Prince v. Ogdensburg Transit Co.

107 F. 978, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4048
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedMarch 20, 1901
DocketNo. 1,139
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 107 F. 978 (Prince v. Ogdensburg Transit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prince v. Ogdensburg Transit Co., 107 F. 978, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4048 (circtdma 1901).

Opinion

COLT, Circuit Judge.

This case was beard on exceptions to the master's report. The order of reference directed the master to ascertain and report his findings of fact and conclusions of law. Iso exceptions were taken to the findings of fact, which are substantially as follows: The petitioners, Loftus Cuddy and Martin Mullen, both of Cleveland, Ohio, are co-partners doing business at Cleveland under the name and style of the Cuddy-Mullen Coal Company. They have also a place of business at Handwich, in the province of Ontario, Canada. During the season of navigation of 1898, and prior to the appointment of the receiver, the defendant, the Ogdensburg Transit Company, owned and operated upon the Great Lakes, their connecting and tributary waters, the steamers Henry E. James, James B. Langdon, William J. Averell, Waiter L. Frost, William A. Haskell, Governor Bmitli, A. McVittie,' and F. H. Prince, all of them vessels of the United Htates duly enrolled and licensed in the collection district: of Qswegatchie, in the state of New York, wherein Ogdensburg is the port of entry. The defendant is a corporation established under the laws of Michigan, having its offices at Ogdensburg and at Ht. Albans, in the state of Vermont; its treasurer having his office at the latter place. At various times during the season of navigation of 1898 the petitioners furnished to the respective steamers certain amounts of fuel, and (here is due to the petitioners for fuel so furnished the sum of $20,230.05, with interest. All the fuel was furnished to the steamers in the port of Cleveland, Ohio, except 90 tons which were furnished at Handwich, Ontario, for which $1.93.75 of the above total is due. All the fuel so furnished was furnished in pursuance of a written contract, dated May 2, 1898, by and between the petitioners and the Ogdensburg Transit Gompany.The contract covered the season of 1898, and was similar in its terms to a former contract between the same parties which had covered the season of 1897. There had also been similar contracts covering successive seasons between the same parties for several years before .1897. All the fuel furnished as above was furnished upon the order of the masters of the various steamers, as they coaled from time to time during the season at the petitioners’ fueling docks. For the number of tons received on each occasion the master of the steamer gave a receipt to the petitioners. This receipt was then ah tached to a voucher and forwarded by the petitioners to the office of the transit company at Bt. Albans, Vt. The masters’ receipts, and the vouchers used were alike in form. The printed forms upon which they were made were furnished by the transit company, and used by the petitioners at the request of the transit company. On December 19, 3898, after the close of the season, the receipts appearing upon all the vouchers were filled out and signed; the petitioners having on that day taken the note of the defendant for the total amount of all the vouchers. The coal specified in the orders and vouchers above referred to was charged as furnished, to the steamer to which it was furnished, upon the dock books, sales books,, [980]*980and ledger of the petitioners. From and including 1897, in the ledger, the charges to the several steamers were grouped under a common heading, viz.: “Ogdensburg Transit Company Line, Ogdensburg,_ N. Y.;” this being done as a matter of convenience in bookkeeping, simply. The petitioners also testified that in furnishing the coal they relied on the credit of the individual boats.. No bills were ever presented for any of the coal furnished to the masters of the various steamboats, nor to any one save as above stated. For coal furnished in previous years the petitioners had presented their bills to, and received pay from, the treasurer of the transit company. The masters of the different steamers were not expected to pay, nor were they provided with funds to pay, for the coal furnished. It did not appear that the transit company had any. representative or any funds at Cleveland or at Sandwich, Ontario, or that its bills for coal were ever paid by any one except its treasurer at St. Al-bans, Yt. No part of the money due for coal furnished having been paid, the petitioners, at the request of the treasurer of the transit company, took the note for $20,833.86, at six months, dated December 19, 1898, and thereupon signed the receipts upon all the vouchers above referred to for the amounts called for by each. The printed form whereon this note is made is one used by the petitioners in their business in cases where a lien was claimed for coal furnished. It contains the following clause: “which, when paid, shall be in full for fuel supplied the O. T. Co. steamers.” This note has never been paid in whole or in part. It has never been discounted, and is tendered by the payee for cancellation in the event of a decree sustaining the liens here claimed. Section 5880 of the Revised Statutes of the State of Ohio was in force at the time of the events above referred to.

Among the conclusions of law reached by the master upon the foregoing facts, to which exceptions were filed, are the following: (1) That the coal was furnished upon the credit of the vessels; (2) that the contract does not disturb the presumption that the coal was furnished on the credit of each vessel unless it contains stipulations inconsistent witji the idea that the petitioners were to have the benefit of such security; (3) that the contract does not indicate that the petitioners either relinquished or were expected to relinquish any security to which they would by operation of law be entitled; (4) that the dealings of the parties of previous years under similar contracts afford no reason for reaching a different conclusion as to its effect; (5) that maritime liens exist in favor of the petitioners against the above-mentioned steamers belonging to the defendant to the amount of $20,230.05, with interest from December 19, 1898.

The master bases his finding of maritime liens upon the following proposition: Where necessary suppliés are furnished to a vessel in a foreign port upon the order of the master and in the absence of the owner, the presumption is that the supplies are furnished upon the credit of the vessel; and this presumption is not overcome by a previous contract to furnish such supplies entered into between the material men and the owners, in the absence of stipm [981]*981lations in the contract inconsistent with the idea that credit was to be given the vessel. In support of this proposition reference is made to the early case of I 'eyroux v. Howard, where the supreme court, in its opinion, uses this language:

“An express contract having been entered into between the parties, under which these repairs were made, is no waiver of the lien, unless such contract contained stipulations inconsistent with the lien, and from which it may fairly be inferred that a waiver was intended, and the personal responsibility of the party only relied upon.” 7 Pet. 324, 344, 8 L. Ed. 700, 708.

Peyroux v. Howard was a libel for repairs brought against the steamboat Planter, a domestic vessel in the port of New Orleans, where the material men and the owners resided. The court held that the Oivil Code of Louisiana gave a lien on the vessel, notwithstanding an express contract for the repairs had been entered into between the parties. The court also decided that no lien existed under the general maritime law, that the case was governed altogether by the local law of the state, and that, if the local law gave a lien, it might be enforced in admiralty.

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Bluebook (online)
107 F. 978, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4048, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prince-v-ogdensburg-transit-co-circtdma-1901.