The Suliote

23 F. 919, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 8, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 23 F. 919 (The Suliote) 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 Suliote, 23 F. 919, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61 (S.D.N.Y. 1885).

Opinion

Brown, J.

This libel in rem was filed to recover the sum of £283 ($1,380) for supplies, consisting of white metal furnished in September, 1881, to the ship Suliote at Greenock, Scotland. The only question litigated is the liability of the vessel or of her owners upon the facts of the case; the parties having desired that the whole question, as respects the liability of either, should be considered and determined without reference to the form of the action.

The ship belonged to American owners. She was a stranger in Greenock, and the libelant had no knowledge of her master or owners. She arrived at that port with a cargo in August, 1881; and the master designated Clerk, Nuel & Co., of Greenock, as her collecting and disbursing agents there. They were an established firm of ship-brokers in that place, of good repute, and in good credit; and they were well known to the libelants. They collected the inward freights of the ship, amounting to about $17,500. The vessel being in need of remetaling, Clerk, Nuel & Co., through Mr. Nuel, since deceased, ordered the necessary white metal of the libelants. They furnished it, accordingly, prior to September 13, and the old metal was returned to them and credited on account. The libelants’ witnesses say. that Mr. Nuel told them that he was acting as agent of the ship and had authority to make inquires about prices; and that it was understood that the sale was made to the captain and owners; and that they gave no credit to Clerk, Nuel & Co. But it was “understood that payment would be made through Clerk, Nuel & Co. in cash, under discount, Mr. Nuel never having said anything about the ship’s taking credit.” No dealings were had with the captain in making the contract, nor were any inquiries made of him as to the terms of Clerk, Nuel & Co.’s authority. Both Mr. Nuel and the captain are dead. Their testimony was not procured; and there is no proof of the actual authority of Clerk, Nuel & Co., except such as is to be inferred from the circumstances of the case. It was understood at first that the bill should be paid by Clerk, Nuel & Co., “when the ship’s accounts were adjusted, in cash, under discount;” that there should be a discount [921]*921of 2|- per cent., and 1 per cent, additional if payment was made in cash, which, as I understand, might be at any time not exceeding one or two months after the sailing of the ship. This was the custom of the trade at Greenock. The bark did not sail until the seventeenth of November. On the twenty-first of September, about a week after the metal had been furnished and the bill, audited by the captain, had been rendered by the libelants to Clerk, Nuel & Co., the latter rendered to the captain of the ship their account of the debits and credits of the ship, in which the libelants’ bill was included as paid; and a receipted voucher, signed by Clerk, Nuel & Co. for this bill as well as for other bills., was also returned to the captain. The account also showed a credit amounting to £2,000, which Clerk, Nuel & Co. had deposited with Baring Bros. & Co. to the credit of the ship on the tenth of September, the same week in which the libelants’ supplies were furnished; and a final balance of £269, 8s., besides the amount needed to pay for the libelants’ bill, was thereupon receipted for to the captain, and was paid by Clerk, Nuel & Go. upon various subsequent drafts by the captain to answer the ship’s needs.

Shortly after sailing the ship met bad weather and was compelled to put back to Lamlash, 40 miles from Greenock. Her arrival was reported in the Greenock papers; and a mutiny of her crew, which led to judicial proceedings in Greenock, was also extensively commented upon. The captain finally sailed again from Lamlash on the ninth of January. During all this time the libelants had never consulted the captain in reference to the goods furnished by them, or the payment of their bill, and had never made any demand upon him. After the seventeenth of January, at some time not stated, and which does not definitely appear, requests for payment were made by the libelants of Clerk, Nuel & Co., to whom their bill had been rendered, as already stated, about the middle of September. As above observed, it “had been at first understood that they would settle the bill when the ship’s accounts were adjusted.” But after the ship had sailed for good they began to prevaricate, to speak of insufficient funds; and on various pretexts they put off payment, stating that they had not sufficient money, and that the owners would remit. In November following the firm failed and dissolved, and then, or shortly before, for the first time, the libelants instituted inquiries to ascertain who and where the owners were. On learning that they were in New York, the libelants forwarded to them a demand for the payment of their bill. Payment being declined, the present libel was filed on the fifth of December, 1883.

The evidence on behalf of the libelants show's that the charge upon their books was made against the “Bq. Suliote, and owners;” that it was usual at Greenock to furnish supplies on the order of ship-brokers, in the manner above stated, to be paid for, either in cash or at some time subsequent to the sailing of the vessel; but that it was “not usual in the case of a sale of goods to a foreign vessel, not known, [922]*922to permit her to depart without payment, except on the responsibility of reputable agents there;” and that in this case they did not know who or where the owners were, or anything as regards their responsibility, until their inquiries, after the failure of Clerk, Nuel & Co.

Upon the above facts I must hold that neither the vessel nor her owners are responsible for this bill.

1. It is well settled, under both the English and American law, that no maritime lien arises for supplies except in case of necessity, or apparent necessity, for the credit of the ship to obtain them. In the case of Thomas v. Osborn, 19 How. 22, 31, Curtis, J., states the law on this point as follows:

“To constitute a case of apparent necessity, not only must the repairs and supplies be needful, but it must be apparently necessary, for the master to have a credit to procure them. If the master has funds of his own which he ought to apply to purchase the supplies, which he is bound, by the contract of hiring, to furnish himself, and if lie has funds of the owners which he ought to apply to pay for the repairs, then no case of actual necessity to have a credit exists; and if the lender knows these facts, or has the means by the use of due diligence to ascertain them, then no case of apparent necessity exists to have a credit; and the act of the master in procuring a credit does not bind the interest of the general owners in the vessel.” The Lulu, 10 Wall. 192; Stephenson v. The Francis, 21 Fed. Rep. 715, 720.

The proofs show clearly that there was an abundance of funds available at Greenock, in the inward freights of the Suliote, to pay for all her repairs there, with a large surplus besides. There is no reason'to suppose that there was any concealment of this fact from the libel-ants when the supplies were ordered. There was then no possible motive for concealment; the facts were easily ascertainable; and if the libelants did not know them, as they now testify, although I think they must have known them at the time, it was clearly their own fault in making no proper inquiry. They do not say whether they made any inquiries on this subject of Clerk, Nuel & Co.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

American Stevedores, Inc. v. Trajan
118 F. Supp. 608 (E.D. New York, 1954)
Kishi v. The British Steamship "Willesden."
4 D. Haw. 407 (D. Hawaii, 1913)
City of Nampa v. Nampa & Meridian Irrigation District
115 P. 979 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1911)
The Priscilla
153 F. 476 (S.D. New York, 1907)
The Chicklade
120 F. 1003 (E.D. Virginia, 1903)
Constantine v. The Burton
84 F. 998 (D. Massachusetts, 1898)
De Lano v. The Alvira
63 F. 144 (N.D. California, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 F. 919, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-suliote-nysd-1885.