Peyroux and Others v. HOWARD AND VARION.

32 U.S. 324, 8 L. Ed. 700, 7 Pet. 324, 1833 U.S. LEXIS 351
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 19, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by117 cases

This text of 32 U.S. 324 (Peyroux and Others v. HOWARD AND VARION.) 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
Peyroux and Others v. HOWARD AND VARION., 32 U.S. 324, 8 L. Ed. 700, 7 Pet. 324, 1833 U.S. LEXIS 351 (1833).

Opinion

Mr Justice Thompson

delivered the-opinion of the Court.

This case comes up from the district court of the United *340 States for the eastern district of Louisiana. The proceedings in the court below were in rem against the steamboat Planter, to recover compensation for repairs made upon the boat.

The libel states that Howard and Varion, shipwrights, residing in the city of New Orleans, had found materials and performed certain work on the steamboat Planter, for which the said steamboat and her owners were justly indebted to them in the sum of two thousand orte hundred and ninety-three dollars and thirty-five cents; and alleges that by the admiralty law, and the laws of the state of Louisiana, they have a .lien and privilege upon the boat, her taclde, apparel and furniture for the payment of the same; and prays admiralty process against the boat, atid that the usual monition may issue.

The appellants afterwards appeared in court and filed their claim and plea, alleging that they are citizens of Louisiana, and residing in the city of New Orleans, and that they are the sole and lawful owners of the steamboat Planter; and alleging further, that the libellants are also citizens of the same state, and that the court had no jurisdiction of the case.

The plea to the jurisdiction of the court was overruled, and a supplemental and amended claim and answer filed, denying all and singular the facts set forth in the libel; and by consent of parties an order of court was entered; that the testimony of the witnesses for the respective parties be taken before the clerk of. the court, and read in evidence upon the trial, subject to all legal exceptions; and upon the hearing of the cause the. court decreed that the claimants should pay to the libellants two thousand one hundred and ninety-three dollars and thirty-five cents, and costs of suit. An appeal to this court was prayed and allowed.

Upon the argument here, the following points have been made.

1. It does not appear upon the proceedings, that the court, below had jurisdiction of the case.

2. That the. libellants had Waived any privilege or lien upon the steamboat under the law of Louisiana, and therefore proceedings in rem were improper.

3. If the court had jurisdiction, the decree is erroneous on the merits.'

*341 The want of jurisdiction in the district court is not put on the ground set dp in the plea in. the court below, that all the parties were citizens of the same state. This has been very properly abandoned here, as entirely inapplicable to admiralty proceedings in the district court. But it is said that it does not appear upon the face of the proceedings, that the- cause of action properly belonged to admiralty jurisdiction. There can be no doubt that it must appear from the proceedings, that the court had jurisdiction of the case.

The proceeding is in rexn against .a steamboat, for materials found and work performed in repairing the vessel in the port of New Orleans, as is alleged in the libel, under a contract entered into between the parties for that purpose. It is therefore a maritime contract; and if the service was. to be performed in a place within the jurisdiction of the admiralty, and the lien given by the Ipcal law of the state of Louisiana, it will bring the case within ttífe jurisdiction of the court.

By the Civil Code of Louisiana, article 2748, workmen employed in the construction ór répair of ships and boats enjoy the privilege established by the code, without being bound, to reduce their contracts to 'writing, whatever may be their amount; but this privilege ceases if they have allowed the ship or boat to depart without exercising their right. The state law, therefore, gives a lien in cases like the present.

In the case of the General Smith, 4 Wheat. 438, it is decided, that the jurisdiction of the admiralty in such cases, where the repairs are upon a domestic vessel, depends upon the local law of the state. Where the repairs have been made, or necessaries furnished to a foreign ship, or to a ship in the ports of a state to which she does not belong, the general maritime law gives a lien on the ship as security,, and the party may maintain a suit in the admiralty to enforce his right. But as to repairs or necessaries in the port or state to which the ship belongs, the case is governed altogether by the local law of the state, ánd no lien is implied unless it is recognized by that law. . But if the local law gives' the lien, it may be enforced in the admiralty.

it is said, however, that the place where these services were performed, was not: within the jurisdiction of the admiralty. *342 The services in this case were, performed in the port of New Orleans, and whether this was within the jurisdiction of the court or not, will depend upon the fact, whether the tide in the Mississippi ebbs and flows as high up the river as New Orleans.

This is a question of fact, and it is notimdesetvingof notice, that although there was a plea to the jurisdiction of the court interposed, the objection was not set up. Had it been put in issue,. the evidence would probably have removed all doubt upon that question; not having been set up, it affords an inference that the objection could not have been sustained by proof.

But we think we are authorized judicially to notice the situation of New. Orleans, for the purpose of determining whether the tide ebbs and flows as high * up the rivér as that place. In the case of the Apollon, 9 Wheat. 374, it is said by this court, that it has béen very justly observed at the bar, that the court is bound to take notice of public facts and geographical positions: and in. the case of the steamboat Thomas Jefferson, the libel claimed wages earned on a voyage from Shipping port in the state of Kentucky, up the river Missouri, and back again to the port of departure. And the court say, that the voyage, not only iri its commencement and termination, but in all its intermediate progress, was several hundred miles above the ebb and flow of the tide, and, therefore, in no just sense can the wages be considered as earned in a maritime employment. It is fairly to be inferred, that the court judicially noticed the fact, that the tide did. not ebb and flow within the range of voyage upon which the services were rendered, as there is no intimation of any evidence before the court to establish the fact.

It cannot certainly be laid down as a universal,' or even as a general proposition, that the court can judicially notice matters of. fact. Yet it cannot be doubted that there are many facts, particularly with respect to geographical positions, of such public notoriety, and the knowledge of which is to be derived from other sources than parol proof; which the court may judicially notice. Thus in the case of the United States v. La Vengeance, 3 Dall. 297, 1 Peters’s Cond. Rep. 132, the court judicially noticed the geographical position of Sandy *343 Hook. And it mhy certainly take notice judicially of like notorious facts, as that the bay of New York, fór instance, is within the ebb and flow of the tide.

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Bluebook (online)
32 U.S. 324, 8 L. Ed. 700, 7 Pet. 324, 1833 U.S. LEXIS 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peyroux-and-others-v-howard-and-varion-scotus-1833.