In determining whether the admiralty has jurisdiction over an
incompleted structure in navigable waters to be used when completed
as a governmental aid to navigation, its location and purpose are
controlling from the time it was begun.
The jurisdiction that admiralty has over an incompleted
structure in course of construction extends to that which is a mere
incident to such construction.
The admiralty has jurisdiction of a libel
in rem
against a vessel for damages caused by its colliding with an
incompleted beacon in course of construction in and surrounded by
navigable waters and which, when completed, is to be used solely as
a governmental aid to navigation.
186 F. 849 reversed in part.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction in admiralty of the
district court of a libel
in rem against a vessel for
damages caused by its colliding with an incompleted beacon in
navigable water, are stated in the opinion.
Page 241 U. S. 172
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellant filed a libel
in rem in the admiralty
against the steamship
Raithmoor to recover damages for
tort. The steamship, coming up the Delaware River on the evening of
July 18, 1909, collided with a scow and pile driver belonging to
the appellant, and also with a structure which the appellant was
erecting for the United States to serve as a beacon, and with a
temporary platform used in connection with the work of
construction. For the injury to the scow and pile driver, a decree
was entered in favor of the libellant. But the district court
Page 241 U. S. 173
held that there was no jurisdiction in the admiralty of the
claim for the damage to the structure and platform, and the
libellant appeals.
The Raithmoor, 186 F. 849.
The district court thus states the character and location of the
structure:
"The company [the appellant] was executing an independent
contract with the United States, which bound them to furnish the
necessary materials, labor, plant, etc., and to erect in place a
foundation pier to receive a gas beacon. The work was under the
continual supervision of a government official, but had neither
been finished nor accepted. The structure was to consist of three
cylindrical piles of reinforced concrete to be sunk about 19 1/2
feet into the bottom of the river, and to project 12 feet above
mean high water, these to be covered with a sheet steel cap. The
piles were to be encased in steel and to be protected also by
depositing rip-rap around them to a specified height. When
completed, the pier was to be used solely as a beacon on the edge
of a navigable channel that has not yet been made ready, and the
government was to install upon the cap a lamp and other appliances.
The site is three-fourths of a mile from the eastern or New Jersey
shore and about two miles from the western or Delaware shore of the
river, and is surrounded by navigable water, about twenty-seven
feet deep at low tide. The work was begun in June, and at the time
of the collision was approaching completion. The piles were in
place, and not much remained to be done except to put the metal cap
into place and deposit the rip-rap. The necessities of the work
required a temporary platform to be built close to the concrete
piles. This was of wood, about 15 feet square, and rested upon
wooden pilings driven into the bottom of the river."
Id., p. 850.
The decisions of this Court with respect to the jurisdiction
Page 241 U. S. 174
of the admiralty in cases of tort make the question to be
determined a very narrow one. In
The
Plymouth, 3 Wall. 20,
70 U. S. 36, it
was broadly declared that
"the whole, or at least the substantial, cause of action,
arising out of the wrong must be complete within the locality upon
which the jurisdiction depends -- on the high seas or the navigable
waters."
Accordingly, it was held that a libel for damage to a wharf and
storehouses, caused by a fire started on a vessel through
negligence, was beyond the limit of admiralty cognizance, as the
damage was wholly done, and the wrong was thus consummated, upon
the land. Upon this ground, the jurisdiction of the district court
to entertain a petition for the limitation of the liability of the
shipowner in such a case was denied in
Ex Parte Phenix Ins.
Co., 118 U. S. 610. The
principle was restated in
Johnson v. Chicago &c. Elevator
Co., 119 U. S. 388,
119 U. S. 397.
And see Knapp, Stout & Co. v. McCaffrey, 177 U.
S. 638,
177 U. S. 643;
Homer, Ramsdell Co. v. La Compagnie Generale
Transatlantique, 182 U. S. 406,
182 U. S. 411.
But in
The Blackheath, 195 U. S. 361, a
distinction was drawn, and the jurisdiction of the admiralty was
upheld in the case of an injury caused by a vessel in negligently
running into a beacon which stood fifteen to twenty feet from the
channel of Mobile River, or Bay, in water twelve to fifteen feet
deep, and was built on piles driven firmly into the bottom. The
Court pointed out the essential basis of the decision in
saying:
"It is enough to say that we now are dealing with an injury to a
government aid to navigation from ancient times subject to the
admiralty -- a beacon emerging from the water, injured by the
motion of the vessel, by a continuous act beginning and consummated
upon navigable water, and giving character to the effects upon a
point which is only technically land, through a connection at the
bottom of the sea."
