This appeal presents the question whether Standard Oil Company of New Jersey is entitled to maritime liens upon six vessels of Hudson River Day Line, now in rеceivership, for the purchase price of various quantities of fuel oil respectively used by said vessels. The District Court confirmed a rеport of the commissioner denying the existence of maritime liens but allowing the aggregate indebtedness as an unsecured claim. The faсts must be stated in some detail.
By written contract between the parties the Day Line agreed to buy for use as fuel in the operation of six named vessels “and any other vessel owned, operated, chartered or controlled by the buyer,” fuel oil to be purchased from the claimant and appellant during a term of two years beginning January 1, 1932. The contract provided that the seller shall make delivery to the buyer’s vеssel and “will rely on any vessel receiving fuel oil and/or this contract for the purchase price thereof.” For a time the seller did deliver the oil directly to the buyer’s vessels, but later the Day Line acquired two tank barges, and thereafter the oil was delivered by the seller to onе of these barges, from which the buyer in its discretion would transfer the oil within five or six days to such of its vessels as might need it. Such was the procedure follоwed
The appellant argues that the parties expressly agreed that the credit of each vessel should be security for the contract price of the oil which it might receive. Such was their agreement so long as the seller made direct deliveries to a particular vessel; but, after this method of delivery was changed, the price of the oil delivered to one of the tank barges was billed to it and the Day Line without regard by the seller to .what vessel, or when, the oil was distributed. Neither by the express terms of the contract nor by implication from the conduct of the parties is it possible to find an agreement to create a lien on the steamers for oil delivered to the barges for later distribution in the buyer’s discretion among the vessels of its fleet. Hence the 'appellant’s rights must be determined under section 30, subsection P, of the Merchant Marine Act of 1920, 46 U.S.C.A. § 971. This provides: “Any person furnishing * * * supplies * * * to any vessel * * * upon the order of the owner оf such vessel * * * shall have a maritime lien on the vessel, * * * and it shall not be necessary to allege or prove that credit was given to the vеssel.”
The decisive words, as applied to the present case, are “furnishing * * * supplies * * * to any vessel.” The meaning of these words in the substantially identical provision of the Act of June 23, 1910, § 1, 46 U.S.C.A. § 971 note, was much discussed in Piedmont & George’s Creek Coal Co. v. Seaboard Fisheries Co.,
The aрpellant relies upon cases holding that, when the supplies are ordered for a designated vessel and actually reach her, it is nоt fatal to a lien that they were delivered to the owner and forwarded by him to the ship. Carr v. George E. Warren Corp. 4 Cir.,
Under the statute as construed by the Supreme Cоurt the supplies must be furnished
by
the supplyman
to
the vessel. Although the supplyman may, in effect, make the ownér his agent to complete the “furnishing” by putting the goods on board, when the quantity and vessel are expressly designated, no case appears to have held that the supplyman may obtain a lien whеn he authorizes the owner to distribute the supplies among such of his fleet as he sees fit. In such a case, even though the owner must under the contract deliver the supplies to some ship, it is his decision that controls which ship it shall be. “Furnishing * * * supplies * * * to any vessel” must, we think, include that factor оf choice; otherwise they are furnished to the owner. See The Fearless, 3 Cir.,
Maritime liens are “stricti juris and will not be extended by construction, analogy or inference.” Piedmont & George’s Creek Coal Co. v. Seaboard Fisheries Co.,
