The American Eagle

30 F.2d 293, 1929 A.M.C. 470, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 967
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJanuary 30, 1929
Docket1253
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 30 F.2d 293 (The American Eagle) 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
The American Eagle, 30 F.2d 293, 1929 A.M.C. 470, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 967 (D. Del. 1929).

Opinion

MORRIS, District Judge.

To tho report of the commissioner finding that the libelant J. E. Sadler & Co. is not entitled to a mail-time lien against the'American Eagle for coal used, by that dredge and alleged to have been “furnished” to it by the libelant, the libelant has filed exceptions.

The dredges American Eagle and Gray Eagle, owned by W. H. French Dredging & Wrecking Company, Inc., were engaged in dredging the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal at tho port of Delaware City. Henry L. Lewis, an officer of the dredging company, whose authority to act for their owner in placing orders for supplies for the di edges is not questioned, ordered coal from the libelant, saying “that they wanted it about fifty-fifty, the two dredges.” Upon this order coal, at the price of $5.90 a ton and of the aggregate valuó of $3,375.62, was supplied by the libelant, received on board the two dredges, and used by them. No- coal other than that supplied by the libelant was used by them at Delaware City. The coal was sold f. o. b. the libelant’s whalrf at Delaware City, from which, without physical division of the bulk into one part specifically designated for tho American Eagle and into another for tho Gray Eagle, the coal was loaded in the mass by the dredging company upon its lighter tending the dredges. From the lighter it was put aboard the dredges as their needs required, but without any record being made of the amount delivered to each, though in tho estimation of the employees of the dredges and the officers of the dredging company the amount of coal used by each dredge was substantially the same. Receipts for the coal, when placed upon the lighter of tho dredging company, were signed by the captain of one or the other of the dredges, without discrimination.

Some of the charges for the coal were made against the owner “a/e dredges American Eagle and Gray Eagle, C. & D. Canal job,” and the remainder were made against tho owner “a/e C. & D. Canal job, Delaware City, Delaware.” Payment not being made, the Sadler Company filed a libel in personam against the owner to recover for all tho coal supplied, and soon thereafter filed a libel against the American Eagle to recover for one-half the coal, and another libel against the Gray Eagle to recover for the remaining half. The commissioner, to whom these two libels in rein and numerous other libels filed *294 against each of the dredges were referred, found that under the facts and the law maritime, as laid down in Piedmont & George’s Creek Coal Co. v. Seaboard Fisheries Co., 254 U. S. 1, 41 S. Ct. 1, 65 L. Ed. 97, the eoal was furnished to the dredges, not by the libelant, but by the dredging company, and that, in any event, in the light of The Alligator (C. C. A.) 161 F. 37, the amount of coal delivered to the respective dredges could not be ascertained from the record with sufficient certainty to support a maritime lien against either dredge.

The basic questions raised by the exceptions-are (1) whether the eoal was “furnished” to the American Eagle by the libel-ant or by the dredging company; and (2) if by the libelant, whether the amount so furnished can be ascertained from the evidence with sufficient certainty to support a maritime lien. Questions incidental to the first of these basic questions are (a) whether the filing by the libelant of the libel -in personam prevents the libelant from now asserting that the eoal was furnished by it to the vessel; and (b) whether in any event the failure of the libelant to divide the coal physically into two parts or lots, and to designate by appropriate marks or otherwise the particular lot to be supplied to the American Eagle, is a bar to the asserted maritime lien against that dredge.

Was the coal used by the American Eagle furnished to it by the libelant? The Act of June 23, 1910, 36 Stat. 604, c. 373, set out at length at 233 F. 922, re-enacted with amendments as section 30, subsections P to T, of the Merchant Marine Act of 1920 (46 USCA §§ 971-975), lays down no rule for the solution of this problem. The answer to it must be found in the facts, when measured by the general maritime law, unmodified by decisions such as The Kiersage, Fed. Cas. No. 7,762, Berwind-White Coal Mining Co. v. Metropolitan Steamship Co. (C. C.) 166 F. 782, and Berwind-White Coal Mining Co. v. W. & A. Fletcher Co. (C. C. A.) 173 F. 471, which rest upon state statutes growing out of or bearing a close analogy to mechanic’s lien laws. In this field there are three outstanding cases: Piedmont & George’s Creek Coal Co. v. Seaboard Fisheries Co., 254 U. S. 1, 41 S. Ct 1, 65 L. Ed. 97; Ely v. Murray & Tregurtha Co., 200 F. 368 (C. C. A. 1); The Yankee, 233 F. 919 (C. C. A. 3). Though these cases are alike in their facts to the extent that in each the supplies were actually delivered to the vessel by its owner, who received them from the libelant, yet in the first it was held that the supplies were “furnished” to the vessel by its owner, while in the last two it was decided that they were “furnished” by the libelants.

The further facts found in the last two eases, but not in the Piedmont Case, and their legal effect, Were indicated by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, sitting in the Piedmont Case (there reported as The Walter Adams, 253 F. 20, 27), thus: “Where specific supplies or materials have been furnished to the owner upon a distinct understanding that they were for a specified vessel, and the owner has, after delivery to him, appropriated them to the vessel so designated between the parties, they have been held to have been furnished to her in the sense of the Statute; and maritime liens for them under it have been sustained.” In the Piedmont Case, the eoal delivered by the libelant to the owner of the fleet was put with the owner’s general stock of coal in its bins, where in some instances it lay for months. Moreover, the Supreme Court, in distinguishing that case from The Yankee, said: “In the ease at bar there was no understanding when the contract was made, or when the eoal was delivered by the libelant, that any part of it was for any particular vessel or even for the vessels then composing the fleet". And it was clearly understood that the purchasing corporation would apply part of the coal to a nonmaritime use. ’ ’

The distinguishing character of the facts found in The Yankee and the Ely Cases, but not in the Piedmont Case, has likewise been recognized in The Cora P. White (D. C.) 243 F. 246; The Fearless (D. C.) 14 F. (2d) 1004, on appeal (C. C. A.) 14 F.(2d) 1006, and in principle, I think, in Carr v. George' E. Warren Corporation (C. C. A.) 2 F.(2d) 333. The facts in the ease at bar distinguish it,- in my opinion, from the Piedmont Case,' and bring it within the principle of The Yankee and the Ely Cases.

The filing by the libelant of the libel in personam is not a bar to the libel in rem, Piedmont & George’s Creek Coal Co. v. Seaboard Fisheries Co., 254 U. S. 1,10, 41 S. Ct. 1 (65 L. Ed. 97), and is of but little, if any, pertinency upon the issue of who furnished the eoal to the dredge.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F.2d 293, 1929 A.M.C. 470, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-american-eagle-ded-1929.