Id., p.
195 U. S. 367.
It was suggested in the concurring opinion of Mr. Justice Brown
(
id., p.
195 U. S. 368)
that the decision
Page 241 U. S. 175
practically overruled the earlier cases, and that it recognized
the principle of the English statute extending the jurisdiction of
the admiralty court to "any claim for damages by any ship." This
consequence, however, was expressly denied in
Cleveland
Terminal R. Co. v. Cleveland Steamship Co., 208 U.
S. 316,
208 U. S. 320.
In that case, it was decided that the admiralty did not have
jurisdiction of a claim for damages caused by a vessel adrift,
through its alleged fault, to the center pier of a bridge spanning
a navigable river and to a shore abutment and dock. Referring to
The Blackheath and drawing the distinction we have noted,
the Court said:
"The damage [that is, in
The Blackheath] was to
property located in navigable waters, solely an aid to navigation
and maritime in nature, and having no other purpose or function. .
. . But the bridges, shore docks, protection piling, piers, etc.
[of the Cleveland Terminal Company] pertained to the land. They
were structures connected with the shore, and immediately concerned
commerce upon land. None of these structures were aids to
navigation in the maritime sense, but extensions of the shore, and
aids to commerce on land as such."
The decision in
The Troy, 208 U.
S. 321, was to the same effect. The steamer
Troy had collided with the center pier of a swinging span
over the St. Louis River, a navigable stream, and the jurisdiction
of the admiralty of a libel for the injury was denied.
See also
Phoenix Construction Co. v. The Poughkeepsie, 212 U.S. 558;
Martin v. West, 222 U. S. 191,
222 U. S.
197.
If, then, in the present instance, the metal cap of the beacon
had been in place, the rip-rap deposited, and the beacon put into
actual service, the case would fall exactly within the ruling of
The Blackheath, and the admiralty would have jurisdiction
although the structure was attached to the bottom. There would be
no difference in the two cases which would afford the slightest
ground for argument. If, on the other hand, simply because of
the
Page 241 U. S. 176
incompleteness of the beacon, it is to be exclusively identified
with the land, and its intended purpose is to be disregarded, the
admiralty would have no jurisdiction. We think that a distinction
based solely on the fact that the beacon was not fully completed
would be a needless refinement -- a nicety in analysis not required
by reason or precedent. We regard the location and purpose of the
structure as controlling from the time the structure was begun. It
was not being built on shore and awaiting the assumption of a
maritime relation. It was in course of construction in navigable
waters -- that is, at a place where the jurisdiction of admiralty
in cases of tort normally attached -- at least in all cases where
the wrong was of a maritime character.
See The Plymouth, supra;
Atlantic Transport Co. v. Imbrovek, 234 U. S.
52,
234 U. S. 58-61,
and cases there cited. The relation of the structure to the land
was of the most technical sort, merely through the attachment to
the bottom; it had no connection, either actual or anticipated,
with commerce on land. It was simply to serve as an aid to
navigation, and while it had not yet been finished and accepted, it
was being erected under the constant supervision of a government
inspector acting under the authority of the United States in the
improvement and protection of navigation. It is urged that the
government might abandon its plan, but there has been no
abandonment. The question is not as to an abandoned mass, but as to
a beacon in course of erection. Even a completed beacon might be
abandoned, and whatever question might arise in such a case is not
presented here. Again, an analogy is suggested to the case of a
vessel which is being constructed on shore, but the argument falls
short, as it is to be remembered that as soon as a vessel is
launched, although still incomplete, it is subject to the admiralty
jurisdiction.
Tucker v. Alexandroff, 183 U.
S. 424,
183 U. S. 438.
This is not the case of a structure which at any time was
identified with the shore, but, from the beginning
Page 241 U. S. 177
of construction, locality and design gave it a distinctively
maritime relation. When completed and in use, its injury by a
colliding ship would interfere, or tend to interfere, with its
service to navigation; and, while still incomplete, such an injury
would tend to postpone that service. We know of no substantial
reason why the jurisdiction of the admiralty should be sustained in
the one case and denied in the other.
With respect to the temporary platform, it is to be observed
that this was a mere incident to the structure, and as such the
jurisdiction would extend to the claim for the damage to it.
The decree, so far as it dismissed the libel for want of
jurisdiction, is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further
proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
* Docket title:
Latta & Terry Construction Company v.
British Steamship "Raithmoor," William Evans, Master and
Claimant.