The E. W. Gorgas

8 F. Cas. 920, 10 Ben. 460
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 15, 1879
DocketCase No. 4,585
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 F. Cas. 920 (The E. W. Gorgas) 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 E. W. Gorgas, 8 F. Cas. 920, 10 Ben. 460 (S.D.N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

CHOATE, District Judge.

These are three suits brought by the owners of three barges to recover damages for the loss of the barges and their cargoes, alleged to have been caused by the negligence and mismanagement of those in charge of the steam-tug, while the said barges were with other boats [921]*921being towed from Port Morris to Bridgeport, Conn., on the 13th of March, 1879. The •claimant, George H. Dentz, after answering in each case to the merits, set up as a separate defence, “that on the 19th of March, 1S79, in the district court of the United States for the eastern district of New York, -a libel was filed against said steam-tug by John Collins, to recover $150, as damages alleged to have been sustained by said Collins, by reason of the running on the rocks off Norwalk, Conn., of his canal-boat, the E. L. Anthony, by said steam-tug; that process on said libel was issued against said steam-tug •on said 19th day of March, and was delivered to the marshal of the eastern district of New York, which said process was made returnable April 2d, 1879; that said marshal attached said steam-tug under said process on March 20th, 1S79; that no claim was interposed by any one and said steam-tug was left in the custody of said marshal, and on the return day of said process, no one ap. pearing for said steam-tug, a decree was made by said court, entering the default of All persons and directing a reference to compute libellant’s damages, and that a vendi-tioni exponas issue to said marshal, and that said steam-tug be sold on six days’ notice; that on April 9th, 1S79, said writ was issued to said marshal, and after six days’ notice of •sale duly given, said steam-tug was, on the 17th day of April, 1879, duly sold at public .auction by said marshal, and was struck off to this claimant, his being the highest bid therefor; that on the 18th of April, 1879, a bill of sale of said steam-tug was duly executed and delivered by said marshal to this claimant, and was on the same day duly re-morded by claimant, in the custom house, in New York City. And said claimant alleges And avers that by said proceedings and sale all liens which accrued prior thereto against said steam-tug were cut off, and that this •claimant took said steam-tug free and clear from all liens and among others free and •clear from the lien set forth in the libel herein.” This answer having been filed, the li-bellant was allowed to amend his libel by Alleging as follows:

“1st. That no final judgment or decree has been had or entered in the proceedings set forth in the answer of the claimant herein as pending in the district court of the United States for the eastern district of New York, wherein one John Collins is libellant and the Steam-tug E. W. Gorgas has been attached.
“2nd. That the district court of the United •States for the eastern district of New York •did not have jurisdiction over the steam-tug E. W. Gorgas, at the time its process was •served upon and the said steam-tug attached in the suit or proceedings aforesaid.
“3rd. That the claimant herein, if he pur•chased the said steam-tug, E. W. Gorgas, at a judicial sale, as is alleged in the answer, got no title to the said vessel, exclusive of and hostile to the lien of this libellant, nor Is this libellant cut off from asserting said lien in this court by reason of any matters set up in the answer of the claimant, because, 1st, the said purchaser and claimant had full knowledge of your libellant’s lien against or upon said vessel at the time he purchased her; 2nd, he is and should be estopped as to this libellant’s lien upon said vessel from setting up his purchase as aforesaid, because by his own acts and declarations he kept this libellant in ignorance of the proceedings of condemnation and sale aforesaid of the E. W. Gorgas for the purpose of deceiving this libel-lant and of cutting off his lien by a pretended judicial sale; 3rd, the said sale of the steam-tug E. W. Gorgas was fraudulent, because of the gross inadequacy of the purchase price; 4th, the purchaser, this claimant, was himself personally guilty of and responsible for the tortious act which became the foundation of your libellant’s lien as already pleaded in his libel; 5th, the proceedings aforesaid of the said Collins were collusive and fraudulent, and instituted and carried out with the dishonest intention of cutting off your libel-lant’s lien and the liens of other persons in which fraud this claimant was a participant” Upon these pleadings the cause coming on for trial, it was agreed that the issues, raised by the defence of the suit in the eastern district and the sale under it, should be first tried. The claimant offered the record and bill of sale- referred to in the answer. The libellants objected to the record and the bill under it, on the ground that the court had no. jurisdiction to make the decree because, 1st, the libel was not properly verified; 2nd, the process based on an unverified libel has no validity; 3rd, the return of the process was not signed by the marshal; 4th, the process was not served by the marshal or a deputy marshal, but by one Tobey, who had no authority to serve it, and that therefore there was no seizure of the vessel so as to give the court jurisdiction; 5th, the process being dated March 19th, was made returnable April 2nd, in less than fourteen days exclusive of Sundays; 6th, that it does not appear by the marshal’s return that the vessel was seized within the district; 7th, that after the alleged seizure she was not kept in the custody of the marshal till the time of sale.

It appeared that the libel, which was signed by the libellant, had annexed to it the following certificate “Subscribed and sworn to before me this 24th day of February, 1879. Simeon Ford, Notary Public, Kings and N. Y Cos.” The objection to this is that, as tht notary’s seal was not affixed, the court hac Dot before it any competent proof under tht laws of the United States, that the libel was sworn to, the certificate of the notary not being attested by his seal. The practice and the rule of the court require a sworn libel previous to the issue of process against the vessel. Martin v. Walker [Case No. 9,170]. By St 1876, c. 304 [19 Stat. 206], notaries public are authorized to take depositions and do all [922]*922other acts in relation to taking testimony to be used in the courts of the United States; take acknowledgments and affidavits “in the same manner and with the same effects” as commissioners of the United States circuit court may now lawfully take or do. This statute differs from some prior statutes relating to the same subject, in that it does not in terms require the signature and authority of the notary to be attested by his official seal. Rev. St § 1778; Stat 1874, c. 390, § 20 [18 Stat ISO]. Under this statute, while a court of the United States may doubtless make any reasonable rule to ascertain the authenticity of the notary’s signature, as by requiring his seal to be affixed or a certificate of a state officer to his appointment and authority as such notary, yet it would seem that any such evidence in addition to his official signature would be required not to make the act of the notary valid, but simply to satisfy the court of the fact that the certifying officer was a notary; and if the court is satisfied with the official signature of the notary, I do not see how any other court can question the regularity of its action. The seal was not necessary under this statute to a due verification, and if the affixing of the seal were the proper and customary mode of proving to the court the notary’s official character, the irregularity of the absence of such proof would not vitiate the process.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Puleston v. United States
85 F. 570 (United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of Florida, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 920, 10 Ben. 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-e-w-gorgas-nysd-1879.