Empresa Maritima a Vapor v. North & South American Steam Navigation Co.

16 F. 502, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 64
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 10, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 16 F. 502 (Empresa Maritima a Vapor v. North & South American Steam Navigation Co.) 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
Empresa Maritima a Vapor v. North & South American Steam Navigation Co., 16 F. 502, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 64 (S.D.N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Brown, J.

On the twentieth of July, 1882, the respondents, a New Jersey corporation, chartered from the libelants, a Spanish corporation, the Spanish steamer Bellver, for service between New York and the West Indies, at the rate of £1,000 per month, with the right of renewal for a subsequent term. The charterers took possession on the seventh of August, and continued her employment, under the charter-party, until February, 1883, when they renewed the engage[503]*503ment for a further period of six months. By the terms of the charter-party the owners bound themselves to keep the ship and machinery in perfect order, and “guarantied to maintain the boilers in a condition to bear a working pressure of at least 65 pounds.” The respondents kept the steamer in service, under the charter-party, until the twenty-first day of April, 1883, when, for an alleged breach of the above condition of the charter-party on the part of the owners in not maintaining a proper pressure, whereby her speed was materially diminished, as well as for other alleged breaches of the charter-party, the respondents threw up the charter and refused to employ her further; and, on the thirtieth of April, 1883, they filed a libel against the ship for damages for violation of the charter-party in the sum of $15,000. The steamer was arrested under process of this court, but has not been bonded, and she is still in the custody of the marshal. The libelants in the present case have appeared as claimants, and answered'to the libel in rem, and, under the rules of this court, have moved for an immediate trial, to which they will be entitled upon the return of process.

On May 1, 1883, the libel in this case was filed by the owners of the steamer against the respondents, the charterers, in personam, to recover the sum of $19,222 damages for alleged breach of the charter-party by the respondents, being the whole amount of the hire of the ship for the remainder of the term of the charter, the same being declared by one of its provisions to be liquidated damages in case of breach. No answer has yet been filed in this suit.

The libelants in this suit now move for security under the supreme-court rule, No. 53, formerly 54, in admiralty, and that in default of such security being given the vessel be released from custody.

The question in litigation in the two suits is substantially the same, namely, whether there was any such breach of the terms of the charter-party, on the part of the owners, as authorized the charterers to terminate the contract. The case is, therefore, within rule 53, as I have recently held in the case of Vianella v. The Credit Lyonnais, 15 Fed. Rep. 637.

It is objected that the motion is premature on the part of the libel-ants, because the vessel in the suit in rem has not been bonded, but is still iñ custody; and because the present libelant, the claimant in that action, has not, as it is alleged, given security in that action.

The case of The Bristol, 4 Ben. 55, is referred to to sustain this point. I find nothing in that case, however, to support the objection. [504]*504That case decided that the motion could only be made in a cross-suit in personam, and could not be made in a cross-suit in rem, where the vessel had not been arrested nor any process served.

The objection now' raised has no support, either in the language or the reasons of the fifty-third rule. The granting of the order, it is true, is to some extent discretionary, since, “upon cause- shown,” the court “may otherwise direct.” From this it is clear that it was the intent of the rule that security should be given unless the respondents affirmatively show, the burden of proof being upon them, circumstances which would make the application of the rule unjust.' The fact, that the vessel is in custody and has not been bonded certainly does not make it unjust for the respondents to file security, according to the rule. The vessel while under arrest is itself security in the suit in rem, as Blatcheord, J., states in the case of The Bristol, cited above. In the present ease the valuation put upon her in the charter, viz., £30,000, shows that the vessel is not only security, but security of the amplest kind, far higher than any personal security that could be required for the charterer’s claim. The object of rule 53,1 cannot doubt, was that in cases of cross-demands upon the same sübject of litigation both parties should stand upon equal terms as regards security. It was designed, where the libelants in a suit in rem, through the arrest of the property, exact and obtain security for their own demand, that in a cross-suit in, personam for a counterclaim in respect to the same subject of litigation, the defendants in the former suit should likewise be entitled to security for the payment of their 'demands, in case the decision of the courtupon the point in controversy should be in their favor. The rule was designed to correct the inequality and injustice of the process of court in rem being used to obtain security in favor of one party, in reference to a single subject of dispute, while it was denied to the other. Where the security obtained by the libelant in the suit in rem is the vessel itself under seizure, which in this case is of great value, and where the libelant is a foreign corporation, having no tangible property here, the reasons for the application of the rule are specially urgent.

The order for security should, therefore, be granted.

It is claimed that the respondents may, at their own mere option, decline to furnish security, or, at least, delay doing so as long as suits their convenience, submitting, meantime, to a stay of their proceedings in the suit in rem, but still retaining the vessel in custody; and it is urged that the court cannot, under the ■ rule, do more than [505]*505stay their proceedings if security is not filed. Whenever the owners of the vessel arrested should be unable to bond her, the consequences of such a construction and application of this rule would be disastrous to all concerned, through the detention of the vessel during a stay of proceedings for an indefinite period. In time she would be eaten up -with expenses, or become worthless by decay; and meanwhile she would be of no advantage to any one. In this ease, by a temporary detention merely, a large loss would ensue, since the hire of the ship, as it appears from the charter-party, is worth nearly $5,000 per month. Thus the rule itself, which was manifestly designed for the benefit of the owner of the vessel in his cross-action, would only serve, through the stay of proceedings and the detention of the vessel indefinitely, to increase greatly his loss and injury. In practical effect the rule would be rendered nugatory at the libelant’s option, since the owner would be compelled to waive the stay of proceedings in order to try the suit and get a release of his vessel. Such a construction and application of the rulo would, therefore, thwart its object, and cannot be sustained.

The cross-suits, moreover, being upon one subject of litigation, and all the parties being before the court in each, they are to be treated as in effect one suit, (The Eleanora, 1.7 Blatchf. 88, 10é;) and it is competent for the court to enforce its order for security, in case of any willful disobedience or neglect in complying with it, by any further appropriate -order in either suit.

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16 F. 502, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/empresa-maritima-a-vapor-v-north-south-american-steam-navigation-co-nysd-1883.