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Southern Pacific Co. v. Jensen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Southern Pacific Company v. Jensen
Argued February 28, 1916
Reargued January 31–February 1, 1917
Decided May 21, 1917
Full case nameSouthern Pacific Company v. Marie Jensen
Citations244 U.S. 205 (more)
37 S. Ct. 524; 61 L. Ed. 1086; 1917 U.S. LEXIS 1628; 1996 AMC 2076
Case history
PriorError to the Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Third Judicial Department, of the State of New York
Holding
State legislation affecting maritime commerce is invalid if it contravenes the essential purpose expressed by an act of Congress, or works material prejudice to the characteristic features of the general maritime law, or interfere with the proper harmony and uniformity of the law in its international and interstate relations.
Court membership
Chief Justice
Edward D. White
Associate Justices
Joseph McKenna · Oliver W. Holmes Jr.
William R. Day · Willis Van Devanter
Mahlon Pitney · James C. McReynolds
Louis Brandeis · John H. Clarke
Case opinions
MajorityMcReynolds, joined by White, Day, Van Devanter, McKenna
DissentHolmes, joined by Brandeis, Clarke
DissentPitney, joined by Brandeis, Clarke
Laws applied

Southern Pacific Company v. Jensen, 244 U.S. 205 (1917), was a United States Supreme Court case concerning the geographical extent of state workers' compensation laws. The Court held that the New York Workmen's Compensation Act, as applied to laborers in the New York Harbor, intruded on federal admiralty jurisdiction, and that civil suits arising within this jurisdiction were subject to the common law of the sea. The compensation statute passed by the state interfered with federal power and was therefore unconstitutional.

The case is noted for the dissent written by Justice Holmes, specifically his dicta on the nature of the common law:

The common law is not a brooding omnipresence in the sky, but the articulate voice of some sovereign or quasi sovereign that can be identified.

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Transcription

Where does ginseng grow? Well, ginseng is native to both North America as well as Asia. In terms of where it grows in the wild, it prefers to grow in rather cool, well-drained north or northeast facing wooded forestland. In terms of the nutrient requirements of ginseng, it really is not a big feeder in the wild. It doesn't necessarily need a lot of fertile soil but it does have a high demand for calcium so typically soils that have at least three to four thousand pounds of calcium per acre would be suitable for growing ginseng in a wooded situation. Other nutrients not nearly as important as that. It requires shade, so obviously it's gotta be a forested area but it also requires a cold treatment every winter so ginseng will only grow as far south as some places in Georgia... doesn't grow in Florida or it doesn't grow in a place that is the least bit tropical. It has to have about a thousand hours temperatures around 40 to 45 degrees each winter in order for the plant to break dormancy. The best place the probably try to grow ginseng saying would be places where ginseng probably at one time grew wild or maybe still is growing wild and the northeast the first thing you would look for would be a sugar maple forest. Sugar maple is a species that has probably co-evolved with ginseng to the point where it contributes something that ginseng needs which is calcium and the calcium that the ginseng may be utilizing is coming from the leaves of the sugar maple trees which are about 1.75 percent calcium by dry weight... so in the Northeast the number one companion species tree species for ginseng would be sugar maple. As you get a little bit further south in ginseng's range sugar maple becomes less common and once you get down much south of Pennsylvania you'll see ginseng growing under things like tulip popular and black walnut in some cases Buckeye but a different forest composition than we would have in the northeast. I rarely suggest a soil test unless the site I consider to be borderline, because this complete soil analysis as performed by any university laboratory, it can pretty much tell me if ginseng will not grow there but it certainly cannot tell me if ginseng will grow there. So, if I see that the soil levels of calcium are let's say two thousand pounds per acre and that's a little bit low but it's marginal. In situations like that I might suggest that the potential grower add some gypsum. Gypsum is calcium sulfate but it does not affect pH of the soil. Most people who want to add calcium to soil will add limestone. Limestone will raise the soil pH...if you raise the soil pH you make other nutrients more available to the plants and in the case of ginseng, adding supplemental nutrients is generally not a good thing. As a matter of fact, people who try to fertilize ginseng that's growing in a forest situation quite often end up getting diseases... so nutrients in general seem to predispose ginseng to diseases. So I would never recommend adding either compost or manure or any nutrients whatsoever to a ginseng site. Ginseng does not like to be fertilized... again, unless you're growing it under artificial conditions under shade cloth in which case you're trying to grow big roots in a hurry and you're prepared to use a lot of chemicals to prevent diseases. Much better to look at the plants that are growing there to begin with to determine if it's a suitable site for ginseng than to test the soil. The acid test when it comes to "can I grow ginseng on the site?" has to do with the herbaceous perennials that are growing on the forest floor. Even though there may be no ginseng present at all the presence of plants such as Baneberry, maidenhair fern rattlesnake fern, blue cohash, foam flower and to a certain extent stinging nettle... these are plants that indicate that the conditions are just right for ginseng. The fact that they're there tells you number one that there's not too much deer predation... because these are the types of plants that will quickly be wiped out if there's too many deer. In general, any population of deer that's more than 15 or 20 per square mile many of these plants are going to drop that the ecosystem. So if these plants aren't present there the deer have probably eaten them or it's not a good site for ginseng and if you can grow ginseng there, the deer are probably going to eat that too. So, the first thing I look at it in a forest besides the trees which are pretty obvious is to look at what plants growing in the understory.... stinging nettle tells me there's adequate moisture Bainberry and maidenhair fern tell me that the calcium levels are probably pretty high and all those plants combined tell me that the shade is correct too. If I see things like dandelions growing there... other sun loving plants, well that might indicate that the site is a bit too sunny. If there's a lot of hemlock trees and pine trees and there's very little growing underneath them... well obviously that indicates that the site's to shady. Shade-loving herbaceous perennials in general is what we're looking for.

