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London Co. v. Industrial Comm'n

U.S.
Apr 8, 1929
279 U.S. 109 (1929)

Summary

In London Guarantee Accident Co. v. Industrial Accident Comm., 279 U.S. 109, 123, 49 S. Ct. 296, 300, 73 L. Ed. 632, it is said: "It is clearly established that the jurisdiction of the admiralty over a maritime tort does not depend upon the wrong having been committed on board a vessel, but rather upon its having been committed upon the high seas or other navigable waters.

Summary of this case from Buren v. Southern Pac. Co.

Opinion

APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA.

No. 491.

Argued March 7, 1929. Decided April 8, 1929.

1. Employment as sailor and assistant navigator of a vessel capable of 500 mile sea voyages, registered as a vessel engaged in transporting people for hire, is a maritime employment though the business be confined to taking patrons on trips of from five to ten miles to and from deep sea fishing places within the territorial jurisdiction of the State. P. 123. 2. Where a person so employed lost his life by drowning while endeavoring, under orders from a superior, to save the vessel with relation to which he was employed when she was driven by a storm from her moorings with no one on board, the fact that he was not employed on board at the time did not take his case from the admiralty jurisdiction. P. 123. 3. The jurisdiction of the admiralty over a maritime tort does not depend upon the wrong having been committed on board a vessel, but upon its having been committed upon the high seas, or other navigable waters. P. 123. 4. Jurisdiction in admiralty arises from Art. 3, § 2, of the Constitution, extending the judicial power of the United States to all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction; it does not depend on interstate or foreign commerce. P. 124. 5. The business of transporting persons for hire on navigable waters of the United States is none the less commerce, and within the admiralty jurisdiction, if the object of the trips be to serve the pleasure of the passengers in fishing. P. 124. 6. Application of a state workmen's compensation act to a claim for death of a seaman in a case involving no interstate or foreign commerce but having no features other than those characteristically maritime, is a violation of the exclusive maritime jurisdiction. P. 125. 75 Cal. Dec. 481, reversed.

APPEAL from a decree of the Supreme Court of California, which, reversing the District Court of Appeal, 53 Cal.App. Dec. 457, affirmed an award of the State Industrial Accident Commission in behalf of relatives of a deceased seaman, in a proceeding under the state Workmen's Compensation Act. The appellant was the insurer of the employer.

Mr. Leo C. Weiler, with whom Messrs. Wm. E. Lowther and Max Ash were on the brief, for appellant.

It is not necessary to admiralty jurisdiction that interstate or international navigation or commerce be involved. Propeller Genesee Chief v. Fitzhugh, 12 How. 443; The Belfast, 7 Wall. 624; The Robert W. Parsons, 191 U.S. 17; Rodgers Hagerty, Inc. v. City of New York, 285 F. 362; City of New York v. Rodgers Hagerty, Inc., 261 U.S. 621; Workman v. New York City, 179 U.S. 552. See Alaska Packers Ass'n v. Industrial Accident Comm'n, 276 U.S. 467; Sultan R. T. Co. v. Department of Labor, 277 U.S. 135. Distinguishing Sherlock v. Alling, 93 U.S. 99; Anderson v. Pacific Coast S.S. Co., 225 U.S. 187; The Daniel Ball v. United States, 10 Wall. 557; The General Smith, 4 Wheat. 438; The Robert W. Parsons, 191 U.S. 17; The Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558. See also Ex parte Boyer, 109 U.S. 629; In re Garnett, 141 U.S. 1.

The motives of the employer's customers in riding upon its boats for recreation, cannot affect the fact that the employer was engaged in commerce, — in navigation for strictly monetary gain.

The contract of employment was maritime. The Thomas Jefferson, 10 Wheat. 428; Chelentis v. Luckenbach S.S. Co., 247 U.S. 372; Atlantic Transport Co. v. Imbrovek, 234 U.S. 52.

