The Irma

13 F. Cas. 93, 6 Ben. 1
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1872
DocketCase No. 7,064
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 F. Cas. 93 (The Irma) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.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 Irma, 13 F. Cas. 93, 6 Ben. 1 (E.D.N.Y. 1872).

Opinion

BENEDICT, District Judge.

The cases against this vessel have been brought before me, on an application for an order determining the priority of the respective demands in the distribution of the proceeds of the vessel, which are insufficient to pay all the claims against her. The only question which calls for any particular examination has arisen between the libellants, Timothy Darling & Co., whose libel is filed to recover the amount of a botomry bond executed by Cummings, as master of the vessel, and Cummings himself, who has filed his libel to recover a balance due him for his own wages and for advance of wages made by him to the crew. If the demand of Cummings be paid out of the proceeds of the vessel, in preference to the bottomry bond, the remainder will be insufficient to pay the bottomry bond in full, and therefore the bottomry lenders contest the right of the master of the vessel to priority over the bottomry bond. The position taken is, that the master is personally liable to the bottomry lenders for the sum borrowed, and that, supposing that he has a lien for his demand, he cannot be paid in preference to the bottomry bond, when such payment will create a deficiency in the bond, which he is liable to make good.

The question raised is one which has sel-[94]*94rtom arisen, owing, doubtless, to the fact that in very many, if not in most, cases of bot-tomry, the master binds himself personally for the debt by means of a special covenant inserted in the bond, and is not therefore in a position to dispute his liability for any deficiency that may arise from the distribution of the proceeds of the ship. But in this instance the bottomry bond contains no such covenant, and the master denies any liability whatever to the bottomry lenders for any part of the bottomry loan. I am, therefore, called on to determine the question of law, whether, in the absence of any special agreement to that effect, the master of a ship incurs any personal liability to repay to the bottomry lender the amount borrowed on bottomry, when the bond becomes due by the safe arrival of the ship, and the proceeds of the ship and freight prove insufficient to discharge it in full.

In considering this question, I am not required to speak of the liability of the ship master for neglect or malfeasance, nor of a case where the bottomry bond proves invalid, or where no risk has ever attached, or where the stipulated voyage is not performed, or where the ship and freight is not abandoned to the bondholder; nor yet of a case where the bond is executed by an owner of the ship. What I have occasion to say is, therefore, intended to refer to the case here presented, where it is sought to hold the master personally liable for the loan, where the bond is a valid bottomry bond, executed by the master as such, in a foreign port, for a voyage which has been duly performed, and where the ship and freight are applied, so far as they will go, to the payment of the bond, and where the master has made no special agreement to be responsible for the loan.

Upon this question, I remark, first, that the bottomry lender, in order to establish a personal liability on the part of the master, cannot resort to the general liability, which the master of a ship is presumed to incur for debts contracted and advances made in behalf of the ship. The implied contract of the master, arising, under the general rule of the maritime law, out of an advance of money for the ship, is extinguished when a lawful contract of bottomry is made, and the debt has been put at risk. All other obligations merge in the new contract, which places the lender in a new and different relation to the vessel, and it is to the rights and obligations arising out of the contract of bottomry alone that the lender must thereafter look. v [The holders of a bottomry bond are not therefore ordinary lien creditors, nor are they holders of a mortgage.] 2

The contract of bottomry, which is not only a contract of great sanctity, but also of great peculiarity, is not a mere agreement for security. “It is neither a sale, nor a partnership, nor a loan, properly speaking, nor insurance, nor a compound of different constructions — undique collatis membris — but it is a contract having a specific name (un con-trat nommé), and a character peculiar to itself.” Emerigon, Oontrat a la Grosse, c. 1, § 2. When once the bottomry risk has attached, the creditor becomes a bottomry lender, and nothing else. “He who lends money on bottomry makes a contract which is to be followed out in all its remedies as such.” Curtis, J., The Ann C. Pratt [Case No. 409]: Bray v. Bates, 9 How. (Mass.) 250; The Ann C. Pratt, 18 How. [59 U. S.] 63. The hold ers of a bottomry bond are, therefore, not holders of a mortgage, and the rules applied in cases of mortgage have little or no application here.

But although the only contract, on which these bottomry lenders can rely, is the contract of bottomry, it does not follow that they have not, by that contract, the personal liability of the master, upon the safe arrival of the ship, notwithstanding the circumstance that the instrument given to bind the ship does not. expressly provide for any personal liability of the master. A personal liability on the part of the master, in case of the safe arrival of the ship, may form part of a valid contract of bottomiy, as has often been held where that liability had been stipulated for in the bottomry bond.

The question here is, whether such a liability does not, by implication of law, constitute an element in every such contract, as, for instance, it does in the contract with the seamen. These bondholders maintain that such personal liability is implied by the maritime law, and that it can be resorted to, at least to make good any deficiency, after exhausting their remedies against the vessel and freight.

In support of their position the words of Lord Tenterden are cited, where he says the remedy of the lender on bottomry is “against the master or the ship” (Abb. Shipp. (5th Ed.) p. 156), and also the statement in Kent’s Commentaries (volume 3, p. 355), that "Tor the repayment of a sum borrowed on bottom-ry the iperson of the borrower is bound, as well as the property charged.” These two citations from the high authorities named will be found, on examination, not to be to the same point. The borrower alluded to by Chancellor Kent is not the master, but the owner of the ship, as the context shows. On page 360 the master will be found spoken of as distinguished from the borrower. So understood, the citation has no direct bearing on the question under discussion. The remark of Lord Tenterden must be understood as referring to such a bond as he describes in a subsequent paragraph, and sets out at length in his appendix, which contains a special covenant on the part of the master. Abb. Shipp, p. 160.

Reference is also made to the general principle of the maritime law, according to [95]*95which the master oí the ship is presumed to hind himself personally in every contract made on behalf of the ship, as showing the existence of such a liability in the contract of bottomry. But if such were the rule in all other eases, it would afford little reason for supposing the liability to exist in a contract of bottomry, for bottomry is a contract ■“resembling nothing and being consistent with nothing but itself’’. (Curtis, .T., The Ann C. Pratt [supra];; and I am of the opinion that the reasons, on which the general rule rests, will be found to be for the most part wanting in the case of bottomry. Take for instance the reasons which led to the personal liability of the master to the crew.

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Related

Salmon v. The Serapis
37 F. 436 (S.D. New York, 1889)
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35 F. 430 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Carolina, 1888)

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. Cas. 93, 6 Ben. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-irma-nyed-1872.