Steamer Patapsco

43 How. Pr. 301
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1872
StatusPublished

This text of 43 How. Pr. 301 (Steamer Patapsco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steamer Patapsco, 43 How. Pr. 301 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1872).

Opinion

Shipman, D. J., dismissed the libel, delivering the following opinion:

Shipman, J.

—This is a suit in rem, to enforce an alleged lien on the steamer Patapsco, for coal furnished her in the months of February and March, 1866, by the' libellant at ■ Baltimore.

It is insisted that the coal was a part of the necessary .supplies of the vessel furnished at that port, and that it was furnished on the credit of the vessel.

Of the necessity of the coal there can be no doubt. The question in dispute is whether it was furnished on the credit of the vessel.

The steamer was owned by John R. Bacon, at the time the article was furnished, but was running in a line owned by the Commercial Steamboat Company, a corporation chartered by the legislature of Rhode Island. This company had an office in New York, and ran their boat between that city and Baltimore. They had exclusive control of the Patapsco as well as other boats of their line, and must be deemed, for the time owners pro hoc vice. • •

This company had an agent in Baltimore, who attended tq their business there, including the purchase of the necessary supplies for the steamers which were required at that port.

The steamers, several in number, had been running on this line for several months and the- agent had been in the habit of purchasing coal for them of different parties, and among others of this libellant. The amount of coal required for each vessel from time to time was ordered by the company’s agent, in writing, the order in each instance designa[306]*306ting to which ship the amount called for was to be delivered. The sales were considered to be cash, but payment on delivery was waived and the bills presented monthly, to the company’s agent.

This was done as a matter of convenience and to avoid the multiplication of bills.

Purchases of coal had been made of the libellant from time to time, from December 1865 down to March 24, 1866, the date of the last charge in the account upon which this suit is brought. They were all paid by the agent up to February 1. The bills were made out to the Commercial Steamboat Company, but designating the name of the ship to which each parcel was delivered. That delivered in February and March was not paid for, and the libellant seeks to charge the ship.

Now, in order to do this, the libellant must prove that this coal was furnished on the credit of the ship, and that there was an apparent necessity for resorting to that credit. I think the proof fails on both these-points. The libellant dealt not with the master of the vessel, but with the accredited agent of the company, resident in Baltimore. I think that it is clear, that he looked to the company generally and not to the particular ship for his pay. Again, there is no satisfactory proof of a necessity apparent at the time for resorting to the credit of the ship. There is proof that the affairs of the company were, in fact, in a state' of embarrassment, and approaching the crisis of insolvency. But the proof fails to show that they had not sufficient credit in Baltimore to obtain supplies required for their ships at that port.

That fact must be clearly proved before this court can assume, that the credit of each ship was or could be resorted to in order to obtain the supplies furnished to such vessel.

The facts in this case, if not exactly the reverse, fall far short of those in the case of Ross agt. The Steamboat Neversink, where I held the boat liable.

Dennis McMahon, for the libellant, and Charles Donahue, for the claimant.

As I discussed the general question of law involved upon principle and authority in the latter case, I do not feel called upon to repeat or enlarge upon that discussion here.

Let an order be entered dismissing the libel, with costs.

From that decree the libellant took an appeal to the circuit court, and the cause was heard before his honor Samuel Nelson, associate justice, and was argued by

After advisement Justice Nelson, reversed the district court, and decreed in favor of the libellant, giving the following opinion:

Nelson, C. J.

—The bill in this case was filed to recover ' for supplies of coal furnished in the months of February and March, 1866, at Baltimore, to the steamship Patapsco. The only question in the case is, whether or not the coal was furnished on the credit of the.vessel, or of the owners, The Commercial Steamboat Company, which ran a line of steamers from the city of New York to Baltimore, and occasionally from thence to Charleston. The arrangement was, that the coal should be furnished on the requisition of the engineers of the vessel for cash, but for convenience in making out the bills and transacting the business, they were made out against the vessel once a month and presented for payment. The weight of the evidence is, that Boyce in this arrangement, and time taken to make out and present the bills, looked to the vessel as security in the meantime for the payment of them, and did not intend, thereby to rely on the credit of the company.- The company was a corporation under the laws of the state of Rhode Island, and, of course, not accessible to him, a resident doing business in Baltimore.

The company had not long been engaged in running this [308]*308line of steamers, and had no established credit in that city, and in the months of February and March, when the present supplies were furnished, its credit was not good. Previous to this time, it had been heavily indebted to the Baltimore and Ohio railroad company. e

Charles Donahue, for the appellants and claimants of the steamer. . I. The claim sought to be enforced here, is nothing short of a running account between a vender and not the owner of the boat, or any one boat, but several vessels, and of a running account against those several boats. It is respect? fully submitted that _as to the facts in the case .of Pratt agt. Reed, (19 How., U. S.), no one doubted- the justice of that decision, and that it is only the general language* and general rule too strongly laid down in that case, that the decision has been modified, and that this case is in all forms with Pratt agt. Reed, (19 How., U. S.)

[308]*308I think the coal in this case, under the circumstances, was delivered and the credit given to the vessel during the interval taken by the common consent and usage of the parties within which to make up the monthly bills, and present them for payment, and that the indebtedness is properly inforceable as a lien upon the vessel against which it was charged.

Decree below reversed, and decree for libellant, with reference.

On that decision a reference was had, and the commissioner reported in favor of the libellant for $1,982 01. To which report exceptions were filed, but' after argument the same were overruled and final decree rendered in favor of the libellant for said- amount, and interest from July 15, 1868, date of the report, and for costs to be taxed in the district and the circuit courts.

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Bluebook (online)
43 How. Pr. 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steamer-patapsco-nysupct-1872.