship, it is not
available by the shipowner in a suit against the owners of the
cargo for a contribution to the general average expenses occasioned
by such stranding. If this be so, then the ship is thereby made
responsible for a fault in her navigation to the exact extent to
which she would be otherwise entitled to a general average
contribution, and the statute to that extent is disregarded and
nullified. I consider this a narrow and technical construction of
the act. I think the third section makes the question of fault in
navigation an immaterial one, and eliminates it from
Page 171 U. S. 197
the relations of the ship to the cargo. The section therefore
becomes available to the shipowner either as a weapon of defense or
attack. If the shipowner stands in relation to the cargo as if no
fault had been committed, it is impossible for me to see why he may
not avail himself of this in whatever shape the question may
arise.
As the Harter Act is a novelty in maritime legislation, of
course, it would be vain to search for authorities based upon a
similar enactment, but cases are by no means wanting where a
similar question has arisen upon stipulations in bills of lading
exempting the owner of the ship from the consequences of faults or
errors in navigation. While it is conceded in this country that
such stipulations are of no avail, it is equally well settled that
by the law of England, and of some, if not all, of the maritime
nations of continental Europe, they are held to be valid and
binding.
In the case of
The Carron Park, 15 P.D. 403, a charter
party contained a stipulation that the shipowners were not to be
responsible "for any act, negligence, or default whatsoever of
their servants during the said voyage." The cargo having been
damaged by water pouring through a valve, negligently left open by
one of the engineers, the owners brought suit against the vessel
and the owners of the ship counterclaimed for a general average
contribution. It was held by the Admiralty Division that the ship
was exonerated in the suit against her by the owners of the cargo,
and was also entitled to her contribution. In delivering the
opinion, Sir James Hannen, President, observed:
"The claim for contribution as general average cannot be
maintained where it arises out of any negligence for which the
shipowner is responsible, but negligence for which he is not
responsible is as foreign to him as to the person who has suffered
by it. The loss would not have fallen upon the shipowner, and the
expenditure or sacrifice made by him is not made to avert loss from
himself alone, but from the cargo owner."
The case of
Strang v. Scott, 14 App.Cas. 601, was cited
to the proposition that the conditions ordinarily existing between
parties standing in the relation of ship and cargo owners may be
varied by special contract.
Page 171 U. S. 198
It is true that the case of the
Carron Park was not one
arising upon a statute, but upon a stipulation in a charter party,
but I think it can make no possible difference in the legal aspect
of the case whether the exemption be conceded by contract or
granted by statute.
The case of
The Ettrick, 6 P.D. 127, is not in point.
In that case, the owner of a ship sunk by a collision in the Thames
admitted the collision to be his fault, and paid into court
�8 a ton in a suit to his liability. The ship having been
subsequently raised at the expense of the owner, he sought to
recover in general average against the cargo its contributory
portion of such expenses. It was held that this could not be done,
the court basing its opinion upon the language of the Merchants'
Shipping Act, section 54, which merely declared that the owners of
the ship should not be
answerable for damages in respect
of losses to ships or goods to a greater amount than eight pounds
per ton of the ship's tonnage. In delivering the opinion of the
court, Sir George Jessel observed:
"That is merely the limit of the liability for damages. It does
not in any way alter the property. . . . Now, property not being
altered, the ground upon which the shipowner puts his claim is
this: he says that the payment of eight pounds per ton not only
prevents his being answerable in damages for any more, but is
equivalent to saying that he shall be in exactly the same position
as if no negligence had been committed, and nothing had been done
by him or by his agents that would give rise to any liability. But
I cannot read the act so. All that it says is that he shall not be
answerable in damages for any greater amount. It does not make his
acts right if they were previously wrongful. . . . It seems to me
that he would have no such right [that is, to salvage on the
cargo], for the statute does not destroy the effect of all that had
been done, as it simply diminishes or limits the liability in
damages. If that is so, of course, that is an end of the case."
In the case of
The Carron Park, the stipulation
exempted the ship from the consequences of all negligence in her
navigation. In
The Ettrick, the act simply limited the
liability of
Page 171 U. S. 199
the owner in damages to a certain sum per ton. The operation of
the Merchants' Shipping Act was evidently intended to be merely
defensive.
The Ettrick, though cited by counsel, was not
referred to by the court in
The Carron Park, and was
evidently regarded as standing upon a different footing.
The French law in this particular is the same: the case of
Le Normand v. Compagnie Generale Transatlantique, 1
Dalloz, Jurisprudence Generale 479, before the French Court of
Cassation, was an appeal from the court of Rouen, which had treated
as general average the expenses of salvage and towage of the
steamer
Amerique after having found that the abandonment
of the ship was imputable only to the master and crew, and had held
that a contract exempting the ship from the consequences of
negligence, permitted the owners of the ship to recover from the
owners of the cargo their share in contribution of the expenses of
salvage. In the opinion of the Court of Cassation upon appeal, it
was said that in this bill of lading the defendant company, the
owner of the
Amerique, had formally excepted the acts of
God, of enemies, pirates, fire by land or sea, accidents proceeding
from the engine, boilers, steam, and all other accidents of the sea
caused or not caused by the negligence, fault, or error of the
captain, crew, or engineers, of whatever nature these accidents
were or whatever were their consequences. It was further said that
no law forbade the owners of ships from stipulating that they would
not answer for the faults of the captain or crew; that such an
agreement is no more contrary to public policy than to fair
dealing; that, in upholding this clause in the bill of lading by
which the defendant company declined responsibility for the faults
of the crew, the decree appealed from violated no law. It was
thereby established that the ship had been abandoned at sea, after
consultation with the crew; that it had afterwards been picked up
by three English vessels, which had towed it to Plymouth, where it
was voluntarily stranded, and that the defendant company had
reclaimed it from the salvors by paying the expenses of salvage and
towage, and thereupon the court held that this was a damage
voluntarily suffered, that the expenses were incurred
Page 171 U. S. 200
for the common safety of the ship and cargo, and without the
payment of which the salvors would not have been obliged to deliver
over the vessel, and that such expenses constituted a claim for
general average, notwithstanding the abandonment of the ship was
not attributed to a peril of the sea, but to the fault of the
master and crew. The decree was affirmed.
