The Young Mechanic

30 F. Cas. 877, 1 Ware 535, 1854 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedApril 17, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 30 F. Cas. 877 (The Young Mechanic) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Young Mechanic, 30 F. Cas. 877, 1 Ware 535, 1854 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12 (D. Me. 1854).

Opinion

WARE, District Judge.

This is a libel in rem against the hull of a- new ship, since named the Young Mechanic, built the last season at Rockland, in this state, by a material man for the price of materials furnished by the libellant for building it. The libel is founded on the statute of the state giving to this description of creditors a lien on the ship, as a security for the price of the materials furnished. Wm. McLoon, the claimant, in his answer alleges that on or about ..the 8th of April, 1854, one Francis Rhoades, intending to build a ship during the season, applied to him for a loan of money to purchase the materials and pay the laborers; that -he. advanced for that purpose .the sum of $20,000; that on the 8th of May, Rhoades executed and delivered to him a mortgage of the materials for the sum advanced; and that having required further advances, he, on the 8th of November, executed another mortgage of the vessel -for the further sum of $20,000 advanced; that, aft-erwards the respondent. made further ad-vanees to the amount of about. $25,000, and on the 4th of December, Rhoades made an. absolute conveyance of the vessel to him, . and on the eighth of that -month died insolvent; that the estate was duly represented insolvent by the,administratrix, and commissioners of insolvency have been duly appointed.

The answer proceeds to state, by way of defence, that the whole advances - to the amount of $65,000 were made on the credit . of the ship. It is admitted that the articles mentioned in the - schedule annexed to the • libel were furnished by the libellant at the request of Rhoades, the builder on account, and on the credit of the ship; but it is contended that if the libellant ever had a lien on the ship, it,has been dissolved!by the ¡death and-insolvency-of: Rhoades.

.- The respondent having admitted- in,his .answer that the materials mentioned in the libel were furnished, for-and on account -of the vessel, the case .presents, but a single-question for decision; that is, whether,- admitting .that the libellant ever had a lien, it has been subsequently-dissolved by the-death and insolvency-of the-person who was owner.at •the time when the materials were furnished, and who remained so until the transfer, on •the 4th of December. ■ It appears to me very .clear, ’under this law, that a creditor who •has advanced money on a mortgage of-the materials, or the ship, is in no -better -condition to. defend against the liens of ¡material men, than’ the owner .or mortgagor; that he merely succeeds to the place of the owner,, the evident object of the law being to give to material men and laborers a lien on the vessel for their security, whoever may be the owner, paramount to-all other claims.

It is certainly true that there is the same apparent equity in allowing a privilege to a creditor, who loans money to be applied to -the building of a ship, if in fact it is so applied, as in allowing it to the furnisher of materials and the mechanics, by whose materials and labor the ship is made, and the Roman law allows the privilege to both -concurrently. For the thing thus created- by his money, in the pointed language of Domat, is as it were his, to the amount that his money has contributed to make it, “elle est -comme sienne jusqu’ & la concurrence de ce qu’il y a mis,” in the same sense and to the same extent as it is the material man’s or the mechanic’s. Domat, Lois Civiles, liv. 3,-tit. 1, § 5, Nos. 4, 6, 9-11. But the common law gives to the lender no such privilege, and the legislature has not seen fit in amendment of the law to extend the privilege to him, which it has given to the laborer and furnisher of materials. The 35th-section of the Revised Statutes of Maine, under which the - lien is claimed, is in these words: “Any -ship-carpenter, caulker, blacksmith, joiner, or other person, who shall furnish labor or materials for or on account of any vessel, building or standing on the stocks, or under repairs aft[878]*878er having "been • launched,: shall Jhave a 'lien bn such vessel for his wages''and materials ¡until four days after such vessel is launched, or such repairs afterwards 'have-¡.been completed; and may secure the same by an attachment on said vessel within‘that period, which shall have precedence over all other attachments.”

The question whether the lien is dissolved by the death and insolvency of the owner, must depend on the nature and quality of the lien or privilege, and-the right .and interest in the thing which it assures to the favored creditor. If it is secured ’by an attachment or - arrest of the vessel, within the time limited, it has a precedence- over all other attachments, that is, attachments of any-other creditors of the.owner. 'The law thus constituting it a privileged’lien,''it amounts to .a legal hypothecation-of the-ship, like a bottomry bond, or the lien of seamen for their wages. .The ship itself becomes-In some sense a debtor. It is a'jus in re, a proprietary interest in the thing,-which may be -enforced directly against the''thing itself by a libel in rem,. in.whose ever -possession it may be and to whomsoever the general title may be transferred. It is not indeed a full jus proprietatis in every sense, but one of a qualified nature. It does not -constitute the lien creditor a tenant in common with the general owner to all purposes, so that if the possession comes into his hands he can hold it as a tenant in common and--employ it in •that right; but it gives him an interest in the thing, and a right by judicial process to get his pay from it.. And this proprietary interest is as complete, -as -it is:in case of pawn or mortgage. In this respect -there is no difference between pawn and hypothecation; and such is the decision of the Homan law, íTnter pignus et hypothecam tantum nominis differt.” Dig. 20, 1, 5, 51; Just. Inst. 4, 6, 7; Domat, liv. 3, tit. 1, § 1,- note. The difference between them consists only in the remedy. The pawnee having the possession of the thing, may, in some cases at least, sell it and pay himself; but the hy-pothecary creditor, not having the possession, must obtain a judicial order before the thing is sold.

If this view of the subject is correct, It seems to follow on general principles, that in the event of the owner’s death and insolvency, the legal interest of the hypothecary creditor remains unaffected by the fact of insolvency and death, precisely as it would in a case of mortgage, the hypothecation being the precise equivalent to a mortgage containing a stipulation that the mortgagor shall retain the possession until the condition is broken. It being a transfer of a legal interest in the thing, jus in re, to the hy-pothecary creditor under a condition, after that is broken he has a right to hold the thing against all other persons, who derive title under the hypotheeators, in whatever manner their title is derived, whether from : contract,;'or -whether -it is cast upon them by operation of Jaw.

But if is said that the supreme court- of the state .has given a different construction to the -37th section of the same chapter, of the --Revised Statutes, which gives to- material men a similar lien on- houses. The language of the two sections, though not perfectly identical, is so nearly alike in the operative words, that there does not appear to be any satisfactory ground for making a distinction in the construction of the two, both being in pari materia, and both apparently having the. same general object, the. benefit of material men" and 'mechanics.

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Related

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28 Me. 511 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1848)

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Bluebook (online)
30 F. Cas. 877, 1 Ware 535, 1854 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-young-mechanic-med-1854.