The Susana

2 F.2d 410
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedOctober 21, 1924
Docket2215
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2 F.2d 410 (The Susana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Susana, 2 F.2d 410 (4th Cir. 1924).

Opinion

2 F.2d 410 (1924)

THE SUSANA.
ROBINS DRY DOCK & REPAIR CO.
v.
STEAMSHIP SUSANA CORPORATION et al.

No. 2215.

Circuit Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.

October 21, 1924.

John W. Oast, Jr., of Norfolk, Va. (J. Dexter Crowell, E. Curtis Rouse, and Crowell & Rouse, all of New York City, and Oast, Kelsey & Jett, of Norfolk, Va., on the brief), for appellant.

Edward R. Baird, Jr., of Norfolk, Va. (Murray, Aldrich & Roberts, of New York City, and Baird, White & Lanning and George M. Lanning, all of Norfolk, Va., on the brief), for appellees.

Before WOODS and ROSE, Circuit Judges.

ROSE, Circuit Judge.

On the 30th of July, 1917, the American steamship Susana, then owned by what called itself F. I. A. T. and was a corporation of the state of New York, was permanently registered at the custom house of the port of New York. At some time before April 20, 1920, and in some way not disclosed by the record, her ownership became vested in the Steamship Susana Corporation, a body corporate of the state of Delaware. It will for brevity be styled the owner. In April, 1920, she was in need of somewhat extensive repairs, and the appellant, the Robins Dry Dock & Repair Company, hereinafter referred to as the repairman, was employed by the owner to make them. The work was begun on April 20, 1920, and was completed on the succeeding 8th of June. There is no controversy that the repairman's bill of $77,190.59 was fair and reasonable. After she had been put in condition, she sailed away, and on the 20th of August in the same year was in the St. *411 Lawrence river in the province of Quebec. The repair bill was then unpaid, and on the day last mentioned the repairman caused proceedings in rem for its collection to be instituted against her in the Exchequer Court of Canada for the Quebec Admiralty District. In drafting the initial pleading, the repairman asked for $77,190.59, without specifying in what currency the figures of its claim were expressed, and of course, in a court of Quebec, its demand was necessarily understood to be for the named number of Canadian dollars. Nobody concerned then thought of the fact that in the exchange markets of the world a Dominion dollar was worth appreciably less than was one of the United States. Out of that oversight this litigation arose.

On the 11th of September, 1920, the owner bailed its ship, furnishing a stipulation in the sum of $80,000 Canadian currency. This, of course, covered the claim as made, but fell short by several thousands of American dollars of being the equivalent in our money of the repairman's bill. Two months later the owner filed its written admission of the justice of the repairman's claims and its consent to a decree in the latter's favor. One was accordingly entered for $87,032.37, the sum in Canadian currency at that time the equivalent of the repairman's bill. The stipulators thereupon paid the $80,000 for which they had become bound, a sum which, however, would then procure but $69,047.81 in the currency of the United States. Seemingly it was only after the payment had been made and the case terminated that the repairman woke up to the fact that about $8,000 of its admittedly proper bill was still unpaid, although the ship upon which it had had its lien was worth much more than the amount of the latter. It bided its time until the 19th of March of the succeeding year, 1921, when, finding that the Susana was in the Eastern district of Virginia, it filed its libel against her in rem and against the owner in personam in form to recover its full original bill of $77,190.59, but in substance to secure the something over 10 per cent. of it still unpaid. On the 21st of March the ship was arrested in the in rem aspect of the proceedings, and attached in that in personam as the property of the respondent, the owner. On the 12th of April the owner excepted to the libel, on grounds not disclosed by the record before us, and on the overruling of its exceptions it on the 25th of April filed its answer setting up the court proceedings in Quebec. It is obvious that, while what had there taken place might be a complete defense of the ship against the claim in rem, it might not necessarily bar the demand in personam upon the owner.

Meanwhile, and before the filing of this answer, other things had happened, and a new party had made its appearance in the court, although it had not as yet come into the case brought by the repairman. The right of this later comer dates back to the 25th of the preceding June, a date two weeks subsequent to the completion of the repairs upon the ship, but almost nine months prior to the institution of the proceedings in which she was attached in the instant case. On the date just mentioned the owner had given a preferred mortgage upon her to the Equitable Trust Company of New York, hereinafter referred to as the mortgagee, to secure a 90-day note for $350,000, with interest at 5 per cent. On the 12th of April, 1921, three weeks after the ship had been attached at the instance of the owner, the mortgagee by its separate libel sought to foreclose this mortgage. It altogether ignored the pendency of the repairman's proceedings. Perhaps it had not then heard of them; more probably it supposed that they could not affect its rights, or the ways in which it might enforce them. Before arresting the ship, it obtained an order of the court below permitting it to do so, although there was no reference therein to the fact that she was already in the custody of the court. On the 29th of April the repairman filed in the mortgagee's case what it called a special appearance. In this it called the court's attention to its own earlier libel, and set up that the mortgage sought to be foreclosed was not a preferred mortgage, over the foreclosure of which the court was given jurisdiction by the Act of June 5, 1920, because there had been no notation upon it of the repair bills then due.

The marshal held the ship. It was earning nothing, and costing not a little. The owner did not offer to bail it. The sooner it was sold the better, especially as that could be done without prejudicing the rights of either repairman or mortgagee. Accordingly on the 5th of May the court ordered her sale. It gave the mortgagee permission to bid at the sale, and if it became the purchaser authorized it to pay all but $27,500 of the purchase money by crediting the excess upon the mortgage debt due it. The $27,500 was to be paid in cash, and the sale was not to prejudice the rights of the repairman or of some other intervening petitioners as against the proceeds. It is admitted that the amount required to be paid in cash was sufficient to cover all their demands. On the *412 25th of May, the court confirmed a sale to the mortgagee for $110,000.

Something over a year later, on the 12th of June, 1922, it passed an order consolidating the two libels, having a few days before referred both of them to a special master, with directions to ascertain and report the amounts respectively due the various parties and their priorities, if any, as among themselves. His report was filed on the 23d of May, 1923. In substance he held that certain intervening petitioners had made out their claims and their right to a preference over the mortgage. To so much of the order of the court as confirmed this portion of the master's report no objection has been taken, and no further reference to it need be made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 F.2d 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-susana-ca4-1924.