The General Burnside

3 F. 228
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan
DecidedJuly 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 F. 228 (The General Burnside) 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 General Burnside, 3 F. 228 (circtedmi 1880).

Opinion

Brown, D. J.

The sole question presented by the exceptions is whether claims for necessaries furnished in foreign ports are entitled to be paid in preference-to those furnished in a [229]*229port of the state where the vessel is owned, for which a lien is given only by the state law, or whether they should share alike and be paid pro rata. The gist of the argument contained in the very elaborate brief of Mr. Speed is to the effect that while there is no lien by the general law maritime as administered in this country, for necessaries furnished in the home port, such lien may be created by the state law, and when so created is not only enforceable in this court, as laid down in the case of The Lotawanna, 21 Wall. 558, but becomes to all intents and puiposes a maritime lien of equal rank with those existing in favor of foreign creditors. The last inference, however, does not necessarily follow. In determining the relative rank of different liens, courts are constantly in the habit of examining their character, and the time and circumstances under which they accrued, marshalling them in the order of their merit. I think there is a well-founded distinction between liens created at home and abroad, in the presumed necessity for credit in a foreign port, which does not exist in the domicile of the owner. This necessity of credit is recognized in the law maritime, but not in the state legislation, which confers the lien whenever the supplies are furnished, whether it be necessary to pledge the credit of the vessel or not; at least, such is the general construction given to the state statutes. 2 Pars. on Shipping, 154; The Young Sam, 20 Law Rep. 608.

Now, if foreign and domestic material men are put upon the same footing, the former, who furnish upon the credit of the vessel, really labor under a disadvantage, since the proceeds, which would otherwise be used to pay them, are absorbed by the home creditors, who, in reality, trusted to the credit of the owner; and as it is not every state which confers these liens it would be necessary for the foreign creditor, in order to protect himself, not only to inquire where the vessel is owned, hut how far the laws of the owner’s domicile put him at the mercy of domestic creditors.

This is substantially the line of argument adopted by Judge Leavitt in the case of The Superior, (Newberry, 176-184,) where the question at issue here was discussed. Although at that [230]*230time the lien created by the Ohio statute did not attach until seizure, the decision was not put upon that ground; but the rule was broadly laid down that in distributing the proceeds of sale maritime liens would be preferred to those created by the state law. “I am not aware that it has been anywhere admitted that state legislation can interfere with, supersede, or destroy a right or lien previously acquired under the national maritime law. On the contrary, the existence of such a power in the states has been strongly denied. They may declare that a lien shall exist in cases designated, and provide for its enforcement by a seizure in rem; but, clearly, the lien so acquired must be subordinate to those existing before in favor of other parties.”

This decision has been followed, so far as I know, throughout this circuit. Eeported cases are rare, but they are uniform. The principle was acquiesced in by court and counsel in The St. Joseph, (Brown’s Admiralty, 202,) and in the recent case, decided by the same judge, of The Alice Getty. In the still later case of The John T. Moore, in the circuit court for the district of Louisiana, Judge Woods held that, even if the state liens were recorded pursuant to the statute, they must be postponed to maritime liens. In Scott’s Case, (1 Abb. U. S. 336,) the relative priority of mortgages and material men in the home port was elaborately argued, but no question was made that foreign material men were entitled to be preferred to mortgagees. The court observes, in speaking of maritime liens: “There was no question as to the validity and priority of these liens, and under former orders of the court they have been paid.” Indeed, in all the cases where the mortgagee has been held to rank lien holders under the state laws it has, apparently, been assumed that the decision would be different if the contract were between a mortgagee and foreign creditors. In The Grace Greenwood, 2 Biss. 131, the admiralty liens were paid before the contest was made. I had occasion to consider these authorities in the case of The Theodore Derry, in which I held that the mortgagees stood only in the place of owners to the amount of their mortgage, and that domestic material men were entitled to rank them.

[231]*231The only adjudication claimed by counsel for domestic creditors to he directly in their favor is that of The Cannon Raleigh and Astoria, recently decided in the district of Virginia. On a careful perusal of this case I do not find this question to have been passed upon, though there are intimations, as in other cases, that the liens of the state laws are of equal validity with strictly maritime liens. The learned judge did say that these liens took precedence of all liens, other than those for mariners’ wages, but the question was not between foreign and domestic creditors, but between material men and a mortgagee, and the court adopted what I have considered the better law, that such lions were entitled to rank a mortgage; following Keeder v. Steam-ship Gurgis Creek, 3 Am. Law Reg. 236. I am informed, too, that the practice of the clerks in many of the eastern districts, in the distribution of proceeds, is to place domestic and foreign material men in the 'same rank; but if this practice, unsanctionod by judicial authority, is entitled to any weight in other districts, it is fairly offset by the uniform practice in this district, ever since the organization of the court, to prefer tbo claims of foreign creditors.

It is not denied that the application of this rule will lead to apparent injustice in certain cases where the foreign port is much- nearer the domicile of the owner than many ports in his own state, which, under the law as settled by the supremo court, must bo considered as home ports; as, for example, in holding Jersey City to he a foreign port to a New York vessel, while Buffalo and Ogdonsburg are domestic, or in regarding Toledo and Windsor as foreign to Detroit, while Ontonagon and St. Joseph are domestic. This difficulty, however, has arisen from the practice of treating any port in the same state as a home port. Indeed, the use of the term home port is unfortunate and misleading. The true distinction is between foreign and- domestic vessels, the uniform current of American authorities holding each state in this regard foreign to every other. The General Smith, 4 Wheat. 438; The Belfast, 7 Wall. 624-43; The Nestor, 1 Sum. 73; The Lulu, 10 Wall. 192-200; The Rich, 1 Cliff. 308. This distinction, adopted from the [232]*232admiralty law of England, where the line between foreign and domestic commerce is of course clearly marked, is founded in no good reason here, since nearly all the domestic commerce, properly speaking, of this country is between different states, and therefore legally foreign to each other.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F. 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-general-burnside-circtedmi-1880.