The Superior

23 F. Cas. 428, 5 Sawy. 346, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 56
CourtDistrict Court, D. California
DecidedJanuary 3, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 23 F. Cas. 428 (The Superior) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Superior, 23 F. Cas. 428, 5 Sawy. 346, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 56 (californiad 1879).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

The facts of this case are not seriously disputed. In the early part of 1870, one Johnson succeeded in getting possession of, and making away with, the schooner Superior, then in the custody of the libellant as sheriff of the city and county of San Francisco, under an attachment levied at the suit of the California Cracker Company against one Clay, the alleged beneficial owner. Johnson, after putting a crew on board, proceeded with the schooner, and in command of her, to Port Townsend, Washington territory, where he contracted debts to a considerable amount for supplies and necessaries. The sheriff, having ascertained her whereabouts, followed her to Port Townsend, and was about to reclaim her, when Rothschild, who had furnished the supplies, filed a libel against her in the admiralty court of the territory. The sheriff thereupon paid Rothschild’s bill, took an assignment of his claim, and returned with the vessel to this city.

She remained in his possession until on or about the eleventh of December, 1876, when judgment having been obtained by the cracker company in the suit against Clay, and execution issued, she was sold by the sheriff at public auction, the company becoming the purchaser. On the fifteenth of January, 18Í7, Peter Larsen filed a libel in this court against the schooner, which was then in possession of the cracker company, under a bill of sale to them by the sheriff. The vessel remained in the custody of the marshal until on or about January 29, 1877, when Orrington Betts, m whose name she stood in the records of the custom house, sold her to Thomas D. Young, the present claimant, for the sum of eight thousand four hundred dollars, of which one thousand two hundred dollars was paid in cash, and applied in satisfaction of Larsen’s claim, and the balance by a negotiable promissory note, which has since been paid. The bill of sale executed by Betts to Young was at once recorded, and the cracker company having failed to record their bill of sale from the sheriff,.the property in the vessel was subsequently adjudged to Young, as an innocent, bona fide purchaser for value from the legal owner of record under a bill of sale having priority of record. On the thirtieth day of January, the present libel was filed by Nu-nan, as the assignee of Rothschild.

The claim of the libellant, if maintained, involves the affirmation of the following propositions: 1. That Rothschild had a valid lien on the vessel; 2. That the sheriff had the capacity to, and in fact did, succeed to the rights of Rothschild, by virtue of the latter’s assignment to him; 3. That his official sale of the vessel, without notice of the existence of the lien, did not amount to a waiver of it in favor of a subsequent purchaser for value, and without notice; 4. That his lien has not been lost by his laches in prosecuting.

1. In determining the first point, it is not necessary to consider the general question whether a mere trespasser who, by force or fraud, has succeeded in making away with a vessel, and who has no color of possessory or proprietary right, can make contracts with innocent third parties which will bind her in rem as against her real owners.

The facts in this«ease do not present such a question. Prima facie, the person in peaceable and undisputed possession of the ship as master is presumed to have been duly appointed. If the owner seeks to avoid con[429]*429tracts made or liens created by him under the circumstances above suggested, the burden of proof is on him to establish the facts. No attempt to do so has been made in the case at bar.

On the contrary, it appears that at the time of the escape, Johnson appeared on the custom-house records as her lawful master. Whether he had been discharged during the time she remained in the sheriff's custody does not appear. It is certain, however, that no one had been substituted for him of record at the custom-house. Nor is the conjecture or suspicion that Johnson escaped with the vessel with the connivance, or at the instigation, of the owners, repelled by any evidence whatever.

If, then, this were a suit between the material-man and the owners of the vessel at the time of the escape, 1 should feel little hesitation in holding that the latter had offered no evidence on which the claim of the former could be disallowed.' I shall, therefore, in the further consideration of this ease, assume that Kothschild acquired a valid lien on the vessel, which he could have enforced against the owner. Whether it would have been equally enforceable against the sheriff is more doubtful. The latter might, with some plausibility, have urged that the lien of the attaching creditor was prior and paramount to any liens growing out of the contracts made by a person whose possession had been obtained by a flagrant violation of law.

That he, the sheriff, was entitled to the exclusive possession of the ship, and that, in legal contemplation, she was still in custodia legis; that he had a right to invoke the pow-' ers of a court of admiralty to reinstate him in the possession of which he had been illegally divested; and that it must continue until the lien of the attaching creditor should be either dissolved by an adverse judgment in the pending suit, or by a satisfaction out of the proceeds of the vessel when sold; and that in the last case the material-man could only look for the payment of his demand to the surplus that might remain on such sale, after satisfying the judgment of the attaching creditor.

It may be that a possessory suit by the sheriff could have been maintained on these grounds, even against the claims of the material-man to a lien. It might be objected, however, that such a suit would be an indirect mode of visiting the consequences of the sheriff’s own negligence upon an innocent party, who, but for that negligence, would have had no dealings with the vessel; that the attaching creditor was amply protected by the sheriff’s liability on his official bond; and that the sheriff could not escape or diminish that liability by easting the loss upon an innocent party who had dealt on the credit of the vessel, and without knowledge or means of knowledge of the facts, with a person whose possession and apparent authority were exclusively the result of the sheriff s negligence in the performance of his official duty. If there be any force in these last suggestions it follows that the sheriff, in paying off the claims of the supply-man, did no more than his duty, and^in fact, was only meeting a liability which he had already incurred. In that view the claim of the supply-man would be deemed to be extinguished by the payment by the sheriff, and the latter would have no demand on any one for reimbursement, and consequently could have no lien to enforce it. I am not sure, however, that this would be the legal result.

On the contrary, 1 incline to think that if the lien of the attaching creditor had been dissolved, either by an adverse judgment in the suit, by bonding of the vessel, or by a settlement of his claim, and the vessel had Deen restored to the owner, the sheriff might, on producing the assignment to him of the supply-man’s demand, and on proof that the escape was by the instigation or with the connivance of the owners, and that the master who had contracted the debt was their agenté be subrogated to all the rights in per-sonam and in rem of the supply-man.

But no such proofs have been presented in this case, and besides' the suit is not against the vessel in the hands of the owner, who may have instigated Johnson to commit the trespass, but against a purchaser for value without notice.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. Cas. 428, 5 Sawy. 346, 1879 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-superior-californiad-1879.