1. Neither upon general principle nor under § 9 of the
Shipping Act of September 7, 1916, or § 4 of the "Suits in
Admiralty " Act
Page 257 U. S. 420
of March 9, 1920,
* is the United
States liable for a collision committed by a vessel while owned by
it absolutely or
pro hac vice and employed by it in public
and government purposes. P.
257 U. S.
431.
2.
Held that a vessel owned by the United States,
assigned by the United States Shipping Board to the War Department,
manned by a navy crew and engaged in transporting foodstuffs
provided by the government for the relief of the civilian
population of Europe after the Great War, to be paid for by the
buyer, was not a merchant vessel, but a vessel engaged in a public
service, and that two others, while let or chartered to the United
States on a bareboat basis and devoted to military and naval uses
were also of public status. P.
257 U. S.
431.
Page 257 U. S. 421
3. The maritime law is part of the law of the country only
insofar as the United States has made it so, and binds the United
States only insofar as the United States has consented. P.
257 U. S.
432.
4. The United States has not consented to be sued for torts, and
therefore it cannot be said that, in a legal sense, the United
States has been guilty of a tort. P.
257 U. S.
433.
5. This immunity extends to public vessels of the United States,
at least while employed in operations of government, and liability
for a tort cannot be fastened upon them by the fiction of a ship's
personality, to lie dormant while they remain with the government
and to become enforceable when they pass into other hands. P.
257 U. S. 433.
The Siren, 7
Wall. 152, and
Workman v. New York City, 179 U.
S. 552, distinguished.
6. Prohibition lies to restrain the district court from
exceeding its jurisdiction in admiralty cases. P.
257 U.S. 434.
Rule absolute for writs of prohibition.
Petitions by the United States for writs of prohibition and
mandamus to prevent district courts from exercising jurisdiction in
three proceedings
in rem for collisions that occurred
while the vessels libeled were owned absolutely or
pro hac
vice by the United States and employed in the public
service.
Page 257 U. S. 429
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are petitions for prohibition to prevent district courts
of the United States from exercising jurisdiction of proceedings
in rem for collisions that occurred while the vessels
libelled were owned, absolutely or
pro hac vice, by the
United States, and employed in the public service. The questions
arising in the three cases are so nearly the same that they can be
dealt with together.
Page 257 U. S. 430
The
Western Maid was and is the property of the United
States. On January 10, 1919, she was allocated by the United States
Shipping Board to the War Department for service as a transport.
She had been loaded with foodstuffs for the relief of the civilian
population of Europe, to be delivered on arrival at Falmouth,
England, to the order of the Food Administration Grain Corporation,
the consignor, American Embassy, London, care of the Chief
Quartermaster, American Expeditionary Forces, France; subject to
the direction of Mr. Hoover. If it should prove impracticable to
reship or redirect to the Territories lately held by the Central
Empires, Mr. Hoover was to resell to the Allied governments or to
the Belgian Relief, the foodstuffs to be paid for by the buyer. The
vessel was manned by a navy crew. Later on the same day, January
10, 1919, in New York harbor, the collision occurred. On March 20,
1919, the vessel was delivered to the United States Shipping Board.
The libel was filed on November 8, 1919. Act of September 7, 1916,
c. 451, § 9, 39 Stat. 728, 730.
The Lake Monroe,
250 U. S. 246. On
February 20, 1920, the government moved that it be dismissed for
want of jurisdiction. The district court overruled the motion. On
April 11, 1921, the Attorney General moved for leave to file the
present petition in this Court. Leave was granted and the case has
been heard.
The
Liberty was a pilot boat let to the United States
on the bareboat basis at a nominal rate of hire. She had been
manned by a crew from the United States Navy and commissioned as a
naval dispatch boat, and was employed to serve military needs in
war service. The collision took place on December 24, 1917, while
she was so employed, in Boston Harbor. Afterwards the vessel was
redelivered to the owners, and still later, on February 5, 1921,
the suit now in question was brought against her. On February 14,
under the Act of March 9, 1920, c. 95, § 4, 41 Stat. 525,
Page 257 U. S. 431
the United States filed a suggestion of its interest, and also
set up the above facts. The district court held that they
constituted no defense, and this petition was brought by the
Attorney General along with that last mentioned.
