The
Repauno was a wooden vessel 37 feet in length at
the water line, 8 feet beam, 3 feet 9 inches depth of hold, 2 feet
1 inch draught, with a small engine and boiler; could carry 25
persons in smooth water, and was used to transport her owner and
superintendent, and occasionally some workmen across the Delaware
between Thompson's Point and Chester.
Held that although
it is sometimes difficult to draw the line between vessels so small
and insignificant that they do not come within the inspection laws
and larger vessels which do come within them, the
Repauno
was liable to inspection under the statutes of the United
States.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 118 U. S. 224
MR. JUSTICE WOODS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action at law brought by Du Pont, the defendant in
error, against Hartranft, collector of customs, to recover $500,
that sum being the amount of a penalty unlawfully exacted by
Hartranft, as collector, from Du Pont, as the latter alleged. The
facts were as follows:
The plaintiff resided in Wilmington, Delaware. He was the
proprietor of certain powder works at Thompson's Point, upon the
Delaware River, across from Chester, Pennsylvania, and distant
about two miles. He owned a wooden boat called the
Repauno, open except her forward part, which was boarded
over. Her dimensions were as follows: length of waterline, 37 feet;
length of keel, 34 feet; width of beam, 8 feet; depth of hold, 3
feet 9 inches; draught of water, 2 feet 1 inch. She had a small
engine and boiler, and was used by the plaintiff to transport
himself and his superintendent across the Delaware River between
Thompson's Point and Chester. Occasionally the plaintiff used the
boat to carry over his workmen -- sometimes as many as nine or ten.
When the water was smooth, the boat could carry twenty-five
persons. She never carried freight or passengers for hire. She had
been inspected, but her papers had expired. When she was seized,
she was sailing without inspection papers. The plaintiff, to get
possession of her again, paid to the defendant, under protest, a
penalty of $500, and brought this suit to recover it back.
The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $500, based
upon a finding of the foregoing facts, with point of law reserved,
which was stated as follows:
"If the court should be of the opinion that a vessel of the size
and description, and used as found by the jury, is liable to
inspection under the statutes of the United States, the verdict and
judgment to be entered for the defendant
non obstante
veredicto, and if the court should be of the opinion that such
a vessel is not liable to such inspection, then the judgment to
be
Page 118 U. S. 225
entered for the plaintiff on the verdict."
Upon this verdict, the court rendered judgment for the
plaintiff, whereupon the defendant sued out this writ of error.
The defendant relies on the following provisions of Title 52 of
the Revised Statutes, "Regulation of Steam Vessels" -- to justify
the exaction of the penalty:
"SEC. 4399. Every vessel propelled in whole or in part by steam
shall be deemed a steam vessel within the meaning of this
title."
"SEC. 4400. All steam vessels navigating any waters of the
United States which are common highways of commerce, or open to
general or competitive navigation, excepting public vessels of the
United States, vessels of other countries, and boats propelled in
whole or in part by steam for navigating canals, shall be subject
to the provisions of this title."
Section 4418, which provides, among other things, that "the
local inspectors shall also inspect the boilers of all steam
vessels before the same shall be used, and once at least in every
year thereafter."
Section 4421, which provides in substance that when the
inspection of a steam vessel is completed and she and her equipment
are approved, a certificate of inspection, verified by the oaths of
the inspectors, shall be issued.
"SEC. 4426. The hull and boilers of every ferry boat, canal
boat, yacht, or other small craft of light character, propelled by
steam shall be inspected under the provisions of this title. Such
other provisions of law for the better security of life as may be
applicable to such vessels shall, by the regulations of the board
of supervising inspectors, also be required to be complied with
before a certificate of inspection shall be granted, and no such
vessel shall be navigated without a licensed engineer and a
licensed pilot."
The seizure in the present case was made under § 4499, which
provides:
"If any vessel propelled in whole or in part by steam be
navigated without complying with the terms of this title, the owner
shall be liable to the United States in a penalty of five hundred
dollars for each offense, one-half for the use of the informer, for
which sum the vessel so navigated
Page 118 U. S. 226
shall be liable, and may be seized and proceeded against by way
of libel in any district court of the United States having
jurisdiction of the offense."