It is not necessary to the attachment of the admiralty jurisdiction that the employee shall have been aboard any vessel at the time of his death. The Plymouth, 3 Wall. 20; Atlantic Transport Co. v. Imbrovek, supra. See also Southern Pacific Co. v. Jensen, 244 U.S. 205, dissenting opinion.

The state compensation act cannot be made applicable to an accident in which the employee was a seaman or apprentice navigator, without affecting or impinging upon the admiralty jurisdiction to an extent heretofore never permitted by this Court. A seaman's injury or death on navigable waters can never be a local matter within the local jurisdiction. Injuries to stevedores or longshoremen, occurring upon navigable waters, have been held to be within the exclusive operation of the maritime jurisdiction, as necessary to the maintenance of uniformity in its general characteristics. In Steamship Bowdoin Co. v. Industrial Accident Comm'n, 246 U.S. 648, this was held of a seaman upon a steamer tied to a wharf. All considerations are equally cogent for requiring a like determination in the case at bar.

Mr. George C. Faulkner, Jr., for appellees.

The rule now is that the application of state workmen's compensation acts to maritime injuries, or to injuries occurring upon navigable waters, is forbidden only where it would interfere with the characteristic harmony and uniformity of the maritime law in its interstate and international aspects. Grant Smith-Porter Ship Co. v. Rohde, 257 U.S. 469; Miller's Ind. Underwriters v. Braud, 270 U.S. 59; Rosengrant v. Havard, 273 U.S. 664; Alaska Packers Ass'n v. Industrial Accident Comm'n, 276 U.S. 467; Sultan R. T. Co. v. Dep't of Labor, 277 U.S. 135; Eclipse Mill Co. v. Dep't of Labor, 277 U.S. 135.

The maritime law surrenders to the domestic law all regulation of matters concerned purely with the domestic or internal affairs of the vessel, and the civil rights and duties of its owner in his relation to individuals in the State of his own domicile. The General Smith, 4 Wheat. 438; The Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558.

It clearly appears in the Jensen case, that the employee was unloading a ship engaged in interstate and foreign commerce. This was true also in every case cited as adopting the rule in the Jensen case.

By contrast, in every case following the rule in the Rohde case, the ship was not engaged in interstate or foreign commerce. This basic differentiation goes on beyond mere coincidence and must indicate the foundation of the distinction between local maritime matters under the state courts' concurrent jurisdiction and purely maritime matters under the admiralty courts' exclusive jurisdiction.

The control of the Federal Government over commerce and navigation is: (1) The power of Congress to regulate: (a) interstate commerce, and (b) foreign commerce, that power being the same over both forms of commerce; (2) the jurisdiction of the federal courts over all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, — not over "cases" of non-maritime causes of action.

The exclusive jurisdiction of the admiralty courts in certain (admiralty and maritime) cases is exercised concurrently with the jurisdiction of the same courts as granted by Congress (Jud. Code, §§ 24 and 256) over all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction. Netherlands, etc. Co. v. Gallagher, 282 F. 171; The Belfast, 7 Wall. 637.

Thus, the inherent power of the federal judiciary as granted it by the Constitution, Art. III, § 2, over admiralty or maritime cases is strengthened, enlarged and rounded out by an Act of Congress functioning under its own constitutional grant of power. Art. I, § 8, subd. 3. The two grants, one constitutional, the other legislative, are exercised by the admiralty courts for a common purpose, i.e., to secure, maintain and preserve uniformity in the regulation of interstate and foreign commerce and, thereby, harmony in that branch of our interstate and foreign relations. The two constitutional grants of power, one to the judiciary and the other to Congress, have thus merged in a common field and are to be viewed as each supplementing the other. N.J. Steam Navigation Co. v. Merchants Bank, 6 How. 392.

Prior to the decision in the Jensen case, supra, this Court had always held that the maritime law furnished no remedy in a death case and the state law might apply. The Harrisburg, 199 U.S. 199; The Alaska, 130 U.S. 201; American S.B. Co. v. Chase, 16 Wall. 522; The Hamilton, 207 U.S. 398.