The Steamship
Carolinian had been chartered to the
United States upon a bareboat charter and had been assigned to the
War Department, by which she was employed as an army transport and
furnished with an army crew. While she was so employed, the
collision took place in the harbor of Brest, France, on February
15, 1918. Afterwards the
Carolinian was returned to the
owners, and she was employed solely as a merchant vessel on July 9,
1920, when the suit in question was begun, under which the vessel
was seized. In the same month, the United States filed a suggestion
of interest, and on January 6, 1921, set up the foregoing facts and
prayed that the libel be dismissed. The district court maintained
its jurisdiction, and this petition was brought by the Attorney
General along with the other two. 270 F. 1011.
It may be assumed that each of these vessels might have been
libelled for maritime torts committed after the redelivery that we
have mentioned. But the Act of September 7, 1916, c. 451, § 9
does not create a liability on the part of the United States,
retrospectively, where one did not exist before. Neither, in our
opinion, is such a liability created by the Act of March 9, 1920,
c. 95, § 4, authorizing the United States to assume the
defense in suits like these. It is not required to abandon any
defense that otherwise would be good. It appears to us plain that,
before the passage of these acts, neither the United States nor the
vessels in the hands of the United States were liable to be sued
for these alleged maritime torts . The
Liberty and the
Carolinian were employed for public and government
purposes, and were owned
pro hac vice by the United
States. It is suggested that the
Western Maid was a
merchant vessel at the time of the
Page 257 U. S. 432
collision, but the fact that the food was to be paid for and the
other details adverted to in argument cannot disguise the obvious
truth that she was engaged in a public service that was one of the
constituents of our activity in the war and its sequel, and that
had no more to do with ordinary merchandizing than if she had
carried a regiment of troops. The only question really open to
debate is whether a liability attached to the ships which although
dormant while the United States was in possession became
enforceable as soon as the vessels came into hands that could be
sued.
In deciding this question, we must realize that, however ancient
may be the traditions of maritime law, however diverse the sources
from which it has been drawn, it derives its whole and only power
in this country from its having been accepted and adopted by the
United States. There is no mystic over law to which even the United
States must bow. When a case is said to be governed by foreign law
or by general maritime law, that is only a short way of saying
that, for this purpose, the sovereign power takes up a rule
suggested from without and makes it part of its own rules.
The
Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558,
88 U. S.
571-572;
Dalrymple v. Dalrymple, 2 Hagg.Cons.
54, 58, 59; Dicey, Conflict of Laws (2d ed.) 6, 7. Also we must
realize that the authority that makes the law is itself superior to
it, and that, if it consents to apply to itself the rules that it
applies to others, the consent is free, and may be withheld. The
sovereign does not create justice in an ethical sense, to be sure,
and there may be cases in which it would not dare to deny that
justice for fear of war or revolution. Sovereignty is a question of
power, and no human power is unlimited.
Carino v. Insular
government of Philippine Islands, 212 U.
S. 449,
212 U. S. 458.
But, from the necessary point of view of the sovereign and its
organs, whatever is enforced by it as law is enforced as the
Page 257 U. S. 433
expression of its will.
Kawananakoa v. Polyblank,
205 U. S. 349,
205 U. S.
353.
The United States has not consented to be sued for torts, and
therefore it cannot be said that in a legal sense the United States
has been guilty of a tort. For a tort is a tort in a legal sense
only because the law has made it so. If, then, we imagine the
sovereign power announcing the system of its laws in a single
voice, it is hard to conceive it as declaring that, while it does
not recognize the possibility of its acts being a legal wrong and
while its immunity from such an imputation, of course, extends to
its property, at least when employed in carrying on the operations
of the government -- specifically appropriated to national objects,
in the language of
Buchanan v.
