Exception is taken to the jurisdiction of the court in this case upon the facts as shown by the libel filed by the plaintiff herein.
Practically the facts appearing upon the face of the libel are as follows:
That the plaintiff was a stevedore; that the defendant was a corporation organized under the law, and is engaged in loading and unloading vessels and ships of all kinds, among them that certain Norwegian bark, the “Aeolus.” That on tbe 26th day of July, 1902, or thereabouts, the plaintiff as such stevedore, was engaged to help unload the said bark by tbe said defendant. The said bark was then lying in the port and harbor of Honolulu in tbis district, in navigable waters of tbe United States; that while so engaged in unloading said bark, “Aeolus,” and while on hoard of said vessel, to-wit: in the hold thereof* the plaintiff received the injury complained of in said libel. That this injury was caused by the carelessness: and negligence of the defendant and its employes. The plaintiff especially ex-onorates the ship and its master and crew by alleging the following:
“That the persons who1 were engaged in the unloading of the said bark, ‘Aeolus,’ were all employes of tbe staid defendant, and not members of tbe crew, or employes of tbe said bark* ‘Aeolus,’ and not fellow servants of any capacity with any of tbe employes of tire said bark, ‘Aeolus.’ ”
To this libel, exception is taken to tbe jurisdiction of tbe court on two grounds:
1. That the relation between tbe parties tot tbe action is suclr that admiralty has no- jurisdiction over the subject matter of the cause', for the reason that the parties to the tort are not within the admiralty jurisdiction of the court.
2. That the final consummation of the tort took place without the jurisdiction of this court, upon dry land.
Eor the purpose of deciding this exception or demurrer, I do not deem it necessary to consider the: second point relied upon by counsel, as tbe facts composing the tort complained of in this case (as shown on the face of the libel) ai*e not such as *321would bring them within the rale of law relied upon by counsel in that point.
As to the first point made by counsel, I am inclined to think it is well taken. It is trae I have been unable to find, after' careful search, any case of a similar nature1, nor has counsel called my attention to any such case. That is, where the action of the stevedore injured has been brought against a so-called “boss” stevedore, with whom he contracted. The books are full of cases in the admiralty courts, of actions for torts of a nature somewhat akin to the one at bar, but where the injury claimed is the result of the alleged fault of the officers or owners of the- shipi, and the-officers or owners of the ship, or the shipi itself are sued or where the party injured and claiming relief is a member of the crew. In all of such cases, the jurisdiction was necessarily sustained, or rather unquestioned.
It is trae that the case of Herman v. Port Blakely Mill Co., reported in 69 Fed. Rep 646, would seem to be somewhat opposed to this point of view. But that was a case of a suit against a mill company for an injury occurring on board a vessel, the plaintiff being an officer of the vessel and injured while acting with the other members of the crew in loading» lumber into its hold. And in that case, while jurisdictional questions were raised and decided in favor of libellant, yet the vital question raised in this case was not one of them. There the question turned upon whether the injury originated on the vessel or on land, a point in this cáse that I consider of no importance,, from the point of view of the facts alleged on the face of the-bill. And again in- that case it appeared affirmatively, that defendant caused the accident by sending lumber down the chute' into the hold of the vessel, without giving the proper warnings, the parties stowing the lumber aw'ay, including the party injured, being the officers and crew of the vessel. In this case-there was no privity of contract between this libellant and any officer or owner of the vessel. The injury is expressly stated to» have been done by a fellow stevedore.
When a tort of the character set up in the libel herein resulte directly from the .conduct of a fellow stevedore, and thei *322ship and its officers and men are distinctly exonerated from any blame in tire matter by the allegations of the libel, and the libellant being soi injured by a fellow stevedore while carrying out a contract of hiring with a “boss” stevedore, it does not seem to me that tire mere fact that a ship may be ineidentaly connected with the tort would make the latter a maritime one, and bring it within, the admiralty jurisdiction.
It is true, the broad rule is laid down in the admiralty text books, that in torts, the test of the jurisdiction is the location; yet, ■as I have before stated, I have been unable to find an adjudication upon tbe exact question raised here, a somewhat negative authority, it is true, but Benedict in his work on Admiralty (third edition) Section 308, recognizes the possibility of such cases and questions the jurisdiction of the admiralty courts therein, using the following language:
“It may, however, he doubted whether the civil jurisdiction 'in cases of torts, does not depend upon the relation of the parties to a ship or vessel, embracing only those tortious violations ■of maritime right and duty which occur in vessels to' which the .■admiralty jurisdiction in cases of contract applies......”
I am, therefore, of opinion that the question of jurisdiction in .a case like the one at bar does not depend alone upon the locality where the injury was inflicted, but rather upon all the facts ■of the case, including the locality; -that is to say, it must occur upon the vessel on the high seas or in the tide waters and arise ■out of some privity between the party injured and the officers •of owners of the ship. No such condition is shown to exist by the libel in this case. The exception is therefore sustained. Let fbe libel be dismissed without prejudice.