7. Injuries to Wharves.—

Cases of collision between ships and wharves are very frequent and the damages caused thereby are a well recognized subject of marine insurance for which the underwriters agree to indemnify the vessel when it has been compelled to pay them. Damage to the wharf can not be recovered in the admiralty because the tort is not maritime; it is not consummated upon the water but on the land of which the wharf is a part. The wharf owner must, therefore, sue at common law or under local statutes; he has no maritime lien for the injury. On the other hand, the injuries received by the ship are consummated on the water and fall within the jurisdiction of the admiralty; the ship, however, can not libel the wharf because that is a fixed structure and not subject to maritime liens; its remedy is by a libel in personam against the wharf owner. If the wharf is a lawful structure and the ship negligently runs into it, full damages may be recovered at law. Where the structure is unlawful, the ship may recover its damages, in whole or in part, as the fault may lie, in an admiralty proceeding. Atlee v. Union Packet Co., 21 Wall. 389, was a case where a barge was sunk by a collision with a stone pier in the Mississippi river which had been placed there without authority of law. The pilot of the barge was also at fault in assuming to take her through the channel without posting himself about the location of the pier. The proceeding was a suit in admiralty by the owner of the barge against the owner of the pier, and, both being considered in fault, the damages were divided. In connection with the subject of admiralty jurisdiction it should be noted that while it declines to take cognizance of the damages sustained by the owners of fixed structures from collisions with vessels, the shipowners, by filing a petition under the Limited Liability Act, may draw their claims into the admiralty and enjoin their actions at common law (Richardson v. Harmon, 222, U. S. 96.).

Injuries are often sustained by docks and wharves when vessels make fast thereto in stress of weather and can not leave without exposing themselves to destruction. The rule is that the shipowner may not save his own property at the expense of the wharf-owner but must compensate him for the damage done by his ship, although the master had no alternative but to remain as he did. Vincent v. Company, 109 Minn. 456, is a decision in point, and Dutton v. Strong, 1 Black 23, should be read in the same connection.