In June, 1893, the Linda Park was moored to a dock at Pier 48,
East River, New York City. While there, she was struck and injured
by the steam fire boat
New Yorker as it was running into
the slip between Piers 48 and 49 for the purpose of getting near
another fire boat then in the slip. Both boats had been called to
aid in extinguishing a fire in a warehouse near the slip bulkhead.
A libel was filed by Workman in the district court of the United
States to recover for the damage occasioned to his vessel
Page 179 U. S. 553
by the collision. This libel was amended by adding as
respondents the Fire Department of New York and Gallagher, who was
in charge of the navigation of the
New Yorker, and the
necessary allegations were made. The district court entered a
decree in favor of the libellant against the city and Gallagher,
and dismissed the libel as to the fire department. The circuit
court of appeals affirmed the decree against Gallagher and in favor
of the fire department, but reversed that portion which held the
city liable. The case being brought here on certiorari, it is
held that the district court rightly decided that the
mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the City of New York were liable
for the damages sustained by the owner of the
Linda
Park.
Where both courts below have concurred in a finding of fact, it
will, in this Court, be accepted as conclusive unless it
affirmatively appears that the lower courts obviously erred.
The local decisions of a state court cannot, as a matter of
authority, abrogate maritime law.
Under the general maritime law, where the relation of master and
servant exists, an owner of an offending vessel committing a
maritime tort is responsible under the rule of
respondeat
superior.
There is no limitation taking municipal corporations out of the
reach of the process of a court of admiralty.
The public nature of the service upon which a vessel is engaged
at the time of the commission of a maritime tort affords no
immunity from liability in a court of admiralty when the court has
jurisdiction.
While it is true that the emergency of fire was an element to be
considered in determining whether or not those in charge of the
fire boat were negligent, it does not follow that it exempted from
the exercise of such due care as the occasion required towards
property which was in the path of the fire boat as it approached
the slip.
A ship, by whomsoever owned or navigated, is liable for an
actionable injury resulting from the negligence of the master and
crew of the vessel.
A recovery can be had
in personam for a maritime tort
when the relation existing between the owner and the master and
crew of the vessel at the time of the negligent collision was that
of master and servant.
Workman, the libellant below, was the owner, on June 11, 1893,
of the British barkentine
Linda Park. On the date named,
while the vessel was moored to a dock at Pier 48 in the East river
in New York City, she was struck and injured by the steam fire boat
New Yorker. At the time of the collision the
New
Yorker was running into the slip between Piers 48 and 49 for
the purpose of getting near to another fire boat which had shortly
prior thereto safely entered the slip. Both the fire boats had been
called in order to aid in extinguishing a fire in a warehouse
situated a distance of eighty-five to one hundred
Page 179 U. S. 554
feet from the slip bulkhead. To recover the damage occasioned to
his vessel, Workman filed, in the District Court of the United
States for the Southern District of New York, a libel
in
personam against the mayor, aldermen, and commonalty of the
City of New York. This libel was subsequently amended by adding the
allegations essential to make, as additional respondents, the fire
department of the City of New York and James A. Gallagher, the
person in charge of the navigation of the
New Yorker at
the time of the collision.
The district court entered a decree in favor of the libellant
against the City of New York and Gallagher, and dismissed the libel
as to the fire department. 63 F. 298.
The circuit court of appeals, to which the case was taken,
affirmed the decree of the district court against Gallagher and in
favor of the fire department. The appellate court, however,
reversed that portion of the decree of the district court which
held the City of New York liable, and remanded the case with
instructions to dismiss the libel as against the city. 67 F.
347.
The case was then brought to this Court by the allowance of a
writ of certiorari.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, after making the foregoing statement,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
It is clearly deducible from the record that the courts below
concurred in dismissing the libel as against the fire department of
the City of New York upon the contention made in the answer of the
department that, under the provisions of a named statute of the
State of New York, the fire department of the City of New York was
neither a corporation nor a
quasi-corporation,
Page 179 U. S. 555
but was merely a department of the city. As no controversy is
made respecting the correctness of the decree in this particular,
we dismiss this subject from view.
With reference to the decree rendered by both courts against
Gallagher, the district judge held that, giving due consideration
to the emergency of fire, "the running into the
Linda Park
arose through lack of reasonable prudence, and was unnecessary and
negligent." 63 F. 298. The circuit court of appeals, in its
opinion, affirming the decree against Gallagher, said:
"The evidence in the record adequately supports the conclusion
of the court below that the injuries caused to the libellant's
vessel by the impact of the fire boat were caused by the negligent
manner [management?] of the fire boat while the latter was trying
to reach a convenient location to play upon a burning building near
the pier at which the libellant's vessel was moored."
There is no substantial controversy raised on the record as to
the premise of fact upon which the personal decree against
Gallagher was rendered by both the courts below. And even if such
were not the case, the facts upon which Gallagher's liability
depends are not now open to controversy, because of the well
settled doctrine that, where both courts below have concurred in a
finding of fact, it will, in this Court, be accepted as conclusive,
unless it affirmatively appears that the lower courts obviously
erred.
The Carib Prince, 170 U. S. 655,
170 U. S. 658,
and cases there cited. It is clear that if it was seriously claimed
that both the courts below had manifestly erred in their
appreciation of the facts as to negligence in the management of the
fire boat, the testimony would not justify the assertion. We shall
therefore no further consider this feature of the case.
In order to elucidate the serious question which arises for
discussion, we briefly state the reasons by which the courts below
were led to reach opposing conclusions as to the liability or
nonliability of the city.
The district court, on the assumption that the local law
controlled, determined that, by that law, as declared in decisions
of the courts of the State of New York, the city was
Page 179 U. S. 556
liable for the injury caused by the negligent management of its
fire boat. The circuit court of appeals, however, was of opinion
that the City of New York was not answerable for the injury
inflicted, for the reasons which it thus stated. 67 F. 348:
"It is familiar law that the officers selected by a municipal
corporation to perform a public service for the general welfare of
the inhabitants or the community, in which the corporation has no
private interest and from which it derives no special benefit or
advantage in its corporate capacity, are not to be regarded as the
servants or agents of the municipality, and for their negligence or
want of skill it cannot be held liable. This is so notwithstanding
such officers derive their appointment from, and are paid by, the
corporation itself. In selecting and employing them, the
municipality merely performs a political or governmental function;
the duties entrusted to them do not relate to the exercise of
corporate powers, and hence they are the agents or servants of the
public at large. Upon this principle, it has uniformly been decided
by the courts that municipal corporations are not liable for the
negligence or wrongful acts of the officers of the police or health
departments committed in the course of their ordinary employment.
Unless the duties of the officers of the fire department are of a
different complexion, and they are the servants of the municipality
because they are engaged in performing one of its corporate
functions, the same principle must extend immunity to the
municipality for the negligent acts of these officers and their
subordinates."
"
* * * *"
"It is quite immaterial that the duties of these officers are
defined and the offices created by the charter or organic law of
the municipality. The test of corporate liability for the acts of
the officers of the municipality depends upon the nature of the
duties with which they are charged. If these, being for the general
good of the public as individual citizens, are governmental, they
act for the state. If they are those which primarily and
legitimately devolve upon the municipality itself, they are its
agents."
Having thus determined the general principle by which the
Page 179 U. S. 557
liability of the city was to be judged, the court reviewed some
of the decisions of the Court of Appeals of New York, and deduced
from them that the city, in the operation of the fire boat,
performed a governmental, and not a corporate, function, and
therefore under the assumption that the decisions in question were
authoritatively controlling, held the city not liable.
Whilst it is contended at bar that the district court correctly
decided, considering the local law of New York alone, that the city
was liable, it is also asserted that even if by such law there was
no responsibility on the part of the City of New York, nevertheless
the circuit court of appeals erred in deciding that the city was
not bound, because by the maritime law the liability existed, and
such law should have controlled although the local law was to the
contrary.
We come, then, to consider first whether, in the decision of the
controversy, the local law of the City of New York or the maritime
law should control, and second, if the case is solely governed by
the maritime law, whether the City of New York is liable.
In examining the first question -- that is, whether the local
law of New York must prevail, though in conflict with the maritime
law, it must be borne in mind that the issue is not -- as was the
case in
Detroit v. Osborne, (1890),
135 U.
S. 492 -- whether the local law governs as to a
controversy arising in the courts of common law or of equity of the
United States, but does the local law, if in conflict with the
maritime law, control a court of admiralty of the United States in
the administration of maritime rights and duties although judicial
power with respect to such subjects has been expressly conferred by
the Constitution (Art. III, Sec. 2) upon the courts of the United
States?
