This is a companion case to our No. 12,556, In the Matter of the Petition of Oskar Tiedemann for Exoneration From or Limitation of Liability. The opinion in that appeal was filed today,
Appellants’ first point that this petition proceeding was improperly commenced in the District Court for the Dis
There remains appellants’ contention that Mathiasen’s Tanker Industries, Inc., was not entitled to move for limitation of its liability.
We are here dealing with an express, written contract. Appellants insist that under it Mathiasen was neither owner nor charterer of the tanker. They cite our decision in Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation v. Vang, 3 Cir., 1934,
The agreement before us indicates a far different situation. In it Mathiasen agreed to “ * * * equip, fuel, supply, maintain, man, victual and navigate the tankers.” It agreed that all tankers turned over to it “* * * shall be redelivered to the Government in such condition as the Government may specify * * It agreed that “The contractor shall procure all personnel necessary to fill the complement of each tanker * * * the officers and members of the crew shall be subject only to orders of the Master or contractor * * * (and) shall be employees of the contractor at all times and not of the government * * Under the article entitled “Insurance-Liability to Third Parties”, it agreed that “The Contractor shall procure from and maintain with a reputable carrier, approved by the Government, such available insurance as the Government * * * shall direct.” And paragraph (d) of that article reads: “For the purpose of this Article, all officers and members of the crew of said tankers and of any other ships owned by, or operated by or for, the Government, and any other personnel employed in any capacity by the Government, shall be deemed to be third parties, and not employees of the Government.”
Jones & Laughlin, supra, at page 91, defines a charter party as “a specific and * * * express contract by which the owner lets a vessel or some particular part thereof to another person for a specified time or use.” We agree with the district court that the contract languge above quoted presents a clear picture of exclusive possession and management of the tanker in Mathiasen. Appellants argue that the fact Mathiasen was to be reimbursed by the government for its operational expense eliminated the former as having manned, victualed and navigated the tanker in the manner called for by 46 U.S.C.A. § 186.
“The court cannot agree with this view for several reasons. First, there was always the possibility the government would deny that the expenditures were within that class which were entitled to reimbursement. Furthermore, the seamen and other third parties could look only to Mathiasen for remuneration. Moreover, all contracts contemplate recovering cost and merely because it is specifically provided for by contract should not taint the agreement. Finally, the provision reads at its ‘own expense or procurement.’ It is quite evident that Mathiasen, at the least, procured these elements. So viewed, Mathiasen comes within the statutory provisions.”
As we see it, Mathiasen’s role under the contract partakes of the nature of both charterer and owner pro hac vice. Either status justifies its petition for limitation. We do not think that the clause providing for the vessel to be operated “in such service as the Government may direct” or the reference to government owned tankers as being “in the custody of the contractor” destroys the total effect of the contract making Mathiasen a charterer of the Mission. It seems to us that in every substantial sense needed to support its right to file the petition the contractor became just that. In Thorp v. Hammond, 1870,
“We are of opinion that the words of the [limitation] acts must be taken in a broad and popular sense in order not to defeat the manifest intent * * * to interpret an unteehnical word in the liberal way in which we believe it to have been used — as has been done in other cases.”
We are satisfied that whether Mathiasen’s status be accepted as charterer or owner pro hac vice “ * * * [its contractual] relationship [to the ship] might reasonably furnish ground upon-which a claim of liability for damage could be asserted.” The Milwaukee, D.C.E.D.Wis.1931,
Mathiasen was the employer of the personnel whose alleged negligence in part at least is asserted as the cause of the collision. Also it had the obligation of procuring “ * * * all personnel necessary to fill the complement of each tanker” and to man, equip and supply the Mission. From that obligation it must follow that if the ship was unseaworthy, because she was not fully
The order of the district court of January 9, 1958 will be affirmed.
Notes
. 46 U.S.C.A. Section 186 reads:
“The charterer of any vessel, in case he shall man, victual, and navigate such, vessel at his own expense, or by his own procurement, shall be deemed the owner of such vessel within the meaning of the provisions of this chapter relating to the limitation of liability of the owners of vessels; and such vessel, when so chartered, shall be liable in the same manner as if navigated by the owner thereof.”
. 1957,
