New York Dock Co. v. Steamship Poznan

274 U.S. 117, 47 S. Ct. 482, 71 L. Ed. 955, 1927 U.S. LEXIS 619
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 11, 1927
Docket229
StatusPublished
Cited by119 cases

This text of 274 U.S. 117 (New York Dock Co. v. Steamship Poznan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Dock Co. v. Steamship Poznan, 274 U.S. 117, 47 S. Ct. 482, 71 L. Ed. 955, 1927 U.S. LEXIS 619 (1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case involves the right of a wharf owner to preferential payment from the proceeds of a vessel, for wharf-age furnished the vessel while in the custody of a United States marshal' under a warrant of, arrest in admiralty. The owner of the S. S. Poznan entered into a contract with petitioner, the owner of a private pier in New York harbor, for the use of the pier for discharging cargo from December 1,1920 until completion. The rate agreed upon was 8250 per day, plus certain incidental charges not now material. On December 2, 1920, the Poznan was made fast to the pier. Later in the day, she was arrested by the United States marshal for the district upon libels, afterward consolidated into a single cause, for non-delivery of the vessel’s cargo and for damages for breach of contracts of affreightment. The marshal allowed the vessel to remain at the pier. Later, on application of one of the libelling cargo owners, the district court ordered the delivery of a part of the cargo which that libellant had shipped, and made the order applicable to all other libellants who should make a like claim. The discharge of the cargo was then begun and deliveries were made to the several libellants in the consolidated cause, including respondent, the John B. Harris Co.

After the cargo had been about one-half discharged, the charterer applied to the district court for leave to move the vessel to another pier where the cargo could be removed more expeditiously. But, on request of some of the libellants and a committee representing the ship *119 pers, the application wás denied on January 5, 1921. . The vessel was unloaded by February 18, 1921. Delivery of the cargo from the pier was completed March 1, 1921, but the vessel remained fast to the pier to and including March 11, 1921, when she was removed.

Meanwhile, the marshal having declined to pay the bill for wharfage without an order of the court, petitioner, in April, 1921, filed its libel against the vessel for the balance of wharfage charges unpaid, aggregating $17,462. By order of the district court, the libellants in the consolidated cause were permitted to intervene. Respondent, the John B. Harris Co.,, served notice of intervention, and filed its answer denying the allegations in the libel and praying that-it be dismissed on the ground, among otlfers, that the wharfage was furnished while the vessel was in the custody of the marshal, and hence no maritime lien could arise. Respondent has since prosecuted the defense in behalf of all the other libellants in the consolidated cause.

The vessel was later sold under an order in the consolidated cause and the proceeds, which were not enough to satisfy the libellants, paid into the registry of the court. The libellants in the consolidated suit have made common cause by stipulation that the recovery under the final decree should be paid to trustees and distributed in accordance with the instructions of a committee representing all of them. The committee found the total claims of the libellants to exceed the amount of the proceeds of the ship. A pro rata distribution has been made to the claimants and an adequate amount reserved to pay the demand of the petitioner, if allowed in this suit. The marshal, although refusing petitioner’s request for payment of the wharfage charge, nevertheless included it in his bill of costs and expenses in the consolidated cause and charged his 'commission on this amount. The court disallowed these items but “without prejudice to any *120 rights of the.New York Dock Company to have recourse against the proceeds of the vessel . . .”

The district court, in the present libel, allowed as a preferential payment from the proceeds of the ship, the reasonable value of the benefits resulting to the consolidated libellants from the wharfage and incidental service furnished by petitioner, to be determined by a special master. This was fount]. by the. master and held by the district court to be the Reasonable value of the wharfage. A decree for' this amount, less certain payments on account made by the owner of the ship, pursuant to the original contract of wharfage, 297 Fed. 345, was reversed by the circuit court of appeals for the second circuit. 9 F. (2d) 838. This Court granted certiorari. 269 U. S. 547.

The court below held that as. the wharfage was furnished after the arrest of the ship, and while it was in the custody of the law, no maritime lien could attach, and that a preferential payment could not be supported upon any other theory applicable to the facts of this case.

A question much argued, both here and below, was whether the case could be considered an exception to the general rule that there can be no maritime lien for services furnished a vessel while in custodia legis. Cf. The Young America, 30 Fed. 789; The Nisseqogue, 280 Fed. 174; Paxson v. Cunningham, 63 Fed. 132; The Willamette Valley, 66 Fed. 565. But, in the view we take, the case does not turn upon possible exceptions to that rule, as we think petitioner’s right of recovery depends, as the district court ruled, not upon the existence of a maritime lien, but upon principles of general application which should govern whenever a court undertakes the administration of property or a fund brought into its custody for the benefit of suitors.

The libellants in the consolidated cause were not only concerned as owners in securing delivery of the cargo, but as lienors they were interested in the ship and, as eventually appeared, in the whole of her proceeds. -Serv *121 ice rendered to the ship after arrest, in aid of the discharge of cargo, and afterward pending the sale, necessarily inured to their benefit, for it contributed to the creation of the fund now available to them. The most elementary notion of justice would seem to require that services or property furnished upon the authority of the court or its officer, acting within his authority;' for the common benefit of those interested in a fund administered by the court, should be paid from the fund as an “ expense of justice.” The Phebe, 1 Ware 354, 359, Fed. Cases 11065. This is the familiar rule of courts of equity when administering a trust fund or property in the hands of receivers. The rule is extended, in making disposition of the earnings of the property in the hands of the receiver, to require payment of sums due for supplies furnished before the receivership, where their use by the debtor or receiver in the operation of the property has produced the earnings. See Fosdick v. Schall, 99 U. S. 235; Thomas v. Western Car Co., 149 U. S. 95, 110; Virginia & Alabama Coal Co. v. Central R. R., 170 U. S. 355; St. Louis, &c. R. R. v. Cleveland, &c. Ry., 125 U. S. 658, 663, 673;

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Bluebook (online)
274 U.S. 117, 47 S. Ct. 482, 71 L. Ed. 955, 1927 U.S. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-dock-co-v-steamship-poznan-scotus-1927.