The Act of March 3, 1899, c. 425, § 10, 30 Stat. 1121,
1151, authorizing establishment of harbor lines, was not intended,
and did not operate, to paralyze all state power concerning
structures of every character in navigable waters within their
borders, or to automatically destroy property rights previously
acquired under sanction of state authority.
Cummings v.
Chicago, 188 U. S. 410.
In this case, the federal question relied upon is so absolutely
without merit, and the grounds are so frivolous, as not to afford a
basis for exercise of jurisdiction, and the writ of error is
dismissed.
Writ of error to review 150 N.C. 137 dismissed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 222 U. S. 368
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Gring, upon the theory that federal questions were wrongly
decided against him, seeks the reversal of a judgment for $300,
damages occasioned by the running of a tugboat, of which he was the
owner, against a marine railway, the property of the defendants in
error, who were plaintiffs below. The railway was situated on the
shore of the Pasquotank River in the harbor of Elizabeth City,
North Carolina. The injury to the railway was committed on the
night of December 24, 1905. The Supreme Court of North Carolina, in
affirming the judgment of the trial court, rendered on the verdict
of a jury, stated these facts:
The marine railway had been in existence for eighteen years
prior to the injury complained of. The railway extended to the
margin of the channel, and between the end of the railway and the
opposite side of the channel, which was buoyed, there was a space
of 540 feet, constituting the usual highway for navigation. The
night upon which the tug collided with the bridge was "a bright
moonlight night, and there was also a bonfire on shore and a line
of electric lights which lighted up the harbor." The conduct which
occasioned the running of the tug against the railway was thus
stated (150 N.C. 137-138):
"The evidence is that the tugboat, which was bound down the
river, instead of following the usual course, ran diagonally
towards the shore, and, striking the marine railway of plaintiffs,
damaged it. The captain of the tugboat testified that he knew the
locality well, having passed it more than two hundred times. After
the injury, he offered to pay damages, but the parties could not
agree upon the amount."
Commenting upon the facts thus stated, the court observed:
"Clearly the proximate cause [of the injury] was the negligence
of the tugboat in not proceeding upon its course in a channel 540
feet
Page 222 U. S. 369
wide, but going several hundred feet out of its way and driving
inshore against the marine railway."
In disposing of a contention concerning an alleged harbor line
established under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1899, c. 425,
§ 10, 30 Stat. 1151, and the proposition that the railway,
because it projected beyond said assumed line, was a public
nuisance, and therefore the complainant was entitled to negligently
and wantonly injure it, the court said (p. 138):
"Whether there was a harbor line or not, the marine railway was
a necessity for the repair of vessels. It was not shown to be
located there illegally, or that it was a public nuisance, and if
it had been, the tugboat was not authorized to run into it
unnecessarily and negligently, as the evidence tended to show."
The only one of the assignments of error filed at the time this
writ of error was sued out which in the remotest way relates to a
federal question is the third, which is concerned with the
reasoning of the court just referred to, and is based upon the
assumption that there could be no recovery because of the asserted
establishment by the Secretary of War, some time between 1900 and
1902, of a harbor line under the authority of the act above
mentioned. In argument, the proposition to which the assignment
relates is that the court erred in not deciding that any structure
projecting into the river beyond the established harbor line was
illegal and a public nuisance, which the plaintiff might wantonly
injure or destroy. As we have seen, however, the court found as an
undisputed fact that the railway in question was constructed and
had been in operation many years before the establishment of the
alleged harbor line. Under this condition, the court was obviously
right in holding that the railway had not been located in violation
of the Act of 1899, and was equally obviously right in deciding
that the plaintiff had no right to recklessly injure it. The basis
of the assumed federal
Page 222 U. S. 370
right rests upon the plainly erroneous assumption that the Act
of 1899 was intended to or did operate to paralyze all state power
concerning structures of every character in navigable waters within
their borders, and to destroy automatically all vested rights of
property in such works, even although acquired prior to the Act of
1899, under the sanction of state authority.
Cummings v.
Chicago, 188 U. S. 410.
See also Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Ry. Co. v.
Ohio, 165 U. S. 365.
In view of the character of the case, the facts found by the
court below, and the absolute want of merit in the federal question
relied upon, we are of opinion that the grounds relied upon for
review are of so frivolous a nature as not to afford the basis for
the exercise of jurisdiction, and our decree therefore will be,
Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.