The proposition, then, which we must first consider may be thus
stated: although, by the maritime law, the duty rests upon courts
of admiralty to afford redress for every injury jury to person or
property where the subject matter is within the cognizance of such
courts and when the wrongdoer is amenable to process, nevertheless
the admiralty courts must deny all relief whenever redress for a
wrong would not be afforded by the local law of a particular state
or the course of decisions therein. And this not
Page 179 U. S. 558
because, by the rule prevailing in the state, the wrongdoer is
not generally responsible and usually subject to process of courts
of justice, but because in the commission of a particular act
causing direct injury to a person or property it is considered, by
the local decisions, that the wrongdoer is endowed with all the
attributes of sovereignty, and therefore as to injuries by it done
to others in the assumed sovereign character, courts are unable to
administer justice by affording redress for the wrong
inflicted.
The practical destruction of a uniform maritime law, which must
arise from this premise is made manifest when it is considered that
if it be true that the principles of the general maritime law
giving relief for every character of maritime tort where the
wrongdoer is subject to the jurisdiction of admiralty courts can be
overthrown by conflicting decisions of state courts, it would
follow that there would be no general maritime law for the redress
of wrongs, as such law would be necessarily one thing in one state
and one in another; one thing in one port of the United States and
a different thing in some other port. As the power to change state
laws or state decisions rests with the state authorities by which
such laws are enacted or decisions rendered, it would come to pass
that the maritime law affording relief for wrongs done, instead of
being general and ever-abiding, would be purely local -- would be
one thing today and another thing tomorrow. That the confusion to
result would amount to the abrogation of a uniform maritime law is
at once patent. And the principle by which the maritime law would
be thus in part practically destroyed would besides apply to other
subjects specially confided by the Constitution to the federal
government. Thus, if the local law may control the maritime law, it
must also govern in the decision of cases arising under the patent,
copyright, and commerce clauses of the Constitution. It would
result that a municipal corporation, in the exercise of
administrative powers which the state law determines to be
governmental, could with impunity violate the patent and copyright
laws of the United States or the regulations enacted by Congress
under the commerce clause of the Constitution, such as those
concerning the enrollment and licensing of vessels.
Page 179 U. S. 559
This follows if a corporation must, for a wrong by it done, be
allowed to escape all reparation upon the theory that, though
ordinarily liable to sue and be sued, it possessed in the
particular matter the freedom from suit which attaches to a
sovereign state.
The disappearance of all symmetry in the maritime law and the
law on the other subjects referred to which would thus arise would,
however, not be the only evil springing from the application of the
principle relied on, since the maritime law which would survive
would have imbedded in it a denial of justice. This must be the
inevitable consequence of admitting the proposition which assumes
that the maritime law disregards the rights of individuals to be
protected in their persons and property from wrongful injury by
recognizing that those who are amenable to the jurisdiction of
courts of admiralty are nevertheless endowed with a supposed
governmental attribute by which they can inflict injury upon the
person or property of another and yet escape all responsibility
therefor. It cannot be doubted that the greater part, if not the
whole, of the maritime commerce of the country is either initiated
or terminated in ports where municipal corporations exist. All the
vessels, whether domestic or foreign, in which this vast commerce
is carried, under the rule referred to, could be subjected to
injury and wrong without power to obtain redress, since every
municipality would be hedged about with the attributes of supreme
sovereignty. For the principle with would exempt the municipal
owner of a fire boat from legal responsibility would be equally
applicable to boats used by a street department for the removal of
refuse, to ferries, to pilot boats, to training school ships -- one
of which, it is suggested in argument, the City of New York now
actually operates, and to all other vessels which the municipality
might consider it necessary or desirable to use. The wrong and
injustice which would thus arise need not be commented upon.
The evil consequences growing from thus implanting in the
maritime law the doctrine that wrong can be done with impunity were
very aptly pointed out in
Mersey Docks & Harbour Board v.
Gibbs (1866), L.R. 1 H.L. 122. In that
Page 179 U. S. 560
case, it was sought to hold the dock trustees liable for damage
occasioned to a ship and cargo in striking a mud bank while
attempting to enter a dock. The trustees asserted an exemption on
the ground that they did not collect tolls for their own profit,
but merely as trustees for the benefit of the public. Lord
Chancellor Cranworth said:
"It would be a strange distinction to persons coming with their
ships to different ports of this country, that in some ports, if
they sustain damage by the negligence of those who have the
management of the docks, they will be entitled to compensation, and
in others they will not, such a distinction arising not from any
visible difference in the docks themselves, but from some municipal
difference in the constitution of the bodies by whom the docks are
managed."
And still later, in deciding the case of
Currie v.
McKnight (1897), A.C. 97, the House of Lords declared that,
while the admiralty law as known in England differs from the common
law of England, and the common law of Scotland differs from the
common law of England, because they were derived from divergent
sources, yet the admiralty laws were derived both by Scotland and
England from the same source, and "it would be strange as well as
in the highest degree inconvenient if a different maritime law
prevailed in two different parts of the same island."
Potential, however, as may be these arguments, predicated on the
inherent injustice of the doctrine contended for and the serious
inconvenience which must result from an attempt to apply it, we are
not thereby relieved from considering the question in a more
fundamental aspect. In doing so, it becomes manifest that the
decisions of this Court overthrow the assumption that the local law
or decisions of a state can deprive of all rights to relief in a
case where redress is afforded by the maritime law and is sought to
be availed of in a cause of action maritime in its nature and
depending in a court of admiralty of the United States.
In
The Key City
(1872), 14 Wall. 653,
81 U. S. 660,
it was held that federal courts of admiralty were not governed by
state statutes of limitation in the enforcement of maritime liens.
In
The
Page 179 U. S. 561
Lottawanna (1874), 21 Wall. 558,
88 U. S. 578,
it was held that the maritime law as accepted and received in this
country did not confer a lien upon a vessel in favor of those who
had furnished necessary materials, repairs, and supplies for such
vessel in her home port, but that the district courts of the United
States, having jurisdiction of the contract as a maritime one,
might enforce liens given for its security, even when created by
the state law.
In the course of the opinion, speaking through Mr. Justice
Bradley, the Court said (pp.
88 U. S.
572-574):
"Whilst it is true that the great mass of maritime law is the
same in all commercial countries, yet in each country peculiarities
exist either as to some of the rules or in the mode of enforcing
them. Especially is this the case on the outside boundaries of the
law, where it comes in contact with or shades off into the local or
municipal law of the particular country and affects only its own
merchants or people in their relations to each other."
"
* * * * "
"That we have a maritime law of our own, operative throughout
the United States, cannot be doubted. The general system of
maritime law which was familiar to the lawyers and statesmen of the
country when the Constitution was adopted was most certainly
intended and referred to when it was declared in that instrument
that the judicial power of the United States shall extend 'to all
cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction.'"
"The Constitution does not attempt to draw the boundary line
between maritime law and local law; nor does it lay down any
criterion for ascertaining that boundary. It assumes that the
meaning of the phrase 'admiralty and maritime jurisdiction' is well
understood. It treats this matter as it does the cognate ones of
common law and equity when it speaks of 'cases in law and equity'
or of 'suits at common law' without defining those terms, assuming
them to be known and understood."
"One thing, however, is unquestionable: the Constitution must
have referred to a system of law coextensive with, and operating
uniformly in, the whole country. It certainly could
Page 179 U. S. 562
not have been the intention to place the rules and limits of
maritime law under the disposal and regulation of the several
states, as that would have defeated the uniformity and consistency
at which the Constitution aimed on all subjects of a commercial
character affecting the intercourse of the states with each other
or with foreign states."
In
Liverpool Steam Co. v. Phenix Insurance Co. (1889),
129 U. S. 397,
129 U. S. 443,
a maritime contract executed in New York was held to be an American
contract, and the local law of New York was declared not to govern
in its construction. In
Butler v. Boston Steamship Company
(1889),
130 U. S. 527 -- a
case growing out of a collision in navigable waters within the
territorial boundaries of Massachusetts -- it was held that a state
statute could not operate to deprive the owner of the offending
ship of the benefit of the limited liability act, and that state
legislatures could not change or modify the general maritime law.
In
The Max Morris (1890),
137 U. S.
1,
137 U. S. 14, the
question for decision was whether, in a court of admiralty, in a
case where recovery was sought for personal injuries to the
libellant arising from his negligence concurring with that of the
vessel, "any damages can be awarded, or whether the libel must be
dismissed
according to the rule in common law cases." (P.
137 U. S. 8.) It
was held (p.
137 U. S. 15)
that
"the mere fact of the negligence of the libellant as partly
occasioning the injuries to him, when they also occurred partly
through the negligence of the officers of the vessel, does not
debar him entirely from a recovery."
In
The J. E. Rumbell (1893),
148 U. S.
1,
148 U. S. 17, it
was held that any priority given by a state statute, or by
decisions in common law or in equity, to a mortgage upon a vessel
as against a claim for supplies and necessaries furnished to the
vessel in her home port was immaterial,
"and that the admiralty courts of the United States, enforcing
the lien because it is maritime in its nature, arising upon a
maritime contract, must give it the rank to which it is entitled by
the principles of the maritime and admiralty law."
True, it is well settled that, in certain cases where a lien is
given by a state statute, the admiralty courts will enforce rights
so conferred when not in absolute conflict with the admiralty law.
