The Lida Fowler

113 F. 605, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 371
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 7, 1902
DocketNo. 41
StatusPublished

This text of 113 F. 605 (The Lida Fowler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Lida Fowler, 113 F. 605, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 371 (E.D. Pa. 1902).

Opinion

J. B. McPHERSON, District Judge.

The facts in this case, which are undisputed, may be thus stated, substantially in the words of libel-ant’s counsel:

This is a proceeding in rem by the Society for the Relief of Distressed and Decayed Pilots, Their Widows and Children, incorporated under the Pennsylvania statute of September 29, 1789, against [606]*606the schooner Lida Fowler, for the sum of $48, with interest, a sum equal to the outward pilotage of the schooner from the port of Philadelphia. On or about March 12, 1901, the Lida Fowler, a registered American vessel of more than 100 tons burden, drawing 12 feet or more of water, engaged in general trading, not solely coal laden, nor engaged in the coal trade, and not licensed as a coasting vessel, was in the port of Philadelphia, about to sail to Central America or the West Indies, and back to the United States. Under the Pennsylvania statute of March 24, 1851 (P. L. 229), she was bound to take a duly licensed pilot of the port; but, notwithstanding that duty, she was towed away without having made an effort to obtain such a pilot, thus neglecting or refusing the statutory duty.

On March 12th, and for a long time prior thereto, the licensed pilots of the port of Philadelphia maintained an office at 319 Walnut street, in this city, for the purpose of supplying pilots to all vessels which under the law were bound to take a pilot; and this fact the captain of the Lida Fowler knew. It is an established custom of the port that the captains or agents of all vessels outward bound shall make application for pilots at that office. On the day the schooner sailed, and for more than 24 hours before and after that time, there were several licensed pilots in attendance at the office, any one of whom could have been employed to take her to sea; but her master made no effort to engage their services, and left the port, without a pilot on board. The libelant, being entitled in such case under the act of 1851 to receive a sum equal to the pilotage fee (Collins v. Society, 73 Pa. 194), demanded payment from the agents of the schooner, and, upon their refusal, attached the vessel.

Sections 5 and 6 of the act of March. 24, 1851 (P. L. 230), are as follows:

“Sec. 5. Every vessel arriving from or bound to any foreign port or place, and every other vessel of the burthen of one hundred tons or upwards, sailing from.or bound to any port not within the river Delaware (except licensed coasting vessels sailing from this port), shall be obliged to take a pilot; and it shall be the duty of the master of every such vessel, within thirty-six hours next after his arrival at said port of Philadelphia, to make a report to the master warden of the name of such vessel, her draught of water and the name of the pilot who shall have conducted her to this port, and when any such vessel shall be outward bound, and not duly licensed to coast, the master of such vessel, and the pilot who is to conduct her to the Capes, and the draught of water at that time; and it shall be the duty of the wardens to enter every such vessel (reported as aforesaid) in a book to be kept by them for that purpose, and if the master of any such vessel shall neglect or refuse to make such report he shall forfeit and pay the sum of ten dollars, and no more. And if the master of any such vessel, being licensed as a coasting vessel, and of the burthen of one hundred tons, or more, shall refuse or neglect to take a pilot, the master, or owner or consignee of such vessel shall forfeit and pay the sum equal to half pilotage of such vessel; and if such vessel be not licensed as aforesaid, then and in such case, the master, owner or consignee thereof, shall forfeit and pay the full pilotage thereof: Provided, always, that wherever it shall appear to the wardens, that in the case of an inward-bound vessel, should a pilot not offer before such yessel reached the Brandywine lighthouse, bearing east, or in case of an outward-bound vessel, that a pilot could not be obtained for twenty-four hours after such vessel was ready to depart, the penalty aforesaid for not having a pilot shall not be incurred.
“Sec. 6. All sums due for pilotage, half-pilotage, and all other claims and [607]*607penalties in the nature or in lieu thereof, shall, as they accrue, become and remain a lien upon the vessel chargeable therewith, her tackle, apparel and furniture, until they are paid; and for the recovery thereof, in addition to the remedies now provided (and which shall remain as heretofore), such process and proceedings shall issue and be had in the court of common pleas of Philadelphia county, or in any court possessing admiralty jurisdiction, as are usually had in courts of admiralty for the recovery of seamen’s wages. And all half-pilotage forfeitures and penalties in the nature thereof, accruing by virtue of this act, and all other debts, claims and demands, 1o which ‘The Society for the Relief of Distressed and Decayed Pilots, Their Widows and Children,’ are legally or equitably entitled to. under any law whatever, shall be recovered in the name and for the use of the said society, to whom, or to whose agent, duly constituted, the same shall be paid: Provided, that in all suits and proceedings, to which ‘The Society for the Relief of Distressed and Decayed Pilots, Their Widows and Children,’ shall be a party, no person shall be incompetent to testify as a witness, because of his being a member thereof.”

The defenses set up by the schooner are thus stated in the brief of its counsel:

“(i) That the provision of the act of 1851, providing that the amount of the penalty for the failure to take a pilot should be a lien upon the vessel, is invalid, because the legislature of this state lacked authority to provide that the penalty should be a maritime lien upon a vessel.
“(2) That this court has 110 jurisdiction of this action in rem, because the provision of the Pennsylvania act for a lien for the amount of the penalty is absolutely invalid.
“(3) That this court has no jurisdiction of an action to recover a penalty provided for by the laws of the state of Pennsylvania.”

The first and second grounds of defense are practically one, and neither, I think, is well taken. The supreme cotirt of the United States has distinctly decided that, where the subject of state legislation is maritime in its character, the legislature may give a lien upon the vessel, and the enforcement of such lien may he committed to the courts of admiralty. It is enough to quote the following paragraphs from The Corsair, 145 U. S. 347, 12 Sup. Ct. 952, 36 L. Ed. 731, and The J. E. Rumbell, 148 U. S. 11, 12, 13 Sup. Ct. 500, 37 L. Ed. 347:

The Corsair: “A maritime lien is said by writers upon maritime law to be the foundation of every proceeding in rem in the admiralty. In much the larger class of eases, the lien is given by the general admiralty law; but in other instances, such. Cor example, as insurance, pilotage, wharfage, and materials furnished in the home port of the vessel, the lien is given, if at all, by the local law. As we are to look, then, to the local law in this instance for the right to take cognizance of this class of cases, we are bound to inquire whether the local law gives a lien upon the offending thing. If it merely gives a right of action in personam for a cause of action of a maritime nature, the district court may administer the law by proceedings in personam, as was done with a claim for half pilotage

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Related

Ex Parte McNiel
80 U.S. 236 (Supreme Court, 1872)
The Corsair
145 U.S. 335 (Supreme Court, 1892)
The J. E. Rumbell
148 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1893)
Collins v. Society for Relief of Distressed & Decayed Pilots
73 Pa. 194 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1873)
The Glendale v. Evich
81 F. 633 (Fourth Circuit, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 F. 605, 1902 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-lida-fowler-paed-1902.