Alexander, 4 How. 20 -- yet if that property passes
into other hands, perhaps of an innocent purchaser, it may be
seized upon a claim that had no existence before. It may be said
that the persons who actually did the act complained of may or
might be sued, and that the ship, for this purpose, is regarded as
a person. But that is a fiction, not a fact, and, as a fiction, is
the creation of the law. It would be a strange thing if the law
created a fiction to accomplish the result supposed. It is totally
immaterial that, in dealing with private wrongs, the fiction,
however originated, is in force.
See Liverpool, Brazil &
River Plate Steam Navigation Co. v. Brooklyn Eastern District
Terminal, 251 U. S. 48,
251 U. S. 53.
The personality of a public vessel is merged in that of the
sovereign.
The Fidelity, 16 Blatchford, 569, 573, Fed.Cas.
No. 4,758;
Ex Parte State of New York, No. 1, 256 U.
S. 490, and
Ex Parte State of New York, No. 2.,
256 U. S. 503.
But it is said that the decisions have recognized that an
obligation is created in the case before us. Legal obligations that
exist but cannot be enforced are ghosts that are seen in the law,
but that are elusive to the grasp. The leading authority relied
upon is
The Siren, 7
Wall. 152.
Page 257 U. S. 434
The ground of that decision was that, when the United States
came into court to enforce a claim, it would be assumed to submit
to just claims of third persons in respect of the same subject
matter. 7 Wall.
74 U. S. 154;
Carr v. United States, 98 U. S. 433,
98 U. S. 438.
In reaching its result, the Court spoke of such claims as
unenforceable liens, but that was little more than a mode of
expressing the consent of the sovereign power to see full justice
done in such circumstances. It would have been just as effective
and more accurate to speak of the claims as ethical only, but
recognized in the interest of justice when the sovereign came into
court. They were treated in this way by Dr. Lushington in
The
Athol, 1 Wm. Rob. 374, 382. Further distinctions have been
taken that need not be adverted to here. There was nothing decided
in
Workman v. New York, 179 U. S. 552,
that is contrary to our conclusion, which, on the other hand, is
favored by
The Fidelity, 16 Blatchf. 569, 573, Fed.Cas.
No. 4,758, and
Ex parte State of New York, No. 1,
256 U. S. 490, and
Ex Parte State of New York, No. 2, 256 U.
S. 503. The last cited decisions also show that a
prohibition may be granted in a case like this.
See The Ira M.
Hedges, 218 U. S. 264,
218 U. S.
270.
Rule absolute for writs of prohibition.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS did not hear the argument in this case,
and took no part in the decision.
*Pertinent parts of the statutes above mentioned are as
follows:
C. 451, § 9, 9 Stat. 730.
"That any vessel purchased, chartered, or leased from the
[United States Shipping] [B]oard may be registered or enrolled and
licensed, or both registered and enrolled and licensed, as a vessel
of the United States and entitled to the benefits and privileges
appertaining thereto."
"
* * * *"
"Every vessel purchased, chartered, or leased from the board
shall, unless otherwise authorized by the board, be operated only
under such registry or enrollment and license. Such vessels, while
employed solely as merchant vessels, shall be subject to all laws,
regulations, and liabilities governing merchant vessels, whether
the United States be interested therein as owner, in whole or in
part, or hold any mortgage, lien, or other interest therein. No
such vessel, without the approval of the board, shall be
transferred to a foreign registry or flag or sold, nor, except
under regulations prescribed by the board, be chartered or leased.
. . . "
C. 95, § 4, 41 Stat. 525, 526.
"That if, a privately owned vessel not in the possession of the
United States or of such [United States Shipping Board Emergency
Fleet] [C]orporation is arrested or attached upon any cause of
action arising or alleged to have arisen from previous possession,
ownership, or operation of such vessel by the United States or by
such corporation, such vessel shall be released without bond or
stipulation therefor upon the suggestion by the United States,
through its Attorney General or other duly authorized law officer,
that it is interested in such cause, desires such release, and
assumes the liability for the satisfaction of any decree obtained
by the libelant in such cause, and thereafter such cause shall
proceed against the United States in accordance with the provisions
of this Act."
