Carmona v. The Esteban de Antunano

31 F. 920, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2327
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana
DecidedJune 11, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 31 F. 920 (Carmona v. The Esteban de Antunano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carmona v. The Esteban de Antunano, 31 F. 920, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2327 (circtedla 1887).

Opinion

Pardee, J.

The Mexican steam-ship Esteban de Antemano, owned by the Mexican Steam-Ship Company, in February, 1886, was running between Vera Cruz, Mexico, and New Orleans, Louisiana, carrying the mails and freight and passengers for hire. She sailed from Vera Cruz, February 6, 1886, and, after her arrival in New Orleans, discharged her cargo, reloaded with freight and passengers, took on full supplies for a round-trip voyage, took out her clearance papers, ready to sail at 8 o’clock a. M. on the seventeenth day of February. On the sixteenth day of February, Murietta & Co., bankers in London, England, alleging themselves the owners of a mortgage upon the said steam-ship, brought suit in the civil district court of the parish of Orleans, slate of Louisiana, against the Mexican Steam-Ship Company, owners, for the amount alleged to be due under the mortgage, and prayed for and obtained a writ of sequestration, and on the evening of the said sixteenth of February, the sheriff of the parish of Orleans executed said writ of sequestration, and took into his possession the said steam-ship.

After various proceedings in the said civil district court, a personal judgment ivas rendered against the Mexican Steam-Ship Company for the amount of the mortgage, with recognition of the mortgage on the steam-ship, maintaining the sequestration, and condemning the ship to bo sold Jbr the purpose of paying the judgment and costs. Execution was issued under the said judgment, and on July 31, 1886, the said steam-ship was sold by the sheriff of the parish of Orleans, and was purchased by Murietta & Co., present claimants. Possession under this sale seems to have been given by the sheriff to Murietta & Co. on the sixth of August following. During the time of the seizure, and up to August 7th, most of the crew remained on hoard of the steam-ship, occupying themselves, under the direction of the master, in painting, scrubbing (leeks, and otherwise keeping the ship in order and condition. The seamen’s wages were due from February 6, 1886. No attempt was made on the part of any one to pay and discharge them. .Many of the passengers remained on board several days after the sheriff took possession, hoping, it is said, that there would be a settlement of the ship’s difficulties, and that she would be able to pursue her voyage, The passengers and crew consumed the provisions supplied for the voyage, .and when they ran short various parties, intervening libelants herein, [922]*922at the instance of the master, without the order of the sheriff, but with the hope that the ship’s difficulties would soon end, and the voyage be made, continued to furnish supplies to meet the alleged necessities of the officers and crew, and the alleged necessity of keeping the ship in good order and condition. No application appears to have been made to the sheriff or to the court, having possession of the ship, for authority to furnish supplies on the credit of the ship, until April 30, 1886, which was followed, after a hearing, by an order to the sheriff of the court, on May 7, 1886, to furnish provisions to the crew to the extent of $25 per day, to be paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the ship, and to cease when the ship should be sold.

June 11, 1886, while the ship was in the possession of the sheriff, Jose Carmona and 53 others, officers and crew of the said steam-ship, filed a libel for wages against the said steam-ship in the district court of the United States for the Eastern district of Louisiana, under which the marshal returns “that he seized the said ship on the thirty-first day of July, and held her in his custody until the seventh day of August, when she was released upon bond.” June 14, 1886, J. M. Walsh filed an intervening libel for supplies furnished to said ship before and after the seizure of the sheriff aforesaid; and on the same day Alsina Bros, filed an intervening libel for supplies alleged to have been furnished during the aforesaid seizure of the sheriff. On June 21, 1886, Jean Begue filed an intervening libel for supplies alleged to have been furnished before and after the aforesaid seizure of the sheriff. June 28,1886, Thomas Casserly filed an intervening libel for alleged services, cleaning, washing furniture, bedding, and linen of the said steam-ship during the time it wTas in the custody of the sheriff aforesaid. August 4,1886, Edward A. Yorke filed an intervening libel for alleged supplies and advances furnished said ship before and during the seizure of the sheriff aforesaid. August 4, 1886, S. C. Manning filed an intervening libel for services as a stevedore in loading said ship on the fifteenth of February, 1886, before the aforesaid seizure of the sheriff.

By the record of the state court, it appears that Casserly, Manning, and Yorke filed interventions in the state court, setting up the same claims which they now respectively set up in this court, and, after hearing and evidence, had judgment against them dismissing their said interventions, but no plea of res judicata has been filed against them. The claims of the officers and crew have been settled and paid, and the questions presented here are as to the sufficiency of the claims, and the existence of the liens claimed by the intervening libelants, Yorke, Alsina Bros., Walsh, Begue, Casserly, and Manning. .

E. A. Yorke was the ship’s husband. By his-testimony it appears that he was the general agent of the ship at this port of New Orleans by appointment of the Mexican Steam-Ship Company, acting through its secretary, and that he visited the City of Mexico, and perfected his arrangements in a personal interview with the owners of the vessel, and agreed to act as her general agent in this port, transacting all her business as vice-principal, with full control of the captain of the vessel and [923]*923crew; and had agreed to pay all hills which the vessel might contract, and discharge all claims against her, Mr. Avondano being security for the Mexican Hleam-Ship Company, who were to repay to him the amount advanced on the return of the vessel on her trip following the one on which he had paid the bills. His correspondence down to March 5, 1886, after the seizure of the ship, shows that lie gave credit to the owners, and does not show that he relied upon the ship.

As tiie ship’s husband, and under his contract, it was his duty and his privilege to keep liens off the ship, rather than to put them on. “Hie ship’s husband is a confidential agent, appointed by the owners to conduct and manage on shore whatever concerns the employment of the ship. * * * He is the person to receive advances of money from the different, part owners, in their respective proportions, to meet the expense of the intended voyage, or, if he lay out his own money, or make himself liable for the necessary charges of the ship before starting, be may, before the voyage is ended, sue the owners severally for their proportionate shares. His is the hand into which the gross freight at the end of the voyage is collected, and by which the expenditure of the vessel is cleared off He is entitled to deduct the expense from the earnings of the ship for the same voyage or adventure before he distributes the net profits of the owners.” Macl. Shipp. 182, 188.

“And if the ship’s husband be a mere stranger, and he has regularly come to the possession of the proceeds of the voyage, or of the ship itself, if sold, or of the ship’s documents and freight, he will be entitled to a lien thereon for his reimbursement and indemnity. But beyond this the ship’s husband does not seem to be recognized as having any peculiar lien, or, at least, not any upon the ship or its proceeds.” Story, Partn. § 448. See Abb. Ship.

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Bluebook (online)
31 F. 920, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carmona-v-the-esteban-de-antunano-circtedla-1887.