The Dolphin

7 F. Cas. 866, 1 Flip. 592

This text of 7 F. Cas. 866 (The Dolphin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Dolphin, 7 F. Cas. 866, 1 Flip. 592 (circtedmi 1876).

Opinion

SWAYNE, Circuit Justice.

I have listened with great attention to the arguments submitted by counsel upon both sides of this case, and I have since read with care the opinion of my learned brother, the district' judge. 'It is careful, able, learned, and well considered.

. The profession and the courts are very much at sea as to many questions touching liens upon admiralty-. Different district and circuit judges, and judges of the -supreme court on the circuit are constantly deciding the same questions differently, all over the country where such questions arise. It has been expected confidently that congress • would interpose, and by a law remedy all such doubts and difficulties. This has not yet been done, but it is hoped that it will be done at an early day. My first impulse was to take this case home -with me and prepare an elaborate opinion, but* reflection bas brought me to a different conclusion. In ■such an opinion my brethren of the supreme court might not concur, and I have thought it best, therefore, to keep my mind,-.as far as it might be consistent with the performance of my .duties, uninfluenced by the consideration of such cases, except as they may come before the full court As regards this case, -.there are two -obstacles in the way to .-a different conclusion than has been reachea already. I should have decided the case lithe same way, and as at present advised, I am willing to indorse and stand-by Judge Brown’s opinion. I am not prepared to say that he has committed any error; I think he has not

The decree of the district court is affirmed.

“Now,” continues Judge Grier, at another place in the same opinion, “it is a doctrine not to be found in any treatise on maritime law,' that every contract by the owner or master of a vessel, * * * hypothecates the- vessel for its performance.” Though stated in The Williams [Case No. 17.710] differently, viz., that all ■contracts including insurance, made by the master, bind the ship (Brown, Adm. 208), the learned district judge admits that this principle Is in one particular incorrect. He says that the part referring to insurance is erroneous, because ■ contracting for that is not within the province of the master—it rests with the owners. Here he'is undoubtedly correct. And why has the master no such power? For the sim pie reason that he cannot bind the ship except for such supplies as are absolutely necessary to enable it to properly discharge its functions in commerce and navigation. He may, when he can raise money in no other way, hypothecate the ship on bottomry or borrow money by re-spondentia. He can charge the ship for all needful supplies and equipment, as seamen, wharfage, provisions, repairs, etc.; but they must all fall within the line of strict necessaries, for which the boat needs credit The reader, in the foregoing extract taken from Yandewater v. Mills, will notice how the court speak of deducing principles from analogy. They refer to that case again on page 91 of the opinion, paragraph 3. Now, in The Dolphin decision, an attempt is made to trace an analogy between the contradi of affreightment and that of marine insurance. In the former the cargo is bound to the ship and the ship to the cargo. The contract is reciprocal. In the latter case, how are the insurers bound to the ship? The contract is made between the owners and the .insurers, and not with the ship at all. In the admiralty it is well understood that the ship is •one person and the owner or owners other and distinct persons. Moreover, .the lien goes along hand in hand with the service, supply or benefit conferred on the vessel (Vandewater v. Mills, 19 How. [60 U. S. 89], and passim); and if it be admitted for the sake of argument that marine insurance is a supply, (.wnieh is not the case,) the benefit derived from supply must be immediate in order to draw along the lien. If any benefit can be derived from this so-called supply by the vessel, it cannot be immediate but is in futuro; for the benefit, if at all, must be in the payment of the premium, the contingency for which may, or may not happen. If the vessel be a total loss, of what service would the premium, when collected by the owners, be to the wholly lost or ruined ship? The •owners might or might not purchase or build another, but if they did there could be no notion of a lien connected therewith, for the additional reason that owners have no liens; only third parties. If the boat were partially in jured, the owners might or might not repair, and to that the same argument might be added as in the ease of total loss. Nor can it be a benefit or service of any kind to the vessel.There is another feature inseparably connected with liens on ships—that is, credit to the vessel. Here the credit is wholly to the owners, and if there be no credit to the vessel there is no lien. Even supplies furnished in a foreign port where the owner may. happen to be at the time, or his agent, or where he has credits, or if the captain -be supplied with funds, create no lien. It is for the furnisher to see tbat tbe vessel needs ■ the credit, and it is for this reason that in the home port, where supplies are furnished or repairs made, there is no lien on .the vessel be cause it is supposed that the owner has credit. There is an exception where it appears that he is Wholly insolvent, or a special contract has been made to charge the vessel. The law does not presume the credit; acts or facts must prove it. The reasoning- of the judge is almost wholly by analogy, and the grounds he bases his decision upon are: 1st—That as the contract is maritime, therefore a lien follows; and 2d—It is a supply, and therefore is entitled to rank as a lien. As is well known there are contracts that are maritime which do not carry a lien with them. If you go to that question—or the one of supply—where can a better illustration be found than in the master of a ship? His contract with the owner for the sailing of the boat pertains to, and is to be performed upon, or in connection with, the sea or public watercourse, and strictly falls within commerce and navigation; hence it is a maritime contract. Yet he has no lien; no, not even for advances that he may make, or articles he may purchase as necessaries for the ship. This is the well settled law in England, and the weight of authorities is the same way in this country. See 2 Pars. Shipp. & Adm. p. 24. Why? Because he does not contract with the ship, but with the owners, and the articles he furnishes are supposed to be furnished upon the understanding either that he has money or credits of the owners, and that he does not in any case look to the . ship, but solely to them; and, perhaps, also, another reason may operate to a certain extent, he is the general agent of the owners, and on board 'represents them. Go to the question of supply. Let it be answered, where is there -a supply- or service so necessary to a ship as the master of the vessel? He is as necessary, as much so, as seamen who have liens—as necessary as provisions or repairs. He is the eye, the life, the soul of the ship. It is he who directs her course through the sunshine as well as the storm, and without him the vessel could not fulfill its mission of moving upon the waters and plying in the marts of trade. And yet he has no lien. The judge seems to have overlooked the decision made by Mr. Justice Story—that great master of admiralty law—in De Lovio v. Boit [Case No. 3,776], a ease decided in 1815. It was then ruled that the contract of insurance taken on a vessel was a maritime .contract. And the other decision made by the same judge, reported in Hale v. Washington Ins. Co. [Id.

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Related

Vandewater v. Mills
60 U.S. 82 (Supreme Court, 1857)
Stillwell v. . Staples
19 N.Y. 401 (New York Court of Appeals, 1859)
Turner v. Stetts, Allen & Gill
28 Ala. 420 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1856)

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 866, 1 Flip. 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-dolphin-circtedmi-1876.