Chandler v. The Willamette Valley

76 F. 838, 1896 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 132
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedJune 4, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 76 F. 838 (Chandler v. The Willamette Valley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chandler v. The Willamette Valley, 76 F. 838, 1896 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 132 (N.D. Cal. 1896).

Opinion

MORROW, District Judge.

The steamship Willamette Yalley was seized under process issuing from this court at the suit of the above-named libelant, to enforce a maritime lien for supplies far-; nished the vessel. Previous thereto she had been arrested upon the libel filed by one Patrick Gleeson, seeking to recover damages incurred while a passenger on hoard of said steamship, but had been released upon a bond given to the United States marshal under the provision of section 941 of the Revised Statutes. Other libels in rem were also thereafter filed against the vessel to satisfy various maritime liens, but she was not released upon these subsequent claims, nor upon the one involved in this case. During the pend-ency in this court of these claims the steamship was sold upon the petition of the libelant, and after a satisfactory showing had beeq duly made under general admiralty rules 10 and 11. The receiver* it appeared, could neither make a deposit nor give the required stipulation for the vessel’s release, and it further satisfactorily appeared that the machinery of the vessel, in her then idle and unused condition, was rusting, her woodwork drying and cracking, and every part showing general deterioration and decay. See opinion of court, 63 Fed. 130. All of the maritime liens originally entered against the vessel having been satisfied, the present proceedings aré [840]*840directed t'ó the" disposition to be made by the court of the surplus how rémáinii% in the. registry. •

When the steamship Willamette Valley was first seized, and, in fact, also upon the subsequent seizures, the receiver of the Oregon •Pacific Railroad Company, appointed and acting under the authority of the .state court of Oregon, which had assumed jurisdiction and control of the property of the Oregon Pacific Railroad Company by virtue of certain foreclosure proceedings instituted against that corporation, - appeared;, and claimed the steamship as the property of the company. He excepted to the jurisdiction or right of the court to proceed against the vessel on the ground that she was under the management, control, and possession of the receiver of a foreign jurisdiction* viz. the state court of Oregon; that she was, therefore, in custodia legis, and that such possession could not be interfered with by this court, unless the consent of the state court of Oregon, whose officer the receiver. was, were first obtained. The same exception was raised to each iibel, and they were consolidated fdr decision on that question. After very full argument and thorough consideration, this court held that the admiralty law, in the enforcement of maritime liens, is paramount within its jurisdiction; that it was immaterial, so far as this, jurisdiction was concerned, whether the vessel was under the control and management and in the possession of a receiver appointed by the state court of Oregon; that admiralty liens would nevertheless attach; and that only considerations of comity will prevent a court of admiralty from maintaining its supremacy. It was further held that these principles of comity did not apply to the case at bar for the reasons: First, that the. cause pf action under consideration arose in this jurisdiction; second, that the vessel, at the time the liens were incurred, was engaged as a common carrier in trade and commerce; third, that the proceedings were in rem; and, fourth, that the state and federal courts were not, in this instance, of co-ordinate or concurrent territorial jurisdiction. 62 Fed. 293. An appeal was taken from this ruling to the circuit court of appeals, where the decision of this court was affirmed, and the case remanded for further proceedings upon the merits. 13 C. C. A. 635, 66 Fed. 565. Further proceedings were thereupon had, and, after satisfying all the maritime liens pending against the steamship, there now remains a surplus of $23,950.85 in the registry. Seven petitions or interventions against this surplus have been filed. They may be classed as follows': (1) That of Charles Clark, the present receiver of the Oregon Pacific Railroad Company in the state of Oregon. This petitioner Claims ¡all of the surplus on the ground that, as all the maritime liens have now been satisfied, this court has no further power or right, sitting as á; court of admiralty, to pay over the surplus to any one except the receiver himself. (2) That of Jacob Levi, Sr., and E. W. ÍFerguson, to.be:paid a certain sum which, as sureties for the release of the Willamette Valley upon the first libel filed against her in this court , by Patrick G-leeson, they were compelled to pay by virtud of th'é decree of this court duly entered in favor of the libelant G-leesohy — :the' sum of $300 and costs. The aggregate of the decree [841]*841and costs amounts to $437.88. They also petition for the additional' sum of $400, to be allowed for counsel fees to the proctor, wlm de-,; fended the claim. (3) That of W. A. Swinerton, who claims a Here by reason of a judgment at common law recovered by him in the courts of this state within this district. The judgment consists of the sum of $15,308.78 principal and interest, and $1,115.95 costs.. (4 and 5) The petitions, respectively, of William L. Law and George F. Lowrie, holders of certain receiver’s certificates issued by and under the authority of the state court of Oregon, having jurisdiction of the foreclosure proceedings, and alleged to constitute a first lien on the steamship Willamette Valley. (0) The petition of several insurance companies, holders of receiver’s certificates received by. them in payment of their premiums upon certain policies of insurance covering the entire property of the Oregon Pacific Railroad Company, and purporting io constitute a lien prior to all others. (7) The petition in intervention of A. -T. S torra for wages as master and pilot. The petitioners have excepted and answered each other’s claims, and they will all he considered together.

The important question to he determined is whether this balance should be turned over to the receiver, as the representative of the owner, or whether any of the other petitioners or interveners have a superior right to be paid out of the surplus. This question depends, obviously, upon the character of the claims presented. But, in order to he entitled to recognition at all by a court of admiralty in distributing surplus proceeds derived from the sale of a vessel seized to satisfy maritime liens, these claims must possess certain qualities. In the first place, they must he vested interests in the fund. This is the meaning given by the supreme court to the language of the forty-third rule, which reads: “Any person having an interest in any proceeds in the registry of the court, sha.ll have a right by petition and summary proceeding to intervene pro interesse suo, for a delivery thereof to him.” Schuchardt v. Babbidge, 19 How. 239; The Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558; The Albert Schultz, 12 Fed. 156. In the second place, as against the claim of the owner, contesting claimants must have a lien, legal or equitable. As said in The Albert Schultz, supra: “In the distribution of the funds which form a residuum in the registry, courts of admiralty recognize legal titles and legal and equitable liens.” In The Edith, 94 U. S. 523, it is said: “The court [of admiralty] can marshal the fund only between lienholders and owners.” In the third place, this lien must be specific, not general. See the cases cited above, particularly The Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558; also, The Peerless, 45 Fed. 493; The Balize, 52 Fed. 414.

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Bluebook (online)
76 F. 838, 1896 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chandler-v-the-willamette-valley-cand-1896.