The Jones Act having given a remedy in cases of death of maritime workers, the admiralty courts now have exclusive jurisdiction in such cases where the casualty occurred on navigable waters. That is the new principle evolved by this Court in Northern Coal Dock Co. v. Strand, 278 U.S. 142. In that case the rule in the Rohde case did not apply because: (1) The services being rendered by Strand at the time of his injury were a direct part of interstate commerce; (2) Strand in rendering those services was a seaman engaged in that commerce called "maritime"; (3) As a seaman engaged in interstate commerce, the maritime law furnished him a remedy.

The principles in New York Central R. Co. v. Winfield, 244 U.S. 147, and Panama R. Co. v. Johnson, 264 U.S. 375, gave the admiralty court in the Strand case a jurisdiction exclusive of that of the state courts because: (1) regulation of interstate commerce by Congress is exclusive; (2) the Merchant Marine Act incorporated the Federal Employers' Liability Act into the maritime law, bringing with it exclusive jurisdiction of cases directly involving interstate commerce; (3) the maritime law thereby furnished a remedy in deaths on navigable waters of seamen and stevedores engaged in interstate commerce.

But, the Merchant Marine Act did not bring into the maritime law any rules applicable to domestic or local or intrastate commerce. Court jurisdiction over this class of commerce was never relinquished by the States to the Federal Government through the Federal Constitution. The Merchant Marine Act did not enlarge the maritime law so as to furnish a remedy in death cases of seamen engaged in a domestic or local enterprise.

The cause of action in the case at bar is one over which admiralty has no jurisdiction because it is not founded on a maritime tort. Ketchikan L. S. Co. v. Bishop, 24 F.2d 63. There was no "tort" proven; only a "casualty" that happened to occur on navigable waters.

Insurance is not commerce. Appellant's contract, through regulation by the Compensation Act of the State, necessarily contained a provision whereby appellant became "directly and primarily liable." Enforcement of that contract by the state courts will not violate the "exclusive" jurisdiction of the admiralty courts. Cf. Northern Coal Dock Co. v. Strand, 278 U.S. 142; Hooper v. California, 155 U.S. 653; Western Union v. James, 162 U.S. 656.


This proceeding was begun by a petition to the Industrial Accident Commission of California to obtain an award for the death of John James Uttley Brooke, an unmarried minor nineteen years of age, who was drowned in Santa Monica Bay on April 8, 1926, while in the service of the Morris Pleasure Fishing, Inc. The appellant was the insurance carrier of the employer, and the question presented in this appeal is whether the case was for the exclusive cognizance of a court of admiralty under § 256 of the Judicial Code, or might be brought within the purview of the Workmen's Compensation Act of California.

The petition was filed by the mother and the stepfather of the deceased before the Commission, which on October 6th, 1926, made its findings and held that he was not at the time of his death engaged in maritime employment, and that both he and his employer were subject to the provisions of the Compensation Act. The Commission found that neither the mother nor the stepfather was dependent on him, and, accordingly, that the award should be limited to the reasonable expenses of burial, fixed at $150.

There was a proceeding in certiorari in the District Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division Two, to review the award of the Commission. The District Court of Appeal found that the Workmen's Compensation Act of California did not give jurisdiction of this cause and annulled the award. 256 P. 857. The Supreme Court of the State reversed the District Court of Appeal and affirmed the award of the Industrial Accident Commission. 265 P. 825. An appeal to this Court was then allowed.

