The Ada

250 F. 194, 162 C.C.A. 330, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1871
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 13, 1918
DocketNo. 136
StatusPublished
Cited by102 cases

This text of 250 F. 194 (The Ada) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Ada, 250 F. 194, 162 C.C.A. 330, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1871 (2d Cir. 1918).

Opinions

WARD, Circuit Judge.

December 10, 1915, the respondent, the Amie Company, as owner of the Swedish steamer Ada, entered into an agreement with the libelant, the Universal Company, described as charterer. The steamer, then at sea, was chartered for about six months for the sum of $165,000, payable $40,000 down, $50,000 fifteen days after arrival, $45,000 three months thereafter with interest at 6 per cent, from the date of the agreement, $30,000 six months from the date of payment of the $45,000, with interest at 6 per cent, from the date of the agreement. The payments were subsequently changed, so as to make the second installment $60,000 and the last $20,000. The Universal Company was to pay all the expenses of running and maintaining the vessel, the risk of the loss of the vessel was on it, and it .was to have the option of purchasing her for the price of $165,000 at [195]*195any time, the owner agreeing to deposit a bill of sale in escrow with the United States Mortgage & Trust Company as soon as possible.

January 25, 191(5, the Universal Company notified the respondent that it would purchase the steamer and was ready to pay on receiving bill oí sale. April 5 it tendered the purchase money to the defendant’s attorneys and asked for a bill of sale, which was not delivered. April 6 the respondent, alleging that the Universal Company had failed to pay the installment of $45,000 on April 4, the day it was due, withdrew the steamer, which was then at sea on her way to New York, depriving the Universal Company both of the use of the vessel after arrival and discharge, as well as of the title. This action it justified on the ground that the contract required the Universal Company to pay the hire “punctually” i. e., on the due date--and gave the Amie Company, in case of its failure to do so, the right to withdraw the steamer “immediately.” As soon as the Amie Company had discharged the cargo loaded by the Universal Company, it resumed complete and exclusive control of the vessel.

April 24 the Universal Company filed a libel against the steamer in rem and against the Amie Company in personam to recover the damages sustained by it, both for the breach of the charter and for breach of the contract of sale. May 3 and 4, 1916, the Amie Company filed exceptions to- the libel, on the ground that the damages claimed arose from a breach of contract for the sale of the vessel, which was a cause of action not within the admiralty jurisdiction. May 8, 1916, the cause came on for trial before the exceptions were argued. The District Judge found that the Amie Company had wrongfully withdrawn the vessel, and was liable to the Universal Company for the loss sustained by it as charterer, but that the damages for breach of the contract of sale were not recoverable in admiralty. We shall dispose of "the case on grounds which relieve us from the duty of considering the merit? at all.

[1,2] Evidently the whole controversy could have been disposed of m an action at law, but the jurisdiction of a court of admiralty is confined to maritime subjects. It cannot, having obtained jurisdiction, dispose of nonmaritime subjects, for the purpose of doing complete justice, after the manner of courts of equity, nor can it distribute funds in its possession, as do courts of equity and bankruptcy, among all creditors, preferred and general. Its power to dispose of the proceeds of a vessel, though it extends to the payment of nonmaritime liens, after maritime liens have 'been satisfied, does not extend to claims in personam or of general creditors, except so far as to pay over any surplus to the owner.

A charter party may, of course, contain covenants both maritime and nonmaritime, which in case of breach may be disposed of; the former either in the admiralty or at common law, and the latter at common law only. This charter party contains such nonmaritime covenants, namely, that of the Universal Company to buy the captain’s chronometer for $200, and the ice box on the steamer for $250; for the breach of either of these covenants, no one, we suppose, would contend that suit could be maintained in the admiralty.

If this charter had provided for the use of the vessel for six months [196]*196at a specified charter hire, and had given the charterer the option thereafter to purchase at a fixed price, there would be two separate causes of action; the former justiciable either in admiralty or at law, and the latter at law only. But the right to use and the right to buy the steamer in this case were inseparably connected. The price for the use for six months was the same as the price for the absolute ownership. Obviously no one would fail to exercise such an option. All the provisions of the agreement show that the main intention was a contract of sale. Installments of so-called charter hire which were not practically paid down were to bear interest from the date of the agreement, and the charterer had a right to a bill of sale at any time upon paying the full charter hire. Certainly, as soon as the Universal Company exercised its option to buy and tendered the price, the contract became one of sale.

[3] It is well established that a contract enforceable in admiralty must be wholly maritime. Grant v. Poillon, 20 How. 162, 15 L. Ed. 871. In this case it was held that the master and part owner could not maintain a suit in admiralty for freight against shippers with whom he was a partner, because a partnership account would have to be settled. In Turner v. Beachem, Taney, 583, Fed. Cas. No. 14,252, Mr. Justice Taney held to the same effect, saying: -

“And I consider it to be a clear rule of admiralty jurisdiction that, although the contract which the party seeks to enforce is maritime, yet, if he has connected it inseparably with another contract over which the court has no jurisdiction, and they are so blended together that the court cannot decide one, with justice to both parties, without disposing of the other, the party must resort to a court of law, or a court of equity, as' the case may require, and the admiralty court cannot take jurisdiction of the controversy. The case of Grant v. Poillon was decided upon this ground at the last term of the Supreme Court. 20 How. 162 [15 L. Ed. 871].”

The Pennsylvania, 154 Fed. 9, 83 C. C. A. 139, was our own decision and is very clear. The steamer Pennsylvania was demised to the charterer, who contracted to take young men on a described sea voyage, to occupy nine months, and at the same time put them through a course of study. He received large sums, prepaid, on account of these contracts, but never completed the alterations of the steamer or performed the contract in any respect. The parents of the young men having libeled the steamer, the owner, as claimant, objected that the contract, being one for education^ as well as for transportation, was not within the admiralty jurisdiction. The District Judge held that it was, but dismissed the libel on the ground that the proceeding should have been in personam, and not in rem. We affirmed the decree, on the ground that there was no jurisdiction whatever in admiralty.

The decisions principally relied upon by the respondent are quite consistent with the foregoing: The Port Adelaide, 62 Fed. 486, 10 C. C. A. 505: The master of the vessel, whose whole capacity had been taken by the charterer, shipped cargo and collected freight on owner's account. This, of course, was a purely maritime transaction, and the charterer was held to have the right to adopt the contract as made for its benefit and to recover the amount. Gross v. New York & Texas Co. (D.

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Bluebook (online)
250 F. 194, 162 C.C.A. 330, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-ada-ca2-1918.