The case of
Crowley v. Saint Freres, 10 Revue
Internationale du Droit Maritime 147, also came before the French
Court of Cassation in 1894. In this case, an English ship, the
Alexander Lawrence, on a voyage from Calcutta to Boulogne
with a cargo of jute, took fire through the carelessness of a
sailor. The ship put into Port Louis, an intermediate port, with
the cargo still burning, and extinguished it, subsequently arriving
at her port of destination. By a clause in the charter party, the
ship was exonerated from responsibility for negligence. It was held
that the expenses of putting into the port of refuge should be
classed as general average, and not as particular average, as it
had been held by the court below. The decree of that court (of
Douai) was therefore reversed.
A case arising from the same disaster to the
Alexander
Lawrence, between the owners and the underwriters, 11 Revue
Internationale 41, subsequently came before the Court of Appeal of
Orleans on appeal from the Tribunal of Commerce of Boulogne, where
a similar ruling was made, and the expense of putting into port
classed as general average under the stipulation in the charter
party, although in the absence of such stipulation they would have
been chargeable to the ship.
The same question came before the Tribunal of Commerce of
Antwerp, Belgium, in the case of
The Alacrity, 11 Revue
Internationale 123, where the cargo was held to contribute to the
expenses of putting into a port of refuge in consequence of a
collision due to the fault of the captain, the shipowner being
exonerated by his contract from the consequences of this fault. In
this case, the parties had stipulated that general average expenses
should be payable under the York-Antwerp rules, and that the ship
should not be responsible for the faults of the captain or crew. It
was
Page 171 U. S. 201
held that, by the Belgium law, parties might contract with
reference to these rules, which declared the expenses of putting
into a port of refuge general average; that there was no difference
between such expenses when occasioned by an inevitable accident or
in consequence of the fault of the captain; that, the parties
having stipulated that the ship should be exonerated from the
consequences of such fault, the owners of the cargo were bound for
their contributory shares.
From the case of
The Mary Thomas P.D. 1894, p. 108, it
would seem that the Dutch law is different, but it was said by Mr.
Justice Barnes in this case (p. 116) that if the question had
arisen in this country (England),
"the point could hardly have occurred as it has done, because it
has already been decided by Lord Hannen, in the case of
The
Carron Park, that the cargo owners would be liable for the
contribution in general average under circumstances where the
accident had occurred through negligence, but where by the bills of
lading the owners of the ship were not responsible for that
negligence."
These are all the cases I have been able to find directly upon
the question under consideration, but there is a class of analogous
cases which, I think, have a strong bearing in the same direction.
It is well known that, by the law of England, a ship is not
responsible to another for a collision brought about by the
negligence of a compulsory pilot. Of course, where such ship is
solely to blame, the rule is easy of application. No recovery can
be had against her. But where the faults of the two vessels are
mutual, a different question arises, and in the case of
The
Hector, 8 P.D. 218, it was held that where a collision
occurred by the mutual fault of two vessels, and one of such
vessels had on board a compulsory pilot whose fault contributed to
the accident, the owner of that vessel was entitled to recover a
moiety of the damages sustained by her without any deduction on
account of the damage sustained by the other -- in other words, she
was not responsible for any portion of the damage done to the other
vessel, but might recover the half of her damages from such other
vessel. Said the Master of the Rolls in delivering the opinion:
Page 171 U. S. 202
"With regard to the
Augustus, she was found to blame
for the collision; therefore she is, in the first instance, liable
to pay all the damage which the
Hector has suffered. With
regard to the
Hector, it is found that her owners are not
to blame, but that her navigation was to blame, but that was the
fault of the pilot. The owners are not liable for this default;
therefore they are not liable for anything to the owners of the
Augustus. What is the result? That the liability of the
owners of the
Augustus is declared to have been proved,
but the liability of the owners of the
Hector is
disproved, and they are dismissed from the suit. Therefore no
balance is to be calculated. The owners of the
Hector are
not liable for a single penny worth of the damage done to the
Augustus. The owners of the
Augustus must go
against the pilot and get what they can out of him; but the
Hector is entitled to succeed."
See also Dudman v. Dublin Port & Docks Board, Irish
Rep. 7 C.L. 518;
Spaight v. Tedcastle, 6 App.Cas. 217.
It seems to me that the cases above cited show an almost uniform
trend of opinion against the principle laid down by the Court in
this case. I do not contend that the decisions of the English,
French, and Belgian courts should be recognized by us any further
than their course of reasoning commends itself to our sense of
justice, but upon questions of maritime law, which is but a branch
of international law, I think the opinions of the learned and
experienced judges of these courts are entitled to something more
than respectful consideration. It is for the interest of merchants
and shipowners, whose relations and dealings are international in
their character, that the same construction should, so far as
possible, be placed upon the law maritime by the courts of all
maritime nations, and I am compelled to say that I see no reason
for creating an exception in this case.