384
FEDERAL REPORTER.
THE OLE OLESON.
(DistrietOourt, E. D. Wisconsin. May 12, 1884.) 1. LIBEL-INTERVENORS-SBAMEN'S WAGES-MARITIME SERVICE.
Where intervenors are mere landsmen, who procure cargoes for a vessel and assist in loadin.f(' them, they do not perform a maritime service, and are not entitled to recover upon a libel for seamen's wages. 'fhe master and part owner of a vessel cannot purchase a cargo on credit and thereby create a maritime lien upon the vessel for the purchase money.
2. MARITIME LmN-PURCHASE OF CARGO BY MASTER OF VESSEL.
3.
SHIP'S HUSBAND-DuTIES AND POWERS.
The duties of a ship's husband are to provide for the sea worthiness of the ship, to take care of her in port, to see that she has on board necessary and proper papers, to make contracts for freiA'ht, and to collect the returns therefor; but he cannot borrow money, give a lien on the freight, make insurance, or purchase a cargo, without special authority.
·
In Admiralty. ,Zlla'rkham cf Noyes, for intervenors. J. E. Wildish, for mortgagee. DYER, J. Objections are filed to claims made by Bernard Kienast and August Walkowski to a share of the proceeds arising froin the sale of the schooner Ole Oleson upon a libel for seamen's wages. The intervenors were employed as stone-pickers by the master of the vessel, who was also managing owner, to gather stone on the shore of Lake Michigan at or Dtar Alpena, and to assist in loading the stone on board as cargo to be carried to Chicago. While engaged in this service they lived and slept on the vessel as she laid off shore; and the master testifies that when the weather was such that stone could not be gathered, the schooner would run into Alpena, and the intervenors would then lend a hand in hoisting sail. But they did not accompany the vessel on her voyages, and were not employed as seamen, the vessel having a full crew without them. The only question is, was the service which they rendered in picking up stone for the vessel a maritime service, and I am constrained to hold that it was not. Three cases are relied on in support of the alleged right of these claimants to payment from the fund in the registry, namely: The Canton, 1 Spr. Dec. 437; The Ocean Spray, 4 Sawy. 105; and The Minna, 11 FED. REP. 759. These cases are all distinguishable from this. In the case of The Canton, the employment of the libelants was to load the vessel at Quincy with stone, not as quarrymen, but to take the stOlle on board from a wharf, to navigate the vessel to Boston, and there to unload her. As was said by Judge SPRAGUE, they must have been ablt! to "hand-reef and steer," the ordinary test of seamanship. These duties they performed, and so they were not landsmen merely, but a.ctually participated in the navigation of the vessel.
'lBE OLE OLESON.
885
In the case of The Ocean Spray, the vessel went upon a voyage for seal. The libelants shipped as sealers, and were hired to take seal for the vessel at a stipulated sum per month, and their shipping agreement bound them also "to lend a hand on board whenever they were wanted." On the voyage they helped make and reef sail, heave the anchor, and clear decks, but did not stand watch. They also procured drift-wood and water for the use of the vessel. They thus aided in the navigation and preservation of the vessel, and, as Judge DEADY well states the case, they were co-laborers in the leading purpose of the voyage. Upon the principle applicable to surgeons, stewards, cooks, and cabin boys, they were to be considered as mariners. They engaged for the voyage, were employed in promoting the purpose of the voyage, and aided in the navigation of the vessel; and, as Judge DEADY says, without their services the voyage must have been profitless, because tbe purpose of it could not have been accomplished. Moreover, the vessel was expressly pledged as security for the payment of the wages of the sealers for the round trip. The case of The Minna seems at first sight to rub the case in hand more closely. The Minna was engaged exclusively in fishing. As the case is stated, she ran out from Alpena every morning to the fishing grounds, threw her nets, made a catch of fish, and returned to port, where the fish were discharged and prepared for market. Her crew consisted of a master and engineer.· The libelant was employed as a fisherman, and though he took no part in the navigation of the tug, his contract required him to go out with the tug every day, to set and lift the nets, clean the fish, discharging the catch and reeling the nets on shore, where he lodged at night. His services were, therefore, as J ndge BROWN decided, in furtherance of the main object of the enterprise in which the vessel was engaged. He assisted in the main purpose of the vessel's employment. His services were mainly performed on board the tug, and were necessarily connected with, and part of, the service in which the tug was engaged. They were, therefore, maritime in their character. In the case in hand the intervenors were mere landsmen. They procured cargoes on shore for the vessel, and assisted in loading them on board. In a general sense their services were in furtherance of the Yessel's employment, but not more so than the services of stevedores, and the present weight of authority is that stevedores have no maritime lien upon a ship for services in loading and stowing her cargo. Paul v. Bark !lex, 2 Woods, 229, and cases there cited. The services of the intervenors were completed before the voyages of the vessel were begun. They did not attend her upon her voyages. They were laborers on shore, and the nature of their contract was not affected by the fact that they obtained their meals and at night slept on board the vessel as she laid off shore or harbor. In material respects, the case, I think, differs from that of The Minna and the other cases cited, and I shall sustain the objections to these claims on the
886; ground th.e services of. the intervenors stand on the sa.me footing as those of ",tevedores. I thus rule, not without Bome hesitation, for, aBJI.U original question, I must confess I have never been able to see wby;the employment of a stevedore should not be regarded entitling him to a maritime lien. Objections are also filed to a claim against the proceeds, in the registry of the court, of $248.30, made by one Robert Peacock, which claiD;larose upon the following state of facts: The Oleson, being at Bay de Noquette, in Michigan, her master, who was half owner of the p\lrchased from Peacock a cargo of culled lumber to carry to Racine, Wisconsin, the home port of the vessel. The contract of purchase was in writing, and was as follows: "BAY DE NOQUETT.E, September 3, 1883. "1Vhenschr. Ole Oleson unloads the load of culls, she, by her captain, promisesto pay to the order of R. Peacock the sum of two hundred forty-eight 30-100 dpllars, being the amount due for the cargo now loaded. This lumber ''las sold the vessel so she could make a freight. Interest after due until paid. BCHR. OLE OLESON, OF RACINE, "By her Captain, JOHN SCHULTZ."
