RUTHERFORD BIRCHARD HAYES, LL.D.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES.
WEDNESDAY, January 18, 1893.
Mr. Attorney General Miller addressed the court as follows: It is my painful duty to announce to the court the death of Rutherford B. Hayes, ex-President of the United States. At his home in Fremont, Ohio, after a brief illness, at the ripe age of threescore years and ten, this eminent public servant last night passed from the life that now is into the life hereafter. This is not the time for eulogy, yet I am constrained to say that in his death the country has lost one who was a good citizen, a good soldier, a good President, and, above all, a good man.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE responded:
The Court receives the announcement of the death of ex-President Hayes with the sensibility due to his eminent public services and his private virtues; and as a mark of respect to his memory will now adjourn until to-morrow at the usual hour.
FRIDAY, January 20, 1893.
This being the day appointed for the funeral of the late exPresident of the United States, Rutherford B. Hayes, the court, out of respect for his memory, suspended business for the remainder of the day.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES.
There having been an Associate Justice of this Court appointed since the commencement of this term, it is ordered that the following allotment be made of the Chief Justice and Associate Justices of said court among the Circuits, agreeably to the act of Congress in such case made and provided, and that such allotment be entered of record, viz.:
For the First Circuit, HORACE GRAY, Associate Justice.
For the Second Circuit, SAMUEL BLATCHFORD, Associate Justice. For the Third Circuit, GEORGE SHIRAS, JR., Associate Justice. For the Fourth Circuit, MELVILLE W. FULLER, Chief Justice. For the Fifth Circuit, HOWELL E. JACKSON, Associate Justice. For the Sixth Circuit, HENRY B. BROWN, Associate Justice. For the Seventh Circuit, MELVILLE W. FULLER, Chief Justice. For the Eighth Circuit, DAVID J. BREWER, Associate Justice. For the Ninth Circuit, STEPHEN J. FIELD, Associate Justice. Monday, March 13, 1893.
1. A collision occurred, in Vineyard Sound, between the steam yacht A., at anchor, owned by V. of New York, and the steamship D., owned by a Massachusetts corporation. The A. sank. The corporation filed a libel against V., to limit its liability in the District Court for Massa- chusetts, under §§ 4283 and 4284 of the Revised Statutes, alleging that the D. was lying at Boston, and averring no negligence in the D., and negligence in the A., and praying for an appraisement of the value of the D. and her pending freight at the time of the collision, and offering to give a stipulation therefor. It was alleged that the A. was worth over $250,000, and that the value of the D. and her freight was less than $150,000. The court appointed three appraisers, who made the appraisement ex parte, and reported the value of the D. at $80,000 and of her freight at $2395.33, and a stipulation was given for those amounts. A monition was then issued for notice to V. and all persons concerned to prove their claims for loss by a day named. The moni- tion was duly published but was not personally served on V. in the Massachusetts District. The court made an order enjoining V. and all other persons from suing the corporation or the D. in respect of any claims arising out of the collision "except in these proceed- ings." Afterwards, M., the master of the A. filed a libel in the Dis- trict Court for the Southern District of New York, against the corporation, the D., V., and all persons claiming damages from the collision for apportionment of limited liability, charging the fault wholly on the D., alleging that the loss of V. was $305,000, and that of M. over $1300; and that the value of the D. was over $200,000. Under process the D. was attached, and it was served on the corpora- tion, and V. duly appeared. On motion of the D. and the corporation the District Court in New York, on a hearing of all parties made an order vacating the process issued on the libel of M., setting aside the service thereof on the corporation, releasing the D. from the attach- ment, and dismissing the libel. The court held that M. had notice, before he filed his libel, of the proceedings in Massachusetts, and of the injunction order issued there. On applications by M. to this court, for a mandamus to the District Court in New York, to vacate its order and reinstate the libel of M., and for a prohibition to the District Court