The facts as shown before the Commission and as stated by the District Court of Appeal were as follows:

"The Morris Pleasure Fishing, Inc., is a corporation which carries on the business of maintaining and operating from Santa Monica Bay a small fleet of fishing vessels for the accommodation of the public seeking recreation in deep-sea fishing. In the fishing seasons its practice has been to have excursions daily from Santa Monica Bay to the ocean fishing grounds, a distance of three to five miles, with fixed charges both for half-day and full-day trips. For use in this business the company has several vessels, ranging from four to fourteen tons registry, equipped with gas engines and capable of cruising a distance of 500 miles. The business has been confined entirely to the maintenance of these pleasure-fishing vessels and the transportation of patrons to and fro by water, except that excursionists have also been supplied with bait. As one of the necessary incidents of its business the company employs seamen to navigate its vessels; and before and at the time of the accident which occasioned Brooke's death, he was in the company's employ as an apprentice navigator and seaman. In that capacity he made daily trips as required with the company's vessels, and at times was substituted as `spare skipper' for one of the regular skippers. On April 8, 1926, one of the company's fishing vessels called `W.K.,' of about seven tons registry, was moored, with no one aboard, in Santa Monica Bay about three-quarters of a mile to a mile from the pier. A storm having arisen, the vessel broke from her moorings early in the afternoon and began to drift toward the shore. In an effort to save the vessel from destruction, Captain Morris, as Brooke's superior officer, had Brooke and another employe, named Gregory, put off from the pier with the captain himself, in a boat about eighteen feet long, with the purpose in mind of boarding the `W.K.' and returning her to her anchorage. But as they neared the drifting vessel, their boat was capsized by a heavy wave and all three were drowned."

The appellant contends that, under § 256 of the Judicial Code, this is a cause of action in admiralty, enforceable in a court of admiralty, or at common law if the latter affords a remedy, and is not a matter of which cognizance may be had under a state workmen's compensation act.

The Commission contends that the matter is one of local concern which does not affect commerce or navigation and of which the Commission is not deprived of jurisdiction.

Section 256 of the Judicial Code provides that jurisdiction vested in the courts of the United States in all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction shall be exclusive of the courts of the several States, saving, however, to suitors in all cases the right of a common law remedy where the common law is competent to give it.

In Southern Pacific Company v. Jensen, 244 U.S. 205, where a stevedore, engaged in unloading a ship in navigable waters in New York, was killed, and an award of compensation was made against the shipowner under the state workmen's compensation act, it was held that that remedy, providing for compensation under a prescribed scale for injuries and deaths of employees without regard to fault, and being administered through a state administrative commission, was a remedy unknown to the common law and incapable of enforcement by the ordinary processes of any court, and hence was not among the common law remedies saved to suitors under § 256, and therefore such a remedy was contrary to the Constitution and laws of the United States. The same principle was followed in Clyde Steamship Company v. Walker, 244 U.S. 255.

In Knickerbocker Ice Company v. Stewart, 253 U.S. 149, it was held that an addition to the saving clause of § 256, by which rights and remedies under the workmen's compensation law of any State were given to claimants thereunder, was unconstitutional as being a delegation of legislative power to States and a defeat of the purpose of the Constitution in preserving the harmony and uniformity of maritime law.

In Union Fish Company v. Erickson, 248 U.S. 308, it was held that a maritime contract of employment was not affected by the California statute of frauds requiring such an agreement, where not to be performed within a year, to be in writing, and that such a contract was not subject to state limitation, because such limitation would materially prejudice the characteristically uniform features of the general maritime law.

The same principle was applied in State of Washington v. W.C. Dawson Company, 264 U.S. 219, where it was sought to compel an employer of stevedores to contribute to an accident fund created by the workmen's compensation act of the State. Under the same title, it was held on the same principle that workmen's compensation under a state statute could not be awarded for the death of a workman killed while engaged at maritime work, under a maritime contract, upon a vessel moored on navigable waters and discharging her cargo.

In Robins Dry Dock Co. v. Dahl, 266 U.S. 449, the same principle was recognized and enforced in a case of maritime tort suffered by one doing repair work on board a completed vessel. The case was reversed, on the ground that the liability of the employer in such a suit could not be affected by the provision of a state law regulating the duties of employers generally to furnish safe scaffolds.

