Briggs Excursion Co. v. Fleming

40 F. 593, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2555
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 25, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 40 F. 593 (Briggs Excursion Co. v. Fleming) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Briggs Excursion Co. v. Fleming, 40 F. 593, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2555 (circtdnj 1889).

Opinion

Wales, J.

The question raised by the demurrer is whether a libelant •who procures the seizure and detention of vessels for the purpose of enforcing the payment of an alleged lien against them, when, on the facts stated by him in his libel he had no lien, is liable to respond in damages to the owners of the proper!}7 as for a trespass. The positions taken in support of the demurrer depend on the theory that the process of attachment wras issued by the special order of the district court, which had a general jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the libel, although in this instance the court may have acted in excess of that jurisdiction. It is conceded that the writ was improperly issued, but, at the same time, the defendant claims that this was the error of the court, and not his own. The record of the district court, and the practice of the admiralty courts in this circuit, do not sustain the defendant in this contention. That practice and the admiralty rules do not require a special order of the court for the issuing of writs of attachment on libels in rem. The ordinary practice is for the libelant to file his libel with the clerk of the court, with a stipulation for costs, and the writ is issued by that officer, in most cases, as a matter of course. Ben. Adm. § 415. But in libels in personam, no warrant for the arrest of the person or property of a defendant will be issued for a sum exceeding $500, unless by the special order of the court, upon affidavit or other proper proof showing the propriety thereof. Adm. Rule 7. Such writs have been issued out of the district courts in this circuit, in the manner and according to the practice just stated, for many years past; and any person who conceived that he had a maritime lien or claim could obtain a writ by filing his libel in rem, or in personam, as the particular circumstances of his case required. If the proceeding was in rem, the writ would be issued by the clerk of the court in whose office the libel had been filed, without a special order of the judge or of the court; but, if the proceeding was in personam for the arrest of the defendant or his property, the allowance of the writ by the court would be requisite. It is not true, therefore, that the attachment of the plaintiff’s vessels was ordered or directed by the court. In point of fact, the attention of the court was for the first time drawn to the case when the exceptions to the libel were heard, and when it was admitted by the defendant that he had mistaken the form of his remedy. Analogies drawn from criminal proceedings are not applicable. A person making an affidavit. before a magistrate, who •thereupon issues a warrant of arrest for a felony, when the facts sworn to do not constitute a felonious offense, will not, in the absence of collusion or malice, be liable to the party arrested for false imprisonment. But this does not resemble a proceeding in which a libelant obtains a writ on his own application, without the consent or knowledge of the court. In the latter case, the party acts on his own responsibility; in the former, the magistrate exercises his official judgment, and his error will not be imputed to the party who makes the complaint.

[595]*595It is also insisted by tlie defendant that tlie declaration does not charge him with bad faith or malicious motives in attaching the vessels, and that so long as he acted in good faith, and without evil intent, he cannot bo held liable for the erroneous order of the court. But this proposition, like the others, assumes what is not true, namely, that the attachment was ordered by the court. If the defendant was honestly mistaken in adopting the course he did, it may affect the quantum of damages, but does not justify the wrong done to the plaintiffs. A void writ taints with illegality all that may be done under it. In O’Brien v. Roosevelt the plaintiff was indebted to the defendants in the sum of $400 for repairs to the plaintiff’s vessel. The defendants caused the vessel to be libeled and seized by process issuing out of the United ¡States district court. The libel was subsequently dismissed for want of jurisdiction, on the ground that the repairs had been made in the home port of the vessel. On an action brought for damages in the court below, the jury found for the plaintiff, and the verdict was sustained. In The Margaret Jane, L. R. 2 Adm. & Ecc. 345, the suit was brought to recover £2,500 for salvage service rendered to the arrested vessel and cargo, the value of which had been reported by the receiver of wreck to bo £746. By a provision of the merchant shipping act (25 & 26 Viet. c. 63, § 49) the court had no jurisdiction of salvage causes in which the value of the property saved was under £1,000. The plaintiff's eventually abandoned their suit, and, on motion to condemn the plaintiff's in costs and damages, the court decided that, “although the .services of the plaintiff's are of considerable merit, yet as the vessel bad been detained after they knew, or bad the means of knowing, that the report of the receiver was substantially correct, the motion should be granted.” In The Oath cart plaintiff's in admiralty ivore condemned in damages, on the ground that, with adequate knowledge of the circumstances, they had arrested the ship when no money was due to them. The court there said “the plaintiffs had full knowledge of the facts, and must be held to the legal effect of their own engagements. If they had regarded the terms of those engagements, they would have known they had no right to arrest the vessel.” These authorities exhibit the legal consequences of improperly causing the arrest of vessels by admiralty process. The Evangclismos is an exceptional case, and the reasoning of tlie court on the facts is not above criticism. Besides, that case is not directly applicable, as there was a disputed fact before the court, but here the facts were ascertained and known before the attachment was issued. To enforce the payment of liens and the recovery of maritime claims, in admiralty, it is often necessary to use summary means, and the fact that proceedings in rem require the attachment of property should make suitors cautious in causing the arrest and detention of vessels which are actively engaged in business, and especially in a case like the present one, where the defendant, by the exercise of a little forethought, might have known that he had no right to seize and hold the property of the plaintiff. The demurrer is overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
40 F. 593, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briggs-excursion-co-v-fleming-circtdnj-1889.