Where the district court has allowed an appeal, but has not
certified that the question of jurisdiction alone was involved, as
required by § 5 of the Act of March 3, 1891, c. 517, 26 Stat.
826, if it appears from the face of the record, irrespective of
recitals in the order, that the
Page 215 U. S. 131
cause was dismissed for want of jurisdiction, the question of
jurisdiction, if it is of such a character as to sustain the
appeal, is sufficiently certified.
United States v.
Larkin, 208 U. S. 333.
Where the case is dismissed because the character of the action
is one cognizable exclusively by a court of admiralty and the
jurisdiction is challenged because the situation of the vessel and
the character of the services rendered afforded no jurisdiction in
admiralty, the jurisdiction of the court as a federal court is
involved, and the case is one cognizable by this Court under §
5 of the act of 1891.
Salvage service, over which a court of admiralty has
jurisdiction, may arise from all perils which may encompass a
vessel when on waters within the admiralty jurisdiction of the
United States, and this includes services rendered to a vessel
undergoing repairs in dry dock and in danger of being destroyed by
fire which originated on land.
A vessel used for navigation and commerce does not cease to be a
subject of admiralty jurisdiction because temporarily in a dry dock
without water actually flowing around her.
158 F. 255 reversed.
The facts, which involved the jurisdiction of the admiralty
court of a case for salvage services rendered to a vessel in dry
dock and in peril from a fire originating on land, are stated in
the opinion.
Page 215 U. S. 133
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
From a decree dismissing this suit for want of jurisdiction,
Page 215 U. S. 134
the present direct appeal is prosecuted. Dismissal of the appeal
is moved on the ground that the jurisdiction of the court below was
not involved in the sense of the fifth section of the act of 1891,
26 Stat. 826, c. 517, and, in any event, because the question of
jurisdiction was not certified as required by that act.
The libel by which the suit was commenced was filed on behalf of
the master of the tug
Helen, for himself and others
entitled to participate in a salvage allowance if made. The cause
of action was thus stated:
"1. That, in the afternoon of the twenty-fifth day of December,
1906, the tug
Helen, whereof said E. W. Simmons was master
and having a crew of six men besides said master, was, together
with the tug
Alice, towing a certain barge from Norfolk,
in said district, to the piers of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway
Company at Newport News, in said district; that about four or
four-thirty o'clock on said day, when said tugs had arrived almost
at their destination at Newport News, it was discovered that a fire
was raging in the shipyard of the Newport News Shipyard & Dry
Dock Company, and there-upon the libellant, with the said tug
Helen, docked his tow at one of the said piers of the
Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company and proceeded with all
possible speed to the said fire."
"2. That when libellant arrived at the said shipyard, it was
found that a large and fierce fire was raging therein, and that
said steamship
Jefferson, which had been undergoing
repairs at the said shipyard, was locked in one of the dry docks,
out of which the water had been emptied, and was afire, her upper
works being then in full blaze and her hull smoking throughout
nearly its whole length; that there was no one on board at the
time, and no one could have stayed aboard under the circumstances;
that the water pipes intended for the use of the fire department
were frozen up and there was no water available for their use, and
that this, together with the fact that the
Jefferson was
in a peculiar and inaccessible situation, being
Page 215 U. S. 135
in a dry dock, rendered the fire engines and fire department
totally unable to render any assistance whatsoever, under which
circumstances said steamer would have been completely destroyed but
for the assistance rendered by libellant and other salvors
hereinafter mentioned."
"3. That thereupon libellant, with his said tug
Helen
and crew, lay at a bulkhead of one of the piers, as close to the
said dry dock as possible, and together with the tugs
Alice and
James Smith, Jr., played streams of
water from their fire house upon said steamship
Jefferson,
and continued so to do until the fire was completely extinguished;
that libellant and other salvors were thus engaged from about 4:30
o'clock in the afternoon of said day until about 8:30 o'clock at
night, during all of which time libellant and said salvors rendered
every possible assistance to said steamship, and during all of
which time libellant and others entitled as salvors as aforesaid
underwent great suffering from smoke, flame, and sparks, and
endured great hardship from exposure to the wind and water in the
bitter coldness of the weather, and libellant and other salvors
incurred great danger from said smoke, flames, and sparks, and from
electric wires, falling poles, adjacent burning buildings,
etc."
"4. That the said steamship
Jefferson is of great
value; that the aforementioned efforts and services rendered by
libellant and other salvors saved the said steamship from total and
complete destruction; that libellant, by reason of the hardships
necessarily incurred, and especially by reason of the nature and
the great importance of the services rendered in saving said
steamship, reasonably deserved to have and therefore claim a
commensurate reward for salvage therefor."