Background

In 1914, Christen Jensen was killed in an accident while unloading cargo in the New York Harbor. Jensen was an employee of the Southern Pacific Company, a railroad carrier which also operated a steamship line. Jensen worked as a stevedore on the ship that transported cargo between New York and Texas. He left behind him his wife Marie and their two young children. The Workmen's Compensation Commission of New York provided an award to Jensen's family members, in accordance with the state statute. The award of compensation was objected to by the Southern Pacific Company, who argued that Jensen had been involved in interstate commerce at the time of his death and that rules of liability were to be determined by Congress. The award was upheld by the appellate division and the New York Court of Appeals.

The Supreme Court's decision

In a 5–4 decision, the Court held in favor of the employer. The majority opinion was written by Justice James C. McReynolds. Liability for a railroad carrier engaged in interstate commerce, McReynolds said, could only be determined by federal statute. The Federal Employers' Liability Act, however, was not applicable to the present case:

Evidently the purpose was to prescribe a rule applicable where the parties are engaging in something having direct and substantial connection with railroad operations, and not with another kind of carriage recognized as separate and distinct from transportation on land and no mere adjunct thereto. It is unreasonable to suppose that Congress intended to change long-established rules applicable to maritime matters merely because the ocean-going ship concerned happened to be owned and operated by a company also a common carrier by railroad.

In regard to the New York state law, it conflicted with the general maritime law, reserved to federal jurisdiction under article 3, § 2 of the Constitution. This article extends the judicial power of the United States "to all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction", and article 1, § 8 confers upon Congress the power "to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the government of the United States or in any department or officer thereof." Congress was authorized to confer jurisdiction over maritime disputes, and the work of a stevedore was maritime in nature. If federal jurisdiction had been established, the states were prevented from imposing their authority. Otherwise, the foundation of the federal structure in maritime matters could be threatened:

If New York can subject foreign ships coming into her ports to such obligations as those imposed by her Compensation Statute, other states may do likewise. The necessary consequence would be destruction of the very uniformity in respect to maritime matters which the Constitution was designed to establish; and freedom of navigation between the states and with foreign countries would be seriously hampered and impeded.

Pursuant to § 9 of the Judiciary Act of 1789, civil suits arising within the limits of maritime or admiralty jurisdiction are reserved to federal district courts, to be decided by application of the common law. However, the act also includes a clause allowing for a party to pursue a remedy for a maritime claim in a state court when entitled to such remedy. This rule is known as the "saving-to-suitors clause". McReynolds, having held state regulation invalid, concluded that the compensation statute furnished by the state could not withstand common law scrutiny:

The remedy which the Compensation Statute attempts to give is of a character wholly unknown to the common law, incapable of enforcement by the ordinary processes of any court, and is not saved to suitors from the grant of exclusive jurisdiction.

Justices Oliver W. Holmes Jr. and Mahlon Pitney filed separate dissents.

