Walker v. The Lotus No. 2

26 F. 637, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Alabama
DecidedJanuary 27, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 26 F. 637 (Walker v. The Lotus No. 2) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. The Lotus No. 2, 26 F. 637, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17 (S.D. Ala. 1886).

Opinion

Bruce J.

We are met at the threshold of this case with the question, what was the home port of the vessel the Lotus No. 2? She was owned by the Columbus Packet Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Mississippi, with its place of business at Columbus, in that state. This company executed to the Columbus Insurance & Banking Company, of that place, a mortgage upon the vessel to secure a debt which had been contracted to put new machinery and repairs upon the vessel. The mortgage bears date April 12, 1884, and it was received for record in the collector’s office, custom-house, Mobile, April 14, 1884. The vessel was enrolled in the custom-house, Mobile, and bill of sale from John Doyle of Columbus, Mississippi, to the Columbus Packet Company was received for record, custom-house, Mobile, July 6, 1883. After the execution and record of the mortgage, the vessel continued to be engaged as a carrier of freight and passengers, navigating the rivers between the cities of Mobile, Alabama, and Columbus, Mississippi, and, while at the port of Mobile, certain parties, in the regular course of trade, and at the request of the master of the steam-boat or other agent, furnished the steam-boat with certain supplies, a statement of which accompanies the libels, and it is alleged that the supplies were necessary for the furnishing and fitting of said steam-boat to enable her to perform her voyage or voyages, and were founded on the credit of the steam-boat, and that these bills have not been paid. There are a number of these claims for which the steam-boat -was libeled in this court, June 3, 1885. The vessel was sold under the order of the court, and the question arises in the case upon exceptions filed to the report of the clerk of the court, to whom the case was referred, raising the question of the priority of claims upon the fund in the registry of the court. The mortgagees, the Columbus Insurance & Banking Company, claim that they shall be paid next after the payment of the claims which are strictly maritime, about which no question is made, and the parties who furnished the steam-boat with supplies here in Mobile claim that they are entitled to priority of payment, notwithstanding the fact that these claims accrued after the execution and record of the mortgage in the custom-house at the port of Mobile. The claim of priority of payment on the part of the mortgagees is based upon the proposition that the port of Mobile is the home port of the Lotus No. 2, and that, therefore, the supplies were furnished, not on the credit of the vessel, but on the credit of her owners, and therefore they, the mortgagees, are entitled to priority of payment. The question, then, is, where'was the home port of this vessel, and [639]*639bow or by what rule is the home port of a vessel to be defined and determined ?

The words themselves, “home port,” indicate that it is where she belongs or is owned. The statutes, and decisions of courts, on the subject speak of where she belongs, sometimes where she is built, where she is enrolled and licensed, and perhaps more often where her owners reside. It is claimed here that the home port of the vessel in question, the Lotus No. 2, was Columbus, Mississippi, because she was owned there by a company incorporated under the laws of the state of Mississippi; that the stockholders of that company resided there; and that the vessel had, in compliance with an act of congress, tho words “The Lotus No. 2, of Columbus, Miss.,” painted upon her stern. It is claimed, however, that in legal contemplation, and under the laws of congress upon the subject of the registration and enrollment of vessels, that Mobile was her home port, for that she was enrolled there in the office of the collector of customs of that port, and that Columbus, Mississippi, is within the collection district of which Mobile is the port of entry. Section 4141 of the Eevised Statutes of tho United States provides:

. “Every vessel, except as hereinafter provided, shall be registered by the collector of that collection district which includes tho port to which such vessel shall belong at the time of her registry, which port shall bo deemed to be that at or nearest to which the owner, if there bo but one, or, if more than one, the husband or acting and managing owner of such vessel, usually resides.”

Tho law as to the enrollment of vessels is the same under section 4312 of tho Eevised Statutes of the United States as it is in reference to the registry of vessels, and it is not questioned that the Lotus No. 2 was properly enrolled in the office of the collector of customs of the port of Mobile. The statute, however, is in relation to the registry (enrollment, in this case) of vessels, and provides where such registry or enrollment shall be made; but it certainly does not provide, in words at least, that the place where such registry and enrollment shall be made is by that single tost to be held and deemed her home port. Tho words of the statute seem to imply that the port to which the vessel shall belong at the time of her registry may be other than the port at which she is to be registered or enrolled, and the port at which she is to bo registered or enrolled is to bo deemed to be that at or nearest to which the owner of such vessel usually resides.

It is said Columbus, in the state of Mississippi, is not a port at all, because it is not a port established by law for tho entry of merchandise through a custom-house, and the proposition is that in contemplation of law only such port where a custom-house is located can be the home port of a vessel. ' In the system of laws enacted by congress concerning the -subject of the importation of merchandise to be entered in custom-houses established by law, the word “port” has a statutory definition, and section 2767 of the Eevised Statutes of the [640]*640United States,- tit. 24, c. 4, under the head of “Entry of Merchandise, ” provides: “The word ‘port,’ as used in this title, may include any place from which merchandise can be shipped for importation, or at which merchandise can be imported; ” so that when the word “port” is used in the statute as to the importation of merchandise, it means a place for such importation, but when not so used, it may have and does have a wider and more general signification.

Can it be maintained that the word “port,” as used and defined by congress in title 34, which is in reference to the collection of duties on imports, and chapter 4 under that title, which is as to the entry of merchandise, must be held to have been used in the same restricted'sense in title 48, which is in reference to the regulation of commerce and navigation, and chapter 1 under that title, as to the registry and recording of vessels ? The two subjects are separate .and distinct, — so treated in the statutes of the United States, — and while the word “port” has a restricted meaning in reference to the entry of merchandise for the collection of duties on imports, for a manifest reason, can it be held that it has the same restricted meaning in reference to an entirely different subject, the registry of vessels, the vehicles of commerce ? In the former case it means a port of entry; in the latter, it is used in a general sense*; and congress lias not changed the law of the admiralty, that the home port of a vessel is the port or the place where she belongs and where her owners reside. The act of congress of June 26, 1884, known as the “Dingley Bill,” throws some light on the subject.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 F. 637, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-the-lotus-no-2-alsd-1886.