Astor Trust Co. v. E. V. White & Co.

241 F. 57, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1737
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 6, 1917
DocketNo. 1486
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 241 F. 57 (Astor Trust Co. v. E. V. White & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Astor Trust Co. v. E. V. White & Co., 241 F. 57, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1737 (4th Cir. 1917).

Opinion

KNAPP) Circuit Judge.

The facts are undisputed and may be thus summarized: In September and October, 1914, the appellees, E. V. White & Co. and the Robert P. Voight Company, "both mercantile corporations, were wholesale dealers in groceries, machinery, and marine supplies at Norfolk, Va. The Atlantic Phosphate & Oil Corporation, a Néw York concern, was the owner of the steam fishing vessels, John L. Lawrence, Portland, Nat Strong, and Adroit, which were chartered to the Carolina Coast Products Company, a corporation of which one" Bussells was president and general manager, and engaged in fishing in and about the port of Wilmington and the coast of North Carolina for the joint benefit of the owner and charterer. It became necessary for these vessels to have certain supplies, which the charterer was unable to procure in Wilmington on account of its poor financial condition, and application was made to the appellees to furnish what was needed on credit. This they were willing to do, if they could have a lien on the vessels for the merchandise furnished.

Thereupon Bussells, for the charterer, and one Ingram, for the appellees, conferred with the officers of the Atlantic Phosphate & Oil Corporation in New York, where an agreement was made that the charterer, the Carolina Coast Products Company, -would execute notes to the appellees for the supplies which they were to furnish, and that they should have a maritime lien for the same on all the steamers, “singularly and as a whole.” Notes were given accordingly, each of which was indorsed with the names of all the vessels, and also indorsed by Bussells and a Mr. Meadows. These notes aggregated $2,000, the amount of supplies which it was then estimated the vessels would immediately require. As it was understood that additional supplies would be needed from time to time, .the owner further agreed that appellees should have a lien on all the vessels, singularly and as a whole, [59]*59for such additional supplies as might be furnished, and the names of the vessels were to he put upon any additional notes that might be given therefor by the charterer.

Relying upon this agreement for a lien on each and all of the vessels, White & Co. furnished supplies to the amount of $516.35, and the Voight Company to the amount of $1,638.66, all of which were necessary to conuuue the vessels in operation. None of this indebtedness was paid by the charterer, and the notes were subsequently surrendered by the appellees. As to the delivery of these supplies the special master found as follows:

“That upon the execution of said notes, as aforesaid, Mr. Ingram and Oapt. Bussells returned to Norfolk, where the said notes wore delivered by Oapt. Bussells to the Voight Company and White & Go., respectively, and they delivered the supplies as called for to the Carolina Coast Products Company at its factory, and said company distributed them to the several si earners.”
“That all of said supplies were not used by steamer Bawrenee, not as much as .SSI 9Ü3; the steamers had used about one-fifth each of the supplies furnished, and the factory one-fifth, and there was on hand §500 worth, when the libels were filed against said steamers, which supplies went into the hands of the receiver of the Carolina Coast Products Company.”
"That neither White & Co. nor Voight- Company had any knowledge that the supplies were intended for uso otherwise than by the steamers. The supplies were shipped by White & Co. and the Voight Company in a commingled lot, and they believed that the supplies would be distributed to the steamers. The supplies were invoiced to the steamers by name, care of the Carolina Coast Products Company.”

After all four of the steamers had been libeled by other parties, each of the appellees filed two intervening libels, one against the steamer Lawrence for half its claim, and one against the Portland for the other half. Under decrees of the court below all of the vessels were sold, but only one of them, the Lawrence, brought enough to pay more than (he prior claims for wages. Prom the sale of the Lawrence, however, a surplus was realized of some $7,000, from which surplus the appellees were ordered paid the amounts of their several libels against that vessel, and no appeal was taken from this order. Thereupon the appellees filed amended libels against the Lawrence, or the funds resulting from its sale, for the other half of their respective claims; and this appeal is taken from the decree which sustained the amended libels and cli reeled payment of their several amounts out of the fund mentioned.

Upwards of a year before any of these transactions, in July, 1913, the Atlantic Phosphate & Oil Corporation had executed to the Astor Trust Company, as trustee, a mortgage upon certain properties then owned by it, including the four vessels above named, to secure a large issue of bonds. In December, 1914, suit was brought to foreclose this mortgage and a decree of sale entered in March of the following year; but '"the aggregate amount realized by the trustee on the sale of all the mortgaged properties was less than the amount of the mortgage and less than the amount due and unpaid on said bonds.” It will thus he seen that the question here is the right of the bondholders, or their representative, to the moneys which the decree below has awarded to the appellees; and this, question must be dealt with as one of general [60]*60maritime law, since the appellees do not base their contention upon any statute, federal or state.

It is virtually conceded by appellants, and we shall assume, that at the meeting in New York everything was done that the' owner and charterer could do by parol agreement to give the appellees a maritime lien upon all the vessels, “singularly and as a whole,” for the necessaries furnished. It is equally clear and undisputed that appellees have already had from the proceeds of the Lawrence more than the value of any supplies which were used by or delivered to, or even intended for, that particular vessel. The appellees, therefore, solely by virtue of their contract with the owner, claim a maritime lien upon the Lawrence, to enforce which their second libels were filed, not for supplies furnished to the Lawrence itself, but for supplies furnished in fact to the other three vessels. Can the claim.be sustained?

[1] Nearly 100 years ago, Mr. Justice Johnson, speaking for the Supreme Court in The St. Jago de Cuba, 9 Wheat. 409, 416 (6 L. Ed. 122), said:

“Tile whole object of giving admiralty process and priority of payment to privileged creditors is to furnish wings and legs to the forfeited hull to get back, for the benefit of all concerned; that is, to complete her voyage.”

And this figure of speech expresses the central idea of a maritime lien, namely, the equitable right, springing from the necessities of commerce, to hold the vessel itself for something done or furnished to it which enables it to continue in service, iand without which its earning power would be greatly reduced, if not destroyed. It is the needful and saving benefit to the res which gives the right to proceed in rem. On no other basis can that right be supported. And this conception of the essential nature of a maritime lien pervades the whole .range of statute law and judicial utterance upon the subject. For example, in 26 Cyc. 787, the principle is summed up as follows:

“Tbe basis of a lien for necessaries is a benefit rendered tbe vessel.

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Bluebook (online)
241 F. 57, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/astor-trust-co-v-e-v-white-co-ca4-1917.