The cargo was carried to Racine, was there attached and sold, and the demand of the vendor, Peacock, for the purchase price has ever since remained unpaid. The question is, did Peacock acquire a maritime lien on the vessel, for the amount due him ·for the lumber, which took precedence of a prior mortgage on the vessel? The instrument ex.ecuted by the m:1ster does not, by its terms, purport to create a. lien. It is true that in the last olause it is stated that the lumber "was sold the vessel so that she could make a freight;" but it does not, in terms, assume to give the vendor of the lumber a lien. The only question, then, is, does the maritime law give the vendor a lien on the vessel from the mere fact that the master bought the oargo for the purpose of earning freight? Or, to state the proposition in another and more general form, can a master and part owner of a vessel purchase a cargo on credit and thereby create a maritime lien for the purchs,se money, on the vessel? So far as the power of the master, acting simply in that character, to bind the owners of a vessel in the purchase of cargo, is concerned, adjudged cases seem to have settled the question, beyond controversy, in the negative. In Hathorn v. 8 Greenl. 360, the court said: "The master, in his capacity as such, has power to bind the owners of the ship in contracts relative to her usual employment only. This power relates merely to the carriage of goods and the supplies requisite for the ship; but the owners of the ship cannot be bound by any contract of the master concerning the purchase of cargo. To bind the owner in such a contract the master must be clothed with powers other than those which are necessarily incident to his office as commander of the ship. He may, indeed, act in the double character of master and supercargo or consignee. but his power to sell, cases of necessity excepted. or to pUl'chafle cargo, flows, not from his official character as master, but from special anthority conferred for that purllose."
887 held that-
In Hewett v. Buck, 17 Me. 158, Judge
SHEPLEY
"The mastl:rmay bind the owners by his contracts relating to the usual employment of the vessel in the carriage of goods, but has no power as such to purchase a cargo on their arJcount. The ship's husband or managing owner may bind the owners for the outfit, care, and employment of the,]Vc3sel, .but has no power to purchase a carg-o on the credit of the owners." Citing, in support of the last proposition, bell v. HumpMies, 2 .:itarkie, 286.
'rhe rule thus laid down in 8 Greenl. and 17 Me. is also asserted without qualification in Newhall v. Dunlap, 14 Me. 180, and Lyman v. Redman, 23 Me. 289. In Naylor v. Baltzell, Taney, Dec. 55, Chief Justice TANEY said: "The master has a right to contract for the employment of the vessel under circumstances of necessity, and the owners will be. bound by it; but this right is derived from the Maritime Code, which is founded on the general ,-sage and convenience of trade, and which has been adopted to a certain extwt by all commercial nations. The authority of the master is limited to objects connected with the voyage, and if he transcends the prescribed limits, his acts become, in legal contemplation, mere nullities, and it is incumbent on the r,reditor to prove the actual existence of the necessity of those things which gave rise to his demand."