The Lottawanna
(1874), 21 Wall. 558. Moreover, it has
Page 179 U. S. 563
been decided that, although at the time of the adoption of the
Constitution, in courts of admiralty as in courts of common law, a
cause of action for a personal injury abated by the death of the
injured party, nevertheless when, by a state statute a right of
recovery in such a case was conferred, the admiralty courts would
recognize and administer the appropriate relief.
The Albert
Dumois (1900),
177 U. S. 257,
177 U. S. 259,
and cases cited. But such cases afford no foundation for the
proposition that state laws or decisions can deprive an individual
of a right of recovery for a maritime wrong which, under the
general principles of the admiralty law, he undoubtedly possessed,
and can destroy the symmetry and efficiency of that law by
engrafting therein a principle which violates the imperative
command of such law that admiralty courts must administer redress
for every maritime wrong in every case where they have
jurisdictional power over the person by whom the wrong has been
committed. The cases in question, on the contrary, but illustrate
the alacrity with which admiralty courts adopt statutes granting
the right to relief where otherwise it could not be administered by
a maritime court, and they hence do not support the contention that
there is a want of power in admiralty courts to give redress in
every case within their jurisdiction where the duty to do so is
imposed by the maritime law. This distinction is well illustrated
by the ruling in
The Max Morris, supra. There it was
asserted that, by the universal principles of the common law as
well as of the local laws of the states, no right to recover for a
wrong committed could be enforced in favor of one who had himself
contributed to the producing cause of the injury. Whilst the
premise was conceded, the soundness of the inference deduced from
it was denied, and it was held that as, by the general principles
of the maritime law, a measure of relief would be afforded to a
person who had suffered a wrong even although he had contributed
thereto,
it was the duty of the admiralty courts to grant
relief in accordance with the principles of the maritime
law.
It being then settled that the local decisions of one or more
states cannot, as a matter of authority, abrogate the maritime law,
we are brought to consider whether, under the maritime
Page 179 U. S. 564
law, the City of New York was liable for the injury inflicted by
the fire boat. As a prerequisite to a solution of this question, it
is necessary to determine what relation the City of New York bore
to the fire boat and those in control of it.
The Fire Department of the City of New York, as constituted when
the collision in question occurred, was established by chapter 410
of the New York Laws of 1882. In the statute it was declared (sec.
27) that,
"for all purposes, the local administration and government of
the City and County of New York shall continue to be in, and be
performed by, the corporation aforesaid"
--
i.e. "the mayor, aldermen, and commonalty of the
City of New York." By section 34 were established eleven enumerated
"departments in said city," among them a fire department. By
sections 40, 106, and 108, provision was made for a board of fire
commissioners, to act as the executive head of the department, to
be nominated by the mayor, by and with the consent of the board of
aldermen, and to be removable for cause by the mayor, subject to
the approval of the governor of the state. The ministerial
direction of the affairs of the department, including the
preservation of the real and personal property used by it, was
confided to this board of commissioners, but the city was made
liable for all expenses of maintenance and operation, and was the
owner of all the property of the fire department. Sections 424
et seq. In addition to making the city liable for all
expenses connected with the maintenance and operation of the
department, it was provided in section 450 of the statute that any
damage caused by the authorized destruction of buildings to stay
the progress of fire should be borne by the City of New York.
In order to emphasize these material facts, we repeat that it
unquestionably appears that the Fire Department of the City of New
York was an integral branch of the local administration and
government of that city. The ministerial officers who directed the
affairs of the department were selected and paid by the city; all
the expenses of the department of every kind and nature were to be
borne by the city, which was bound by all contracts made for such
purpose; all the property of the department, including the fire
boats, belonged to the city, and the
Page 179 U. S. 565
city was liable in case of an authorized destruction on land of
property of individuals to prevent the spread of a
conflagration.
That, upon such a state of things, the relation of master and
servant existed between the City of New York and those in charge of
the fire boat is clear. And that, under the general maritime law,
where the relation of master and servant exists, an owner of an
offending vessel committing a maritime tort is responsible, under
the rule of
respondeat superior, is elementary.
Thorp v.
Hammond (1871), 12 Wall. 408;
The
Plymouth (1866), 3 Wall. 35.
It is not gainsaid that, as a general rule, municipal
corporations, like individuals, may be sued; in other words, that
they are amenable to judicial process for the purpose of compelling
performance of their obligations. True it is that, under the
general law, growing out of the public nature of their duties,
where judgments or decrees are entered against municipal
corporations, such judgments or decrees may not, as a matter of
public policy, be enforced by the levy on property held by the
corporation for public uses.
Meriwether v. Garrett (1880),
102 U. S. 472.
As a result of the general principle by which a municipal
corporation has the capacity to sue and be sued, it follows that
there is no limitation taking such corporations out of the reach of
the process of a court of admiralty, as such courts, within the
limit of their jurisdiction, may reach persons having a general
capacity to stand in judgment. True also, where admiralty process
has been set in motion against a municipal corporation, public
policy, it has been held, restrains a seizure of property used for
public purposes by such corporation.
The Fidelity (1879),
16 Blatchf. 569. This conclusion, however, is but the application
of the exception as to the mode of execution of a judgment or
decree against such a corporation, to which we have referred, and
its existence in the admiralty law in all cases has also been
denied.
The Oyster Police Steamers of Maryland (1887), 31
F. 763. Which of these conflicting conclusions, as to the exception
in question, is correct we are not called upon on the present
record to determine, since no levy of process upon the fire boat
was made or attempted to be made.
Page 179 U. S. 566
The contention is, although the corporation had general capacity
to stand in judgment, and was therefore subject to the process of a
court of admiralty, nevertheless the admiralty court would afford
no redress against the city for the tort complained of, because
under the local law the corporation as to some of its
administrative acts was entitled to be considered as having a dual
capacity, one private, the other public or governmental, and as to
all maritime wrongs committed in the performance of the latter
functions, it should be treated by the maritime law as a sovereign.
But the maritime law affords no justification for this contention,
and no example is found if such law where one who is subject to
suit and amenable to process is allowed to escape liability for the
commission of a maritime tort upon the theory relied upon. We, of
course, concede that, where maritime torts have been committed by
the vessels of a sovereign, and complaint has been made in a court
of admiralty, that court has declined to exercise jurisdiction, but
this was solely because of the immunity of sovereignty from suit in
its own courts. So also where, in a court of admiralty of one
sovereign, redress is sought for a tort committed by a vessel of
war of another nation, it has been held that as, by the rule of
international comity, the sovereign of another country was not
subject to be impleaded, no redress could be given. Both of these
rules, however, proceed upon the hypothesis of the want of a person
or property before the court over whom jurisdiction can be exerted.
As a consequence, the doctrine above stated rests not upon the
supposed want of power in courts of admiralty to redress a wrong
committed by one over whom such courts have adequate jurisdiction,
but alone on their inability to give redress in a case where
jurisdiction over the person or property cannot be exerted. In
other words, the distinction between the two classes of cases is
that which exists between the refusal of a court to grant relief
because it has no jurisdiction to do so and the failure of a court
to afford redress in a case where the wrong is admitted and
jurisdictional authority over the wrongdoer is undoubted.
The decisions of this Court clearly expound the principles we
have stated.
The Exchange
(1812), 7 Cranch 116, involved the
Page 179 U. S. 567
right of a court of admiralty to enforce, by a proceeding
in
rem, an alleged maritime claim against a vessel of war of a
foreign nation. The right to relief was denied exclusively because
of a want of jurisdiction over the foreign sovereign or his
property.
The Siren
(1869), 7 Wall. 153, involved the liability of a prize ship in the
possession and control of the officers of the United States for an
injury inflicted by a collision of the ship with another vessel,
averred to have been occasioned by the negligent management of
those in charge of the prize ship. In considering the power of the
Court to adjudicate the controversy, the Court said (p.
74 U. S.
155):
"For the damages occasioned by collision of vessels at sea, a
claim is created against the vessel in fault in favor of the
injured party. This claim may be enforced in the admiralty by a
proceeding
in rem, except where the vessel is the property
of the United States. In such case, the claim exists equally as if
the vessel belonged to a private citizen, but, for reasons of
public policy already stated, cannot be enforced by direct
proceedings against the vessel. It stands in that respect like a
claim against the government, incapable of enforcement without its
consent and unavailable for any purpose."
"In England, when the damage is inflicted by a vessel belonging
to the Crown, it was formerly held that the remedy must be sought
against the officer in command of the offending ship. But the
present practice is to file a libel
in rem, upon which the
court directs the registrar to write to the Lords of the Admiralty
requesting an appearance on behalf of the Crown -- which is
generally given -- when the subsequent proceedings to decree are
conducted as in other cases. Coote's New Admiralty Practice 31. In
the case of
The Athol, 1 W. Robinson 382, the court
refused to issue a monition to the Lords of the Admiralty to appear
in a suit for damage by collision, occasioned to a vessel by a ship
of the Crown, but, the lords having subsequently directed an
appearance to be entered, the court proceeded with the case and
awarded damages. As no warrant issues in these cases for the arrest
of the vessels of the Crown and no bail given on the appearance, it
is insisted that they
Page 179 U. S. 568
are brought simply to ascertain the extent of the damages, and
that the decrees are little more than awards, so far as the
government is concerned. This may be the only result of the suits,
but they are instituted and conducted on the hypothesis that claims
against the offending vessels are created by the collision.
