The Aurora

14 U.S. 96, 4 L. Ed. 45, 1 Wheat. 96, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 312
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 29, 1816
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 14 U.S. 96 (The Aurora) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Aurora, 14 U.S. 96, 4 L. Ed. 45, 1 Wheat. 96, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 312 (1816).

Opinion

SroRt, J.,

delivered’the opinion of the court, and, after stating the facts, proceeded as follows :

Such are the material facts of the case, and the question to be decided is, whether, under all the circumstances, the bottomry bond executed at Calcutta constitutes a valid lien upon the ship.

The law in respect to maritime hypothecations is, in general, well settled. The master of the ship is the confidential servaiit or agent óf the owners, and they are bound to. the performance bf all lawful contracts made by him, relative to the usual employment of the"ship, and the repairs and other necessaries furnished for her use. This rule is established as" well upon the implied assent of the owners, .as with a view to the convenience of the commercial world. As, therefore, the master may contract for repairs and supplies, and thereby; indirectly, bind the owners to the value of the ship and freight, so, it is held that he may, for the like purposes, expressly-pledge and hypothecate the ship and freight, and thereby create á direct, lien on the same, for the security of the creditor. But the authority of' the master is limited to objects connected with the voyage-, and, if he transcend the prescribed limits, his acts becbm'e, in legal contemplation, mere nullities. Hence, to make *103 a bottomry- bond , executed by the master a valid hypotheeation of the ship, it must be shown by the creditor that the master acted within the scope óf his authority; or, in other words, it must be shown that the advances were made for repairs and supplies necessary for effectuating the objects of the voyage, or the safety and security of the ship; and no presumption should arise, that such repairs and supplies could be prpcured- upon any reasonable terms, with the credit of the owner, independent of such hypothecation. -If, ’therefore, the master, have sufficient Ífinds ' of the owner, within his control, or can procure them upon the general credit of the owner, he is not at liberty to .subject the ship to the expensive and disadvantageous lien of an hypothecator} instrument.

Let us now, with these principles in view, proceed to the consideration. of. the validity of the bottomry bond executed at Port Jackson, which enters so ma-. terially into the subsequent one executed at Calcutta. This bond purports, on its face, to have been given for advances, of supplies, furnished for the ship’s . use, not immediately before its -date, but at various times and places; and, from the other evidence in. the cáse, it distinctly appears that the greater part was furnished before and during the voyage, of discovery in .which she was engaged, under the contract with Messrs, Lord &. Williams, and foi*-their immediate benefit Not the slightest account is given of the earnings of the ship during this long voyage of a year, nor of the terms or stipulations of the charter. This sifence would be wholly unaccounta *104 ble if it were not in proof, that captain Smith was guilty of the most shameful misconduct, and either* fraudulently sacrificed■, or grossly neglected, the interests of his owner.

The advances made by Messrs. Lord & Williams do not appear*, to have been originally made upon a stipulation for ah hypothecation of the ship. On the contrary, there, is the strongest reason to believe that they were originally made upon, the general credit of the owner, of master, or both. If there had been a stipulation for an hypothecation, it mujrt have been carried into effect by the parties on the next ensuing voyage; and, as this ivas not done, there arises an almost irresistible presumption, that Messrs. Lord & Williams looked for their, reimbursements out of the freight of the, voyage in which the ship was then engaged by them. If, indeed, there had been a stipulation, originally, for an hypothecation, it must be deemed, in point of law, to havé been waived by the omission to have had it attached to the first voyage then next to be prosecuted ; and the party who. thus waives his right cannot be permitted, at a subsequent time, and under a. change of circums tances, to reinstate ..himself in his former condition to the injury of the owner. It is said that the ship might'have been arrested for these advances; and that, in point ¡of fact, the captain was put in jail on account of debts contracted for the ship, arid was relieved from imprisonment by Messrs. - Lord & Williams. That captain Sriiith was imprisoned on account of some debts appeal's in the evidence, but it is.by no means -dear that these- *105 debts were contracted for the use of the ship. The1 presumption is repelled by the consideration that the necessaries and supplies are expressly stated in the bond to'have been furnished by Messrs, tiord. & Williams; and the only other creditors who are alleged to have furnished stores, are admitted not to have instituted, any suits; . It is undoubtedly true, that material men, and others, who furnish supplies to a foreign ship, have a lien on the ship, and may proceed in the admiralty to enforce'that right. And it must be admitted that, in such a case, a bona, fide creditor, who advances his money to relieve the, ship from ah actual arrest on account' of such debts, may stipulate for, á bottomry interest, and the necessity of the occasion - will justify the master in giving it, if he have no Other sufficient funds, or crédit, to re* deem the ship from such arrest. But it would be, tpo much to hold, as was contended for by the counsel for the appellants, that, a' mere threat to arrest the ship, for a pre-existing debt, would be a sufficient necessity to justify the master in giving a bottomry interest, since it might be an idle threat, which the creditor might never enforce; and-until enforced the peril would nob áct upon the ship itself. And even supposing a just debt might, in siich.a case, be a valid, consideration to sustain a bottomry interest in favour . of a third person, such an effect never could be attributed to a debt manifestly founded in'ffaud or injustice. Nor does it by any means follow, be* cause a debt sought to be enforced by an arrest of the ship, might uphold an hypothecation in favour of 'a third person, that a general creditor would be en *106 titled to acquire a' like interest. It would seer» against the policy of the law to permit a party, in this manner, to obtain advantages from his contract for which he had not originally stipulated. . Tt would hold out temptations to fraud and imposition, and: enable creditors to practise gross oppressions, against which even the vigilance' >and good faith, of an intelligent master might not always be á sufficient Safeguard in a foreign country.

These are not the only difficulties which press upon the claim of Messrs. Lord & Williams. The terms of the charter-party, entered into by them on the yoyage to Calcutta, as well as on the voyage of discovery, are nowhere explained. It was certainly their duty, in the first instance, to apply the freight in their hands, earned in these voyages, to the discharge of the debt due to them for- advances. What Was the amount of this freight, and what was the manner in which it was to be. paid, and how$ in fact, it was paid or appropriated, are inquiries which have never been answered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 U.S. 96, 4 L. Ed. 45, 1 Wheat. 96, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-aurora-scotus-1816.