Baron was an admiral in the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War I. His brother, Katà  Yasuhisa, was a general in the Imperial Japanese Army, and his adoptive son was the biological son of Admiral Dewa Shigetà Â.
Katà  was born in Edo, as the third son of Katà  Yasukichi, a hatamoto retainer of the Tokugawa shogunate. He attended the Numazu Military Academy, and in October 1883 graduated at the top of his class from the 10th class of the Imperial Japanese Naval Academy. One of his classmates was Yamashita Gentarà Â. He served as a torpedo officer on the Jingei, and . With the opening of the Sasebo Naval District, he was appointed secretary to Admiral .
From July 1891 to March 1893, Katà  served as chief weapons officer on the cruiser . He was then sent to Germany as part of the entourage of Prince Fushimi Hiroyasu. He remained with the prince in Germany through the duration of the First Sino-Japanese War. After his return to Japan, he served as weapons officer on the cruiser and on the staff of the Readiness Fleet.
In August 1897, Katà  was assigned as secretary to Navy Minister Saigà  Tsugumichi, who was soon promoted to fleet admiral. Katà  was promoted to commander.
Katà  returned to sea duty from December 1898 to April 1901, serving as executive officer on the cruisers and . He then returned to Germany to oversee the completion of the cruiser , and was executive officer on her voyage to Japan. From April 1901, he served with the Imperial Japanese Navy General Staff, where he enjoyed the confidence of Admiral Ità  Sukeyuki. Katà  met with business and political leaders, reviewed the designs of new warships, and was consulted on political developments and naval strategy. In October 1902, he was promoted to captain and returned to sea in April 1903 as captain of Akitsushima.
At the start of the Russo-Japanese War, Katà  was captain of the cruiser , an obsolete vessel not regarded as capable for front-line combat duties. However, in January 1905 he was transferred to command the cruiser and was thus able to participate in the crucial Battle of Tsushima.
After the end of the war, Katà  served for ten months in the Naval Personnel Department before returning to sea to captain the cruiser , followed by the battleships and . In May 1908, he became chief-of-staff of the Maizuru Naval District. He was then promoted to rear admiral, and spent the next three years as commandant of the Maizuru Naval Arsenal . In May 1911, Katà  became commander of the Training Fleet and in April 1912 became commander of the Sasebo Naval Arsenal, followed in December 1912 by promotion to vice admiral and the post of commander of the Yokosuka Naval Arsenal.
In December 1913, Katà  returned to sea as commander-in-chief of the Second Fleet. With the start of World War I, the IJN 2nd Fleet was deployed to the Siege of Tsingtao. At Tsingtao, Katà  commanded a fleet of four battleships, two cruisers, 15 destroyers along with submarines, torpedo boats and other auxiliary vessels.
In July 1916, Katà  was elevated to the kazoku peerage with the title of baron (danshaku). He was also awarded the Order of the Golden Kite, 2nd class and the Order of the Rising Sun. That December, he was appointed commander of the Kure Naval District and in July 1918 was promoted to full admiral. In December 1919, he was appointed a naval councilor and entered the reserves from January 1923.
As a naval councilor, Katà  spoke out frequently in politics, and was a strong advocate of the âÂÂbig guns and big battleshipsâ clique within the Navy. Despite his experiences at Tsingtao, he derided the development of naval aviation as of only minor importance. Katà  was especially vehement in his opposition to the Washington Naval Treaty and was thus a prominent member of the Fleet Faction within the Imperial Japanese Navy.
Katà  collapsed while in a meeting with Prince Fushimi in September 1927 and died shortly afterwards.