Baker v. Loring

19 F. 127, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2018
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedJanuary 22, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 F. 127 (Baker v. Loring) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Loring, 19 F. 127, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2018 (circtdma 1884).

Opinion

Lowell, J.

The schooner Jennie B. G-ilkey was sold in the district court, and certain debts which were admitted to be privileged were paid out of the proceeds. The libel of H. M. Baker & Co., of New York, for necessary supplies furnished the master in New York, for his last voyage, was rejected, because, according to the evidence in that court, New York appeared to be the home port of the schooner. A new case is made in this court, and has been very thoroughly prepared and argued, both upon the facts and the law. The claimant, Mr. Loring, owns the greater part of the vessel, and contests the lien of the libelants. When these supplies were furnished, the vessel was •owned .in Massachusetts, Maine, and New Hampshire, excepting that Loud & Co., of New York, owned one sixty-fourth part. The case for the libelants is, that the schdoner was built and largely owned in Boston, and had a permanent register in that port; that “Boston” was painted on her stern; that they believed, and had reason to believe, that she was a Boston vessel; and that in fact she was so. The ¡contention of the claimant is, that New York was the home port ■of the vessel, because Loud & Co., of that city, were her managing owners; or that the master was such owner, and usually resided in New York; that, therefore, she should have been registered there; .and that admiralty, like equity, will hold that to be done which ought to have been done. If Loud & Co. were the husbands, or acting and managing owners, of the vessel, the registration-should have been •changed to New York when they were appointed to that office. Rev. St. § '4141. It does not necessarily follow that New York became, ipso facto, the home port, without change of registration. I have .seen no case which decides that the home port shifts as often as the managing owner is changed, without change of papers, or that material-men are bound to discover who is the managing owner of a vessel, •or what place is his usual place of residence. One case decides that the port of enrollment is the home port, if the managing owner lives there, though a majority of the owners live in another state. The Indiana, Crabbe, 479. In that ease the decree was that the vessel •changed her home port from a certain day, which was that of her new enrollment at the port of the managing ovpner, and not that of the sale to him; but the time between the conveyance and the enrollment was trifling, and the point does not appear to have attracted attention.

It has often been decided that the place of residence of the owners [129]*129is to be considered the home port, even wnen the registration is in another state, if the facts of ownership and residence were known, or might have been known, to the material-man, (The Golden Gate, Newb. 308; The Albany, 4 Dill. 439; The E. A. Barnard, 2 Fed. Rep. 712; The Mary Chilton, 4 Fed. Rep. 847;) but I have seen no case which brought up any question between majority and minority ownership, or between the managing and not managing ownership, in a case of this kind. It is equally well established that the port of registry is, in a case of this kind, prima facie the home port, to he overcome by clear proof, before any other home is taken as the true one. The Superior, Newb. 176; The Sarah Starr, 1 Sprague, 453; 2 Pars. Shipp. & Adm. 326. Mr. Justice Clifford said that the statute requiring the name of the port of registry to be painted on the stern is intended to give to all persons Interested notice of the home of the vessel, and this statement is quoted in an opinion in the supreme court. The Martha Washington, 1 Cliff. 463, 466; Morgan v. Parham, 16 Wall. 471, 475. As I find the facts to be in this case, it will not he necessary to go beyond these decisions.

Loud & Co. testify that they acted merely as brokers or consignees of the vessel, and neither had, nor assumed to have, any of the powers of managing owners; and this is confirmed by all the evidence. The schooner’s voyages, during some years, were chiefly between New York and foreign ports, and, as is so common with New England vessels, the master sailed her on shares. He undoubtedly took the responsibility, and gave the orders for all the voyages and business of the vessel; and Loud & Co. acted precisely as they did for all other vessels which they disbursed. The fact that New York was the headquarters of the vessel, as it must be of general freighting vessels on this coast, has no eifect to make it the home port. Hayes v. Pacific Mail Co. 17 How. 596; Morgan v. Parham, 16 Wall. 471.

In taking out registration, Mr. Loring, the present claimant, represented himself to be the managing owner. He says that he signed the papers because he was told by Capt. Gilkoy, his brother-in-law, that they were necessary, and knew nothing about their contents, which I take to be the fact. Still, Mr. Loring was the largest owner, and all the managing owner that the vessel had, unless the master shall be considered so. I agree with the claimant that it is doubtful whether the master can be the ship’s husband, or acting and managing owner in the sense of this statute; but, however this may be, I do not find, as a fact, that Capt. Gilkoy was such husband, or acting and managing owner, nor that he usually Resided in New York. IIo managed the voyages of the vessel, as charterer and special owner, not as ship’s husband, in the sense of the statute; nor did he reside in New York. Judge Ware decided that a merchant who passed most of his time in New York might be considered as usually residing there, though he was domiciled in Maine. The St. Lawrence, 3 Ware, 211. I have my doubts of the soundness of this opinion, but [130]*130do not now controvert it. ' Capt. Gilkey was often in New York, but it was because his vessel happened to be there at the end of his voyages. He called himself a resident of Boston, Or of Somerville, which is a suburb of Boston, and his family lived in Somerville, and it is not proved that either he, or any one else, ever supposed that he usually resided in New York. I cannot think that, if the statute would ever admit the master to be the managing owner, it intends to say that his usual residence shall shift with the shifting business of his vessel. Seamen are considered to reside, for all municipal purposes, of voting, taxation, distribution of estates, etc., where their families live, and they consider themselves to have their home. Guier v. O’Donnell, 1 Bin. 349, note; Boothbay v. Wiscasset, 3 Greenl. 354; Hallet v. Bassett, 100 Mass. 167. While I do not, at the present time, dissent from Judge Ware’s opinion that a business man may have a usual residence apart from his family, I hold that the master of a vessel does not acquire such a residence by putting into a foreign port more or less often. I hold, therefore, that the schooner was properly registered in Boston, and was a foreign vessel in New York, knd that the libelants have a privilege for the supplies furnished her.

The only disputed items of the account are the premiums of insurance. The evidence upon this point is not very full. I understand that the vessel sailed on her last voyage in 1878, and suffered damage which caused heavy expenses in a foreign port; that the owners contributed funds to redeem her, and afterwards became dissatisfied with the conduct of Capt. Gilkey, and sent out another master who brought the vessel to Boston in 1881.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. 127, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-loring-circtdma-1884.