I
This case, involving an in rem admiralty action against the barge the “Dragon I,” was initiated by Beauregard, Inc., an equipment lessor who held a first preferred ship mortgage. Beauregard properly arrested the Dragon I. Following Beauregard’s seizure of the barge, several other entities intervened claiming maritime liens, and also seized the barge. Each intervenor was ordered to share in the cost of the Dragon’s maintenance. 1
Sword Services, L.L.C., moved to intervene to assert a maritime lien securing $654,-817 owed for work on the barge. The district court unconditionally granted Sword’s motion. Beauregard then filed a motion to dismiss Sword’s Complaint for Intervention, contending that Sword should be required to arrest the Dragon, and share in the custodia legis expenses. The district court denied Beauregard’s motion to dismiss, but ordered Sword to seize the barge and share in the custodia legis costs of maintaining the barge. The court expressly noted that if Sword failed to seize the Dragon I, Sword’s complaint for intervention would be dismissed. When Sword failed to comply with this order, the district court dismissed Sword from the case. Sword appeals this dismissal. We affirm.
II
The narrow issue presented by the parties is whether a district court can condition an intervenor’s participation in an admiralty in rem case, upon the intervenor arresting the vessel, and sharing in its custodia legis expenses. We hold that it can.
Sword contends that because it is entitled as of right to intervene under Fed. Rule. Civ. P. 24(a)(2), the district court could not attach any conditions to its intervention. 2 Although not without some controversy, 3 it is *1223 now a firmly established principle that reasonable conditions may be imposed even upon one who intervenes as of right. The Advisory Committee Note to the 1966 Amendment of Rule 24(a) provides: “An intervention of right under the amended rule may be subject to appropriate conditions or restrictions responsive among other things to the requirements of efficient conduct of the proceedings.” 4 Courts generally have accepted the position of the Advisory Committee Note, and allowed various conditions to be imposed upon intervenors. 5 Scholarly commentators have also supported this view. 6 Therefore, we hold that the district court in this case had the power to place conditions upon Sword’s participation in this action. This holding, however, does not resolve the separate question of whether the conditions actually imposed were reasonable.
Contending that the district court erred in directing it to seize the Dragon I, Sword points out that parties often intervene in in rem actions without seizing the property and sharing in the cost of maintaining it. This contention, however, shows at most that the district court was not required to condition intervention on Sword seizing the vessel, and sharing in the cost of maintaining her.
On the other hand, in its inherent powers to manage this litigation properly, the district court had the discretion to order a party to seize the vessel and divide the cost of the ship’s maintenance among all the parties. Courts routinely enter orders that divide the custodia legis expenses among the parties of an in rem action. When such orders are entered is largely discretionary and vary in different cases. Often the party that filed a suit will pay the entire cost of maintaining the res until the resolution of the case. At the judicially ordered sale, the cost of maintenance is deducted from the sale proceeds before the remaining proceeds are divided among the claimants. Therefore, even when a single litigant advances the cost of maintenance, all claimants are eventually required to share in this cost. 7
A case analogous to the one before us arose in the Eleventh Circuit. In
Donald D. Forsht Associates, Inc. v. Transamerica ICS, Inc.,
*1222 We think that the district court’s order also derives some authority from 28 U.S.C. § 1921. This provision authorizes the United States marshal to collect expenses and fees for custody, which may be taxed by the court as litigation costs. Where a vessel is held in custody, the marshal may collect certain costs in advance:
The marshals shall collect, in advance, a deposit to cover the initial expenses for special services required under paragraph 1(E), and periodically thereafter such amounts as may be necessary to pay such expenses until the litigation is concluded. This paragraph applies to all private litigants, including seamen proceeding pursuant to section 1916 of this title.
28 U.S.C. § 1921(a)(2) (emphasis added). 9
Finally, the district court enjoys broad equitable authority over the administration of maritime seizures. In
New York Dock Co. v. The Poznan,
Thus, for the foregoing reasons we think that the district court did not err by requiring Sword to seize the vessel and share in the in custodia legis costs.
Ill
' Finally, we note that irrespective of whether the court committed error in entering the underlying order, the district court was within its authority to dismiss Sword as a sanction for its willful disregard of the order.
See, e.g., In re United Markets Intern., Inc.,
For the reasons set forth above, the order of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district court ordered that each of the three parties pay one-third of the custodia legis expenses.
. The district court granted Sword’s intervention under Rule 24(b). It is undisputed that virtually any condition may be attached to a grant of permissive intervention.
See, e.g., United Nuclear Corp. v. Cranford Ins. Co.,
. 7C Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller, Mary Kay Kane, Federal Practice and Procedure, § 1922, at 505 ("It had been supposed ... that conditions could not be imposed on one who intervened of right and that he had all the privileges of an original party. Rule 24(a) does not authorize the imposition of conditions and the court, in theoiy at least, has no discretion to refuse intervention to one who satisfies the requirements of that rule.”)
. One court has noted that this comment "was not an innovative suggestion but was instead the recognition of a well-established practice."
Shore v. Parklane Hosiery, Co.,
.
See, e.g., McDonald v. E.J. Lavino Co.,
. See, e.g., Kennedy, Let's All Join In: Intervention under Federal Rule 24, 57 Ky.L.J. 329, 375 (1969); Shapiro, Some Thoughts on Intervention before Courts, Agencies, and Arbitrators, 81 Harv.L.Rev. 721, 752-56 (1968).
.
See, e.g., Certain Underwriters at Lloyds v. Kenco Marine Terminal, Inc.,
. In some circumstances, requiring an interve-nor to pay a per capita share of the cost of maintenance could be unreasonable. For example, an intervenor with a very small claim might not be forced to bare the same proportion of the *1222 cost of maintenance as a claimant with a large claim. In such circumstance, costs might be divided according to the relative size of each party's claim.
. In some cases a district court has granted an intervenor as of right only a limited ability to participate in a case. For example, the district court may limit its participation to one issue in the litigation, or may restrict the intervenor’s right to discovery. In contrast, in this case, the district court allowed the intervenor full participation in the case. The district court merely imposed the same conditions upon Sword, that were imposed upon the original party, and all subsequent parties to this action. An intervenor is generally treated as an original party to an action.
United Steelworkers of America v. Jones and Lamson Machine Company,
