The Kearsarge

14 F. Cas. 165, 1 Ware 546, 1855 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJanuary 3, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 F. Cas. 165 (The Kearsarge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Kearsarge, 14 F. Cas. 165, 1 Ware 546, 1855 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99 (D. Me. 1855).

Opinion

WARE, District Judge.

This is a libel by material men against the hull of a new ship, since named the Kearsarge, for the value of materials furnished. The case involves several questions of considerable importance to the ship-building interest in this state, some of which are novel and of no inconsiderable difficulty. Messrs. B. & E. Perkins of Bidde-ford, on the 9th of December, 1853, entered into a contract with Charles C. Sawyer and seven others, to build for them a new ship,— the builders to furnish all the materials and complete the vessel ready to receive her rigging, and to be delivered in the month of September following. The form and dimensions of the vessel are particularly set forth in the contract. By the agreement the builders were to get insurance on the vessel while she was on the stocks. The price agreed was $42 a ton, but the purchasers were to pay only for 650 tons admeasurement, if she even exceeded that tonnage. It was further agreed that the builders should give a mortgage of the vessel to the purchasers as a security for their advances, which was accordingly done in March, 1854. Two thirds of the price was to be paid while the work was in progress, and one third when she was completed and ready for delivery.

This contract having been made, the builders applied to Messrs. Lyman & Richardson, of this town, to supply them from time to time in the progress of the work with articles of ship-chandlery, which was accordingly done to the amount as charged in the bill of $944.-27. The builders having failed to pay, this libel is brought to enforce the lien for the price given by the statute of the state. It is not denied that the articles enumerated in the schedule annexed to the libel were furnished for and on account of this ship, together with another which the contractors were building at the same time, and in the same ship-yard. The influence which this fact, that the materials were furnished on account of two vessels and not of one only, has on the lien, will be considered after disposing of some particular objections which are independent of this.

A doubt was suggested at the argument, but not much insisted on, whether the benefit of the statute lien extended to a merchant who furnishes materials for the construction of a ship in the ordinary course of his business and trade. The words of the statute are: “Any ship-carpenter, caulker, blacksmith, joiner, or other person, who shall perform labor or furnish materials for or on account of any vessel building and standing on the stocks, or under repairs after having been launched, shall have a lien on such vessel for his wages or materials until four days after such vessel has been launched, or such repairs afterwards have been completed.” The doubt suggested is, whether the law having enumerated certain classes of mechanics and laborers, the additional words ‘or other person' ought not by a just interpretation of the law to be restricted to persons ejusdem generis. Though it may be probable that the legislature had principally in view the classes of persons named, as being the description of persons who most frequently needed this additional security, yet as they have used words which extend the remedy to all persons who render like services, it would be an unwarrantable construction of the law to limit its operation to any particular classes of the community.

[166]*166■ An objection is also made to certain items in the account as not being covered by the statute lien. First, there is a charge for Manilla cordage, which did not go into the construction of the vessel, but was used in making derricks employed by the workmen in moving and raising the timber. Two other charges for augers used by the mechanics in doing the work are open to the same objection, and I think it is well founded. It is said that heretofore it has been the practice of auditors in settling the accounts to allow such charges, and that they have been passed without objection. At the same time it is admitted that such allowance passed sub si-lentio, cannot be urged as an authority when the objection is taken. It may be said, in a certain sense, that tools used by mechanics in doing the work, and procured for that purpose, are furnished for and on account of the vessel. But the reasonable intendment of the law extends only to such materials as are used, and in some sense consumed in the construction of the ship, and when completed, make part of her either as incorporated into the body of the vessel or as appurtenant to her. Thus the law may perhaps cover materials used in the construction of a boat built for the ship’s use, and going with her as an appurtenance. This appears to me to be not only the natural and obvious intent of the law, but this construction is strengthened from the nature and operation of the lien. When, on a contract of sale, the law gives to the vendor a lien on the thing sold, as a security for the purchase-money, an imperfect title only passes to the vendee. But it becomes a perfect and unin-cumbered title when the price is paid. If the tools used by the mechanics, in the performance of the work, are, in the sense of the law, furnished for and on account of the vessel, by the payment of the price they would pass to the owners as appurtenant to the ship. Such, I think, cannot have been the intention of the legislature.

Another item in the account objected to is a charge of insurance paid by the libellants on a cargo of timber procured for the ship and used in her construction. Had such a charge been made by the vendor and fur-nisher of the materials, it might perhaps, like freight, be allowed as part of the cost of materials at the place of delivery, unless by the bargain they were to be delivered at the ship-yard of the builders, and then the insurance as well as freight would be involved in the price. But the insurance here was procured by a stranger, and if he can claim in this libel, it must be in the character of a material man. But.the mere payment of insurance on a cargo of lumber, though actually furnished for the ship and used in the construction, cannot give him the character of a furnisher of materials in the sense of the law. It is not sufficient for a party to show that his money was contributed to building the ship and has gone into her construction. The lien is . given by the statute not to persons generally who have contributed and furnished means towards building the ship, but to creditors of a certain description; and to entitle a party to the privilege, he must bring himself within the descriptive words of the statute as a furnisher of materials and labor. A person who merely pays the insurance on a cargo of materials, being an entire stranger to the contract for furnishing them, stands, in relation to the ship, merely as one who loans or advances money for her use, and whatever natural equity he may have against the vessel, he is not entitled to the statute lien.

Another objection is made which goes to the whole claim set up in the libel. It is that the materials were sold on credit. It is often stated in books of undoubted authority, in reference to this class of maritime liens, that giving credit is a waiver of the lien. But it is obvious that these general observations must be received with some limitation, since the credit is the sole foundation of the lien. The true formula, in which the doctrine is expressed, is that credit is a waiver when it is inconsistent with the lien. When it is not incompatible with the lien, whether it is waived or not is a question of intention.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 F. Cas. 165, 1 Ware 546, 1855 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-kearsarge-med-1855.