If, then, the master, acting in his official character of master, has not the power to make a purchase of cargo, and bind the ownefs of the vessel, it would seem quite logically to follow that he could not, in such a transaction, bind the vessel. This right to make engagements on the credit of the vessel being restricted to cases of neces· sity, he would seem to have no greater authority to purchase a cargo, and thereby create a lien on the vessel, than by. the same act to bind the owners. The rule in the one case has not been more unquali. fiedly laid down than in the other. "The master, acting as an agent, is limited and restricted in his power, and can pledge his vessel only in case of necessity for the purpose of repairs, and other things indispensable to the prosecution of the voyage. It is for the convenience of commerce that he should have authority to pledge his vessel for the security of a foreign creditor who might furnish the means of relieving his necessities. But sllch power ought to be well guarded, and confined to cases coming within the reason of the rule. It is, therefore, incumbent on the creditor to show that the advances were made for repairs and supplies necessary for effectuating the objects of the voyage, or the safety and security c1f the vessel. The master would, therefore, have no right to pledge the vessel for advances to purchase a cargo." The }(!ary, 1 Paine, 674. And, certainly, if he could not create a lien on the vessel for advances to pnrchase a cargo, he could not create such lien by a direct purchase of the cargo on credit, in favor of the vendor. Attempt was made on argument to liken this case by analogy to one of bottomry. But the analogy fails, because some of the wellknown essentials of a marine hypothecation of that character are not here shown. Moreover, so far as the power of the master to execute
388
an instrument of bottomry is concerned, it is limited to the necessities of the ship. If, then, according to the rule laid down in the adjudged CRses, it was beyond the power of the master, acting in that capacity alone, to create a lien on the vessel for the purchase price of the cargo, is the rule changed or affected by the fact that the master was part owner of the vessel? It is to be observed that the other part owner was not present and did not participate in the transaction. We have seen that the ship's husband or managing owner has no power, virtuteojficii, to purchase a cargo on the credit of the owners. In the case of 'Ph6 Mary, supra, it was held that the owner of the ship, havingabsolute control over his property, has a right to pledge his vessel for money borrowed for any purpose to be applied to repairs, outfits, or other necessaries, or to the purchase of a cargo. This was held in a case where the owner had executed a bottomry bond for the pllyment of moneyadvallced for repairs, outfit, and other disbursements for the use of the vessel, and to enable her to perform her voyage. But the duties of the ship's husband are in general to provide for the seaworthiness of the ship, to take care of her in port, to see that she has on board all necessary and proper papers, to make contracts for freight, and collect the freight and all returns. 1 Bell, (4th Ed.) p. 410, § 4::l8; Id. (5th Ed.) 504. But he cannot borrow money, nor give up the lien for freight, nor insure, nor purchase a cargo for the owners without special authority. 1 Pars. Shipp. & Adm. 110. Part owners are not, by virtue of such ownership, copartners. The general rules of co-tenancy apply, and controlling authority would have to be produced before leonId be persuaded to hold that a part owner can by implication bind the vessel for tile purchase price of a cargo, thereby displacing other existing liens. It would be a dangerous power to lodge either in the master, or managing or part. owner, for in carrying such a cargo the vessel would be simply carrying the property of her owner, and if he chose not to pay for it, the result would be, according to the doctrine here contended for, that prior liens would be entirely defeated, or at best outranked, by a demand that had its origin in private speculation, !"ather than in such necessities of the vessel as arise in her employment in navigation, and as constitute the basis of a lien in admiralty. 1'he objections to the claim of the intervenor Peacock are sustained.
THE HATTIE M. BAIN.
389
THE HATTIE
M.
BAIN.
(Di8trict Oourt, 8. D. New York.
May 21,1884.)
The work of a stevedore in loading or unloading cargo is a maritime service, within the definition of the supreme court in 11.8. Co. v. Dunham, 11 Wall. 26. It is maritime because it "relates to a maritime transaction," and is rendered in the discharge of the maritime. obligation whiuh the ship owes to the goods. Held, tlterefore, that a lien should no longer be denied to workmen rendering stevedore's service to foreign 2. SA:I<IE-WORKMEN-COLLA'niHAJ,l'noMIsE. Workmen employed :;oldy by the head stevedore, under the mollern usages of business, are presumed to know that they must look to him only for their pay, and hence have no lien upon Ihe ship, nor Juve they a lien on the captain's collateral promise as to past services; bUl where they work. either upon the captain's direct employment, or upon the faith of his promise that he will see them paid, the workmen are entitled to a liell, as provided by the Consulat de la Mer.
1.
MARITIME LIEN-STEVEDORES-WORKMU:N-COLLATERAL PROMISE.
In Admiralty. J. A. Hyland, for libelants. Benedict, Taft ct Benedict, for claimants.
BROWN, J. This libel was filed by several persons claiming wages due them for stevedore work in unloading a cargo of logwood from the brig Hattie M. Bain, in September, 1881. The head stevedore was one McAllister, by whom most of the libelants were originally employed. In their behalf it is claimed, however, and the testimony shows, that a number of them, at least, being informed that McAllister was not to be trusted to pay them, went to the captain and told him that they could not trust McAllister, and would stop work unless the captain would see them paid; and that the captain, being in haste for the discharge of the cargo, promised that he would see that they were paid. The captain admits that on the last day he employed two of the men, but he denies that he employed or promised to pay any others. As respects those workmen to whom the captain's promise, if any, was collateral only to the obligation of MCAllister, and who did not work on the faith of the captain's promise, no recovery can be had; for it was McAllister's debt, and it is impossible, under the present known customs, that workmen engaged by the head stevedore should not understand that they must look to him for their pay. The old law of the Consulado expressly provided that where the workmen knew the work was done by a contractor by the job the ship could not be seized. Vol. 2, f? 54, § 83; The Mark Lane, 13 FED. REP. 800. But the Consulado also declares that if the patron (captain) promise to pay the workmen, and they work on the faith of it, though the work be let out to a contractor by the job, that promise must be made good. Chapter 54, § 85. Where the original employment is by another, and thfl alleged promise by the master is disputed, no liability of the ship can