in Massachusetts from proceeding further on the libel filed there; Held, (1) The District Court in New York dismissed the libel of M. on a hearing on the merits; (2) If the jurisdiction of that court was in issue before it, the remedy of M. was by a direct appeal to this court, on that question, under § 5 of the act of March 3, 1891, c. 517, 26 Stat. 827; (3) If otherwise, the remedy of M., as against the order dismiss- ing the libel, was by an appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals, for the Second Circuit, under § 6 of the same act; (4) The mandamus is re- fused; (5) The District Court in Massachusetts acquired prior juris- diction of the proceedings; (6) That court did not lose its jurisdiction by the fact that the D. subsequently went to New York; (7) In order to sustain the proceeding it was not necessary that M. or V. should have been personally served with notice thereof within the District of Massachusetts, or that the D. should have been taken and held by the Massachusetts Court; (8) The filing of the libel by the corporation, with the offer of a stipulation, gave jurisdiction, and no subsequent irregularity in procedure could take it away; (9) The ex parte ap- praisement was not void; (10) The District Court in Massachusetts can order the giving of a new or further stipulation, and, on a failure to comply with such order, can stay the further proceedings of the corporation, deny it all relief, and dismiss its libel; (11) The provision of Rule 54 in Admiralty, for the giving of a stipulation, instead of making a transfer to a trustee, is valid, and the value involved may be judicially ascertained primarily without a hearing of the persons interested adversely. In re Morrison, 14.
2. In construing the act of February 16, 1875, 18 Stat. 315, c. 77, so far as it relates to admiralty suits, it is settled: (1) That the facts found by the court below are conclusive; that a bill of exceptions cannot be used to bring up the evidence for a review of the findings; that the only rulings upon which this court is authorized to pass are such as might be presented by a bill of exceptions prepared as in an action at law; and that the findings have practically the same effect as the special verdict of a jury; (2) That it is only the ultimate facts which the court is bound to find; and that this court will not take notice of a refusal to find the mere incidental facts, which only amount to evidence from which the ultimate fact is to be obtained; (3) That if the court below neglects or refuses to make a finding one way or the other, as to the existence of a material fact which has been estab- lished by uncontradicted evidence, or if it finds such a fact when not supported by any evidence whatever, and an exception be taken, the question may be brought up for review in that particular. The City of New York, 72.
3. Applying these rules to the findings in the present case, Held, (1) That there was gross negligence on the part of the steamship in failing to run at moderate speed in a fog, and in failing to take the proper precautions when the proximity of the sailing vessel became known;
(2) That so far as the barque was concerned there was evidence to support the findings of the Circuit Court, and that these findings justify the conclusion that its change of course was made in extremis. lb.
4. The probability that a steamer or a vessel sailing with a free wind will pursue the course customarily pursued in that vicinity by vessels bound from and to the same port is so strong, that a deviation from that course without apparent cause will not be considered as estab- lished without a clear preponderance of testimony. lb.
5. There is no such certainty of the exact position of a horn blown in a fog, as will justify a steamer in speculating upon the probability of avoiding it by a change of helm, without taking the additional pre- caution of stopping until its location is definitely ascertained. Ib. 6. Where fault on the part of one vessel is established by uncontradicted testimony, and such fault is, of itself, sufficient to account for the disaster, it is not enough for such vessel to raise a doubt with regard to the management of the other vessel. Ib.
ADVERSE POSSESSION.
See UNITED STATES, 5.
See EMINENT DOMAIN, 6, 7, 8.
ASSIGNMENT FOR THE BENEFIT OF CREDITORS.
An assignment of all his property, made for the benefit of his creditors with preferences, by a citizen of Utah to another citizen of Utah which is valid by the laws of Utah and valid at the common law, is valid in Idaho against an attaching creditor, as to property in Idaho of which the assignee has taken possession, notwithstanding the pro- vision in the Revised Statutes of Idaho that no assignment by an insolvent debtor otherwise than as therein provided is binding on creditors, and that creditors must share pro rata, without priority or preference. Barnett v. Kinney, 476.
ATTACHMENT.
See JURISDICTION, A, 6.
A creditor of a bankrupt caused execution to be levied, before the bankruptcy, on goods of the bankrupt to satisfy the debt. The levy
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