Donald & Co. v. Hewitt

33 Ala. 534
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 33 Ala. 534 (Donald & Co. v. Hewitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donald & Co. v. Hewitt, 33 Ala. 534 (Ala. 1859).

Opinion

WALKED, J.—

The complainants in the original bill, Schnetz & Hewitt, and Thomas Moore, one of the respondents, at Louisville in the State of Kentucky, made a written contract under seal, whereby the former agreed to make an engine, and put it on board of a certain boat; and the latter agreed to pay therefor $3,400 during the progress of the work, and, besides, to give three “ notes or [545]*545acceptances ” for equal amounts, making together the sum of $8,400. The writing concludes with a stipulation, that for the better security of the payment “ of the said notes,” Sehnetz & Hewitt were to retain a special lien on said boat and engine until “the notes” were paid. Moore paid $3,400 during the progress of the work, and accepted six bills of exchange, for amounts together exceeding $3,400. The boat having been brought to Montgomery in this State, was attached and libeled by creditors of Moore & Jackman, the owners of the boat. The bill asserts for the complainants a prior lien upon the boat, and is designed to enforce that lien.

1. An attempt is made to sustain the complainants’claim to a prior lien under a statute of the State of Kentucky, where the contract was made, and the indebtedness to complainants was incurred. By that statute, steamboats, built, repaired and equipped in the State, are made liable for all debts contracted by the master, owner, or consignee thereof, on account of work, supplies, or materials, furnished towards the building, repairing, fitting, furnishing or equipping such steamboats, their engines, &e.; and a preference over all other debts, except for the wages of the officers and crew, is given. By the same statute it is provided, that the “lien given by the act” is invalid against a purchaser without notice, unless suit be commenced within twelve months; but that a notice of the lien, endorsed upon, or attached to the enrollment of the vessel, shall operate as actual notice. The preference given by the Kentucky statute cannot operate to defeat liens acquired by virtue of attachments and libels in this State before it was set up. This priority, or lien given by the Kentucky statute, is not a matter of contract. “It is extrinsic, and is rather a matter of personal privilege,” given by the lex loci contractus.—Harrison v. Sterry, 5 Cranch, 298, 299. The just “comity,” which is recognized in the law, requires that a contract should be expounded, and its obligations ascertained, according to the law of the country where it is made. But this principle does not extend to a recognition of liens, given by the foreign law, when it would operate prejudicially to [546]*546the rights of others in the country where such lien is asserted. The liens given by the statute in one country, upon moveables, have no superiority to liens subsequently acquired in another country, to which those moveables are carried. In support of this proposition, we cite authorities which sustain it: Story’s Conflict of Laws, §§ 323, 324, 325, 325 a, 325 b, 325 c; Lee v. Creditors, 2 Louisiana Ann. 599 ; Noble v. Steamboat St. Anthony, 12 Mis. 262; Harrison v. Sterry, supra; Goodsill v. Brig St. Louis, 16 Ohio, 178 ; Smith v. Union Bank, 5 Peters, 518; McMahan v. Green, 12 Ala. 71; Merrick & Fenno v. Avery, Wayne & Co., 14 Ark. 370.

A different rule may apply, in reference to maritime liens, existing by virtue of the general maritime law. There are, doubtless, reasons why such liens should have their superiority recognized, which do not apply to domestic liens. The law which gives them existence, is common to most, if not all commercial countries; and the necessities of maritime commerce seem necessarily to require a precedence for its liens.—Story’s Con. of Laws, § 402. A sound public policy does not require, that liens, such as those springing up under the Kentucky statute, upon boats navigating our inland rivers, should have conceded to them a priority over other liens, which may be acquired in other States to which they may be carried. Steamboats might be covered up, if such priority was allowed, by antecedent liens, of which there was no notice; and great injustice might be done to those who trusted the boat, upon the assumption of its liability ; and there would be great room for collusive arrangements, to shelter the boat, by virtue of such liens, from just debts.

2. It is contended that the complainants have no lien by virtue of their contract. It is argued, that the parties, in providing that Schnetz '& Hewitt should retain a special lien, contemplated no other than the statutory lien. If this be so, the parties have done a vain and useless thing, iii bringingthe subject of a lien into their contract. The language employed is appropriate to create alien, and to provide for its continuance. If the parties intended that the lien so held should exist by virtue of the statute of [547]*547Kentucky, and not of the contract, they have not said so; nor have they said that which authorizes us to infer it.

We give effect to the words of the contract, and allow a motive to the parties in the use of them, when we understand them as creating a lien ; one to exist by virtue of, and to have effect determinable by, the contract. We adopt that view of the question, and thus avoid the necessity of considering what would be the rights of the parties, if there were no other lien than that given by the statute of Kentucky.

3. It is contended for appellants, that the well-ascertained technical meaning of the word lien, is a right to retain possession of property until a demand is satisfied; and that it must be so understood, where it occurs in the written contract above-named. It is true that common-law liens—for example, liens of carriers, inn-keepers, factors, and artificers—are mere rights to retain until the specific debt is satisfied, and cannot continue without possession. But, whatever may be the import of the word, when applied to that class of cases, or whatever may have been its original meaning, it has acquired, in our law, a much more extended signification. It is used to designate all the various charges of debts upon land or personalty, which are created by statute, or recognized in chancery and maritime law, although neither connected with, nor dependent upon possession.—Willard’s Equity Jur. 123. ■ Thus, we have the lien of a judgment; the lieu of tin execution; the lien of a partner; the lien of a legal or equitable mortgage; the lien of a vendor, and various other charges which are denominated liens; and in courts of equity, the term lien is used to denote a charge or incumbrance on a thing, where there is neither jus in re, nor jus ad rem, nor possession of the thing.—Peck v. Jenness, 7 Howard’s Rep. 612, 619; The Brig Nestor, 1 Story, 73.

The term lien, having so comprehensive a signification, includes an equitable mortgage; and no perversion of its meaning will be involved in construing the written contract of the parties as an equitable mortgage.

[548]*548[4.] The parties unquestionably had a right by contract to create a charge upon the boat, which would exist independent of the possession of the thing charged. The inquiry, unembarrassed by the technical meaning imputed to the word lien, is whether they have done so.

A lien merely co-existent with the possession of the boat, could not have been contemplated. The boat was not built by Schnetz & Iiewitt. It does not seem to have been designed that it should ever go into their possession.

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33 Ala. 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donald-co-v-hewitt-ala-1859.