By an intervening petition, the crew of the tug
Helen
and the masters and crews of two other tugs, the
James Smith,
Jr., and the
Alice, asserted claims to salvage, on
the ground that they had rendered services at the same time and
under the same conditions as those which the libel alleged had been
rendered by the
Helen. The libel and intervening
petition
Page 215 U. S. 136
were excepted to by the owner and claimant of the
Jefferson upon these grounds:
"First. That the property proceeded against was not at sea or on
the coast of the sea, or within public navigable waters, or on the
shores thereof."
"Second. That the property proceeded against was not a vessel
engaged in maritime commerce."
"Third. That the libellants did not render any service at sea or
in saving property from any peril of the sea."
"Fourth. That there is not shown any sea peril or such peril as
may be the basis of a claim for salvage."
"Fifth. That the
Jefferson, while in a dry dock, from
which all the water had been emptied, when threatened with fire
from land, was not a subject of salvage services."
"Sixth. That there is not shown any admiralty or maritime lien
upon the
Jefferson in favor of the libellants for
salvage."
The court, on January 14, 1908, handed down an opinion stating
its reasons for concluding that the exceptions were well taken, and
hence that it had no jurisdiction over the cause. 158 F. 358. On
the 29th of the same month, a final decree was entered dismissing
the libel and intervening petitions. In this decree it was
recited:
"The court is of opinion, for the reasons stated in the opinion
filed, on the fourteenth day of January, 1908, that it is without
jurisdiction in the premises and that the exceptions should be
sustained. . . ."
In the following July, the present appeal was prayed on the
ground that, as the court had dismissed the case for want of
jurisdiction, its action was susceptible of review by direct appeal
to this Court. In its order allowing the appeal, the court stated
that "the claim of appeal is allowed as prayed for from the final
order and decree dismissing said cause for want of jurisdiction. .
. ." As upon the face of the record, irrespective of the recitals
in the order made on the allowance of the appeal, it is apparent
that the only question
Page 215 U. S. 137
which was decided below was one of jurisdiction, and as the
decree which was appealed from on its face shows that the cause was
dismissed for want of jurisdiction, the question of jurisdiction,
if it is of such a character as to sustain the appeal, was
sufficiently certified.
United States v. Larkin,
208 U. S. 333,
208 U. S. 338.
We therefore put the contentions as to the absence of a certificate
out of view.
It is settled that, under the act of 1891, in order to entitle
to a direct appeal from the decree of a district or circuit court
dismissing a cause for want of jurisdiction the decree which is
sought to be reviewed must have involved the jurisdiction of the
court below as a federal court.
Louisville Trust Co. v.
Comingor, 184 U. S. 18;
Schweer v. Brown, 195 U. S. 171.
Relying upon this doctrine, the contention is that the appeal was
wrongfully allowed because, although it may be that, in form of
expression, the court below dismissed the suit for want of
jurisdiction, its action was, in substance, alone based upon the
conclusion that the facts alleged were insufficient to authorize
recovery, even although the cause was within the jurisdiction of
the court. The claim which the libel asserted was for salvage
compensation, and it therefore presented a character of action
cognizable exclusively by a court of admiralty of the United
States.
Houseman v. The Cargo of the
Schooner North Carolina, 15 Pet. 40,
40 U. S. 48. It
is clear that the exceptions to the libel and intervening petition
challenged the jurisdiction of the court over the cause of action
which the libel asserted, because, from the situation of the
vessel, the place where the alleged salvage services were rendered,
and the nature and character of those services, they afforded no
basis for the jurisdiction of the court as a court of admiralty of
the United States. That this was also the conception upon which the
court below acted in dismissing the libel and intervening petition
is apparent from its opinion and the terms of the decree which we
have previously referred to. After stating the elements
constituting a salvage service, the court observed(158 F. p.
359):
Page 215 U. S. 138
"These, however, have relation to perils encountered and
services rendered and performed to vessels actually engaged in
commerce, either on the high seas or other public navigable water.
. . . The
Jefferson, at the time of the service sued for,
was not a medium of commerce subject to dangers and hazards of the
seas. She, on the contrary, was in an unseaworthy condition,
undergoing repairs. She could not move of her own volition, nor
could she be used at the time in furtherance of commerce. She was
neither pursuing nor capable of engaging in her ordinary business
of navigation of the seas."
Again, in considering the averments of the libel concerning the
origin of the fire which, it was alleged, enveloped the
Jefferson, and which it was asserted, had been
extinguished by the exertions of the alleged salvors, the court
observed, p. 360:
"This language makes it clear that the peril in which the
Jefferson was placed arose from a fire on the shore, and
that there was no peril in connection with the sea or the
navigation thereof."
In summing up its conclusion, the court said, p. 361:
"The mere fact that the property upon which the fire was
extinguished was that of a vessel will not suffice. There must have
been a sea peril from which it was rescued, and the vessel itself
must have been at the time the subject of a sea peril, in order to
support a maritime lien and afford jurisdiction
in rem in
the admiralty."