The
Clara, Swabey 3, and
The Swallow, 1 Swabey 30. The
vessels are not arrested and taken into custody by the marshal for
the reasons of public policy already stated, and for the further
reason that it is to be presumed that the government will at once
satisfy a decree rendered by its own tribunals in a case in which
it has voluntarily appeared."
As the prize vessel had been condemned and sold at the instance
of the United States, and the proceeds were in the registry of the
court for distribution, the court gave the relief sought against
the proceeds of the sale, because the facts stated established, not
only the liability of the offending ship, but also furnished the
basis of jurisdiction.
The same principle was applied in the later case of
The Davis
(1869), 10 Wall. 15, where it was held that personal property of
the United States on board of a vessel for transportation from one
point to another was liable to a lien for salvage service rendered
in saving the property from a peril of the sea, and that such lien
might be enforced by a proceeding
in rem, when the process
of the court might be used without disturbing the possession of the
government.
The statement of the maritime law of England on the subject now
being considered, made in
The Siren, supra, makes it clear
that, in harmony with the maritime law of this country, the fact
that a wrong has been committed by a public vessel of the Crown
affords no ground for contending that no liability arises because
of the public nature of the vessel, although, it may be, in
consequence of a want of jurisdiction over the sovereign, redress
cannot be given. This is well illustrated by the cases to which we
shall now refer.
The Athol (1842), 1 Wm.Rob. 374, was the case of a
British troopship which had run down a brig in the English channel.
The Lords of the Admiralty having refused a petition for
compensation, the owner of the brig applied to the High Court
of
Page 179 U. S. 569
Admiralty to decree a monition to issue against those officials.
In declining to issue the monition, for want of power, Dr.
Lushington said (p. 382):
"Under the circumstances of this case then, both upon principle
and the authority of decided cases, I must decline to issue the
monition as prayed. At the same time, sitting here as a judge in a
court of justice, I am bound to express the opinion that I cannot
apprehend the high personages who represent Her Majesty in her
office of admiralty will avoid doing justice, or that, upon a due
consideration, they will take upon themselves to say that they will
be themselves the exclusive judges upon the merits of the present
case. Whether they shall appear or not is not a matter for this
court to determine. I decline to grant the monition."
The Lords of the Admiralty subsequently, directed that an
appearance should be made on behalf of
The Athol, and as
by this act the court had jurisdiction to determine the
controversy, it did so, held
The Athol to have been in
fault, and, despite the public nature of the vessel, "the damages
and costs were pronounced for."
The Parlement Belge (1879), 4 P.D. 129, was an action
instituted on behalf of the owners of a steam tug against the
steamship
Parlement Belge and her freight to recover
damages sustained by the tug in a collision with the steamship. The
latter vessel was, at the time of the collision and when the action
was instituted, a public vessel of the government of the sovereign
state of Belgium, navigated and employed by and in the possession
of such government and officered by officers of the Royal Belgium
Navy, holding commissions from His Majesty the King of Belgium, and
in the pay and service of his government. Besides carrying the
mails between Dover and Ostend,
The Parlement Belge
carried passengers and merchandise, and was employed in earning
passage money and freight. Sir Robert Phillimore declared (p. 144)
that the case was one of first impression, and to be decided upon
general principles and the analogies of law, rather than upon any
direct precedent, and it was held that
The Parlement Belge
did not come within the category of a ship of war or a pleasure
vessel belonging to the
Page 179 U. S. 570
Crown of Belgium, and was not exempt from the process of the
court. On appeal, however (1880) (5 P.D.197), it was held that the
admiralty court was concluded by the declaration of the sovereign
authority that the vessel was a public vessel of the state, and
further that the mere fact of the ship's having been used
subordinately for trading purposes did not take away the immunity
attaching to the public vessel of an independent sovereignty, and
that the vessel could not be proceeded against.
It results that, in the maritime law, the public nature of the
service upon which a vessel is engaged at the time of the
commission of a maritime tort affords no immunity from liability in
a court of admiralty where the court has jurisdiction. This being
so, it follows that as the municipal corporation of the City of New
York, unlike a sovereign, was subject to the jurisdiction of the
court, the claimed exemption from liability asserted in the case at
bar, because of the public nature of the service upon which the
fire boat was engaged -- even if such claim for the purposes of the
case be conceded -- was without foundation in the maritime law, and
therefore afforded no reason for denying redress in a court of
admiralty for the wrong which the courts below both found to have
been committed.
And these consideration would dispose of the case were it not
for two subordinate contentions which we deem it essential to
notice before reaching a conclusion. The first, as expressed in the
brief of counsel, is that the injury to the
Linda Park
should have been held to have been the result of inevitable
accident, because
"whatever was done in regard to the navigation of the
New
Yorker was done in the excitement of the moment, and in view
of the extent of not only the possible, but probable, spread of the
fire, under pressure of necessity."
Pausing for a moment to analyze this contention, it results that
it involves the self-destructive assumptions that the maritime law,
in order to render the person and property of the individual safe
in case of an emergency arising from the happening of fire, causes
both the person and property of the individual to be unsafe, since
without necessity and through negligence, injury can be inflicted
or destruction be brought about without power in the admiralty
courts to redress the wrong, although the wrongdoer
Page 179 U. S. 571
be amenable to their jurisdiction. But while it is true that the
emergency of fire was an element to be considered in determining
whether or not those in charge of the fire boat were negligent on
the occasion in question, since negligence is relative -- that is,
depends upon whether there was an absence of the care which it was
the duty to exercise under the particular circumstances -- yet it
does not follow that the emergency of fire exempted from the
exercise of such due care as the occasion required towards property
which was in the path of the fire boat as it approached the slip
for the purpose of getting into a position where it might assist in
extinguishing the fire in question.
This principle has been heretofore applied by this Court. Thus,
in
The Clarita
(1875), 23 Wall. 1, a tugboat, whose business it was to give relief
to vessels on fire, in towing a vessel on fire from out of a dock,
used a manilla hawser. While so engaged, the hawser was burnt, and
the burning vessel, getting loose from the tug, drifted and set
fire to another vessel. It was urged upon the court
"that it is the interest of shipping that an enterprising
company like the one which owned this tug -- a company which at
great expense fits up a tug with powerful steam pumps and keeps the
vessel ready with her fires banked, night and day, to move on a
moment's notice everywhere about a harbor for useful service --
should be encouraged,"
and the emergency of the occasion it was claimed ought to exempt
from liability. In holding that the tug was in fault, this Court
said (p.
90 U. S. 15):
"Even ordinary experience and prudence would have suggested that
the part of the hawser made fast to the burning ferryboat should be
chain, and that it would be unsafe to use a hawser made of manilla.
Where the danger is great, the greater should be the precaution, as
prudent men in great emergencies employ their best exertions to
ward off the danger. Whether they had a chain hawser on board or
not does not appear, but sufficient does appear to satisfy the
court that one of sufficient length to have prevented the disaster
might easily have been procured, even if they were not supplied
with such an appliance."
And in accord with this doctrine is the local law of New
Page 179 U. S. 572
York. Thus, in
Farley v. New York (1897), 152 N.Y. 222,
in speaking of the obligation to exercise due care devolving upon
the driver of a fire engine while responding to an alarm of fire,
the court said (p. 227):
"The conduct of the plaintiff was for the consideration of the
jury. . . . He was bound in driving to exercise the care which a
prudent person would ordinarily exercise under similar
circumstances. It was for the jury to say whether he was alert on
this occasion, watchful to avoid obstructions which might be in his
path, and whether there was any omission on his part of reasonable
circumspection and diligence which contributed to the
accident."
And indeed, although there are a number of cases holding that a
municipal corporation is not liable for a positive injury to the
person or property of an individual inflicted by its fire
department, they do not rest upon the doctrine of emergency, which
we are now considering. On the contrary,
all these cases but
expound the theory of sovereign attribute, which we have seen
does not control the maritime law and cannot justify an admiralty
court in refusing to redress a wrong where it has jurisdiction to
do so.
The remaining suggestion is that, as a proceeding
in
rem could not have been maintained against the fire boat
because it was the property of the City of New York, and therefore
an instrumentality employed in the performance of its municipal
functions, no action
in personam was available to the
owner of the injured vessel. As we at the outset said, there is
contrariety of opinion in the lower admiralty courts of the United
States as to whether the rule of the courts of common law which
exempts from seizure the property of a municipality devoted to its
municipal uses obtains in a court of admiralty of the United
States. This conflict, as we have also said, we deem it unnecessary
to determine in this case because, even if it be conceded that the
fire boat could not have been seized by process from a court of
admiralty, the proposition that therefore the owner could not be
called upon in an action
in personam to respond for the
damages inflicted by the boat is without foundation. Of course, as
has been repeatedly declared by this
Page 179 U. S. 573
Court, by the general admiralty law of this country, subject to
the exemption from process possessed by the national government, a
ship, by whomsoever owned or navigated, is liable for an actionable
injury resulting from the negligence of the master and crew of such
vessel.
