The Brig Wexford

7 F. 674, 1881 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 109
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 5, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 7 F. 674 (The Brig Wexford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Brig Wexford, 7 F. 674, 1881 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 109 (S.D.N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Choate, D. J.

The brig Wexford, an English vessel belonging to Nova Scotia, was libelled in this court in a suit for seamen ’s wages. The libel was against vessel and freight, but process issued only against the vessel. She was condemned and sold, and the amount of the proceeds of the vessel in the [676]*676registry is $2,075. The owner did not appear. Several other parties filed libels against the vessel, or petitions to be paid out of the proceeds, the claims exceeding in the aggregate the whole amount in the registry. One Crossman also commenced a suit in personam against the master and owners of the vessel, on a draft drawn by the master on the owners for money advanced at a port on the coast of Africa to the master for the purpose of obtaining necessary supplies for the vessel in that port. On this libel the freight was attached in the hands of the consignees of the eai'go, as belonging to the owners, and has been paid into court to the amount of $703.04. Among the claims presented against the vessel was that of a mortgagee, who also claimed the freight on the ground that after the arrival of the vessel in this port, and before the discharge of the cargo, he had taken possession of the vessel. The parties having claims on the vessel insist that the freight should be applied to payment of the seamen’s wages in order that they may make good their claims against the vessel. By consent of all parties who appeared in the suit of Crossman, and also in the suits against the vessel, it was referred to a commissioner to take proof of the amounts due the several parties, determine their liens, if any, and their claims for priority of payment, and the proper mode of marshalling the funds in the two suits, without formal pleadings other than the libels and petitions of the respective parties. The parties appeared before the commissioner, and the amounts found due them are as follows: Crocker Brothers & Co., a corporation doing business in this city, have proved a claim for $837.84, for copper supplied to the vessel in this port in April, 1877, subject to the objections hereinafter stated. Their libel was filed July 6, 1880. The following claims were also proved, as to which no objection is now taken: Richard H. Anderson, of Philadelphia, for supplies in. that port in April, 1880, $319.55; Charles A. Warren & Co., of Philadelphia, for supplies and materials furnished in that port, $102.58; Owen Beilly, for supplies, $17.80; James Germond, for pilotage in this port, $64.57; Joseph [677]*677M. Wright & Co., of Eio Janeiro, for supplies and repairs furnished to the vessel in that port, $380.03; James T. Abbott, for advances in port of St. Thomas in March, 1879, $193.03. The libels in all these cases were filed subsequently to that of Crocker Brothers & Co.

The master’s claim for wages was proved at $504.04, including extra wages for 10 days’ double pay on account of delay in payment. Crossman’s claim in his suit in personam, for advances on the coast of Africa, was proved at $77.12. The mortgagee proved a balance of $1,500 due to him. The commissioner inadvertently reported this at $5,000. The mistake is conceded. The commissioner held that the freight should be applied first to the payment of the claim of Cross-man, and that the balance should be paid to the mortgagee, on the ground that the mortgagee had taken possession of the vessel before delivery of the cargo. He also held that the proceeds o.f the vessel, after paying the wages of the seamen, should be applied as follows:

(1) To pay the claim of Germond, pilot.

(2) To pay the claims of Anderson, Wright & Co., Abbott, Warren, and Beilly, material men, in the order in which their libels wore filed.

(3) To pay the master’s wages, including extra wages on account of delay in payment.

(4) To pay the claim of Crocker & Co., material men, this claim being postponed to the claims of the other material men on account of their laches in filing their libel, and to that of the master on account of his superior equitable claim upon the fund.

The claims of the seamen were proved at $360.62.

The master excepts to the report on the ground that his wages should be paid out of the freight either next after payment of Crossman’s claim or next after payment of Crossman and the seamen. Crocker Brothers & Co. except on the ground that their claim should be paid out of the proceeds of the vessel before the claims of the other material men, whose libels were filed after that of Crocker Brothers & Co.; also [678]*678on the ground that the freight should first be applied to payment of the seamen’s wages; also on the ground that Cross-man is not entitled to be paid until all liens on vessel and freight have been first paid; also on the ground that the material men, whose claims cannot be paid out of the vessel, are in equity entitled to be paid out of the freight in preference to the mortgagee; also on the ground that the master is not entitled'to extra wages; or, if so, that such extra wages do not constitute a lien, and that the master’s lien against the vessel is not entitled to priority over that of Crocker Brothers & Co. The mortgagee excepts on the ground that Crocker Brothers & Co. had no lien on the vessel; also on the gi-ound that Crossman is not entitled to be paid out of the freight; also on the ground that the mortgagee is entitled to the whole of the freight; also on the ground that the master is not entitled to be paid out of the vessel in preference to the mortgagee; also on the ground that the master is not entitled to any extra wages out of the proceeds of the vessel before payment of the mortgagee. No objections are understood to be taken to the result reached by the commissioner except those raised by these exceptions.

The first question to be considered in respect to the claim of Crocker Brothers & Co. is whether they have a lien on the vessel for the copper supplied to her in April, 1877. To the lien claimed by them several objections are made—First, that the vessel was an English vessel, and that, by the law of England, the master has no authority to bind the vessel in a foreign port for supplies and materials, otherwise than by a bottomry bond; secondly, that in this ease the owner of the vessel resided in this port, and that in such case there is no lien, though the vessel be under a foreign flag; thirdly, that in this case credit was not given to the vessel; fourthly, that their lien, if they ever had one, was waived by taking a subsequent mortgage; and, lastly, that it was forfeited by laches.

As to the first objection, formal proof of the English law was not made, as it should have been, since the court does [679]*679not take judicial cognizance of foreign laws; but it has been assumed on both sides that the English law is what it is shown to be by the decisions of the English courts, and I, therefore, shall hold formal proof to be waived. It is conceded that, independently of recent statutes, the English courts, including the court of admiralty, denied the authority of the master of an English ship to bind the vessel even in a foreign port for materials and repairs otherwise than by bottomry. The Woodland, 7 Ben. 110, and cases cited; S. C. 14 Blatchf. 499, and cases cited. It is, however, unnecessary to pass on this objection to this alleged lien, since the circumstances show that if the lien ever attached it has been waived and lost by the subsequent acts of the party.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 F. 674, 1881 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-brig-wexford-nysd-1881.