Economu v. Bates

222 F. Supp. 988, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7904
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 23, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 222 F. Supp. 988 (Economu v. Bates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Economu v. Bates, 222 F. Supp. 988, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7904 (S.D.N.Y. 1963).

Opinion

WEINFELD, District Judge.

Respondents move, pursuant to Rule 27 of the Rules of Practice in Admiralty and Maritime Cases, to dismiss the libel in personam and to vacate the writ of foreign attachment issued against the vessel Diana B, owned by the respondent Conestoga Carriers Corp., upon the ground that the claims asserted are not maritime and so beyond the admiralty jurisdiction of the Court. 1

The first cause of action alleges that libelants entered into an agreement with the individual and corporate respondent whereby the respondents would purchase and operate the S/S Diana B; that libelants “would contribute certain monies” toward the purchase and become owners and operators with the respondents of the vessel; that freight moneys earned and collected from its ownership and operation would be shared by libel-ants and respondents; that pursuant to the agreement, libelants paid to respondents “certain sums of money” for the purchase and operation of the vessel; that thereafter respondents purchased the S/S Diana B in the name of Conestoga Carriers Corp., the corporate respondent; that the respondents received and collected various sums as profit and freight money from the operation of the vessel, but that they wrongfully withheld and misappropriated libelants’ share of the freight moneys and profits.

In the second cause of action libelants repeat the allegations of the first and, in addition, allege that upon payment of $20,000 they were to become owners and operators with respondents of the S/S Diana B, and if she were purchased in the name of the corporate respondents, certificates evidencing ownership of fifty per cent of the stock of the corporation were to be issued and delivered to libel-ants. They allege payment and due performance of the terms and conditions of the agreement. Under the first cause of action libelants seek a money judgment in the sum of $100,000, and under the second, the issuance of fifty per cent of the stock of the corporation.

If the agreement as alleged is maritime, there is jurisdiction; if not, there is none. The fact that the libel alleges that freight moneys derived from the operation of a vessel were to be shared by libelants and respondents and have been collected and misappropriated by the respondents, or that libelants have endorsed their libel as one “for freight monies and enforcement of vessel purchase agreement,” is not controlling. Admiralty is concerned not with isolated self-serving allegations or the form of the action, but with its substance. 2 The fundamental issue of whether the contract sued upon is maritime is governed by the nature and subject matter of the contract. 3 Fairly read, the libel in substance alleges an agreement whereby libelants were to contribute to the financing and to become co-owners with respondents on an equal basis of a vessel yet to be purchased. The means by which title to the vessel was to be evidenced was left open. This is emphasized *990 by the second cause of action wherein it is alleged that “if said vessel were purchased in the name of respondent, CONESTOGA CARRIERS CORP.,” the li-belants were to receive fifty per cent of the corporate stock. 4

The basic agreement is one of joint enterprise between the libelants and the respondents, and the fact that it may be carried on nominally in corporate form does not affect its essential character. The parties, if we accept, as we must, the allegations of the libel as true, have agreed to purchase a vessel and thereafter to operate her for their mutual benefit; the profits were to be shared whether the operation was in the name of one or more individuals or through a corporate entity. This is the essence of their arrangement. Otherwise, if the libel is strictly construed, the libelants are stockholders to whom their shares have not been issued and, in major part, are asserting a derivative claim on behalf of the corporation 5 or to compel the declaration of a dividend. Nor is the basic nature of the contract affected or changed merely because it is a maritime venture and relates to maritime activities. The Supreme Court, in holding that an agreement to form a steamship line under which passenger and freight income was to be divided was not maritime, stated:

“This is nothing more than an agreement for a special and limited partnership in the business of transporting freight and passengers between New York and San Francisco, and the mere fact that the transportation is by sea, and not by land, will not be sufficient to give the court of admiralty jurisdiction of an action for a breach of the contract.” 6

The instant agreement is to be distinguished from one where an owner of a vessel engages another to manage or operate her, admittedly maritime, 7 and where an accounting is incidental to admiralty’s independent jurisdiction and necessary for the adjustment of the rights of the parties. 8 Here the accounting of the freight moneys and profits is prime and not incidental. What the Court is called upon to determine is the existence vel non of the claimed agreement for the joint purchase and operation of the vessel and the terms thereof. It is that arrangement which is the subject matter of the libel.

*991 It may be argued that the distinction between an agreement to purchase and operate a vessel on a partnership or joint venture basis, and one whereby an owner engages another to operate her, is rather refined — but no more so than the difference between a contract to construct a vessel and one to rebuild or repair a vessel. And yet it is not open to question that the former is not a maritime contract, 9 whereas the latter is. 10 The dividing line between maritime and nonmaritime claims is not always sharply defined. 11 Thus, a contract for the charter of a vessel is maritime in nature, whereas a contract creating an agency to obtain charterings has been held nonmaritime. 12 Also, a contract for the sale of a vessel has been held to be nonmaritime. 13 Therefore, it is difficult to see on what basis the purchase of a half interest in a vessel constitutes a maritime contract. And so, too, if a court of admiralty is without power, as the Supreme Court has stated, to entertain a libel to “declare * * * [a ship] to be the property of the mortgagees and direct possession of her to be given to them,” 14 it is also without jurisdiction to declare one a half owner of a vessel and to direct the delivery of stock certificates evidencing such 50% ownership 15

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 F. Supp. 988, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/economu-v-bates-nysd-1963.