The John G. Stevens (1898),
170 U.
S. 113,
170 U. S. 120,
and cases cited. A liability of the owners
in personam,
however, is not dependent upon ability to maintain a proceeding
in rem because of the maritime tort. A maritime lien may
not exist in a cause of collision, for instance, when the thing
occasioning the tort was not the subject of a maritime lien,
The Rock Island
Bridge (1867), 6 Wall. 213, or such a lien, if it
exist, may not be enforceable, and so may be said to render the
offending thing not the subject of a maritime lien, because of the
ownership and possession of such thing being in the government of
the nation.
The Siren
(1869), 7 Wall. 152. Or the remedy
in rem may not be
available owing to the offending thing's being actually in another
country, or because of its loss intermediate the collision and the
institution of legal proceedings.
A recovery can be had
in personam, however, for a
maritime tort when the relation existing between the owner and the
master and crew of the vessel at the time of the negligent
collision was that of master and servant.
Thorp v.
Hammond (1871), 12 Wall. 408;
The
Plymouth (1866), 3 Wall. 35.
The prerequisite in admiralty to the right to resort to a libel
in personam is the existence of a cause of action maritime
in its nature. That a collision upon navigable waters of the United
States, between vessels, by the fault of one of such vessels,
creates a maritime tort and a cause of action within the
jurisdiction of a court of admiralty is, of course, unquestioned.
And, as said by this Court in
In re Louisville
Underwriters (1890),
134 U. S. 488,
134 U. S.
490:
"By the ancient and settled practice of courts of admiralty, a
libel
in personam may be maintained for any cause within
their jurisdiction, wherever a monition can be served upon the
libelee or an attachment made of any personal property or credits
of his."
Because we conclude that the rule of the local law in the
Page 179 U. S. 574
State of New York -- conceding it to be as held by the circuit
court of appeals -- does not control the maritime law, and
therefore affords no ground for sustaining the nonliability of the
City of New York in the case at bar, we must not be understood as
conceding the correctness of the doctrine by which a municipal
corporation, as to the discharge of its administrative duties, is
treated as having two distinct capacities, the one private or
corporate and the other governmental or sovereign, in which latter
it may inflict a direct and positive wrong upon the person or
property of a citizen without power in the courts to afford redress
for such wrong. That question, from the aspect of both the common
and municipal law, was considered by this Court in
Weightman
v. Washington (1861), 1 Black 39;
Barnes v.
District of Columbia (1875),
91 U. S. 540, and
in
District of Columbia v. Woodbury (1890),
136 U.
S. 450. And although this opinion is confined to the
controlling effect of the admiralty law, we do not intend to
intimate the belief that the common law which benignly above all
considers the rights of the individual, yet gives its sanction to a
principle with denies the duty of courts to protect the rights of
the individual in a case where they have jurisdiction to do so. For
these reasons, we are sedulous to say that we must not be
understood as in any wise doubting the correctness of the doctrines
expounded by this Court in the cases just cited, or as even
impliedly approving contentions which may conflict with the
principles announced in those cases.
Our conclusion is that the district court rightly decided that
the mayor, aldermen, and commonalty of the City of New York were
liable for the damages sustained by the owner of the
Linda
Park.
The decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second
Circuit is reversed, and the decree of the district court is
affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, for himself and MR. JUSTICE BREWER, MR.
JUSTICE SHIRAS and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, dissenting:
We are unable to concur in this decision, and the case
appears
Page 179 U. S. 575
to us of such importance as to warrant, if not to require, a
statement of the grounds of our dissent.
The question presented by the record is whether the owner of a
vessel lying at a dock in the port of New York can maintain a libel
in admiralty
in personam against the City of New York for
an injury to his vessel from being run into through the negligence
of those in charge of a fire boat, owned by the city and in the
custody and management of its fire department, while hastening to
assist in putting out a fire raging in a building at the head of
the dock.
We had supposed it to be well settled, on authority and on
principle, that no private suit could be maintained against a
municipal corporation for an injury to person or property caused by
negligence of members of its fire department while engaged in the
performance of their official duties.
How far a municipal corporation may be held liable to a private
action for the neglect of itself or of its officers in the
performance of duties imposed upon it or upon them by law is a
subject upon which, in some of its aspects, there has been much
difference of opinion in the courts of this country.
The difference has been most marked in actions against a city
for injuries from a defect in a highway which the city is bound by
its charter to repair. Such actions, when not expressly given by
statute, have been held not to be maintainable by the courts of the
New England states, and by those of New Jersey, Michigan,
Wisconsin, South Carolina, Arkansas, and California, but have been
held to be maintainable by the courts of every other state in which
the question has arisen. The decisions upon that point in either
class of states are fully collected in 1 Shearman & Redfield on
Negligence (5th ed.), §§ 258, 289.
What kinds of cases may fall within the same rule has been the
subject of much doubt and discussion. But it has never, so far as
we are aware, been held by the highest court of any state that an
action at law may be maintained against a municipal corporation for
an injury to person or property caused by the negligence of the
members of its fire department while engaged in the line of their
duty.
It is not only in states whose courts hold that, unless
authorized
Page 179 U. S. 576
by express statute, no action can be maintained against a city
for the neglect of itself or its officers to keep a highway in
repair -- as throughout New England, and in New Jersey, Wisconsin,
and California -- that no action has been held to be maintainable
against a city for negligence of members of its fire department
while discharging their duty as such.
Hafford v. New
Bedford (1860), 16 Gray 297;
Fisher v. Boston (1870),
104 Mass. 87;
Pettingell v. Chelsea (1894), 161 Mass. 368;
Burrill v. Augusta (1886), 78 Me. 118;
Edgerly v.
Concord (1879), 59 N.H. 78, and (1882), 62 N.H. 8;
Welsh
v. Rutland (1883), 56 Vt. 228;
Dodge v. Granger
(1892), 17 R.I. 664;
Jewett v. New Haven (1871), 38 Conn.
368;
Wild v. Paterson (1885), 47 N.J.L. 406;
Hayes v.
Oshkosh (1873), 33 Wis. 314;
Howard v. San Francisco
(1875), 51 Cal. 52.
But the same view has prevailed in those states where a
different view is taken of the question of the liability of cities
for defects in highways and bridges. In the states of New York,
Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, Mississippi,
Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, and Washington (as appears in Shearman
and Redfield on Negligence,
ubi supra), cities are held
liable to private actions for damages from defects in highways. Yet
in each of those state it has been adjudged that cities are not
liable to actions for negligence of members of their fire
department engaged in the line of their duty.
In the case at bar, the decree of the district court in favor of
the libellant against the City of New York proceeded upon the
ground that, by the local law of New York, an action could be
maintained against the city by the owner of property injured by the
negligence of members of its fire department. The circuit court of
appeals came to the opposite conclusion, and, upon careful
examination of the New York decisions, we are satisfied that the
circuit court of appeals was right upon that question.
In the Court of Appeals of the State of New York, the law has
long been settled that a municipal corporation having a charter
from the state which requires it to construct and maintain highways
and bridges is liable to a person suffering injury
Page 179 U. S. 577
in person or property by a defect in the construction or repair
of either by the negligence of the commissioner of highways.
Hutson v. New York (1853), 9 N.Y. 163;
Conrad v.
Ithaca (1857), 16 N.Y. 158, 161;
Requa v. Rochester
(1871), 45 N.Y. 129;
Hume v. New York (1878), 74 N.Y. 264;
Ehrgott v. New York (1884), 96 N.Y. 264;
Hughes v.
Monroe County (1895), 147 N.Y. 49, 57;
Missano v. New
York (1899), 160 N.Y. 123.
But that court has constantly held otherwise in regard to
negligence of members of the fire department, the police
department, or even of the department of public charities, of
public health, or of public instruction.
In
Maxmilian v. New York (1875), 62 N.Y. 160, which has
always been considered a leading case, Judge Folger, delivering the
unanimous judgment of the court, said:
"There are two kinds of duties which are imposed upon a
municipal corporation: one is of that kind which arises from the
grant of a special power, in the exercise of which the municipality
is as a legal individual; the other is of that kind which arises,
or is implied, from the use of political rights under the general
law, in the exercise of which it is as a sovereign. The former
power is private, and is used for private purposes; the latter is
public, and is used for public purposes. . . . The former is not
held by the municipality as one of the political divisions of the
state; the latter is. In the exercise of the former power, and
under the duty to the public which the acceptance and use of the
power involves, a municipality is like a private corporation, and
is liable for a failure to use its power well, or for an injury
caused by using it badly. But where the power is entrusted to it as
one of the political divisions of the state, and is conferred not
for the immediate benefit of the municipality, but as a means to
the exercise of the sovereign power for the benefit of all
citizens, the corporation is not liable for nonuser nor for misuser
by the public agents."
