Two Marys

24 F. Cas. 451, 10 Ben. 558
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 F. Cas. 451 (Two Marys) 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
Two Marys, 24 F. Cas. 451, 10 Ben. 558 (S.D.N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

CHOATE, District Judge.

This is a libel for supplies and materials furnished by David W. McLean to a domestic ship for which a lien is claimed in the libel under the law of New York. The libel was filed Jan. 25. 1879. On this libel a monition was issued, returnable Feb. 11, 1879, ■ of which the marshal made return that on the 29th of January, 1879, he “attached the schooner at Hawkins' Dock, City Island.” An order for publication of notice for all persons in interest to appear and intervene was made on the 25th of January, but no publication has been made. It appears , by affidavit that •at the request of the libellant the marshal put no keeper on board at the time of the service of the process; that the vessel was then hauled out of the water undergoing repairs and not in a condition to be navigated .at all or to float in the water. Sept. 16, 1879, on motion of the libellant’s proctor an order was made that the marshal take the schooner into his custody under the original process and place a keeper in charge. Thereupon the marshal resumed the custody of the vessel and removed her to a pier in the East river. On the 20th of September, one Hawkins appeared as claimant, averring in his claim that at the time of the seizure he was in possession óf the schooner, reconstructing her, and claiming a common law lien therefor to the amount of $5,000. He offered a bond under the act of 1847 [9 Stat. 181], in double the amount of libellant’s claim, and gave notice to libellant’s proctor of the justification of his sureties for the 22d of September. The libellant’s proctor did not appear and the bond was approved and an order was made in the usual form for the release of the vessel on the same day. The marshal thereupon gave to the claimant’s proctor a notice to the keeper to discharge the vessel. The claimant took a tug and proceeded with this notice to the vessel, exhibited the notice to the keeper but declined to give it up. He met there the libel-lant’s proctor, and one Crowley, who claims to have been previously appointed master of the schooner and who also appears to be the owner of one-sixteenth part of her. It is very difficult to ascertain with certainty from the conflicting affidavits, what occurred on the vessel at that time. It is sworn by witnesses on behalf of the libellant and Crowley, that the claimant did not demand the delivery of the schooner to him; but I am satisfied that the libellant’s proctor and Capt. Crowley, as well as the keeper, understood that he was there for the purpose of taking possession of the schooner upon the discharge of the attachment. A controversy appears to have arisen, Crowley and libellant’s proctor insisting that Hawkins, had no right to be there. The result of this controversy was that Hawkins, the claimant, was by the procurement of these parties or one of them taken under arrest by a police officer and compelled to leave the vessel. He seems to have refused to exhibit his authority to receive the vessel to libellant’s proctor, but the evidence shows concert of action between the libel-lant and Capt. Crowley, the libellant now claiming to be the principal owner and Crowley as master claiming to act by his appointment and under his directions. After Hawkins left the vessel the keeper went away, leaving Capt Crowley on the vessel, who claims now to have been left in possession by the discharge of the attachment. The result is in reality that the libellant has, or appears to have through Capt Crowley, possession of the vessel; and through her seizure on his libel and her subsequent discharge, the claimant, if he was the party in possession, has been dispossessed. This is a motion on behalf of the claimant that the marshal retake the vessel and restore her to him, and for other relief. The libel-lant and the said Crowley appear to oppose the motion.

Although the customary order for discharging an arrest of the vessel is simply that she be released from custody, yet it is the duty of the court, on the dissolution of an attachment under its process, to cause the vessel to be restored to the party who was in possession at the time the officer of the court took her into custody. The process of the court in its execution and discharge must not be used as the means indirectly of taking a vessel from one party and giving it to another. In the case of The Neptune, 3 Hagg. Adm. 132, Sir John Nicholl says: “Had bail been given to the action for wages, the ship would be delivered up, upon the removal of the arrest, to the party previously in possession, whoever he might have been.” Mr. Dunlap in his treatise says: “In the admiralty courts of the United States, in all civil causes, except perhaps those of bottomry and by hypothecation, it is usual for the court upon application to deliver the property to the claimant from whose possession it has been taken, upon bail or stipulation with ample security, conditioned in some cases for the restoration of the property, in others for the payment of the amount which may be decreed to the li-bellant and his costs.” Dunl. Adm. Prac. p. 166. I cannot agree with the counsel for the libellant that the marshal’s duty is simply to withdraw his keeper and leave the vessel, without regard to whether she thereby falls into the hands of her owners, or strangers, or river thieves. It is his duty under these authorities upon the termination of his custody to replace her in the possession of the party from whose possession [453]*453he took her. An admiralty suit in rem proceeding in proper course is a suit against all the world, against whoever has or claims to have any interest in the vessel, and where the proper notice is given, including the publication of notice to all persons interested to intervene according to the rules and practice of the court, all persons having an interest who do not appear are in default; and a claimant, who does appear and gives bond for value or under the act of 1847 for double the amount of libellant's claim and whose right to intervene as claimant is not challenged by the libellant or some other party intervening, is to be held to be by the aeauiescence of all the parties to the suit the party entitled to the possession.- A claim thus made is an application to the court for the possession of the vessel on giving bail. Thus in the case already cited, the court says: “The warrant of arrest calls upon all persons who have an interest to appear and show cause, and if the party in possession at the time the warrant was executed is no longer in possession, it is. I repeat, his own default; he has, by not appearing to give ball, acquiesced in being dispossessed and has thus allowed the proceeds arising upon the sale of the ship to come into the registry of the court.” 8 Hagg. Adm. 132.

Now in this case it appears that there are two parties who claim to have been in possession at the time the marshal took the-vessel under the process of the court, the claimant Hawkins, who has appeared, and the captain or the alleged captain and owner Crowley, who has not appeared as claimant but only to resist this motion. If publication had been made and the default.of all persons not appearing had been entered, Crowley could not dispute the right of the claimant Hawkins to the possession of the vessel upon discharge of the arrest. But there having been no publication, I do not think he is in default, and he should have an opportunity to contest Hawkins’ right to appear as claimant, which is based upon an alleged actual possession of the ship as a lienor at the time of the arrest.

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Related

The Two Marys
12 F. 152 (S.D. New York, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 451, 10 Ben. 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/two-marys-nysd-1879.