The Orient

18 F. Cas. 801, 10 Ben. 620, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 196
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 8, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 F. Cas. 801 (The Orient) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.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 Orient, 18 F. Cas. 801, 10 Ben. 620, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 196 (S.D.N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

CHOATE, District Judge.

This is a suit for seamen’s wages, and after default of the owners of the steamer and a decree in favor of the libellants but before the sale of tbe vessel, the insurers on the hull of a 'canal-boat which was totally lost by a collision with the Orient while the canal-boat was in tow of another steamer, applied by petition for leave to intervene for their interest and to have the decree opened and to be allowed to defend. They claim that the Orient is responsible for the collision on the ground of negligence; that the value of the Orient is not sufficient to pay in full the seamen and the claims for damage caused by the collision, and that in such a ease the lien of the party injured has a preference over the lien of the seamen. The petitioners have paid the loss and are subrogated to the rights of the owner of the canal-boat. Another libel is pending in this district against the Orient, filed by the master of the canal-boat on behalf of himself and the owners of the cargo, and is now prosecuted on behalf of the underwriters on the cargo. The petitioners have been allowed to file an answer to the libel of the seamen, denying that the amounts claimed are due to them. This question has, however, been now heard and the wages are shown to be due to the libellants as follows: Willetts, ?47.50; Collins, $94.84; Murphy, $94.84; Leather, $33.81; Bills, $50; Schreier, $50, in all $370.99. The collision happened September 25th, and the vessel was seized oy the marshal on process from this court October 11, 1879. The wages due were earned partly before and partly after the collision.

The petitioners have an interest, which, if they have a prior lien to the seamen, would require that the proceeds of the vessel be kept in the registry of the court until the rights of the parties shall be determined. They now ask this relief in case 'the wages shall be found due. Several foreign decisions are cited to sustain this claim. The first is the case of The Benares, 7 Notes ■ of Cas. (Supp.) 50. This was an action for damages against the Benares by collision in which bail had been given for the ship and also for the freight. And the question arose, on a motion that the bail should pay the amount of the freight into the yegistry, whether the amount, to be paid in under the English act limiting the liability of the owners, was the gross freight or the net freight. The owners claimed that they should deduct from the freight all the expenses of the voyage, which was to India and back^ito England, including the whole amount of seamen’s wages. And it was held that the statute intended by “freight due or to grow due for and during the voyage” the entire freight; that this expression could not 'be construed to mean the freight, less those expenses usually paid out of it or for the payment of which there was á lien on the freight. There was no claim of seamen here competing with the claim of the party injured by the collision, but simply a claim of the owners who had paid wages to deduct them from the freight which had been attached. The question which would be the superior lien did not arise in the case, and the opinion of Dr. Lushington seems not to touch that question. There is not even a dictum in the case adverse to the seamen’s lien for wages in such ,a case, as I understand the decision. The case of The Linda Flor, Swab. 309, is the only other reported English case cited. It was a suit for mariners’ wages against a Portuguese ship, and the claim was opposed by a party who had obtained' a decree against the vessel in a cause of damage, the proceeds being insufficient to meet all the claims. Dr. Lushington held that in such a case, there being no evidence that the foreign owners were insolvent, the injured party who had obtained a decree should be paid out of the fund in preference to the seaman. He applied to the case the equitable doctrine which governs cases of mar-shalling assets between competing claimants, that a party who has two funds to resort to shall, as against a party having only one of those funds to resort to, be remitted to the fund to which the other party cannot resort. And as the seamen could resort to the personal liability of the owners in their own country, which was assumed by the court to afford no practical remedy of any actual value to the other claimant, they should be compelled to do so; that in such a case to permit the seamen to reduce the only fund to which the 'injured party could resort would be merely to benefit the owners and relieve them from a part of the liability which the law imposed on them for the injury inflicted by them. I think this is the point of the decision. The learned judge indeed adds that “it is not to be forgotten that in all these cases of damage, or nearly all, the cause of the damage is the misconduct of some of the persons composing the crew.” I do not understand the de-[803]*803■cisión to rest in any considerable degree on this last suggestion. On the contrary, this seems to be thrown in merely as a suggestion, showing that in many cases no real injustice will probably be done by the application to a case like that before the court of the equitable doctrine of marshalling assets. The case is by no means an authority that, upon the sole ground of punishment for misconduct or retaliation, the seamen of the offending ship forfeit any of the rights which the maritime law gives them against their own vessel for their wages. Nor is this case an authority for the position that English seamen would, as against English parties suing in an English court for damage by collision, be remitted to their personal remedy against their English owners. The principle of marshalling assets would seem not to go so far. The important fact assumed by the court as existing, that the party injured would stand no chance of ■obtaining redress in a foreign court for any balance due to him of the owner’s liability, would not exist in such a case. It could not be assumed that in an English court the party injured would not receive full justice against the owners equally with the -seamen, and in such a case they would not be subjected to the expense, delay and uncertainty of a resort to a foreign tribunal, •perhaps in a half-civilized country, whose law might be wholly inadequate for their relief. Dr. Lushington says, in that case, •“In case of a foreign ship doing damage .and proceeded against in a foreign country, the injured party has no means of redress ■save by proceeding against the ship herself, which I apprehend is one of the most eo--gent reasons for all our proceedings in rem.” The only other English case cited is The Chimeera, unreported, but stated in The Linda Flor to be precisely like that case. It must be- assumed, therefore, that it was the •case óí foreign seamen competing with English parties who had a claim for damages by collision. The case of The Duna, 13 Ir. Jur. 358, was the case of a Russian ship proceeded against in the Irish admiralty court. It was like the case of The Linda Flor and is decided on the authority of that case. In the case of The Enterprise [Case No. 4,498], -the same rule was applied as against British seamen, on the ground that the law of -Great Britain controlled the case. And -Judge Lowell there says: “I believe no admiralty court of the United States has decided the general question of the order of priority of these liens.” The equitable doctrine of marshalling assets undoubtedly -prevails in admiralty courts and will be applied where its application will do no injustice. Thus even in a case of seamen’s wages where there are two funds to which they can resort, as the ship and the freight, each e’qually available and equally certain, they may for the benefit of other parties having only a claim on the ship, be decreed to be paid out of the freight.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 F. Cas. 801, 10 Ben. 620, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-orient-nysd-1879.