62 N.Y. 164, 165. The previous decisions holding municipal
corporations liable to private actions for defects in highways or
bridges were placed upon the ground that
"the duty of keeping in repair streets, bridges, and other
common ways of passage, and sewers, and a liability for a neglect
to perform that duty, rests upon an express or implied
Page 179 U. S. 578
acceptance of the power, and an agreement so to do. It is a duty
with which the city is charged for its own corporate benefit, to be
performed by its own agents, as its own corporate act."
62 N.Y. 170. But it was adjudged that the city was not liable
for a personal injury caused by the negligence of the driver of an
ambulance employed by the commissioners of public charities and
correction, because the powers and duties of those commissioners
were such as were to be exercised and performed, in every local
political division of the state, not for the peculiar benefit of
that division, but for the whole public in the discharge of its
duty to care for paupers, lunatics, and prisoners. 62 N.Y. 168.
In
Ham v. New York (1877), 70 N.Y. 459, the decision in
Maxmilian's case was approved, and was followed in holding
that the city was not liable to one whose property was injured in
consequence of the negligent construction of a schoolhouse by the
department of public instruction of the city.
More directly in point is
Smith v. Rochester (1879), 76
N.Y. 506, in which it was held that no action against the city
could be maintained by a person injured by the negligent driving of
a hose cart along the street pursuant to a vote of the city council
directing the fire department to assemble in front of the city hall
at midnight as part of a celebration of the centennial anniversary
of the National Independence. The judgment was put not only upon
the ground that the city had no authority to employ the horses and
wagons of the fire department for a midnight parade of the fire
department to celebrate the centennial anniversary of the nation,
but upon the additional and distinct ground that, assuming that the
city had such authority under the statutes of New York,
"the difficulty in maintaining the plaintiff's action is the
well settled rule that a municipal corporation is not liable for
the negligence of firemen while engaged in the line of their
duty."
76 N.Y. 513.
In
Terhune v. New York (1882), 88 N.Y. 247, it was held
that an officer of the fire department could not maintain an action
against the city for his wrongful dismissal from office by the fire
commissioners, because, as was said by Judge Earl, citing the cases
of
Maxmilian, of
Ham, and of
Smith,
above
Page 179 U. S. 579
referred to, "the fire commissioners were public officers, and
not agents of the city." 88 N.Y. 251.
See also Springfield Ins.
Co. v. Keeseville (1895), 148 N.Y. 46.
Quite in line with these decisions is
Farley v. New
York (1897), 152 N.Y. 222, 227, which was an action by the
driver of a hose carriage against the city to recover damages for
injuries caused by driving against an obstruction in the highway.
The New York statute of 1882, c. 410 (consolidating the laws
affecting public interests in the City of New York), provides in
section 444 that
"the officers and men of the fire department, with their
apparatus of all kinds, when on duty, shall have the right of way
at any fire, and in any highway, street, or avenue, over any and
all vehicles of any kind, except those carrying United States
mail,"
and in section 1932 that no person shall drive or ride any horse
through any street in the city faster than five miles an hour. The
Court of Appeals, speaking by Chief Justice Andrews, said:
"The safety of property and the protection of life may, and
often do, depend upon celerity of movement, and require that the
greatest practicable speed should be permitted to the vehicles of
the fire department in going to fires. Section 1932 was intended to
regulate the speed of horses traveling on the streets and using
them for the ordinary purposes of travel, and from the nature of
the exigency, cannot apply to the speed of vehicles of the fire
department on their way to fires."
The further decision that negligence on the part of the driver
would defeat his action against the city has no tendency to show
that such negligence could render the city liable to third
persons.
In the very recent case of
Missano v. New York, 160
N.Y. 123, in which it was held that keeping the streets clean stood
upon the same ground as keeping them in repair, and that the city
was therefore liable for a personal injury caused by the negligence
of the driver of an ash cart of the street cleaning department, the
court again affirmed the established distinction between such cases
and those in which the corporation exercised a public and
governmental power for the benefit of the whole public and as the
delegate and representative of the state, and quoted with approval
the statement of Judge Wallace in a similar
Page 179 U. S. 580
case in the circuit court of the United States, where, speaking
of the commissioner of the street cleaning, he said:
"His duties, unlike those of the officers of the departments of
health, charities, fire, and police, although performed
incidentally in the interest of the public health, are more
immediately performed in the interest of the corporation itself
which is charged with the obligation of maintaining its streets in
fit and suitable condition for the use of those who resort to
them."
Barney Co. v. New York (1889), 40 F. 50.
See also
Hughes v. Auburn (1899), 161 N.Y. 96, 103, 104, and the
decisions of the District Court of the United States for the
Southern District of New York in
Haight v. New York
(1885), 24 F. 93, and in
Edgerton v. New York (1886), 27
F. 230.
The highest courts of the States of Pennsylvania, Ohio,
Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, Mississippi, Iowa, Minnesota,
Nebraska, and Washington also, as already mentioned, have adjudged
that no private action can be maintained to recover damages against
a city for an injury caused by negligence of members of its fire
department while engaged in their official duties. The decisions
are so uniform, and treat the point as so well settled, that it is
enough to cite them without stating them in detail. They are as
follows:
Knight v. Philadelphia (1884), 15 Penn.Weekly
Notes 307;
Fire Insurance Patrol v. Boyd (1888), 120 Pa.
624, 646;
Kies v. Erie (1890), 135 Pa. 144, 149;
Frederick v. Columbus (1898), 58 Ohio St. 538, 546;
Wilcox v. Chicago (1883), 107 Ill. 334, 338-340;
Greenwood v. Louisville (1877), 13 Bush 226;
Davis v.
Lebanon (1900), 22 Ky.L.Rep. 384;
Heller v. Sedalia
(1873), 53 Mo. 159;
McKenna v. St. Louis (1878), 6 Mo.App.
320;
Alexander v. Vicksburg (1891), 68 Miss. 564;
Saunders v. Fort Madison (Iowa, 1900), 82 N.W. 428;
Grube v. St. Paul (1886), 34 Minn. 402;
Gillespie v.
Lincoln (1892), 35 Neb. 34, 46;
Lawson v. Seattle
(1893), 6 Wash. 184.
The law on this point, as understood and administered throughout
the country by the highest courts of all the states in which the
question has arisen, is unqualifiedly recognized by the principal
text writers. Mr. Dillon for instance, after observing that
Page 179 U. S. 581
"police officers appointed by a city are not its agents or
servants, so as to render it responsible for their unlawful or
negligent acts in the discharge of their duties,"
goes on to say:
"So, although a municipal corporation has charter power to
extinguish fires, to establish a fire department, to appoint and
remove its officers, and to make regulations in respect to their
government and the management of fires, it is not liable for the
negligence of firemen appointed and paid by it who, when engaged in
their line of duty upon an alarm of fire, ran over the plaintiff in
drawing a hose-reel belonging to the city on their way to the fire,
nor for injuries to the plaintiff caused by the bursting of the
hose of one of the engines of the corporation through the
negligence of a member of the fire department, nor for like
negligence whereby sparks from the fire engine of the corporation
caused the plaintiff's property to be burned. The exemption from
liability in these and the like cases is upon the ground that the
service is performed by the corporation in obedience to an act of
the legislature, is one in which the corporation, as such, has no
particular interest, and from which it derives no special benefit
in its corporate capacity; that the members of the fire department,
although appointed, employed, and paid by the city corporation, and
not the agents and servants of the city for whose conduct it is
liable, but they act rather as officers of the city, charged with a
public service, for whose negligence in the discharge of official
duty no action lies against the city without being expressly given;
the maxim of
respondeat superior has therefore no
application."
2 Dillon on Municipal Corporations §§ 975, 976.
See also 1 Shearman and Redfield on Negligence § 265;
Tiedeman on Municipal Corporations § 333
a; 1 Beach on
Public Corporations § 744; 13 Am. & Eng.Ency.Law (2d ed.)
p. 78.
The libellant relied on
Mersey Docks v. Gibbs, L.R. 1
H.L. 93, in which the members of the town council of Liverpool and
their successors, who had been formed by acts of Parliament into a
corporation by the style of the Trustees of the Liverpool Docks,
were held liable to an action for an injury to a vessel from a bank
of mud which had been negligently suffered to remain in the docks.
That decision proceeded upon the ground that the trustees of the
docks were one of those corporations
Page 179 U. S. 582
formed for trading and other profitable purposes, and in their
very nature substitutions on a large scale for individual
enterprise; supplying to those using the docks the same
accommodation and the same services that would have been supplied
by ordinary dock proprietors to their customers, and being paid for
such accommodation and services sums of money, constituting a fund
which, although not belonging to them for their own use, was
devoted to the maintenance of the works, and presumably to pay
claims against the corporation for injuries caused by their
negligence.