Holmes' dissent

Holmes contended that the state law prescribed absolute liability and that the issue to be decided was the effect of federal jurisdiction:

The short question is whether the power of the state to regulate the liability in that place and to enforce it in the state's own courts is taken away by the conferring of exclusive jurisdiction of all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction upon the courts of the United States.

There was no question, Holmes said, that the saving-to-suitors clause allowed for state courts to exercise common law jurisdiction, and left to the state some power of legislation. This could be observed in state statutes dealing with pilotage and liens in aid of maritime contracts. Moreover, the Court had previously held that a statutory remedy for causing death could be enforced by the state courts, when the death was due to a collision upon the high seas. There could be no constitutional difference, Holmes said, in imposing liability for accident instead of fault. Both rules were unprecedented in maritime or common law.

Holmes further asserted that maritime torts would be equally valid in cases not due to death. Maritime law did not constitute an exhaustive body of law, but was amenable to state action:

Taking it as established that a state has constitutional power to pass laws giving rights and imposing liabilities for acts done upon the high seas when there were no such rights or liabilities before, what is there to hinder its doing so in the case of a maritime tort? Not the existence of an inconsistent law emanating from a superior source, that is, from the United States. There is no such law. The maritime law is not a corpus juris—it is a very limited body of customs and ordinances of the sea.

Holmes noted that a common law remedy for a stevedore injured while loading a ship had been sustained by the Court in a prior decision. That ruling, Holmes said, was the result of incremental adjudication that could be traced to either statutes or common law of the state. This exemplified the states' relationship to the maritime law:

For from the often-repeated statement that there is no common law of the United States, and from the principles recognized in Atlantic Transport Co. v. Imbrovek having been unknown to the maritime law, the natural inference is that, in the silence of Congress, this court has believed the very limited law of the sea to be supplemented here as in England by the common law, and that here that means, by the common law of the state (...) Even where the admiralty has unquestioned jurisdiction the common law may have concurrent authority and the state courts concurrent power.

In Holmes' view, the repository of law for the district court originated in state power, and the common law applied was on equal footing with state statutes:

The common law is not a brooding omnipresence in the sky, but the articulate voice of some sovereign or quasi sovereign that can be identified (...) It always is the law of some state, and if the district courts adopt the common law of torts, as they have shown a tendency to do, they thereby assume that a law not of maritime origin, and deriving its authority in that territory only from some particular state of this Union, also governs maritime torts in that territory,—and if the common law, the statute law has at least equal force (...)

Holmes observed that jurisdiction over maritime matters had not been explicitly granted to the states as it had to Congress. But a previous line of cases, all of which had sustained adjudication in accordance with state law, was sufficient demonstration of federal acclimation to state influence:

(...) show that it is too late to say that the mere silence of Congress excludes the statute or common law of a state from supplementing the wholly inadequate maritime law of the time of the Constitution, in the regulation of personal rights, and I venture to say that it never has been supposed to do so, or had any such effect.

Pitney's dissent

In a long dissent, Pitney decried what he said was a decision "entirely unsupported by precedent" that would have "novel and farreaching consequences". The grant of federal admiralty jurisdiction was not intended to limit the states from establishing separate and independent systems of law in maritime matters. In the absence of congressional legislation, the states were free to set their own rules, and civil suits in admiralty did not have to be confined to federal courts. The Court's decision, Pitney said, was an undue encroachment upon state power, and effectively invalidated the saving-to-suitors clause:

(...) it is not necessary, in order to give full effect to the grant of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, to imply that the rules of decision prevailing in admiralty must be binding upon common-law courts exercising concurrent jurisdiction in civil causes of maritime origin, and to give such a construction to the Constitution is to render unconstitutional the saving clause in § 9 of the Judiciary Act, and also to trench upon the proper powers of the states by interfering with their control over their water-borne internal commerce.

Subsequent developments

In October 1917, Congress passed an amendment to the Judiciary Act of 1789 which outlined the powers of the federal government in the area of maritime jurisdiction, including an exemption that allowed for workmen's compensation claimants to seek benefits under state compensation laws.[1]

References

  1. ^ Shoemaker, Rebecca S. (2004). The White Cort: Justices, Rulings and Legacy. ABC-CLIO Ltd. p. 133. ISBN 978-1-57607-973-7.

External links

This page was last edited on 30 September 2023, at 15:47
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