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA, dissenting.
The question in the cases is without complexity, and the means
of its solution ready at hand. The question is, what is the law
applicable to colliding vessels, and what remedy is to be applied
to the offending one, if there be an offending one? The question, I
venture to say, has unequivocal answer in a number of decisions of
this Court if they be taken at their word. And why should they
Page 257 U. S. 435
not be? That they have masqueraded in a double sense cannot be
assumed; that they have successively justified implications adverse
to their meaning would be a matter of wonder.
What, then, do they express to be the law of colliding vessels,
the assignment of offence, if offence there be, and how far it is
dependent, if at all, upon whether the offender was in public or
private service?
The answer may be immediate. The Court has kept steadily in mind
that the admiralty jurisprudence of the country, as adopted by the
Constitution, has a distinctive individuality, and this Court has
felt the necessity of keeping its principles in definite integrity,
and the remedies intact by which its principles can alone be
realized. The most prominent and efficient of its remedies is that
which subjects its instrumentalities, its ships particularly, to
judgment. Personality is assigned to them, and they are considered
in pledge to indemnify any damage inflicted through them. They are
made offenders, and have the responsibility of offenders, and the
remedy is suited to the purpose. In
Rounds v. Cloverport
Foundry & Machine Co., 237 U. S. 303,
237 U. S. 306,
it is said, Mr. Justice Hughes delivering the opinion of the
Court:
"The proceeding
in rem which is within the exclusive
jurisdiction of admiralty is one essentially against the vessel
itself as the debtor or offending thing -- in which the vessel is
itself 'seized and impleaded as the defendant, and is judged and
sentenced accordingly.'"
In
The John G. Stevens, 170 U.
S. 113,
170 U. S. 120,
the Court, through Mr. Justice Gray, declared:
"The foundation of the rule that collision gives to the party
injured a
jus in re in the offending ship is the principle
of the maritime law that the ship, by whomsoever owned or
navigated, is considered as herself the wrongdoer, liable for the
tort, and subject to a maritime lien for the damages. This
principle, as has been observed by careful text writers on both
Page 257 U. S. 436
sides of the Atlantic, has been more clearly established, and
more fully carried out, in this country than in England. Henry on
Admiralty, § 75, note; Marsden on Collisions (3d ed.) 93."
The case in many ways and by many citations fortifies and
illustrates the principle. [
Footnote 1]
The Siren was cited, and the fact is pertinent, as we
shall presently see.
The China, 7
Wall. 53, was also cited and quoted from. The quotation was
repeated in
Ralli v. Troop, 157 U.
S. 386,
157 U. S.
402-403, where it is said that the liability of a vessel
is not derived from the authority or agency of those on board
either under the civil or common law,
"but upon a distinct principle of maritime law, namely, that the
vessel, in whomsoever hands she lawfully is, is herself considered
as the wrongdoer, liable for the tort, and subject to a maritime
lien for the damages."
In
Tucker v. Alexandroff, 183 U.
S. 424,
183 U. S. 438,
this Court, by Mr. Justice Brown, gave graphic representation to
the same principle. He described a ship prior to her launching as
"a mere congeries of wood and iron," but, after launching, she took
on a name, a personality of her own, and had in a sense volition,
became competent to contract and be contracted with, sue and be
sued, could have agents of her own, was capable of committing a
tort, and was pledged to its reparation. Cases were cited,
The
Siren, among others.
The doctrine thus explicitly announced is denied application in
the pending cases, and upon what grounds? As I understand, the
contention is that a vessel has not independent guilt, that there
must be fault in its owner or
Page 257 U. S. 437
operator, his fault becoming its fault. This has been said, but
it puts out of view her character as bail, and that the innocent
victim of the injury she has inflicted shall not be remitted to the
insufficient or evasive responsibility of persons, but shall have
the security of the tangible and available value of the thing. And
this responsibility and fullness of indemnity we have seen it was
declared in
The John G. Stevens, supra, distinguished the
law of this country from that of England.
