(after stating the facts as above.) The intention of congress in passing the act of June 29, 1888, is clearly expressed in its title. It is “An act to prevent injurious deposits within the harbor and adjacent waters of New York city,” etc. Deposits which do not injuriously affect the harbor are not prohibited by the act. It was the harbor that the lawmakers had in view; it was the harbor (hat they sought to protect. Recognizing the fact that the usefulness of the harbor would be destroyed if its approaches were obstructed, the act is careful to designate all waters adjacent or tributary to the harbor, where the dumping of deposits can, in any manner, affect it injuriously. It will be observed, however, that dumping is not forbidden in all parts of the enumerated wafers, but only in such parts of these waters as are “■within the limits which shall be proscribed by the supervisor of the harbor.” It can hardly be presumed that congress intended, under pretense of protecting the harbor of New York, to require refuse taken from the harbors of Stonington or New London, for instance, to be towed through the sound and dumped far out at sea. Improvements at Albany and Troy and in the harbors of ports along the sound will have to cease if dredgings taken therefrom are to be towed several hundred miles and dumped at a designated point in the Atlantic ocean. Clearly congress did not intend to weigh down a law, having a single object to accomplish, with conditions so expensive, onerous and useless.
The purpose of the act is to prevent dumping where it will injure the harbor and to prevent it nowhere else. To insure this result the supervisor, taking the waters enumerated in the act as the theater of his operations, is required to draw protecting lines around the harbor. When these lines are fixed the act becomes operative. Within them is the harbor of New York and such waters as are necessary for the protection of the harbor. Within these limits, says the act, no dumping shall be done, without them it is not prohibited. The supervisor had no power to issue his ukase commanding that all dumping shall be done within limits fixed by him far out in the Atlantic; limits which include waters not mentioned in the act. What the supervisor did do was to direct that the deposit of refuse, dirt, etc., “must take place east of the meridian ?3° 55' 56" W., and south of parallel 40° 31' N.” The libelant insists that this order means that the dumping must not only be east of the meridian, but it must also be south of the parallel, and that under the provisions of the act the supervisor had authority to make such an order. The claimants, on the contrary, argue — First, that the order is void for indefiniteness; second, that the libelant’s construction is inadmissible under the act; and, third, that if sustained at all the order must *382be construed as fixing, within the designated meridian and parallel, the limits beyond which, at all points, both on the east and south, refuse may be deposited. The situation can best be illustrated by the following diagram showing these opposing theories:
*383The libelant contends that dumping must all take place within the angle represented by the dotted lines. The claimants contend that, if •the supervisor’s order can be upheld at all, it must be construed to prohibit dumping within the angle formed by the plain black lines. If the libelant’s theory is correct, the supervisor possessed the'power to fix upon any point in the ocean where a meridian and parallel intersect, and command every person from Ooney island to Troy and from Staten island to Montauk point, under pain of imprisonment, to deposit refuse material at the vertex, or somewhere within the ever-widening lines, of the angle thus formed — an angle which necessarily includes a large part of the Atlantic ocean in no way referred to in the act. Under such a construction a contractor engaged in improving the harbor of Stoning-ton, Conn., who should dump dredgings in the Atlantic 500 miles east of Boston would be liable to the penalties of the act, because the dumping would take place north of the parallel. If the power to designate an area where refuse must be deposited is once conceded, the supervisor could have named a dumping ground 10, 20, or 30 miles from New York, with as much propriety as the one he did name. It is thought that a construction which leads to such absurd results, especially in a penal statute, is out of the question. In order to reach it it is necessary to reverse the plain meaning of the first section and substitute the word “without” for the word “within.” If this section made it a misdemeanor to deposit dirt, etc., without (outside of) the limits fixed by the supervisor, the contention of the libelant would be more plausible. The supervisor was not authorized to say where the dumping should be done, but only where it should not be done. The remaining question is, has he done so? When read alone his order certainly bears the construction put upon it by the libelant, but, as such a construction renders it utterly void, it remains to be seen whether, when considered in connection with the act, an interpretation can be placed upon it which renders it operative. Though most infelicitously expressed, it is thought that the order can be construed to mean that the deposit of refuse material may take place at any point east of the meridian or at any point south of the parallel. In other words, that no dumping is permitted within the angle formed by the plain black lines as shown on the above diagram.
The decision of the circuit court in the case of The Sadie, 41 Fed. Rep. 896, does not conflict with these views. The point now under discussion was not considered in that case for the reason that it was not pretended that the dumping took place east of the meridian. Although there arc expressions in the opinion which appear to uphold the contention of the libelant, the following language indicates that the court construed the supervisor’s order as fixing limits coincident with the northwesterly angle as indicated on the above diagram. Says the opinion, at page 399:
“In the next place, it is to be noted that, under the statute, it is not the supervisor of the harbor who is to prohibit dumping, etc., in the tidal waters *384named in the act. The act itself prohibits such dumping ‘within the limits which shall be prescribed ’ by that officer. These limits which he is to prescribe are the lines or boundaries on one side and the other of which, respectively, such material may and may not be dumped. The order made by him designates two lines, running, one north and the other west, from a point at the intersection of the meridian 73° 55' 56" W. and the parallel 40° 31' 1ST. To the east and south of these lines it is expressly stated that the deposit of refuse material (repeating the phraseology of the first section) must take place. Why these'lines are not thus made the limits of dumping within the meaning of the act I am at a loss to conceive. Up to them all material is to be deposited; beyond them it is not to be deposited. The limits being thus fixed, the first section becomes operative, and persons or vessels depositing such material within these lines, upon the waters enumerated in the act, become liable to the penalties prescribed thereby. ”
The italics do not appear in the opinion and are introduced to emphasize the point in question.
It seems quite clear that if the circuit court intended to sanction the theory that the supervisor had power to designate a dumping ground and make a criminal of every person depositing refuse material elsewhere, it would have described the south-easterly angle as above shown — an angle formed by two lines running, one south and the other east from the point of intersection — instead of using the language above quoted. As the tugs were not engaged in dumping within the limits prescribed by the supervisor, it follows that the libels must be dismissed.