As the foregoing considerations demonstrate that the case was
dismissed below because of the conclusion that there was no
jurisdiction as a federal court over the subject matter of the
controversy, it results that the motion to dismiss is without
merit.
Cope v. Vallette Dry Dock Co., 119 U.
S. 625;
The Resolute, 168 U.
S. 437;
Cleveland Terminal Valley R. Co. v.
Cleveland Steamship Co., 208 U. S. 316;
The Troy, 208 U. S. 321;
Scully v. Bird, 209 U. S. 481;
Globe Newspaper Co. v. Walker, 210 U.
S. 356.
Page 215 U. S. 139
Passing to the merits, the question is this: did the facts set
forth in the libel
prima facie state a claim for salvage
within the admiralty jurisdiction?
The contention on the part of the appellee that a negative
answer should be given to this question is based upon the
propositions which controlled the action of the court below. They
are:
a, that, at the time the services sued for were
rendered, the
Jefferson was in a dry dock undergoing
repairs, was not on the sea, but was virtually on the shore, and
was consequently at such time not an instrumentality of navigation,
subject to the dangers and hazards of the sea;
b, the
services were not rendered in saving the
Jefferson from a
maritime peril, as the danger relied on arose outside of the
admiralty jurisdiction, and not in connection with the sea or the
navigation thereof. We shall consider the contentions together.
In the nature of things, it is manifest, and indeed it is
settled, that, because of the broad scope of the admiralty
jurisdiction in this country, the perils out of which a salvage
service may arise are all of such perils as may encompass a vessel
when upon waters which are within the admiralty jurisdiction of the
United States; from which it follows that the right to recover for
salvage services is not limited to services concerning a peril
occurring on the high seas or within the ebb and flow of the tide.
And although, in defining salvage, the expression "peril of the
sea" has sometimes been used as equivalent to "peril on the sea,"
it is settled that the distress or danger from which a vessel has
been saved need not, in order to justify a recovery of salvage
compensation, have arisen solely by reason of a peril of the sea in
the strict legal acceptation of those words. The varied character
of services upon which a claim to salvage may be based was pointed
out in the definition of salvage given in the opinion in
The Blackwall,
10 Wall. 1, where it was said (p.
77 U. S. 12):
"Salvage is the compensation allowed to persons by whose
assistance a ship or her cargo has been saved, in whole or in part,
from impending
Page 215 U. S. 140
peril on the sea, or in recovering such property from actual
loss, as in cases of shipwreck, derelict, or recapture."
In
The Blackwall, the facts, in substance, were these:
an English ship, with cargo aboard and ready to sail, while lying
at anchor in the harbor of San Francisco, about seven or eight
hundred yards from the wharves, was discovered to be on fire. A
steam tug was utilized in conveying alongside of the ship members
of the fire department and two steam fire engines belonging to the
city. After the fire had been extinguished, the tug took the ship
in tow and safely placed her on adjacent flats, in charge of her
master and crew. Upholding the right of the owners of the steam tug
and her master and crew to salvage compensation, the Court
said:
"Service undoubtedly was performed by the members of the fire
department, but it is a mistake to suppose that service was not
also performed by the steam tug, as it is clear that, without the
aid of the steam tug and the services of her master and crew, the
members of the fire company would never have been able to reach the
ship with their engines and necessary apparatus, or to have subdued
the flames and extinguished the fire. Useful services of any kind
rendered to a vessel or her cargo, exposed to any impending danger
and imminent peril of loss or damage, may entitle those who render
such services to salvage reward."
"Persons assisting to extinguish a fire on board a ship, or
assisting to tow a ship from a dock where she is in imminent danger
of catching fire, are as much entitled to salvage compensation as
persons who render assistance to prevent a ship from being wrecked,
or in securing a wreck or protecting the cargo of a stranded
vessel.
The Rosalie, 1 Spink 188;
Eastern
Monarch, Lush. 81;
The Tees, Lush. 505; Williams
& Bruce Adm. Pr. 92."
The case of
The Rosalie was one of salvage of a vessel
in danger from a fire at sea, and, among other things, treated as
constituting the salving services was the unloading of the cargo
upon land. In
The Tees, salvage was awarded for
Page 215 U. S. 141
towing to a place of safety a vessel lying in a dock and in
danger of catching fire from the surrounding warehouses which were
in flames. To the English cases cited in the opinion in
The
Blackwall may be added that of
The City of Newcastle,
7 Asp.Mar.Cas. (N.S.) 546. That case was heard before Justice
Bruce, assisted by the Trinity Masters, and the facts in brief were
as follows: a fire broke out on board a vessel which was lying
alongside a jetty at the entrance to a dock. The vessel was under
repairs, with no steam up, and had no one but the master and
watchman on board. At the request of the master, a steamship, which
had just arrived, hove alongside, and, getting her hose on board
the burning vessel, extinguished the fire, which, if it had
remained unchecked, would have caused a very serious damage. The
services were such as might have been rendered by a fire engine on
shore. The value of the salved vessel was �9,500. The
defendants tendered �200. The court upheld the tender, being
of opinion that the services were not of such character as to
require that the award should be assessed upon the same liberal
principles as obtained in the ordinary cases of sea salvage
rendered by one ship to another.