See L.R. 1 H.L. 105-107, 122. It was of such
bodies, that Lord Cranworth, after observing that the fact that the
appellants, in whom the docks were vested, did not collect tolls
for their own profit, but merely as trustees for the benefit of the
public, made no difference in principle in respect to their
liability, went on to say:
"It would be a strange distinction to persons coming with their
ships to different ports of this country, that in some ports, if
they sustain damage by the negligence of those who have the
management of the docks, they will be entitled to compensation, and
in others they will not; such a distinction arising, not from any
visible difference in the docks themselves, but from some municipal
difference in the constitution of the bodies by whom the docks are
managed."
But the City of New York, in establishing and carrying on a fire
department, is not a substitution for individual enterprise, nor
does it perform any such services as ordinary individuals might
perform to their customers, nor does it receive any compensation
for the use of the fire boat, or from those benefited by the acts
of the fire department.
The decisions of this Court contain nothing, to say the least,
inconsistent with the conclusion that no action at law could be
maintained in such a case as this.
This Court, taking the same view of the liability of municipal
corporations to actions at law for injuries caused by defects in
highways or bridges, which has prevailed in New York and in most of
the states, has held that an action of that kind may be maintained
in the courts of the District of Columbia,
Weightman
v. Washington (1861), 1 Black 39;
Barnes v.
District of
Page 179 U. S. 583
Columbia (1875),
91 U. S. 540;
District of Columbia v. Woodbury (1890),
136 U.
S. 450;
Bauman v. Ross (1897),
167 U.
S. 548,
167 U. S. 597;
or in the courts of a territory,
Nebraska
City v. Campbell (1862), 2 Black 590, or in the
circuit court of the United States held in a state whose courts
maintain such an action, as in New York,
New York
v. Sheffield (1866), 4 Wall. 189; in Illinois,
Chicago v.
Robbins (1862), 2 Black 418 and (1866)
71 U. S. 4 Wall.
657, and
Evanston v. Gunn (1878),
99 U. S.
660; in Virginia,
Manchester v. Ericsson
(1881),
105 U. S. 347, or
in Ohio,
Cleveland v. King (1889),
132 U.
S. 295, but that, in a state where, as in Michigan, its
highest court holds that a municipal corporation is not liable to
such an action, no such action will lie in the circuit court of the
United States, because, as was said by MR. JUSTICE BREWER in
delivering judgment, the question "is not one of general commercial
law; it is purely local in its significance and extent."
Detroit v. Osborne (1890),
135 U.
S. 492,
135 U. S.
498.
In the leading case of
Weightman v. Washington, which
was an action against the City of Washington for injuries caused by
a defect in a bridge, the Court said:
"In view of the several provisions of the charter, not a doubt
is entertained that the burden of repairing or rebuilding the
bridge was imposed upon the defendants in consideration of the
privileges and immunities conferred by the charter."
1 Black
66 U. S. 51. And
the Court took occasion, by way of precaution, to observe that
powers granted by the legislature to a municipal corporation to
pass ordinances prescribing and regulating the duties of policemen
and firemen
"are generally regarded as discretionary, because, in their
nature, they are legislative, and although it is the duty of such
corporations to carry out the powers so granted and make them
beneficial, still it has never been held that an action on the case
would lie against the corporation at the suit of an individual, for
the failure on their part to perform such a duty."
1 Black
66 U. S. 49.
In
Barnes v. District of Columbia, the action was for a
defect in a street in the District of Columbia, constituted a
municipal corporation by the act of Congress of February 21, 1871,
c. 62, which vested in a board of public works appointed by the
Page 179 U. S. 584
President, the entire control and regulation of the streets,
avenues, and alleys of the city. 16 Stat. 419, 427. The decision
proceeded upon the ground that the care of the streets was
"peculiarly a municipal duty," and that the board of works, being
charged by Congress with the exclusive control of the streets, was,
in that respect, like an ordinary agent of the city, and its
proceedings were proceedings of the city. 91 U.S.
91 U. S. 547,
91 U. S.
555.
But there is no ground for assuming that the duty of putting out
fires was imposed upon the City of New York "in consideration of
the immunities and privileges conferred by the charter," or was
"peculiarly a municipal duty."
In
Bowditch v. Boston (1879),
101 U. S.
16, it was adjudged that no action would lie, either at
common law or by statute, against the City of Boston to recover
damages for the destruction of a building, blown up under a general
order of the chief engineer of the city to prevent the spreading of
a conflagration; that the action, not being maintainable at common
law, could only be supported by an express statute, and that the
statutes of Massachusetts, as construed by the highest court of the
state, did not authorize such an action against the city, except
for the destruction of a building by specific order of three
firewards or engineers acting jointly. In support of the position
that the action would not lie at common law, this Court relied on
the ancient rule, as stated by Coke, that,
"for the commonwealth, a man shall suffer damage -- as, for
saving of a city or town, a house shall be plucked down if the next
be on fire . . . and a thing for the commonwealth every man may do
without being liable to an action."
Case of the King's Prerogative in Saltpetre, 12 Coke
12, 13. The expression "the commonwealth" was evidently used by
Coke as equivalent to "the common weal" or "the public welfare,"
for he added, after the proposition above quoted, "as it is said in
3 Hen. VIII. fol. 15," evidently intending to refer to the Year
Book of 13 Hen. VIII, 15, 16, in which the rule is introduced by
the words "the common wealth shall be preferred before private
wealth;" and in a statement of the rule in a case in 29 Hen. VIII,
the corresponding expression is "the common weal."
Maleverer v.
Spinke, 1 Dyer 35
a, 36
b.
Page 179 U. S. 585
The precise question whether a municipal corporation is liable
to an action at law for injuries caused by negligence of members of
its fire department has never been decided or considered by this
Court.
But the principles affirmed and illustrated in the authorities
already cited forbid the maintenance of a private action against a
municipal corporation for injuries caused by the negligence of
members of a fire department while engaged in the performance of
their official duties.
The putting out of fires which are in danger of spreading is for
the benefit of the whole public, and for the protection of the
property of all. The danger is so great and imminent that it is
especially one of those cases in which the public safety must be
preferred to private interests.
Salus populi suprema lex.
It is the public good, the general welfare, that justifies the
destruction of neighboring buildings to prevent the spreading of a
fire which as yet rages in one building only. The duty of
protecting, so far as may be, all property within the state against
destruction by fire is a public and governmental duty which rests
upon the government of the state, and it does not cease to be a
duty of that character because the state has delegated it to, or
permitted it to be performed by, a municipal corporation. When
entrusted by the legislature to a municipal corporation, a
political division of the state, it is not for the peculiar benefit
of that corporation or division, but for its benefit in common with
the whole public. A fire department is established in a
municipality not merely for the protection of buildings and
property within the municipality itself, but equally for the
protection of buildings and property beyond its limits to which a
fire originating within those limits may be in danger of spreading.
Moreover, the necessity and appropriateness of the course and
measures to be taken to stay a conflagration must be promptly
determined, in the first instance, by those charged with the
performance of the duty at the time of the exigency, and often
cannot be as accurately judged of long after the fact. The members
of the fire department of a city, therefore, whether appointed by
the municipal corporation or otherwise, are not mere agents or
servants of the corporation,
Page 179 U. S. 586
but are public officers charged with a public service, and for
their acts or their negligence in the performance of this service
no action lies against the corporation unless expressly given by
statute.
It appears to us to be equally clear that no suit upon a like
cause of action can be maintained in a court of admiralty; or, as
expressed by the circuit court of appeals in this case:
"That the suit is brought in a court of admiralty, instead of a
common law court, and that the negligence consisted in the improper
navigation of the vessel, are considerations which cannot affect
the conclusion."
67 F. 348.
It was argued that all the admiralty courts of the United States
should be governed by one rule of maritime law, without regard to
local decisions. Such is doubtless the case in the courts of
admiralty, as it is in the other courts of the United States, upon
questions of general commercial law.
Liverpool Steam Co. v.
Phenix Ins. Co. (1889),
129 U. S. 397,
129 U. S. 443.
Courts of admiralty are also governed by their own rules, and not
by the common law or by local statute, in matters affecting their
own jurisdiction and procedure -- as, for instance, in regard to
the rules of navigation in navigable waters,
The New
York v. Rea (1855), 18 How. 223, to the limitation
of the liability of shipowners,
Butler v. Boston Steamship
Co. (1889),
130 U. S. 527; to
the duration, the enforcement, and the marshaling of maritime
liens,
The Chusan (1842), 2 Story 455, 462;
The Lottawanna
(1874), 21 Wall. 558;
The J. E. Rumbell (1893),
148 U. S. 1,
148 U. S. 17, and
to the effect of contributory negligence of a suitor upon his right
to recover, and upon the assessment of damages.
Atlee v.
Packet Co. (1874), 21 Wall. 389,
88 U. S. 395;
The Max Morris (1890),
137 U. S. 1. But the
decision of this case does not turn upon any such question.
