ORDER GRANTING EMERGENCY MOTION TO SET BOND
The defendant vessel, the M/V Destiny Panama, “together with her boats, tackle, apparel, furniture, engines, and appurtenances,” was arrested on May 18, 2000, to secure the plaintiffs’ wrongful death claim. Warrant for Arrest In Rem [D.E. 10] (May 18, 2000). See also Amended Complaint [D.E. 8] (May 17, 2000); Amended Emergency Motion for Arrest [D.E. 9] (May 17, 2000); Order Directing Issuance of Warrant of Arrést [D.E. 12] (May 18, 2000). Unofort Investmеnts,' Ltd., the owner of the Destiny Panama, moved on an emergency basis to set a bond amount so that it could obtain the Destiny Panama’s release from custody. See Emergency Motion to Set Bond and for Release of Vessel [D.E. 17] (June 1, 2000). That motion was deferred to allow the parties to address whether the Destiny Panama’s replacement engines were within the rеach of the warrant for arrest and to present evidence regarding the value of those engines. See Order Granting Motion for Discovery [D.E. 29] (June 8, 2000). The parties have since filed supplemental mem-oranda on these matters.
Undisputed Facts
During the hearing on the motion to set bond, the parties agreed that the
Destiny Panama
without regard to her replace
Arguments
Unofort insists, relying on
Nelson v. The Arctic,
Legal Analysis
The analysis begins with what constitutes a ship or a vessel. “A ship is considered as consisting of the hull and engines, tackle, apparel, and furniture of all kinds. This, of course, is elemental and requires no citation of authority.”
The Augusta,
Some of these authorities could be fairly reаd to indicate that a ship’s engines are as much a constituent part of the ship
qua
ship as the hull and are not, therefore, appurtenances: “[I]f, indeed, they were, they would not be appurtenances, for the very nature of an appurtenance is that it is one thing which belongs tо another thing .... ”
The Edwin Post,
It is well-established that an appurtenance need not be installed or on board a vessel at the time of her arrest to be itself subject to the warrant for arrest. The seminal case on point was decided by Judge Augustus Hand. In 1924, the steamship
Great Canton
was sold at auction by the United States Marshal for the South
In all suits in rem against a ship, and/or her appurtenances if her appurtenances or any of them аre in the possession or custody of any third person, the court shall, on due notice to such third person and after a hearing, decree that the same be delivered into the custody of the marshal or other proper officer, if on hearing it appears that the same is rеquired by law and justice.
Id.
Accordingly, the court deciding
The Arctic
held that electronic equipment that was removed from a fishing vessel and stored in her owner’s basement prior to the vessel’s arrest and sale was nonetheless appurtenant to the vessel. The court stated that “[ejquipment that is useful in the operation of а vessel becomes an appurtenance when installed.”
In Stewart & Stevenson Services, the court held that a tail shaft that had never been installed on the boat for which it destined was nonetheless its appurtenance. The controversy was rooted in the sinking of the tugboat Chris Way MacMillan at the Louisiana Dry Dock in New Orleans. Her owner, Hugh Mac Towing Corporation, decided not to attempt to refit her and removed her propellers and tail shafts. Hugh Mac owned another towboat that utilized identical propellers and tail shafts. At the time of the sinking of the Chris Way, Hugh Mac’s inventory included one other propeller and one other tail shaft identical to the two salvaged from the Chris Way. Some months after the sinking, Hugh Mac reconsidered its decision to refit and refurbish the Chris Way. Work began in late 1993 or early 1994 and continued after Hugh Mac filеd for bankruptcy in February of 1994. Hugh Mac was to supply the propellers and tail shafts for the refit and ultimately determined to use both propellers and one of the two tail shafts removed from the Chris Way after her sinking. Because the other salvaged tail shaft was damaged, Hugh Mac decided tо use its third identical tail shaft for the refit. These parts were eventually trans1 ported to and grouped at a particular shipyard.