Another class of cases is illustrated by Western Fuel Co. v. Garcia, 257 U.S. 233. There a stevedore was killed while at work in the hold of a vessel under charter to the Fuel Company. The Workmen's Compensation Commission granted an award to the widow and children. This was annulled by the state court, and then the widow and children brought a suit in admiralty against the Fuel Company in the District Court of the United States, alleging death by negligence, and prayed for damages. The District Court was held to have jurisdiction in admiralty under La Bourgogne, 210 U.S. 95; American Steamboat Co. v. Chase, 16 Wall. 531; The Hamilton, 207 U.S. 398. The plaintiff was defeated in the admiralty suit by application of the state statute of limitations. This Court thus recognized a well established exception to the nonapplication of state statutes to admiralty jurisdiction, which is when they give a common law remedy for death by wrongful act. But this Court, in the Knickerbocker Ice Co. case, decided that it could not extend the saving clause of § 256 to include an award under a state workmen's compensation act. Such cases as the Garcia case, supra, Northern Coal Co. v. Strand, 278 U.S. 142, and Great Lakes Dock Co. v. Kierejewski, 261 U.S. 479, are therefore hardly to be regarded as real exceptions to the exclusive jurisdiction of admiralty by § 256.

Other cases, however, are cited to sustain the state jurisdiction in this case. The first and chief one is Grant Smith-Porter Company v. Rohde, 257 U.S. 469. That was a proceeding to recover an award under a workmen's compensation act, from a shipbuilder, for injuries which a carpenter received while he was working on an unfinished vessel moored in the Willamette River. The contract for constructing the vessel was non-maritime, and although the uncompleted structure upon which the accident occurred was lying in navigable waters, neither Rohde's general employment nor his activities at the time had any direct relation to navigation. It was held to be a matter of merely local concern, in view of the fact that reference of the rights and liabilities of the parties, under a contract between them, had been made by their consent to the local statute; that they had not consciously contracted in view of admiralty, and such an exception would not injure any characteristic feature of the general maritime law or the harmony or uniformity of that law in its international and state relations.

In Miller's Indemnity Underwriters v. Braud, 270 U.S. 59, the plaintiff's intestate was employed as a diver by a ship building company. He submerged himself from a floating barge anchored in a navigable river 35 feet from the bank, in order to saw off some timbers of an abandoned set of ways once used for launching ships which had become an obstruction to navigation. He died from suffocation for lack of air supply during his work. His representative was allowed to recover from the employer's insurer under the Texas Workmen's Compensation Law. The facts disclosed a possible maritime tort to which the general admiralty jurisdiction might extend, except that the state compensation law prescribed an exclusive remedy. The state statute was allowed to have effect. It was thought that enforcing such a state statute would not tend to destroy the characteristic features of maritime law.

In Alaska Packers' Association v. Industrial Accident Commission, 276 U.S. 467, a person engaged by a fishing and canning company as a seaman, also as a fisherman, and then for general work in and about a cannery, was injured after the fishing season was over while standing upon the shore and endeavoring to push a stranded fishing boat into navigable waters for the purpose of floating it to a nearby dock, where it was to be lifted out and stored for the winter. It was held that the injury, even if within admiralty jurisdiction, was of such a local character as to be cognizable under a state compensation law, — a ruling which would not injure the characteristic features or uniformity of the admiralty law.

In Sultan Railway Co. v. Department of Labor and Industries of the State of Washington, 277 U.S. 135, an award for injuries under the Workmen's Compensation Law of Washington was sustained. The plaintiff was engaged in assembling saw logs in booms for towage elsewhere for sale, and the breaking up of the booms, which had been towed on a river to a saw mill, and the guiding of the logs to a conveyor extending into the river, by which they were drawn into the mill for sawing. Clearly, even if this had any admiralty feature, it had only an incidental relation to navigation. The rights and obligations of the employees and their employers could well be regulated by local rules which would not work material prejudice to the characteristic features of the general maritime law.