But, if the contention were conceded, it would not determine
these cases. I reject absolutely that, because the government is
exempt from suit, it cannot be accused of fault. Accountability for
wrong is one thing; the wrong is another.
But I do not have to beat about in general reasoning. I may
appeal to the authority of
The Siren,
7 Wall. 154, and the cases that have approved and followed it. A
gloss is attempted to be put upon it -- which we think is
unjustified and inaccurate unless, indeed, it can be asserted that
the writer of the opinion did not know the meaning of the words he
used, and that the members of the Court who concurred with him were
equally deficient in understanding. And their insensibility to what
the words conveyed had no excuse. A dissenting Justice tried to
bring their comprehensive import to understanding, proclaimed,
indeed, that the words had the extent and consequence that the
Court now says was not intended nor accomplished.
The Siren, while in charge of a prize master and crew,
having been taken in prize by the United States, ran into in the
port of New York and sank the sloop
Harper. The collision
was regarded by the Court as the fault the
Siren. She was
condemned as prize and sold, and the proceeds deposited with the
Assistant Treasurer of the United States. The owners of the
Harper asserted a claim upon her and her proceeds for the
damages sustained
Page 257 U. S. 438
by the collision. The district court rejected the claim. Its
action was reversed by this Court.
The United States was an actor in the case, and this was
regarded by the Court, who spoke by Mr. Justice Field, as removing
the impediment to the claim of the owners of the
Harper.
It was not, however, the basis of recovery. There was no confusion
in the language or conception of the learned Justice, nor in the
Court, of that. By becoming the actor, the United States, it was
said, waived their exemption from direct suit, and opened "to
consideration all claims and equities in regard to the property
libeled" -- not, of course, that the waiver of exemption created
the "claims and equities." They, it was explicitly said, were
created against the offending vessel by the collision. "In such
case," the language was,
"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."
And again: "The inability to enforce the claim against the
vessel is not inconsistent with its existence."
The distinction was clearly made between exemption of the United
States, the offence of the vessel and the existence of a claim
against it in consequence of its offence. And the distinction was
emphasized in the dissent of Mr. Justice Nelson. He was at pains to
distinguish between liability to suit and legal liability for the
act of injury, the ground of suit. And the basis of his dissent was
the same as the basis of the opinion of the Court in the present
cases, but not so epigrammatically expressed. In the opinion in
these cases it is said that
"the United States has not consented to be sued for torts, and
therefore it cannot be said that, in a legal sense, the United
States has been guilty of a tort. For a tort is a tort in a legal
sense only because the law has made it so."
Mr. Justice Nelson was more discursive. He said that
"if the owner of the offending vessel [he regarded the
Siren as owned by the United States] is not liable at
all
Page 257 U. S. 439
for the collision, it follows as a necessary legal consequence
that there can be no lien; otherwise, the nonliability would amount
to nothing."
And again:
"If the government is not responsible, upon the principles of
the common law, for wrongs committed by her officers or agents,
then, whether the proceedings in the admiralty are against the
vessel or its proceeds, the court is bound to dismiss them."
And, giving point to this view, the learned Justice observed
that
"No principle at common law is better settled than that the
government is not liable for the wrongful acts of her public
agents."
I repeat that, in view of these extracts from Mr. Justice
Nelson's dissent, misapprehension of its opinion by the Court is
not conceivable nor carelessness of utterance. Yet the opinion in
the present cases practically so asserts and, in effect, regards
Mr. Justice Nelson's dissent as the law of
The Siren, and
not that which the Court pronounced. The Court decided that the
vessel was the offending thing, and though it could not be reached
in the hands of the government, this "inability to enforce the
claim against the vessel" was "not inconsistent with its
existence."
The inevitable deduction is that, in such situation, the
enforcement of a claim is suspended only, and when the vessel
passes from the hands of the government, as the offending vessels
have in the cases at bar, they and "all claims and equities in
regard to" them may be enforced.