And the doctrine of
The Blackwall and the other cases
just reviewed was in substance reiterated in
The
Clarita and
The Clara, 23 Wall. 1. In that
case, remuneration was claimed by the libellants as owners of the
steam tug
Clarita for salvage services rendered by the tug
and the officers and crew in subduing a fire on board the schooner
Clara. While at anchor in the middle of the Hudson River,
the
Clara caught fire from contact with a burning
ferryboat, which, after being towed from a ferry slip, had gotten
adrift. It was not questioned that the services, intrinsically
considered, were salvage services, but, because the injury to the
schooner was occasioned by the fault of the tug whose owner,
master, and crew asserted the salvage claim, the right to salvage
was denied. And the principles just announced, when duly
appreciated, also establish that the
Jefferson, while in
dry dock, undergoing
Page 215 U. S. 142
repairs, was subject to the jurisdiction of a court of admiralty
and liable for a salvage service. By necessary implication, it
appears from the averments of the libel that the steamship, before
being docked, had been engaged in navigation, was dedicated to the
purposes of transportation and commerce, and had been placed in the
dry dock to undergo repairs to fit her to continue in such
navigation and commerce. As said in
Cope v. Vallette Dry Dock
Co., 119 U. S. 625:
"A ship or vessel used for navigation and commerce, though lying
at a wharf and temporarily made fast thereto, as well as her
furniture and cargo, are maritime subjects, and are capable of
receiving salvage services."
In reason, we think it cannot be held that a ship or vessel
employed in navigation and commerce is any the less a maritime
subject within the admiralty jurisdiction when, for the purpose of
making necessary repairs to fit her for continuance in navigation,
she is placed in a dry dock and the water removed from about her,
than would be such a vessel if fastened to a wharf in a dry harbor,
where, by the natural recession of the water by the ebbing of the
tide, she for a time might be upon dry land. Clearly, in the case
last supposed, the vessel would not cease to be a subject within
the admiralty jurisdiction merely because, for a short period, by
the operation of nature's laws, water did not flow about her. Nor
is there any difference in principle between a vessel floated into
a wet dock, which is so extensively utilized in England for
commercial purposes in the loading and unloading of vessels at
abutting quays, and the dry dock into which a vessel must be
floated for the purpose of being repaired, and from which, after
being repaired, she is again floated into an adjacent stream. The
status of a vessel is not altered merely because, in the one case,
the water is confined within the dock by means of gates closed when
the tide begins to ebb, while, in the other, the water is removed
and the gates are closed to prevent the inflow of the water during
the work of repair.
It was long recognized by this Court that a service rendered in
making repairs to a ship or vessel, whether in or
Page 215 U. S. 143
out of the water, was a maritime service.
Peyroux v.
Howard, 7 Pet. 324.
But we need not further pursue the subject, since the error of
the contention that a vessel, merely because it is in a dry dock,
ceases to be within the admiralty jurisdiction was quite recently
established in
The Robert W. Parsons, 191 U. S.
17. In disposing of the proposition we are now
considering, it was further said (p.
191 U. S.
33):
"A further suggestion, however, is made that the contract in
this case was not only made on land, but was to be performed on
land, and was in fact performed on land. This argument must
necessarily rest upon the assumption that repairs put upon a vessel
while in dry dock are made upon land. We are unwilling to admit
this proposition. . . . A dry dock differs from an ordinary dock
only in the fact that it is smaller, and provided with machinery
for pumping out the water in order that the vessel may be repaired.
All injuries suffered by the hulls of vessels below the water line,
by collision or stranding, must necessarily be repaired in a dry
dock, to prevent the inflow of water; but it has never been
supposed, and it is believed the proposition is now for the first
time made, that such repairs were made on land. . . . But, as all
serious repairs upon the hulls of vessels are made in dry docks,
the proposition that such repairs are made on land would
practically deprive the admiralty courts of their largest and most
important jurisdiction in connection with repairs. No authorities
are cited to this proposition, and it is believed none such
exist."
There is in reason no distinction between the continued control
of admiralty over a vessel when she is in & dry dock for the
purpose of being repaired and the subjection of the vessel when in
a dry dock for repairs to the jurisdiction of a court of admiralty
for the purpose of passing upon claims for salvage services, by
which it is asserted the vessel, while in the dock, was saved from
destruction.
Reversed and remanded.