Kahn v. Niagara Laundry & Linen Supply Co.

10 F.2d 15, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2163, 1926 A.M.C. 627
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 15, 1926
DocketNo. 4210
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 F.2d 15 (Kahn v. Niagara Laundry & Linen Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kahn v. Niagara Laundry & Linen Supply Co., 10 F.2d 15, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2163, 1926 A.M.C. 627 (6th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

DENISON, Circuit Judge.

The opinion of the District Judge, reported in The Theodore Roosevelt, 291 F. 453, fully states the facts and the questions involved. They all lead up to the controlling problem — a determination of the character and effect of the $130,000 bond given by the appellants. This must be decided upon the principles involved, and as a new question; we find no helpful precedent.

This bond is said to have been given “under favor” of the amendment of March 3, 1899, to R. S. § 941 (Comp. St. § 1567). In one respect it is not the statutory bond; the law contemplates and regulates a bond to secure the claimants in all future suits brought against a vessel; this present bond reaches only future suits, based on now existing claims. At the same time, as far as it goes, it takes its effect from the statute, and it must take its character and legal intent from the same source. We see no sufficient reason why, in its present application, it should be given a construction different from what it would have had, if it had secured future claims as well. Such a bond may be thought of either as in effect an obligation to pay, at all events, the debts falling within its scope, or instead as a bond of indemnity, placing [16]*16the claimant in the position he would have had if he might have arrested the ship, though he did not. It is quite plain that in some senses the bond is a substitute, not for the vessel, but for the power to arrest. This conflict of thought is made most concrete by supposing that the vessel, after giving the complete statutory futurity bond, is completely lost, after the future obligation accrued, but before any opportunity for actual arrest was waived in reliance on the bond, and before the beginning of any suit against the vessel with notation on the bond as a substitute for arrest. The District Judge assumed that the remedy by suit against the bond would continue, although the ship was out of existence.

We do not see that it is necessary to decide this supposed concrete question; but we think the bond should be read as being consistent with and as furnishing one means of carrying out common and familiar admiralty principles and procedure, rather than as marking a novel and distinct departure therefrom. In 1899 it had long been the established admiralty practice that the first libel filed, and under which arrest was made, became the principal case. Other lien claimants who came along were, in effect, if not in name, intervening libelants. The process issued for them, to the marshal already in possession of the vessel, was only noted by him. A monition was issued and published, and all lien claimants were invited to intervene and establish their demands. In due time— lacking successful defense — a final decree was rendered for condemnation and sale, and distribution of the proceeds was made among the lien claimants who had intervened; those who had not done so lost their lien upon the ship, and had no recourse by way of any lien, unless, under some circumstances, upon the surplus, if there was one. We cannot doubt that the common familiarity with proceedings of this character furnished the background against which the new statute should be seen. Any other resulting situations — - that is, any situation in which, although the ship was sold, there remained a liability on the bond, to be enforced piecemeal by one claimant after another until the statute of limitations should run — must, against this background, be so unnatural it should not be inferred, except from the clearest language in the statute or bond.

We find no such clear language. On the contrary, the theory that the bond is completely and permanently substituted for the ship is inconsistent with the provision that the substitution ends whenever some subsequent suit is commenced, which raises the total claims from 49 per cent, to 51 per cent, of the bond. The only procedural effect of the bond — the stay of process — thereupon ceases. Further, the condition is to answer the decree in any case that may be brought “against the said vessel.” It,is not natural to think of any procedure in rem “against the vessel” after the vessel has disappeared from actual existence, as by sinking, or from the field of legal liability, as by admiralty sale. The statute further provides that “like remedies” may be had as if the ordinary bond had been filed pursuant to. the ordinary libel. As has been pointed out, the customary remedy in such a case involves a monition and the taking, of an account of all lien claimants in the same class — all as .preliminary to a final decree of sale.

The general, principle of equity — and likewise, we take it, of admiralty — that all claims of one class should be treated alike makes it imperative that there should be, under such a bond, some proceeding where all can come in and have their respective rights determined. The principle involved is no different when the bond is ample for all than when it is insufficient; yet, in the latter ease, individual recoveries, to the prejudice of unknown claimants, would not be approved in equity.

Further, a study of the precise language of this bond confirms the conclusion that there was no intent to substitute the bond for the ship in a permanent way. The fact was that the receiver, in possession of the ship on behalf of all creditors, was chartering the ship to be taken out of the district and there operated by the charterer. The receiver was bound to protect the charterer from seizure on the existing claims, or else the charter could not be made. To avoid such interference, and to confine the litigation to the occupied forum, were the objects. The bond recites that libels had been, and from time to time may be, filed against the vessel in this district upon existing claims, and that it is desired to avoid delay from such seizures and indemnify the officers for not seizing “under said libels,” and the pertinent condition is that the obligor “pay such judgment as shall be awarded in any or every such proceeding or proceedings.” There is thus direct reference to the pending proceeding, and we think the natural inference is that the usual procedure was contemplated, and that only those claims were to be secured which should be materialized by suits brought in rem, while there continued in existence a res subject to such suits.

The theory that the bond is substituted [17]*17for the ship, if adopted, should be followed to its logical conclusion. After there has been an accounting of liabilities and a judicial sale, the ship is no longer subject to attachment. If the bond is a complete substitute, it should be similarly exempt. It is true that the debts of appellees were among those at first covered by the bond; but the conduct of appellees does not call for any relaxation of the customary rules which confine the obligee within the limits of his contract. The creditors’ bill was filed and the receiver appointed September 24, 1920. On January 21, 1921, libels in admiralty were filed by the Pittsburg Coal Company (No. 2736) and others. Others were filed from time to time until May 14, and doubtless warrants of arrest were issued. After May 14, when this bond was filed, other intervening libels in this same case were filed from time to time until June 13. Thereafter nothing was done until December 17, when the boat was returned to the charterer.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F.2d 15, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2163, 1926 A.M.C. 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kahn-v-niagara-laundry-linen-supply-co-ca6-1926.