Nothing in these cases could apply to the case before us. They may be said to be of an amphibious character. They have an admiralty feature about them in the locality where they occurred, although even this is doubtful with respect to the Alaska case. But the contract in the Rohde case was non-maritime, the ship was incomplete, and being completed under a non-maritime contract; both parties had made a non-maritime contract with reference to their liabilities and not in contemplation of the admiralty law. The Braud case was one of a maritime tort. But it had no characteristic feature of the general maritime law except locality, and it was very like, in its relation to the state law, to the Rohde case. The employment was not maritime, and the transaction and the circumstances thus seemed to have but one characteristic that was maritime. This was true of the Sultan Company case.

Other cases cited, but which seem to have no application here, rest on the undisputed circumstance of locality in fixing or excluding admiralty jurisdiction.

In State Industrial Commission v. Nordenholt Corp., 259 U.S. 263, the tort complained of was committed upon a dock which was an extension of the land, and was not within the jurisdiction in admiralty at all.

Smith Son v. Taylor, 276 U.S. 179, was a case in which a longshoreman was struck by a sling while working on a stage resting solely upon a wharf and projecting a few feet over the water to or near a vessel. He was knocked into the water, where sometime later he was found dead. It was there held that the right of action was controlled by the state and not by the maritime law, since the blow was received on the wharf, which was to be deemed an extension of the land.

And so in Gonsalves v. Morse Dry Dock Repair Company, 256 U.S. 171, where an employee, engaged in the repair of a vessel resting on a dock floating on navigable waters, was allowed to recover for negligence of the vessel-owner in the explosion of a blau torch negligently permitted to be out of repair. It was held that repairs to a vessel while in an ordinary dry dock were not made on land, and that the admiralty jurisdiction in tort matters was settled by the locality.

In Messel v. Foundation Co., 274 U.S. 427, it was held that a boilermaker, employed to lengthen the smokestack on the deck of a vessel lying in navigable waters, and injured by negligence of the owner through the sudden burst of hot steam, was entitled to recovery in admiralty or under the saving clause of § 256, by virtue of the Louisiana Civil Code, Art. 2315, declaring that every act whatever of a man that causes damage to another obliges him by whose fault it happened to repair it. This was held equivalent to the operation of the common law, and so, under the saving clause of § 256, to support a suit for damages either in admiralty or common law. The Louisiana Workmen's Compensation Act gave him no right of action.

We have thus examined all the cases in this Court since Southern Pacific Co. v. Jensen, with respect to the efforts to apply the workmen's compensation acts in admiralty, and we have found nothing in them that would justify an award in the present case.

Here it is without dispute that the deceased was a sailor, that his employment and relation to the owner of the vessel were maritime. It is without dispute that the vessel, in the navigation of which he was employed, was registered as a vessel engaged in the navigable waters of the United States, in the business of transporting people for hire. He was a skipper engaged in assisting the navigation of these registered vessels from their mooring place in Santa Monica Bay to the place where the deep sea fishing was to be carried on, a distance of from three to five miles or more, all in navigable waters. The vessels were capable of navigation for 500 miles. There was no feature of the business and employment that was not purely maritime. To hold that a seaman, engaged and injured in an employment purely of admiralty cognizance, could be required to change the nature or conditions of his recovery under a state compensation law, would certainly be prejudicial to the characteristic features of the general maritime law.

Objection is made that the deceased here lost his life by drowning when he was not on a vessel in the navigation of which he had been employed as a seaman. This is immaterial. He was lost in navigable waters. He was engaged in attempting to moor and to draw into a safe place the vessel with relation to which he was employed. It is clearly established that the jurisdiction of the admiralty over a maritime tort does not depend upon the wrong having been committed on board a vessel, but rather upon its having been committed upon the high seas or other navigable waters. The Plymouth, 3 Wall. 20; Atlantic Transport Co. v. Imbrovek, 234 U.S. 52, 59, 60.