The plaintiff in the case, Stewart
&
Stevenson Services, Inc., was the general contractor performing the refit and the mortgagee for the value of the work. It brought suit to foreclosе its mortgage. One of the issues before the court was whether the propellers and the tail shafts were appurtenances of the
Chris Way
at the time she was arrested by the court. The court held that, despite the fact that the items were not on board the vessel at the time of arrest, they were appurtenances because they were necessary for her general navigation.
See
The plaintiffs’ argument — that the common ownership of the Destiny Panama and her replacement engines is disposi-tive — is likewise without merit. Obviously, not everything that the owner of a ship owns is subject to a warrant for arrest of that ship. Conversely, an item may be aрpurtenant to a vessel even though the vessel and the item are not under common ownership. The reasoning underlying the arrest of a vessel in the first instance is the fiction that the vessel is herself responsible for the wrong committed, and ownership of the vessel and her appurtenanсes is beside the point:
“The offending ship is considered as herself the wrongdoer, and is herself bound to make compensation for the wrong done. The owner of the injured vessel is entitled to proceed in rem against the offender, without regard to the question who may be her owners, or tо the division, the nature or the extent of their interests in her. With the relations of the owners of those interests, as among themselves, the owner of the injured vessel has no concern. All the interests, existing at the time of the collision, in the offending vessel, whether by way of part ownership, of mortgagе, of bottom-ry bond or of other maritime lien for repairs or supplies, arising out of contract with the owners or agents of the vessel, are parts of the vessel herself, and as such are bound by and responsible for her wrongful acts.”
Turner v. United States,
Thus, in
The Augusta,
the court held that radio equipment leased from thе Radio Corporation of America could be used to satisfy maritime liens against the vessel if the proceeds of the ship were insufficient.
A general rule for determining whether a particular item is an appurtenance can be synthesized from the reasoning set forth in the fоregoing cases. Neither installation, location, nor ownership is dispositive of the matter. Rather, an appurtenance is any specifically identifiable item that is destined for use aboard a specifically identifiable vessel and is essential to the vessel’s navigation, operation, or mission. Thus, the chronometer temporarily removed from the
Great Canton
for repairs was appurtenant to her although not on board at the time of arrest. The wireless equipment on. board
The Augusta
There remаins only the issue of the parties’ suggested mathematical computations. The plaintiffs’ contention that the bond for the Destiny Panama should be set as though the replacement engines were installed and operational is without merit. The evidence in the record leaves no question that it would require a significant investment of resources to overhaul and install the replacement engines. Bond is to be set at the sum of the fair market value of the vessel and her appurtenances at the time of arrest, not at a speculative value based on repairs or upgrades that may or may not be made at some time in the future.
Unofort’s suggestion that the value of the old engines should be deducted from the bond amount is also unsound. Unofort apparently means to imply that only one set of engines can be appurtenant to or part of the Destiny Panama at any оne time. There is no support for this contention and it simply does not logically follow. At the time of arrest, there were installed on board the Destiny Panama two non-functional engines. On land, there were two replacement engines destined to be overhauled and installed. The residual value of the original engines would presumably offset this process of overhaul and installation. The fact that, at the time, of arrest, this residual value had not been liquidated and devoted to refitting the Destiny Panama does not mean that the plaintiffs’ claim does not attach to the engines’ residual value. The originаl engines, though broken, remained a constituent part of the Destiny Pana ma—-as surely as the broken chronometer in The Great Canton was part of that vessel—and the replacement engines were simultaneously appurtenances. Bond is therefore set at the sum of the Destiny Panama, which the parties agree is about $190,000, plus the value of the engines intended for her, which the Court finds is $80,000.
Conclusion and Relief
Unofort’s motion to set bond [D.E. 17] is GRANTED. Bond is set at $270,000. Upon satisfaction of the bond and any attendant fees owed to the United States Marshal or other third parties, thé Destiny Panama shall be released.
