Post Steamboat Co. v. Loughran

12 App. D.C. 430, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3169
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 1898
DocketNos. 689, 690 and 691
StatusPublished

This text of 12 App. D.C. 430 (Post Steamboat Co. v. Loughran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Post Steamboat Co. v. Loughran, 12 App. D.C. 430, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3169 (D.C. Cir. 1898).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Alvey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an admiralty proceeding against the steamer “ John Sylvester,” belonging to the claimant, the Post Steam[436]*436boat Company, a corporation of the State of New Jersey. The boat was registered at the port of New York, and was chartered by charter party, dated the 15th of May, 1896, to the Chesapeake and Potomac Steamboat Company, a corporation of the State of West Virginia, to be run as an excursion boat on the Potomac River, between the city of Washington, D. C., and Colonial Beach, in the State of Virginia, during the summer season of 1896, the term of the hiring to expire the 15th of September, 1896.

The charterers of the boat were incorporated under the law of the State of West Virginia, and its principal corporate office was established at Martinsburg, in that State. Its principal business office, however, was established in the city of Washington, and in the latter place the principal corporators resided; and while the capital stock of the corporation was allowed to be increased, the subscribed capital stock was but $500, and only $50 of which had been paid in. It was purely an experimental and adventurous enterprise, without capital and with but doubtful prospect of ultimate success. Its corporators and promoters were men of little or no pecuniary 'resources, and depended alone upon the income of the undertaking for means to pay expenses.

The charter party under which the Chesapeake and Potomac Steamboat Company obtained possession and use of the “John Sylvester,” in the excursion business, contained, among others, the following clauses and provisions :

“At the expiration of this charter, the said steamboat shall be delivered to her owners at such dock in Washington or Georgetown as designated by them, (unless lost), in in as good condition as she was delivered to the charterers, ordinary and reasonable wear and tear excepted. . . .

“ It being further understood, agreed and provided that, should the charterers at any time fail to fulfill their part of this contract in matter of security, charter payments or for other causes, the owners shall have the right to enter at once into possession of their property without prejudice to [437]*437any claim or claims they (the owners) may otherwise have on the charterers, in pursuance of this charter.

“That the charterers agree to furnish to the owners on execution of this charter party, a good and acceptable bond from a guaranty or indemnity company of good standing in the city of New York, for the amount of $12,500 to guarantee against debt for supplies furnished the vessel, or for what claim owners may have against the charterers.”

■ The bond referred to in the charter party was given, though not with the surety specified. Instead of a guaranty company of the city of Baltimore or New York, as surety, a bond with personal sureties wras substituted, and one of the sureties in this bond was J. Edward Chapman, a coal merchant residing and doing business in the city of Washington.

The steamer was run from Washington City to Colonial Beach, and its supply of coal and all other supplies to meet the requirements of a summer excursion boat, were taken in at Washington; and the materials were supplied by various persons, and they failed to receive the amounts of their bills.

Near the end of the season for which the boat was chartered, there were several original, and a greater number of intervening, libels filed against the steamboat “ John Sylvester,” some thirteen in all, claiming maritime liens, seeking to have the vessel condemned and sold for the payment of the respective claims: The owners of the steamer, answering the several libels, deny the right of lien in each and all of the several libels filed, and insist that there is no ground for the liens claimed.

There is no question on these appeals as to whether the articles furnished by the several libelants were properly embraced within the definition of necessary supplies, such as were proper and would be required to keep supplied a suitably provisioned excursion boat, running for the pleasure of the public, during the summer season. But the question is, whether the libelants have acted under such circumstances, in the absence of such notice, and upon the exercise [438]*438of such reasonable diligence to acquire notice as to the protection of the vessel against liens for supplies under the charter party, as will entitle them to claim a right of lien upon the vessel for supplies furnished, according to the principles of the general maritime law?

After answers filed, the cases were referred to a special commissioner, with directions to take testimony, and to report both as to the law and the facts, as to the respective claims of the libelants. A considerable volume of evidence was taken, for and against the claims, and the commissioner made elaborate reports, both as to the law and the facts, and he reported in favor of .the allowance of all the claims, with inconsiderable exceptions, and that the libelants were entitled to liens upon the vessel for the claims so allowed. The reports of the commissioner were all excepted to bjr the' owners and claimants of the vessel; but the exceptions were all overruled by the court below, and decrees were entered confirming the reports, and declaring liens against the steamer for the several amounts reported due to the libel-ants. It is from these decrees, three in number, that the present appeals are taken by the owners and claimants of the vessel. And as the evidence is all embraced in one record, and much of which ris applicable to all the cases, the court below consolidated the appeals so as to avoid the necessity of making up and having'printed more than one record for this court, though there are three several decrees and three several appeals entered.

As we have already seen, from the provisions of the charter party recited, the charterers were required, at the end of the term for which the vessel was hired, to deliver it back to the owners in as good condition as it was when delivered to the charterers, ordinary and reasonable wear and tear excepted; and in the event that the charterers should fail to fulfill their part of the contract in matter of security, charter payments, or for other causes, the owners should have the right at once to take possession of their [439]*439property, without prejudice to any claim they might have against such charterers; and, further, that by good and sufficient bond, the charterers should guarantee the owners against debts for supplies furnished the vessel, or for what claims owners might have against charterers. The manifest object and purpose of these provisions were not only to furnish security for charter due, but also to protect both the owners and the steamer against claims that might otherwise be enforced by way of lien upon and condemnation of the steamer. With such protective stipulations in the charter party, no person dealing with the charterers or those representing them, in the port where the charterers reside, and furnishing supplies to the vessel, could acquire the right to libel and fix a maritime lien upon it for coal or other supplies, if he had notice of the existence of the charter party and its provisions, or if by the use of reasonable diligence, by making inquiry, he could have acquired knowledge of such charter party.

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Bluebook (online)
12 App. D.C. 430, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/post-steamboat-co-v-loughran-cadc-1898.