Another objection to the admiralty jurisdiction here is that the vessel was not engaged in interstate or foreign commerce. It was employed only to run from shore to Santa Monica Bay, five or ten miles to the deep sea fishing place, and then return, and all within the jurisdiction of California. This argument is a complete misconception of what the admiralty jurisdiction is under the Constitution of the United States. Its jurisdiction is not limited to transportation of goods and passengers from one State to another, or from the United States to a foreign country, but depends upon the jurisdiction conferred in Article 3, Section 2, extending the judicial power of the United States to all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction.

Mr. Justice Clifford, in The Belfast, 7 Wall. 624, 640, said:

"Difficulties attend every attempt to define the exact limits of admiralty jurisdiction, but it can not be made to depend upon the power of Congress to regulate commerce, as conferred in the Constitution. They are entirely distinct things, having no necessary connection with one another, and are conferred in the Constitution by separate and distinct grants." Citing The Genesee Chief, 12 How. 452. See also In re Garnett, 141 U.S. 1, 15; Ex parte Boyer, 109 U.S. 629, 632; The Propeller Commerce, 1 Black 574, 578.

Another objection which is pressed on us is that § 256 of the Judicial Code does not exclude the jurisdiction under the California Compensation Act, because the object of the trips was for pleasure and not for commerce. This is a misconception. Commerce is not prevented because the object of it is to serve the pleasure of passengers. The business was that of earning money by transporting people on the navigable waters of the United States, and, strictly speaking, it is just as much a part of commerce and of the admiralty jurisdiction as if these vessels were carrying cargoes of merchandise. Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 215 et seq. The conclusion sought to be drawn by counsel for the Commission from the Rohde and other cases is that workmen's compensation acts will apply unless their application would interfere with the uniformity of the general maritime law in interstate and foreign commerce, and there is neither here. But this omits one of the grounds for making an exception — that it shall not be prejudicial to the characteristic features of the maritime law. That is just what it would be here, for here we have a transaction on the navigable waters of the United States which in every respect covers all the characteristic features of maritime law and has no other features but those. To apply to such a case a state compensation law would certainly be prejudicial to those features. We must hold, therefore, that it was a violation of the exclusive maritime jurisdiction conferred by the Constitution to apply in this case the California Compensation Act.

The judgment of the Supreme Court of California is

Reversed.

MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS dissents.


Summaries of

London Co. v. Industrial Comm'n

U.S.
Apr 8, 1929
279 U.S. 109 (1929)

In London Guarantee Accident Co. v. Industrial Accident Comm., 279 U.S. 109, 123, 49 S. Ct. 296, 300, 73 L. Ed. 632, it is said: "It is clearly established that the jurisdiction of the admiralty over a maritime tort does not depend upon the wrong having been committed on board a vessel, but rather upon its having been committed upon the high seas or other navigable waters.

Summary of this case from Buren v. Southern Pac. Co.

In London Guarantee Accident Co. Ltd. v. Industrial Accident Commission of California, 279 U.S. 109, it was held that one engaged as a mariner on a small fishing vessel used for daily excursions of three to five miles, for the accommodation of the public seeking recreation in deep sea fishing, was under admiralty jurisdiction with respect to injuries.

Summary of this case from Ciaramitaro's Case

In London Co. v. Industrial Comm'n (1929) 279 U.S. 109 [73 L.Ed. 632, 49 S.Ct. 296], a sailor employed by Morris Pleasure Fishing, Inc., a corporation engaged in maintaining and operating fishing vessels from the Santa Monica Bay to fishing grounds three to five miles from the bay, drowned while attempting to rescue one of Morris Pleasure's vessels during a storm.

Summary of this case from Hamilton v. County of Los Angeles
Case details for

London Co. v. Industrial Comm'n

Case Details

Full title:LONDON GUARANTEE ACCIDENT COMPANY, LTD., v . INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENT…

Court:U.S.

Date published: Apr 8, 1929

Citations

279 U.S. 109 (1929)
49 S. Ct. 296

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