The Rapid Transit

11 F. 322, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Tennessee
DecidedMarch 18, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 11 F. 322 (The Rapid Transit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Rapid Transit, 11 F. 322, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57 (W.D. Tenn. 1882).

Opinion

Hammond, D. J.

A disputed question of fact lies at the threshold of this case. If Ashford’s testimony be true, Collins has no claim whatever of'any kind. The testimony was read at the bar, and I have since carefully read it twice without any very satisfactory conviction either way. And I am quite as much at a loss to say where the burden of proof lies, — whether on Collins, to prove that the sale to the corporation was of the vessel as she stood; or on the other intervening libellants, contesting his claim, that it was as she would be after the changes in her construction. The case should not have been left to stand on the conflict between the two witnesses Collins and Asliford. The other part owner, Holterhoff, no doubt knows all about it, and perhaps other persons who appear in the record, and they should have been examined. The fact that they were not is against Collins, whose testimony does not impress me favorably. I am inclined to think, however, that the burden is on the Memphis creditors to show that Collins and Holterhoff were to pay for the reconstruction, and on the record as it stands they have not answered that burden. But, notwithstanding the disagreeable impression of Collins’ deposition, there is some corroboration in the documentary proof, although it may be that he has overreached Ashford, as suggested by counsel, in the matter of writing up the documents; and I must hold, without taking space to analyze the proof, that the corporation is liable for the reconstruction.

It was a Kentucky corporation to which the vessel was sold, and the remodeling being done in that state there is no lien under the general maritime law. I do not think the fact that while the work was going on the boat, on account of low water, was dropped down to Cairo, in another state, where it was completed, affects that result. We cannot separate that done in Kentucky from that done in Illinois, it being an entire contract. Besides, the boat, as she lay at Cairo, [325]*325was not while on a voyage found in a foreign port in necessitous circumstances, in the sense of the maritime law, but was carried there by consent of all parties for convenience of completing what was begun, and could have very well been finished in Kentucky. It wah said in Conrad v. Atlantic Ins. Co. 1 Pet. 386, 436, that it is no objection to a respondentia loan that the money was paid after the departure of the ship on the voyage. The same principle applies to bottomry bonds. The Draco, 2 Sumn. 157, 180; The Mary, 1 Paine, 671. In the ineipiency of a contract for repairs or supplies I doubt not the location of the vessel is a necessary element in determining the question of lion, but I find no trace of any principle that requires the furnishing to be completed in that place as affecting it; and it would be adding to the perplexities, not to say absurdities, of our maritime law, created by the peculiar relation of our contiguous states to each other and the subject-matter, to hold, where a contract for repairs or supplies to be furnished at one place cannot be entirely executed at that place and is finished at another, that the existence or non-existence of a lien must be determined with reference to the particular articles furnished in the one place or the other. Desty, Adm. §§ 68-91; 2 Pars. Ship. 322-337.

In the case of The Isaac Davis, narrated by Judge Hopkinson in Sarchet v. The Davis, Crabbe, 185, 199, it appears that a vessel built and owned in Delaware was carried in an incomplete condition to Philadelphia to be rigged, and Chief Justice Taney doubted whether the workmen and material-men at Philadelphia had a lien under any circumstances, because, among other things, “coming here in this condition and for this purpose, she could not in any sense be said to be in her passage from Fredriea to Philadelphia to have sailed on a voyage from one port to the other.” He decided that the owner, being of credit and having made the contract for the rigging, there was no lion, whether it be treated as repairs or original construction, though he thought it was probably not repairs. See The Iosco, 1 Brown, Adm. 495, and The Eliza Ladd, 3 Sawy. 519. So, on the facts of this case, in any view there was no lion for the work done at Cairo under the general maritime law. The Kentucky corporation, through Collins, bad made the contract for the work, and there is no satisfactory proof that it was done on the credit of the vessel, but rather on the credit of the corporation or Collins himself, a wealthy man, the former owner and the'chief man in the corporation. Whether there could be any lien claimed under Illinois statutes I am not advised; nor does it seem important, in the view I take, to inquire as to these [326]*326statutes, for I hold that the work done at Cairo (except, perhaps, the painting) was a continuation of the work commenced in Kentucky, and is to be treated as if done there and not in Illinois; and, for the reasons I have already stated, as the general maritime law would not operate to give a lien, I do not see why a court of admiralty, under the facts and circumstances of this case, should consider a state statute as applicable to so much of the work as happened to be executed there. In the case of The H. C. Yaeger, 1 Fed. Rep. 285, on analogous principle it was held that services rendered a stranded boat should not be considered as rendered in her “home port,” although she was within the territorial limits of her home state, she having commenced her voyage to a “foreign port.”

Necessarily, until congress relieves us by legislation, the courts, in dealing with this subject of supply liens under the maritime law and state statutes, must not press the rules made to govern in commerce between actually foreign countries, separated by oceans, gulfs, and straits, or contiguous thereto, to the ridiculous and absurd consequences that would constantly present themselves in the application of those rules to our states and their commercial intercourse along these inland rivers. If a steam-boat lying at Memphis, in Tennessee, and belonging here, be undergoing repairs, and necessity requires that she be moored at Hopefield, a bare landing in Arkansas, across the river, and they be there continued, it would seem an unreasonable application of the distinctions between “home” and “foreign” ports to separate the work before and after such mooring, to give a lien under the general law or any state statute, and better to consider the furnishing as done at Memphis. In the case of The Ratler, Taney’s Dec. 456, there was' a separation of a contract for repairs or supplies, where there was a change of ownership pending the execution of the work, but there a different principle was of obvious application.

The claims, then, for the remodeling cannot be 'allowed as a lien on any theory of the general maritime law, inasmuch as they were done in Kentucky, where the corporation which owned the boat resided. It matters not that the furnishers resided in Ohio or New York, if they did, for it is not their place of residence that controls the question, but the residence of the owner. 2 Pars. Ship. 326; The Eliza Jane, 1 Spr. 152, 156. The claim of Farrer & Tufts, of Buffalo, New York, deserves special attention in this connection; it is'for the price of wheels which reached the boat at Cairo. But the proof shows conclusively they were bargained for by Collins himself, [327]*327either as owner or as agent for the corporation, and on its credit and not on that of the vessel.

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. 322, 1882 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-rapid-transit-tnwd-1882.