The case was commented on in
The
Davis, 10 Wall. 15,
77 U. S. 20, and
the gloss now put upon it rejected. It is there said that the well
supported doctrine of the case is:
"that proceedings
in rem to enforce a lien against
property of the United States are only forbidden in cases where, in
order to sustain the proceeding, the possession of the United
States must be invaded under process of the court."
So again, in
Workman v. City of New York, 179 U.
S. 552, where it is said, Chief Justice White delivering
the opinion of the Court after an exhaustive review of cases, such
as
Page 257 U. S. 440
he usually gave:
"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."
In view of this, it is difficult to understand how it can be
said that there was nothing that case decided contrary to the
conclusion in these cases.
Against this array of cases and their reasoning,
Ex Parte
State of New York, No. 2, 256 U. S. 503, and
Ex Parte State of New York, No. 1, 256 U.
S. 490, are adduced. Neither case has militating force.
The latter case decided nothing but that a state cannot be sued
without its consent, an indisputable proposition which this Court
in its opinion had to clear from confusing or disturbing
circumstances. In the former case,
The Queen City, a steam
tug, was in the possession and service of the State of New York,
and to have awarded process against it, as the district court did,
would have arrested the service. This Court rightfully reversed
that action. The tug had not been released from that immunity as
the vessels were in the pending cases.
Counsel for claimants, in opposition to the petition, cite cases
at circuit and district which followed
The Siren.
[
Footnote 2]
Page 257 U. S. 441
It is not necessary to review or comment upon them. They are
testimony of what the judiciary of the country considered and
consider
The Siren and other cases decided. Therefore, we
cannot refrain from saying that it is strange that, notwithstanding
the language of
The Siren, its understanding and
acceptance in many cases in this Court, the enforcement of its
doctrine at circuit and district, it should now be declared
erroneous. The cases at bar would seem to be cases for the
application of the maxim of
stare decisis, which ought to
have force enough to resist a change based on finesse of reasoning
or attracted by the possible accomplishment of a theoretical
correctness.
The rule should be discharged.
MR. JUSTICE DAY and MR. JUSTICE CLARKE concur in this
opinion.
[
Footnote 1]
General Insurance Co. v.
Sherwood, 14 How. 351,
55 U. S. 363;
The Creole, 2 Wall. Jr., 485, 518, Fed.Cas. No. 13,033;
The Mayurka, 2 Curtis 72, 77, Fed.Cas. No. 1, 175;
The
Young Mechanic, 2 Curtis 404, Fed.Cas. No, 18, 180;
The
Kiersage, 2 Curtis 421, Fed.Cas. No. 7,762;
The Yankee
Blade, 19 How. 82,
60 U. S. 89;
The Rock Island
Bridge, 6 Wall. 213,
73 U. S. 215;
The China, 7
Wall. 53,
74 U. S. 68;
The Siren, 7
Wall. 152,
74 U. S. 155;
The
Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558,
88 U. S. 579;
The J. E. Rumbell, 148 U. S. 1,
148 U. S. 10-11;
The Glide, 167 U. S. 606.
[
Footnote 2]
The
U.S.S. Hisko, U.S.S. Roanoke, and
U.S.S.
Pocationtas, (Circuit Judge Manton, S.D.N.Y.) (March 17, 1921,
unreported opinion annexed to brief);
The U.S.S. Newark
(District Judge Knox, S.D.N.Y.) (March 18, 1921, unreported opinion
annexed to brief);
The U.S. Sixaola (District Judge Mayer,
S.D.N.Y.) (April, 1921, unreported opinion annexed to brief);
The F. J. Luckenbach,
267 F. 931; The
Liberty now
before this Court;
The Carolinian, also now before this
Court; also
The Florence H., 248 F. 1012;
The
Gloria, 267 F. 929;
The City of Philadelphia, 263 F.
234.
Counsel also cites:
The Tampico, 16 F. 491;
Thompson v. City of Chicago, 79 F. 984;
Johnson
Lighterage Company No. 24, 231 F. 365;
The Attualita,
238 F. 909;
The Luigi, 230 F. 493;
The Othello, 5
Blatchf. 343, Fed.Cas. No. 10,611.