The
Repauno was a vessel propelled by steam and
navigating the Delaware river, which is a water of the United
States and common highway of commerce. She was therefore, by the
terms of § 4400 of the Revised Statutes, made subject to the
provisions of Title 52. But if there were any doubt about the
application of the inspection laws to the
Repauno, it
would be removed by § 4426. It seems to us clear that the
Repauno comes within the class of boats described in this
section. Of course, she bears no resemblance to a canal boat, but
she only differs from a ferry boat, as it is generally understood,
in not conveying passengers for hire, and she differs from a yacht
in not being seagoing, if in fact she is not seagoing, and in not
being designed and used for pleasure merely. But if neither a ferry
boat nor a yacht, she clearly falls within the meaning of the
phrase "other small craft of like character." If such a boat, so
constructed and used, is not included in that phrase, it would be
difficult to name any that would be. If it is argued that the
Repauno is not such a craft as Congress would require to
carry a licensed engineer and a licensed pilot, the reply is that,
as § 4426 makes this requirement of a canal boat propelled by
steam, and subjects it to the other provisions of law for the
better security of life, there is no reason why the same exactions
should not be made of the boat in question.
The reason of the law applies to the
Repauno. The
purpose of Title 52 is primarily the protection of the passengers
and crew and property on vessels propelled by steam. The law was
passed also to protect the lives and property of persons on other
boats, and at the wharves. The
Repauno was of sufficient
size to cause peril to life and property by an explosion of her
boiler. She was not a skiff. She was not a mere toy, incapable of
doing harm. The plaintiff's superintendent, who daily, and his
workmen, who occasionally, were carried back and forth upon her,
and the pilot and engineer, who were required for her navigation,
and the people in other boats who passed her on the water, or those
who stood on the
Page 118 U. S. 227
docks where she landed, were entitled to the same protection
which the law provided against the explosion of the boilers of
larger craft. A boat propelled by steam which habitually carries
four persons and sometimes more, and is capable of carrying
twenty-five, ought to be subject to inspection. The fact that if
her boiler should explode or her hull spring a leak, probably only
four lives would be imperiled does not occur to us as ground why
she should be exempted from the provisions of the law requiring
inspection of vessels propelled by steam.
In reaching this conclusion we have not overlooked the case of
United States v. The Mollie, 2 Woods 318. In that case,
the craft in question was of smaller dimensions than the
Repauno, and was occasionally run by her owners for
amusement on the Buffalo Bayou, below Houston, Texas. She was held
not to be within the inspection laws.
It may be difficult to draw the line between vessels propelled
by steam which are so small and insignificant that they do not come
within the inspection laws and larger boats which do. But we are
clearly of opinion that the
Repauno belongs to the latter
class, and that the penalty sued for in this case was lawfully
enforced. The judgment of the circuit court must therefore be
Reversed and the cause remanded with directions to grant a
new trial.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, dissenting.
I cannot agree to the judgment in this case. It seems to me that
it carries the application of the statute to an unreasonable
length. The boat in question was a mere skiff, not larger than a
ship's yawl, with a capacity not exceeding that of a good sized
canoe, without deck, with a boiler not much larger than a
tea-kettle, and a cylinder of seven inches stroke, and not much
larger than a popgun. I think we are in danger of sticking in the
bark by construing the statute as requiring such a vessel to be
inspected. Indeed, it seems to me that the terms of the law do not
apply to such a boat. Its language is "every ferry boat, canal
boat, yacht, or other small craft of
like character."
Section 4426. The same section declares that
Page 118 U. S. 228
"no such vessel shall be navigated without a licensed engineer
and a licensed pilot." The boat in question is not of "like
character," within the meaning of the statute. It seems absurd to
require a man to have an inspection made of a mere skiff which he
has rigged up to take him across the river to his shops, and to
have a licensed engineer and licensed pilot to navigate it. With
all due respect, I think it is running the application of the
statute into the ground.