By the general admiralty law of this country, often declared by
this Court, a ship, by whomsoever owned or navigated, is liable for
an actionable injury resulting from the negligence of her master or
crew to another vessel.
United States v. The Malek
Adhel (1844), 2 How. 210,
43 U. S.
233-234;
The China
(1868), 7 Wall. 53,
74 U. S. 68;
Ralli v. Troop (1895),
157 U. S. 386,
157 U. S. 403;
The John G. Stevens (1898),
170 U.
S. 113,
170 U. S. 120.
But that does not warrant the inference
Page 179 U. S. 587
that a libel
in personam can be maintained against the
owner for a tort which would neither sustain a libel
in
rem against the ship nor an action at law against her
owner.
There is no case, we believe, in which a libel in admiralty has
been maintained by this Court as for a tort upon a cause of action
on which, by the law prevailing throughout the country, no action
at law could be maintained. On the contrary, it has repeatedly held
that, as no action lies at common law for the death of a human
being, no suit for a death caused by the negligence of those in
charge of a vessel on navigable waters, either within a state or on
the high seas, can be maintained in admiralty in the courts of the
United States in the absence of an act of Congress or a statute of
the state giving a right of action therefor, and in delivering
judgment in the leading case, Chief Justice Waite said:
"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. . . . The rights of persons
in this particular under the maritime law of this country are not
different from those under the common law, and as it is the duty of
courts to declare the law, not to make it, we cannot change this
rule."
The Harrisburg (1886),
119 U.
S. 199,
119 U. S. 213;
The Alaska (1889),
130 U. S. 201;
The Corsair (1892),
145 U. S. 335;
The Albert Dumois (1900),
177 U.
S. 240,
177 U. S.
259.
The cases of
The Siren
(1868), 7 Wall. 152, and
The Davis
(1869), 10 Wall. 15, related wholly to claims against the United
States, as compared with claims against private persons; no
question of the liability of municipal corporations was contested
by the parties or alluded to by the court, and neither decision has
any tendency to support the libel in the present case. In
The
Siren, a claim against a prize ship for damages from a
collision with her while in the possession of the prize crew was
sustained against the proceeds of the sale after condemnation
solely because the United States were the actors in the suit to
have her condemned. So, in
The Davis, salvage against
goods belonging to the United States, and part of the cargo of a
private ship, was allowed because the possession of her master was
not
Page 179 U. S. 588
the possession of the United States, and the United States could
only obtain the goods by claiming them in court. In short, in each
case, as Mr. Justice Miller afterwards pointed out,
"the government came into court of its own volition to assert
its claim to the property, and could only do so on condition of
recognizing the superior rights of others."
Case v.
Terrell (1870), 11 Wall. 199,
78 U. S. 201.
The opinion in each of the three cases distinctly affirmed the well
settled doctrine of our law that no suit can be maintained in a
judicial tribunal against a state, or against its property, without
its consent.
See also Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick
Railroad (1883),
109 U. S. 446,
109 U. S. 451;
Stanley v. Schwalby (1892),
147 U.
S. 508,
147 U. S. 512,
and (1896)
162 U. S. 162 U.S.
255,
162 U. S. 270;
Belknap v. Schild (1896),
161 U. S.
10,
161 U. S. 16;
Briggs v. Lightboats (1865), 11 Allen 156, 179-185. In
England, it is equally well settled that no libel in admiralty can
be maintained against the Crown, or against a foreign sovereign, or
against any property of either, without his consent.
See The
Lord Hobart (1815), 2 Dodson 100;
The Athol (1842), 1
W.Rob. 374;
The Parlement Belge (1880), 5 Prob.D. 197, in
which the Court of Appeals, speaking by Lord Justice Brett (since
Lord Esher, M.R.), reversed the exceptional decision of Sir Robert
Phillimore in (1879) L.R. 4 Prob.D. 147. The decisions that no suit
can be maintained against the sovereign without his consent have
certainly no tendency to support a suit against a municipal
corporation for negligence in exercising powers delegated to it as
a political division of the state, or to its officers, for the
benefit of the whole public and not for the benefit of the
corporation only.
The cases of
The Blackwall
(1869), 10 Wall. 1;
The Clarita
(1875), 23 Wall. 1, and
The Connemara (1883),
108 U.
S. 352, related to the rights and liabilities of private
persons engaged in saving or attempting to save vessels from
imminent danger of destruction by fire, and decided nothing as to
the rights or liabilities of municipal corporations or of their
firemen. In
The Clarita it was a private corporation
owning a ferry boat that was held liable for negligence while
engaged in an attempt to save a vessel from destruction by fire,
and
The Blackwall, The Clara, and
The Connemara
concerned the allowance of salvage to private salvors for services
in putting out a
Page 179 U. S. 589
fire on a vessel. In
The Blackwall, the Court avoided,
as unnecessary to the decision, the expression of any opinion upon
the question whether members of a fire department could recover
salvage for such services.
77
U. S. 10 Wall. 12. It was afterwards decided by Mr.
Justice Bradley, sitting in the circuit court, that they could not,
because "the firemen were merely engaged in the line of their
duty," and "the attempt to make the performance of this duty a
ground of salvage, when it is a ship that takes fire, is against
wise policy."
Davey v. The Mary Frost (1876), 2 Woods 306;
The Suliote (1880), 4 Woods 19.
In
The F. C. Latrobe (1886), 28 F. 377, in the District
of Maryland, and in
Gavagnin v. Philadelphia (1894) 59 F.
303 and 17 U.S.App. 642, and in
Guthrie v. Philadelphia
(1896), 73 F. 688, in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, in each
of which a libel in admiralty was maintained against a city for a
collision with the libellant's vessel of a steamboat maintained by
the city for the purpose of clearing its harbor of ice, the
steamboat, at the time of the collision, was not engaged in its
usual public service, but in a special service for a private
benefit, and stress was laid upon that fact in each of the
opinions.
The decisions of the Circuit Court of the United States in
Massachusetts in
Boston v. Crowley (1889), 38 F. 202, and
of the District Court of the United States in Connecticut in
Greenwood v. Westport (1894), 63 Conn. 587, 60 F. 560,
were only that libels in admiralty
in personam could be
maintained against a city or town for injuries caused to vessels by
not keeping open a draw in a bridge. It may also be observed that,
in
Crowley's case, the decision was not in accord with the
earlier decision in
French v. Boston (1880), 129 Mass.
592, and proceeded upon the assumption (38 F. 204) that the
question was one of general municipal or commercial law upon which
the courts of the United States were not bound to follow the
decisions of the highest courts of the state -- an assumption
inconsistent with the later judgment of this Court in
Detroit
v. Osborne, 135 U. S. 492,
135 U. S. 498,
above cited. In
Greenwood's case, the question was
considered to be an open one in the courts of Connecticut, and it
has since been decided the
Page 179 U. S. 590
other way by the highest court of the state. 60 F. 569, 575,
576;
Daly v. New Haven (1897), 69 Conn. 644.
The only instance cited at the bar in which a libel in admiralty
has been maintained in such a case as the present is that of
Thompson Navigation Co. v. Chicago (1897), 79 F. 984,
decided by the District Court for the Northern District of Illinois
since this suit was commenced, and avowedly a departure from the
case of
The Fidelity (1878), 9 Benedict 333, and (1879) 16
Blatchf. 569, in the Southern District of New York, in which it was
held by Mr. Justice Blatchford, then district judge, and by Chief
Justice Waite in the circuit court on appeal, that a libel
in
rem could not be maintained in admiralty against a steam tug
owned by the City of New York, and under the exclusive control of
the commissioners of public charities and correction, and employed
in the performance of their official duties, for her collision with
the libellant's vessel through the negligence of those in charge of
the tug.
The duty of the state to protect the property of all from
destruction by fire covers vessels in its harbors as well as
buildings within its territory. The authority of the fire
department and its members as to both kinds of property is derived
from the municipal law, and not from the maritime law.
Ralli v.
Troop, 157 U. S. 386,
157 U. S.
419-420. All the shipping, foreign and domestic, in the
port is under the same safeguard and subject to the same risks.
Prompt, decisive, and unembarrassed action of the firemen is
necessary to the protection of both buildings and vessels from the
dangers of a conflagration. The necessity of allowing a municipal
fire boat to proceed on her way to put out a fire affords a special
reason for not allowing her, while so occupied, to be seized on a
libel
in rem. But all the reasons for not maintaining an
action of this kind against the city in a court of common law apply
with undiminished force to a libel against the city
in
personam in a court of admiralty.
In any aspect of the case, therefore, we are of opinion that
this suit cannot be maintained against the City of New York; not by
the local law of New York, because that law, as declared by the
Court of Appeals of the state, is against the maintenance of such a
suit; not by the maritime law, because, according to
Page 179 U. S. 591
the municipal law prevailing throughout this country, as
declared by the highest court of every state in which the question
has arisen, cities are not liable to such suits, and no
authoritative precedent or satisfactory reason has been produced
for applying a different rule in a court of admiralty.