Burke v. The M. P. Rich

4 F. Cas. 741, 1 Cliff. 308
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 F. Cas. 741 (Burke v. The M. P. Rich) 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
Burke v. The M. P. Rich, 4 F. Cas. 741, 1 Cliff. 308 (circtdma 1859).

Opinion

CLIFFORD, Circuit Justice.

Several objections were made by the respondents to the right of the libellant to maintain this suit. In the first place, it is insisted that the suit is brought in the name of the wrong party, and that it cannot be maintained in the name of the libellant. That objection rests upon the proof that the libellant has parted with his interest in the bond, and upon the admitted fact that the suit is prosecuted in his name, for the benefit of the assignees and present holders of the same. If it was an action at law in the common-law courts, it would be well brought, and indeed could be maintained in no other way. All the authorities cited by the respondent admit that the assignee of a maritime contract may, in certain cases, enforce his rights in the admiralty by a suit in the name of the party to whom the promise was made, and from whom he derived his rights. For example, it is said, in Fretz v. Bull, 12 How. [53 U. S.] 468, that the party -entitled to relief should always be made libellant, and that the practice of instituting the suit in the name of one person for the benefit of another only obtains in the admiralty in particular cases. But the same court admits that all persons entitled on the same state of facts to participate in the relief may join as libellants, whether the suit be in personam or in rem. Benedict, Adm. 386. Doubts have often been expressed whether a suit can be maintained against a carrier by a consignee who has no beneficial interest in the goods. \v nether so or not, it is well .settled that the presumption is that he has an interest, and to defeat the right to sue in his own name the prima facie presumption must be rebutted by proof. Lawrence v. Minturn, 17 How. [58 U. S.] 100. Mr. Parsons says a bottomry bond is generally regarded in the admiralty as a negotiable instrument, or interest, which, being transferred in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, may be put in force by the holder in his own name. In the case of The Rebecca, 5 c. Rob. Adm. 103, the warrant was taken out by the merchant, who having subsequently become an alien enemy during the progress of the suit, its prosecution was suspended, but not until the respondent had pleaded that fact in answer to the suit. An attempt was afterwards made by the attorney to revive the prosecution for his own benefit, alleging that the bond had been transferred to him, and that the obligee had become bankrupt. While the learned judge, who gave the opinion, admitted that a bottomry bond was a negotiable instrument, he nevertheless, in the argument of the opinion, put a case by way of analogy, which goes very far to show that the proceedings may be carried on in the name of the original party. A contract of hypothecation made by the master, says Mr. Abbott, does not transfer the property of the ship, but only gives the creditor a privilege, or claim upon it, to • be carried into effect by legal process. Such a contract, says the same learned commentator, is one of those matters technically called choses in action, and therefore the duty created by it is not assignable at common law, so as to enable an assignee to sue upon it in his own name, or to make it subject to a set-off, although it may be available in a court of equity. In the admiralty, he says, a bottomry bond is a negotiable interest, which may be transferred, and put in issue by the person so acquiring it. Abbott, Shipp, p. 154. No doubt is entertained that a bottomry bond, in a qualified sense, is a negotiable interest, and that it is competent for the assignee to enforce payment in the admiralty in his own name. But it is not a negotiable instrument, in the broad sense in which that term is employed, as applied to bills of exchange and promissory notes. Thompson v. Dominy, 14 Mees. & W. 406. None of the cases decide that the assignee may not maintain the suit in the name of the original obligee of the bond, and it is difficult to see any reason connected with the obligor for the opposite rule. His rights are not thereby impaired, and it is not perceived that any undue advantage is secured to the assignee. Be that as it may, still in this case the real parties in interest appeared in the progress of the suit, and filed a supplemental libel, setting forth all the grounds of their claim. Answer [744]*744■was made by tbe respondents to tbe supplemental libel, and tbe parties proceeded to issue and trial. All tbe parties are before tbe court, and full justice may be done in tbe premises. Under these circumstances, and in view of tbe state of tbe pleadings, I am of tbe opinion that this objection cannot be sustained.

It is objected by tbe respondent, in tbe second place, that the bond is invalid, because there was no such necessity in the case as authorized tbe master to mate it.

Maritime hypothecations bad their origin in tbe necessities of commerce, and are said to be tbe creatures of necessity and distress. They are of a high and privileged character, and are held in great sanctity by maritime courts. 1 Conk. Adm. (2d Ed.) 200. Such contracts, said Lord Stowell, in tbe case of The Kennersley Castle, 3 Hagg. Adm. 7, were intended for the purpose of procuring tbe necessary supplies for ships which may happen to be in distress in foreign ports, where tbe master and tbe owners are without credit, and where, unless assistance could be procured by means of such instruments, the vessels and cargo must perish. . But the master is not the owner of the property, so as to have a right to bind it at his own will and pleasure. Hypothecation of the vessel by the master is only authorized when based upon necessity, and the required necessity is twofold in its character. It must be a necessity of obtaining repairs or supplies, in order to prosecute the voyage, and also of resorting to such a loan, from inability to procure the required funds in any other way. If the master has funds of his own or of the owner in his possession, or within his control, or if he can, by any other reasonable means, procure them upon his own credit or that of the owners, or by advances on the freight, or by passage money he is not at liberty to resort to a bottomry bond. The Hersey, Id. 407; The Fortitude [Case No. 4,953]; The Active [Id. 12,070]; 1 Conk. Adm. 269; The Aurora, 1 Wheat. [14 U. S.] 102; Thomas v. Osborn, 19 How. [60 U. S.] 31. Such hypothecation can only be made by the master in a foreign port, but the term “foreign port,” in the jurisprudence of the United States, includes all maritime ports other than those of the state where the vessel belongs. Applying these principles to the present case, it is obvious that the objection under consideration is wholly without merit. Disabled as the vessel was, and unable to leave the port in her crippled condition, the necessity for repairs was pressing and urgent. Her master had no means of his own or of the owners, within his control, and he and they were alike without credit in the port of distress. Notice to the owners brought neither assistance nor the promise of assistance, and neither the creditors of the vessel, nor the brokers who negotiated the charter, were able or willing to furnish any available funds. All other resources failing, the master, as was his duty in the emergency, promised to hy-pothecate the vessel; and having obtained the loan upon the faith of that promise, and made the repairs, he executed the bond to secure its payment Courts of justice everywhere agree that where the supplies are ordered by the master, and the repairs made, and the bond given afterwards, the bond is good, provided it was originally intended to furnish the supplies on the credit of the ship, and to secure the payment of the amount advanced in that way. The Virgin, 8 Pet. [33 U. S.) 552; La Ysabel, 1 Dod. 276; Furniss v. The Magoun [Case No. 5,163].

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Bluebook (online)
4 F. Cas. 741, 1 Cliff. 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-v-the-m-p-rich-circtdma-1859.