The Hunter

12 F. Cas. 951, 1 Ware 251
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine
DecidedFebruary 15, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 F. Cas. 951 (The Hunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Hunter, 12 F. Cas. 951, 1 Ware 251 (circtdme 1833).

Opinion

WARE, District Judge.

Several objections are made to the validity of this bond. In the first place, it is contended that Leavitt was not appointed master by any competent authority, and that he could not, therefore, bind the vessel, under any circumstances, by a bottomry bond. The evidence on this point is not free from difficulty. Mr. Harrison, the American consul, says that Houd-lette, on leaving Gustavia, gave orders that if Captain Theobald, whom he intended to send out to take the command of the vessel, did not arrive in season, Leavitt should be put in as master for the purpose of navigating her home. The witness, however, does not mention the means he had of knowing this fact It may perhaps be. presumed that he had it from Houdlette himself, but as the fact is controverted, it would have been more satisfactory if he had stated how he came to the knowledge of it It would then be more easy to determine the degree of authority which might be justly attached to his testimony. There is no intrinsic improbability in his statement. If Mr. Houdlette had determined, on his return, to send out a master to take the command of the vessel, it was natural, and it would seem prudent, to leave a discretionary authority with his agent at Gustavia to provide for the contingency of the master’s not arriving, who should be dispatched from this country. At the same time, if his intention was, in such a case, that Leavitt should take the command, we should naturally expect that he would have been informed of the arrangement. But if Leavitt is to be believed, no such arrangement was made known to him; on the contrary, he says that Houdlette’s orders to him were, that after superintending certain repairs of the vessel, he should either wait the arrival of Theobald, or take passage home in some other vessel, and that he had actually engaged his passage home when he was called on by Bailey to take the command of the vessél. But it is to be remarked that two witnesses, examined at Gustavia, state in their depositions that Leavitt told them that he was directed to take the brig home, provided Theobald did not arrive in season. This is not, indeed, admissible as evidence of the principal fact, but it may go to raise some doubts as to the reliance which may be placed on the accuracy of this witness’s recollection upon the subject.

But supposing the objection of the want of authority in Leavitt to bind the owners by such an instrument overcome, it is contended that the bond is void because a bill of exchange was drawn by Leavitt, acting as master, on the owners, for the same sum. In the case of The Augusta, 1 Dod. 283, Lord Stowell considered that the taking of a bill of exchange by the holder of a bottomry bond was a strong circumstance to show that the advances were made on the personal credit of the owners, and not on the [953]*953credit of the vessel, and he held the bond void for the amount of the bill and good for the advances made after the bill was drawn. But in this case there were other circumstances which went strongly to show that, at the time when the first advances were made, the creditor looked only to the personal responsibility of the owners. He did not, however, intimate an opinion that the simple fact of taking a bill of exchange, as a security in addition to the bond, would, of itself, vitiate the bond. And in the cases of The Jane, 1 Dod. 466, and The Nelson, 1 Hagg. Adm. 179, in both of which bills of exchange were drawn by the master, he treated them as merely collateral to the bond, which, if paid, discharge the bond, but which do not affect its validity.' “It is,” says he, “the usual practice to draw bills of exchange; there is no inconsistency in taking this collateral security, nor has it ever been held to exclude the bond nor diminish its solidity. It is an erroneous view taken of bills drawn under such circumstances, which would hold them to be independent securities, payable at all events. It is indeed true,, that the owners are generally bound to honor the bills drawn by the master for the necessities of the ship. But when a bill is drawn, and a bottomry bond- taken, with maritime interest, for the same sum, the bill must share the fate of the bond. Until the vessel arrives in safety at the end of her voyage, the loan is at the risk of the lender, and if she is lost, nothing is due upon the bill more than upon the bond. This risk belongs to the essence of loans made on maritime interest Emerigon, Contrats a la Grosse, c. 1, § S. When a bill is therefore drawn, and a bottomry bond given for the same consideration, the owner is not bound to honor the bill, at least not before the safe arrival of the vessel, and the end of the risk. For it does not appear that any thing will ever be due until the happening of the event on which the bond - becomes payable, and then the payment of one security extinguishes both.

It is objected that the master has no authority to take up money on bottomry, except in the progress of a voyage, and to enable him to complete an enterprise already begun. If the objection were well founded, it would not be applicable to the present ease, because here the advances were made at the request of the owners. But it is not admitted that the authority of the master is confined to such narrow limits as was supposed at the argument. The authority of the master to charge the owners by this contract, is confined to cases of strict necessity, such as usually occur in the progress of a voyage, and are occasioned by unforeseen accidents and disasters. But suppose a voyage is broken up in a foreign port, and a new one is undertaken; if the master is authorized to commence a new voyage the princi-pié will apply with the same reason to such a case as to one that occurs in the progress of a voyage. The true principle seems to be, that when the master is authorized to employ a vessel in a particular way or in any particular enterprise, and he is obliged to raise money to comply with his orders, he may take it on bottomry, if he cannot obtain it on any other terms. And so it was decided in the case of Crawford v. The William Penn [Case No. 3,373].

But there is another objection which is conclusive against the validity of this instrument as a bottomry bond, carrying maritime interest. It is, that the advances were originally made on the personal credit of the owner. Before Houdlette left Gustavia, Bailey agreed with him to make the necessary advances for repairing the vessel. It is not pretended that there was any thing said at this time about a bottomry bond, and there is not the slightest evidence that any such security was contemplated by either party. There is not only an entire absence of any evidence of that kind, but the testimony directly negatives any such idea. Mr. Harrison states in his answer to the fourth interrogatory, “that the advances were not made by Bailey on account of any pecuniary advantage that would immediately arise therefrom, but from the circumstance of having many friends at Bath, who had favored him with their- business, and he felt it his duty to make an exertion, though straitened for means, to get the vessel away, fearing that a reluctance to do so would injure him in their opinion. It is true that, at the time the Hunter was ready for sea, he had partly determined to detain her, in consequence of Houdlette’s not complying with his engagement to reimburse his advances, but on the representation of his friends here, as well as myself, whom Leav-itt earnestly solicited to use my good offices with Mr. Bailey, he consented to her departure.’-’

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Bluebook (online)
12 F. Cas. 951, 1 Ware 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-hunter-circtdme-1833.