1. An action at law brought under § 33 of the Merchant
Marine Act of June 5, 1920, c. 250, 41 Stat. 988, to recover
damages for the death of a seaman from personal injuries suffered
in the course of his employment, is subject to the injunction
provided by admiralty Rule 51 in aid of limitation of liability
proceedings. P.
266 U. S.
366.
2. The Merchant Marine Act, § 33, did not impliedly repeal
the statute regarding limitation of liability of shipowners
(Rev.Stats., §§ 4283,
et seq.) so far as claims
or suits based on personal injuries to or death of seamen are
concerned.
Id.
Page 266 U. S. 356
Certificate from the circuit court of appeals in a proceeding in
admiralty for limitation of liability, appealed from the district
court.
See 291 F. 1017.
Page 266 U. S. 364
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes here upon a certificate from the Circuit Court
of Appeals for Second Circuit. The facts
Page 266 U. S. 365
are few. On August 22, 1922, the steamtug
Edward,
belonging to East River Towing Company, Inc., a New York
Corporation, sank in New York harbor because of an explosion of her
boiler. This caused the death of her captain, Thomas McCaffrey, and
his administratrix brought a suit against the company in the
Supreme Court of New York. Thereupon the company filed a petition
for limitation of liability in the district court of the United
States. Rev.Stats., § 4283
et seq.; admiralty Rules,
51-55. The district court made an order under Rule 51 restraining
the further prosecution of the suit, but, on motion, vacated the
stay on the ground that the statutes limiting liability were
repealed so far as they applied to this case by the Merchant Marine
Act, June 5, 1920, c. 250, § 33, 41 Stat. 988, 1007, under
which the suit purports to be brought. 294 F. 686. The questions
certified are:
"(1) If an action at law be brought such as is described in
Merchant Marine Act 1920, Sec. 33, can the prosecution thereof be
enjoined by the injunction provided for in admiralty Rule 51?"
"(2) Has the Merchant Marine Act 1920, Sec. 33, impliedly
repealed the statute regarding limitation of liability of
shipowners so far as claims or suits based on personal injuries to
or death of seamen are concerned?"
Section 33 of the Merchant Marine Act gives an action at law
with the right of trial by jury to any seaman suffering personal
injury in the course of his employment, or to his personal
representative in case of his death from such injury. In the former
cases, the statutes of the United States modifying or extending the
common law right or remedy of railway employees shall apply; in the
latter, such statutes conferring or regulating the right of action
for death of such employees. The argument that this section removes
the personal injury or death of seamen from the statutes limiting
liability is based upon the growing considerations for the claims
of labor, the
Page 266 U. S. 366
suggestion that the enlistment of seamen needs to be encouraged
equally with the building of ships, and the supposed inconsistency
of the right to a jury trial and of some of the statutes
incorporated by reference, with the continued application of the
older law. Thus, the Act of April 22, 1908, c. 149, 35 Stat. 65, as
amended by the Act of April 5, 1910, c. 143, 36 Stat. 291,
regulating actions for injuries or death of railroad employees,
gives concurrent jurisdiction to the courts of the states and of
the United States, and forbids the removal of cases arising under
the act from state courts of competent jurisdiction to any court of
the United States. It is argued that a stay of proceedings in the
state court and an adjudication in the district court would be a
removal, which, of course, it would not be in a technical sense. It
is said with more force in
The El Mundo, 294 F. 577, 579,
that, when § 33 was passed, a seaman, at his election, already
had his action with trial by jury or a libel in the admiralty, but
in either case subject to injunction and a concourse under
Rev.Stats. § 4285, and that, if the new section left the
seaman's election liable to be defeated by the election of the
owner to surrender his ship, it was empty words. So the "election"
to "maintain" an action at law given by § 33 is thought not
reconcilable with the possibility that he should be called into
admiralty against his will, and his action at law stopped.
In
re Charles Nelson Co., 294 F. 926, 929 (reversed, however,
October 27, 1924, 1 F.2d 774).
We are of opinion that these arguments cannot prevail. We shall
not follow the discussions in the briefs as to the origin of the
admiralty rule, a question that cannot be answered with confidence
from the historical material now at hand. The English courts,
interpreting, we presume, the scope of their own decisions, rather
than passing upon historical fact, refer the admiralty liens to the
commercial convenience of security and repudiate the
Page 266 U. S. 367
reference of liability to the guilt of the ship.
The
Tervaete, [1922] P. 259, 270. In this Court, the ship has been
personified so far as to incur liability in cases where the owner
could not be held.
The China, 7
Wall. 53.
See The Malek
Adhel, 2 How. 210,
43 U. S. 234;
Liverpool, Brazil & River Plate Steam Navigation Co. v.
Brooklyn Eastern District Terminal, 251 U. S.
48,
251 U. S. 53. It
is laid down in
The China that:
"originally, the primary liability was upon the vessel, and that
of the owner was not personal, but merely incidental to his
ownership, from which he was discharged either by the loss of the
vessel or by abandoning it to the creditors."
If this be true, it gives to our statute a distinguished family
tree, but hardly throws light upon the question now before the
Court.
The short point is that the later act determines the extent of
the seaman's substantive rights and the measure of damages,
Panama R. Co. v. Johnson, 264 U.
S. 375,
264 U. S. 391;
the earlier one, from what he shall collect those damages in
certain exceptional cases, where those rights have been infringed.
If there is no surrender of the ship, which we presume is made
relatively rarely, the limited liability statutes play no part.
Section 33 has no relation to means of collection, but only to
principles of liability and the ordinary course of trial.
Naturally, therefore, the limited liability laws are not mentioned
in the list of statutes repealed, in § 2, yet there can be no
doubt that those laws would apply unless repealed. No sufficient
reason is offered for the extraordinary preference over other
claims that would be given to seamen were the decree of the
district court sustained. When a preference in respect of seamen's
wages was intended, it was expressed. Act of June 26, 1884, c. 121,
§ 18, 23 Stat. 57. On the other hand, it has been laid down
with reference to this same § 33 that an intention to depart
from a policy deliberately settled in a general statute is not
lightly to be assumed.
Panama R. Co. v.
Johnson,
Page 266 U. S. 368
264 U. S. 375,
264 U. S. 384.
See also Butler v. Boston & Savannah Steamship Co.,
130 U. S. 527. The
bankruptcy act might provide a bar to recovery -- homestead and
other exemptions might make collection of a judgment impossible --
yet we do not suppose that it would be argued that such laws were
overridden by § 33. The wholesale adoption of the law for
railroads above mentioned must be taken as an adoption of
principles, not as a basis for meticulous discovery of conflict
with an established system in matters of detail. The choice of a
jury trial is given when things take their ordinary course, not to
break in upon the settled mode of adjustment when the ship is given
up.
We answer these questions as they are asked, and assume that the
state Court had jurisdiction to try the case under the concluding
words of the section: "Jurisdiction in such actions shall be under
the court of the district in which the defendant employer resides
or in which his principal office is located." For, assuming that it
had jurisdiction, we have no doubt that the injunction may issue,
and that the statute regarding limitation of liability of
shipowners has not been repealed so far as claims like the present
are concerned. We answer
Question (1): Yes.
Question (2): No.