Reakirt v. The Ella

86 F. 666, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 165
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedApril 9, 1898
DocketNo. 554
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 86 F. 666 (Reakirt v. The Ella) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reakirt v. The Ella, 86 F. 666, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 165 (D. Del. 1898).

Opinion

BRADFORD, District Judge.

This is a libel in rem filed September 30, 1896, by Margaret L. Reakirt, of the City of Philadelphia, Pa., trading as Reakirt Brother & Company, against the steamboat Ella,, to recover the price of coal furnished in that city by the libelant on the credit of that vessel, as is alleged, from April 14, 1896, to August 22, 1896, inclusive, amounting, after deducting certain allowances, to $707.22, together with interest thereon from the last mentioned date.. The Ella was owned solely by The Philadelphia and Smyrna Trans[667]*667portation Company, a corporation oí Delaware, from 1889 at least until August 21, Í896, on which day that company executed a bill of sale to John H. Holfeeker, the claimant. The claimant asserts that from that time he was the sole owner of the vessel until she was sold, October 19, 1896, by order of this court for the enforcement of a wharfage lien. The proceeds of sale remaining in the registry of the court, after deducting all other demands, are sufficient to cover whatever claim the libelant may have under this libel, together with the costs of suit. By agreement of the proctors for the libelant and claimant respectively, all the testimony in the case of Building Co. v. The Ella (recently decided by this court) 84 Fed. 471, is to be considered, so far as material, in this case. The price charged for the coal furnished by the libelant is reasonable, and Philadelphia was a. port foreign to the Ella in the sense of being a port in a state other than that in which she was owned during the furnishing of the coal. At the time of and for many years prior to the transaction in question the libelant carried on business in Philadelphia as a coal dealer, and F. Albert von Boyneburgk was the general manager of her business. The transportation company was incorporated under the laws of Delaware in 1883 for the purpose of transporting freight by vessel between the town of Smyrna, Del., and Philadelphia, Pa., and elsewhere. For the last six or seven years the claimant has been and now is its president. Pursuant: to its charter the transportation company engaged in the carriage of freight by vessel to and from Smyrna and Philadelphia, regular trips being made over the route several times a week. Augustus E. Jardine has been the general manager of the transportation company for many years. That company has for the past eight or ten years dealt, although not exclusively, with the libelant in purchasing coal. The correspondence between the libelant and the transportation company shows bovond doubt that during all that time the furnishing of coal by the former to the latter was the result of direct dealings between them. In addition to the business of transportation, the transportation company was engaged in selling a considerable proportion of the coal bought by it from the libelant and others, to blacksmiths and other persons in or near Smyrna. Von Boyneburgk testified, without qualification, that all coal delivered by the libelant to the Ella was furnished upon the credit of that vessel and was charged invariably to “Stmr. Ella and Owners.” The fact that such a charge was made, standing alone, is entitled to but little weight and is wholly .inconclusive on the question whether credit was given to the vessel as well as to her owner. Nor could a mere belief on the part of the libelant or of von Boyneburgk that the furnishing of the coal would create a lien on the Ella avail the libelant unless the circumstances under which the coal was furnished were such as to justify such belief. The testimony for the libelant strongly tends to support a lien for the whole amount demanded in the libel, but that testimony is inconsistent witli the documentary evidence, which is of primary importance in the case. The coal furnished by the libelant to the transportation company, including the coal in question, was, while that company continued to own the Ella, all delivered to that vessel; but the documentary evidence shows that while a comparatively small pro[668]*668portion of the coal was supplied for the use of the Ella, the balance of it was delivered and received on board of that vessel as cargo to be transported to the transportation company at Smyrna, there to be disposed of in accordance with the pleasure of that company. Upon the delivery of coal by the libelant in Philadelphia, bills of lading were signed by the pilot of the Ella, acting for and representing her master, for all coal intended to be delivered as cargo at Smyrna, and bunker receipts were signed by the pilot in the same capacity for such coal as was supplied for the use of the vessel. The bills of lading were substantially in the following form:

“Shipped by Reakirt, Bro. & Co., in good order, on board the Stmr. called the Ella of-whereof-is Master for this present voyage, and now lying in the Port of Philadelphia, and bound for Smyrna, Pel., 28 tons of coal, which I promise to deliver at the aforesaid Port of Smyrna in like good order, (the dangers-of the seas only excepted,) unto Phila. & Smyrna Trans. Co. or their assigns, he or they paying freight for the same at the rate of-Dollars per ton.
“And 24 hours after the arrival at the above named port, and notice thereof to the consignee named, there shall be allowed for receiving said cargo at the rate of one day, Sundays and legal holidays excepted, for every hundred tons thereof, after which the cargo, consignee or assignee shall pay demurrage at the rate of eight cents per ton a day, Sundays and legal holidays not excepted, upon the full amount of cargo, as per this bill of Lading. For each and every day’s detention, and pro rata for parts and portions of a day beyond the days above specified, until the cargo is fully discharged; which freight and demurrage shall constitute a lien upon said cargo.
“In Witness Whereof, the Master or Purser of the said Vessel has affirmed to 3 Bills of Lading, all of this tenor and date; one of which being accomplished the others to stand void.
“Dated at Philadelphia, this 14 day of April, 1896. “28 Tons in the Hold.
“-” on Deck.
“Draws —=— feet water, and was built at-in 189 .
“J. L. Jackson.”

The bunker receipts were in the following form:

“No. 18619. Penna. R. R. Pier. Greenwich. ' 5/29 1896.
“Shipped for account of Reakirt, Bro. & Co., Office 218% Walnut Street, on board Steamer Ella, 5 tons of Penn coal, for steamers’ use. I certify that I have received on board, in good order, the quantity and kind of coal above specified. J. L. Jackson, Master.”

The bills of lading and bunker receipts were signed in the office of the libelant on her pier at G-reenwich. Both the libelant or her manager, von Boyneburgk, and the transportation company had knowledge of the execution of bills of lading'and bunker receipts for a number of years preceding the furnishing of the coal in question. Not only bunker receipts but bills of lading were executed in connection with the supply of coal included in the present demand. A sale by the libelant to the transportation company of a cargo of coal not to be used in aid of navigation was not a maritime contract, and could give rise to no lien nor serve as the basis of any lien cognizable by this court. It appears that the coal bought by the transportation company from the libelant and others was placed on the wharf of that company at Smyrna, and that the bunkers of.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass'n v. Fred Miller Brewing Co.
87 F. 864 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 F. 666, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reakirt-v-the-ella-ded-1898.