The Lulu

77 U.S. 192, 19 L. Ed. 906, 10 Wall. 192, 1869 U.S. LEXIS 1057
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 21, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 77 U.S. 192 (The Lulu) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Lulu, 77 U.S. 192, 19 L. Ed. 906, 10 Wall. 192, 1869 U.S. LEXIS 1057 (1870).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Experience shows that ships and vessels employed in commerce and navigation often need repairs and supplies in *197 . course of a voyage, when the owners of the same are absent, and at times and places when and where the master may be without funds, and may find it impracticable to communicate seasonably with the owners of the vessel upon the subject.

Contracts for repairs and supplies, under such circumstances, may be made by the master to enable the vessel to proceed on her voyage, and if the repairs and supplies were necessary for that purpose, and were made and furnished to a foreign vessel or to a vessel of the United States in a port other than a port of the State where the vessel belongs, the prinid facie presumption is that the repairs and supplies were made and furnished on the credit of the vessel unless the contrary appears from the evidence in the case.

Where it appears that the repairs and supplies were necessary to enable the vessel to proceed on her voyage, and that they were made and furnished in good faith, the presumption is that the vessel, as well as the master and owners, is responsible to those who made the repairs and furnished the supplies, unless it appears that the master had funds on hand, or at his command, which he ought to have applied to the accomplishment of those objects, and that they knew that such was the fact, or that such facts and circumstances were known to them as were sufficient to put them upon inquiry and to show that if they had used due diligence in that behalf they might have ascertained that the master, under the rules of the maritime law, had no authority to contract for the repairs and supplies on the credit of the vessel.

Repairs and supplies amounting to eight thousand seven hundred and ninety-six dollars and twenty-one cents, as adjudged by the District Court, were made and furnished by the various parties mentioned in the record to the steamship Lulu, at the request of her master, while she was lying in the port of Baltimore, and the owners of the steamer refusing to pay for the same, those several parties, including the appellants in this case, filed separate libels against the Steamer in the District Court to recover the amount of their *198 respective claims. Monitions were issued in the several suits, and the steamer was arrested to answer to the allegations of the respective libels.

Appearance was entered in each suit by the owners of the. steamer as claimants, and on their petition, and pursuant to the order of the court, the steamer was sold by the marshal and the proceeds of the sale were paid into the registry of the court to abide such further order of the court as might be made in the respective causes.

Answers were filed by the claimants to the several libels and the suits were subsequently consolidated, and the order of the court was to the effect that they should be heard together.

Testimony was taken on both sides and the District Court entered a decree that the several libels filed in the cáse, except one, “be allowed a.s liens against the steamer to the amount of the respective claims,” and by the decree of distribution the court awarded to the appellants the sum of two thousand three hundred and thirty-seven dollars and forty-six cents, as appears of record.

Appeal was taken from that decree by th'e claimants to the Circuit Court for the same district, where the parties were again heard, and the Circuit Court reversed the decree of the District Court and ordered, adjudged, and decreed that so much of the fund in the registry of the court as was applicable to the payment of the appellant’s claim, under the decree of the District Court, should be paid to the claimants as the owners of the steamer. Dissatisfied" with that ^decree the libellants appealed from the same to this court, and now insist that it ought to be reversed.

Prior to the twenty-fourth of August, 1866, the title to the • steamer was in the grantors of the claimants, but the claimants admit, in their answers, that their grantors, as well as themselves, were residents of New York, and that the port’of New York was the home port of the steamer. "Whatever title they have was' acquired by virtue of a bill of sale executed on that day, and the record shows that it is duly recorded in' the custom-house of that port. Although *199 the bill of sale is' absolute in form the claimants allege that it was intended only as a mortgage, but the fact alleged is of no impprtance in the decision of the case, as it is admitted that the former owners, as well as the claimants, were residents of a State other than the one where the repairs were made and the supplies furnished, and that the steamer belonged to a port of the State, where her owners resided.

When arrested the steamer had beeu engaged for a period of eleven months in carrying passengers and freight between the ports of Baltimore, iu the State of Maryland, and Charleston, in the State of South Carolina, and the evidence is full to the point that the repairs made and the supplies furnished were necessary to enable the steamer to continue' to make her regular trips between those ports and to fulfil the obligations to the travelling and commercial publie which her owners had contracted. Argument upon that topic is quite unnecessary, as the point is conceded by the claimants, but they deny that the repairs and supplies were made and furnished, on the credit of the steamer, or that'the evidence shows that there was any necessity for any such credit to the steamer. • Full proof is exhibited that the repairs were made and. the supplies furnished in the several cases at the request of the master, and there is no proof whatever that he had any funds which he ought to have applied, or which he could have applied, to accomplish those objects or any other.

Attempt is made to show that the agent of the steamer had funds derived from freight which might have been so applied, but the evidence iu the case fails to establish that theory and satisfies the court that he had no funds of the owners and that he was not under any obligations to grant them any further credit for that purpose.

Unless the repairs or supplies, as the case may be, aré necessary to render the ship or vessel seaworthy or to enable her to prosecute her voyage, it is quite clear that the master, as between himself and the owners, is not authorized to make any such contracts or purchases either on the credit *200 of the vessel or her owners. Such necessity usually arises when the ship or vessel is in a port distant from the owners, and oftentimes when they have no knowledge or means of knowledge'.§s to the actual condition of the vessel, and it is chiefly for that reason that, the authority is reposed in the master to act in their .behalf and for the best inteiest of all concerned, but it should be borne in mind that his authority in that respect is limited to the circle of duties which that necessity requires should be performed before the owners can be consulted.

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Bluebook (online)
77 U.S. 192, 19 L. Ed. 906, 10 Wall. 192, 1869 U.S. LEXIS 1057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-lulu-scotus-1870.