Wilmer v. The Smilax

30 F. Cas. 84, 2 Pet. Adm. 295
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJuly 1, 1804
StatusPublished

This text of 30 F. Cas. 84 (Wilmer v. The Smilax) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilmer v. The Smilax, 30 F. Cas. 84, 2 Pet. Adm. 295 (D. Md. 1804).

Opinion

BY THE COURT.

Your argument amounts to this—that if a mortgagee, does not instantly on his debt falling due, take possession of the mortgaged premises, he loses his security. The hypothecation of a ship by the maritime law, is on the same footing as a mortgage of chattels on land is by the common law. And the plain distinction in cases of this kind, is between liens arising by implication of law, and those which result from express pledge: the former may be lost by parting with possession, on which they depend, or evidence of other equivalent circumstances, but the latter depend on very different rules. The bottomry stipulates, that the vessel shall, with all convenient speed, proceed upon the voyage on which the money was taken up, and if lost during that voyage, that the obligee shall lose his money. The objection that the bottomry did not attach is founded upon the defendant’s own allegation, of the breach of his own contract and duty. I cannot conceive that that circumstance can alter the nature of the contract. It was originally a contract of bottomry, or it was not. If it was, the act of one of the parties, cannot alter its nature. The written contract is plainly a contract of bottomry; and it can never be permitted to a defendant, to rely upon his own default, to injure the rights and diminish the security of a fair creditor.

The libellant’s counsel considering this case, like the ease of an insurance, which does not attach where the contemplated, risk has not been run, again pressed it on the court. I did not see sufficient cause to change my opinion. On mature deliberation and revision of that opinion, I can see no reason to think it erroneous. The contract of bottomry, has probably been in use from the earliest periods of foreign commerce, and its long recognition stands in the place of all reason, as it respects public policy. In questions resulting from that contract, as constituting the jus pignus vel hypotheca, the interest of individuals is more to be regarded than that of the public. And it is not to be doubted, that he who takes upon himself the hazard of loss for the benefit of another, will adopt the best method of securing himself, and look to all the securities the law allows, and in aid of that personal responsibility and sufficiency which the law creates by the very act of a loan, will rely on the thing. “Quia plus cau-tionis in re est, quam in persona.” Dig. c. 106. The contract of bottomry may be either for a limited time, or upon a whole voyage; and in both, the lender has the same securities, to wit, the person of the borrower, and the thing on which it is loaned: and runs the same risk, to wit, a total loss, if his money is effectually hazarded. I say effectually, for it must be out of his own separate power to recall the hazard and rescind the contract; and I hold it to be effectually hazarded when the contract is once completed, and the employment of the money depends upon the sole volition of the borrower.

The general analogy between this species of contract and that of insurance is very striking, but there are some differences very material to be attended to. The insurer parts with no funds or property until the misfortune arrives. The lender on bottomry deprives himself of his funds and property from the moment of the contract, and risks their entire and total loss—he hazards his money too, to a person who by the application to borrow on bottomry, announces a decline or embarrassment of his affairs. The contract of insurance by its terms imports, that the obligation on the underwriters to make good a loss arises only when that loss happens. The contract of bottomry, on the other hand, implies an immediate pledge and security de-feasible upon a future event: the first is a personal contract simply—the latter a contract of pledge, as well as personal security; in eases, therefore, between the insurer and the lender upon bottomry, the latter is preferred. There has not been, to my knowledge, any judicial decision upon the immediate question whether a bottomry in such a case attaches. Nor can I find such a question ever stirred by E.-glish elementary writers. A strong evidence that the objection is not solid, since the very term “bottomry” imports hypothecation by the maritime law; but there is' much stronger evidence than any which results from the silence of jurists, to be drawn from principles which must be admitted to apply between insurers and lenders upon bottomry. I will suppose in this case for a moment, that the brig Smilax was insured for the voyage she actually sailed; and that upon her return voyage she was so materially injured by perils of the sea as tó warrant an abandonment to underwriters as for a total loss, and a contest arose between the lender on bottomry, who should have the benefit of the salvage goods. If the insurer, [86]*86in this case, must give way, I think it will not be contended that the owner can stand against the bottomry creditor. That the insurer in suen case, is to be postponed to the creditor on bottomry, is I think, very clear. By an abandonment, the insurer is placed in the situation of the insured whom he represents, and can have no greater right than the insured had. The lender upon bottomry loses remedy .inly when the ship, &c. is wholly lost; and where a part is preserved, they are esteemed as his proper goods, being presumed to be the product of his money. He therefore takes preference of the insurer. See 1 Valin, Comm. 262, iii. But in this case it is admitted, that if the voyage on which the money was intended to be hazarded, was not proceeded on, it resulted from the voluntary determination of the borrower. It cannot be denied, that when he undertook to perform that voyage, he virtually promised not to go on another, or exercise the lender’s hazard. Good faith and common honesty required, at least, that he should not do any act to injure the lender, or increase his risks. The lender on bottomry looks for this integrity, and to the security so pledged. He is deceived in the honesty of the borrower, who may be insolvent, and upon that failure to. discharge a moral duty, is attempted to be bottomed a principle which shall go to the further length of depriving the creditor of his security, on which he must be supposed principally to have relied. Thus by fraud, in the only act in his power, a foundation is laid to erect a more extended superstructure of iniquity, that the fraud which cannot be directly perpetrated, may nevertheless form a legal stock, on which to engraft other frauds, and produce more extensiv.e injuries. Is there any case, or principle, or opinion, in any systein of law, which will warrant a claim of protection, founded on an admitted violation of duty? Can there be any colour for such doctrine in a court of equity, and against a fair and equitable creditor?

Does the underwriter, or the lender upon bottomry insure the honesty of the man with whom he deals, or does the law hold out a temptation to him to commit iniquity that he may reap its fruits? The only hazard or peril which the insurer or lender upon bottomry runs, is the perils of the sea. They are answerable for no act of fraud or misconduct of the insured on the borrower. If they were at any time to b'e so affected, I can see no reason why at every period of the voyage they should not equally be affected. The true rule is, that the lender upon bottomry loses all remedy, if the vessel does not return to port, by perils of the sea, &c. or is lost without the fraud or fault of the owner.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F. Cas. 84, 2 Pet. Adm. 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilmer-v-the-smilax-mdd-1804.