86 F. 344 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Washington | 1898
The defendant, is an insolvent corporation, and its property and business are in the hands of a receiver apj>ointed by this court, upon the petition of the complainant, with the acquiescence of the defendant. The property which has come under control of the receiver consists chiefly of patent rights, including the right to own and operate, within certain territory, vessels, machinery, and apparatus for dredging, constructed according to plans and specifications covered by the several patents granted to Alphouso B. Bowers; also, the dredgers Anaconda and Python, with their machinery and equipments. Duiing the years Í895, 1896, and 1897, the defendant was engaged in operating said dredgers in the harbor of Seattle, cutting water ways and Ailing tide flats, under a contract with the Seattle & Lake Washington Water-Way Company, a corporation which has undertaken to All a large area of tide flats, and in connection therewith to cut and deepen water ways across said area, and to cut and construct a ship canal, with a lock, to connect Lake Washington with said water ways; said improvements being- authorized by a, contract made and entered into by the state of Washington with the waterway company. The defendant, under its contract, during the lime it was engaged in said work, dredged a water way more than 2,500 feet in length, 500 feet wide, and with a depth of water of 26 feet at low tide, and, with the material excavated by dredging said water way, Ailed in and made from 75 to 100 acres of land; cover ing a spa.ee theretofore submerged except at low tide. In doing-said work the defendant contracted debts for necessary supplies and materials, for repairs to its vessels and machinery, and for wages earned bv the men employed in operating the dredgers, and handling the pipes by which the material taken from the water ways was conducted to the Ailed area. The Anaconda and Python are vessels designed to operate afloat, and to navigate from place to place where their services may be required in dredging and deepening rivers, harbors, and water ways. Before coming to Seattle, they have each been employed at other distant places, and have made voyages by being towed irpon the Paeiflc Ocean. Their machinery consists of rotary cutters, for digging in mud and sand
The main question in the case is whether the dredgers are vessels subject to admiralty process, whether the work which they were doing was a maritime service, whether the contracts under which they were supplied and kept in repair are maritime, and whether their crews have maritime liens for their wages. The writers and judges who have expounded maritime laws, and the rules by which the jurisdiction of admiralty courts must be measured, have not succeeded in making known any satisfactory test by which floating structures which are subjects of admiralty jurisdiction, and to which maritime liens may attach, may be distinguished from those which have no place in the realm of maritime jurisprudence. There are numerous decisions which tell that adaptability to float on the water, masts, sails, propelling machinery, steering apparatus, capacity for carrying merchandise or passengers, and mobility, are features by which a subject of admiralty jurisdiction may be recognized; but the decisions are not all con
I find no difficulty in pronouncing in favor of the engineers, firemen, deck hands, and captains who worked on board of the dredgers. They have maritime liens for the balances due to them for wages. The captains were not clothed with the authority of masters, but were simply foremen in charge of the working crews. Therefore the rule that the master of a vessel has no lien for wages does not apply to them. Those who worked as general mechanics in keeping the machinery in repair, and the pipe men, who attended to laying, connecting, and moving the lines of pipe, and those who performed necessary labor upon and about the filled area, are also entitled to liens. Their services were required in prosecution of the enterprise in which the vessels were employed. The right to claim a lien for wages under the general maritime law is not restricted to favor only mariners who serve the ship with peculiar nautical skill, but extends to all whose services are in furtherance of the main object of the enterprise in which the ship is engaged. The Minna, 11 Fed. 759; The Ocean Spray, Fed. Cas. No. 10,412. It is true that some of the men worked upon and in connection with both vessels, and the la,w does not admit of a lien upon one vessel for wages earned in service upon a different vessel; but the evidence shows with approximate accuracy the time which each man devoted to the service of each vessel, and the amounts can be fairly apportioned.
All of the coal consumed by both vessels while engaged in the work was purchased of the intervener O. J. Smith, as receiver of the Oregon Improvement Company. The evidence shows that the defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Illinois. Its president and general officers, except a general manager, were not inhabitants of this state, and it had no general office in this state while the work referred to was being done.
9’lie claims to liens for wages and for supplies and repairs are founded, not only upon the general maritime law, but also upon a statute in force in this state, which provides that:
“All steamers, vessels and boats, their tackle, apparel and iurnllure, are liable: (1) For services rendered on board at the request of or on contract with their respective owners, masters, agents, or consignees. (2) For supplies furnished in this slate for their use at the request of their respective owners, masters, agents, or consignees. (3) For work done or material furnished in this slate, for their eonstradion, repair, or equipment, at the request of their respective owners, masters, agents, c.i "sigíleos, contractors, subcontractors, or other person or persons having charge in whole or in part of their construction, alteration, repair, or equipment.” 2 Ballinger’s Codes & St. Wash. § 5953.
From the evidence and stipulations of the parties, I find that the claims of O. J. fehnith, receive!' of the Oregon Improvement Company, the Moran Bros. Company, and P. J. Sullivan, for supplies and materials furnished, and for repairs, come clearly within the letter and spirit of this statute. The power of the legislature to create a lien upon a vessel owned by a nonresident of this state is denied, and a number of decisions have been cited to the effect that the maritime law is not subject to amendment or change either by congress or the legislature of any state. It is well established, however, by repeated decisions of the supreme court, that the state legislatures can create liens upon ships and vessels, and that such liens, when given to secure debts or liabilities cognizable in a court of admiral tv, mar be enforced by the process of a court of admiralty. See The J. E. Kumbell, 148 U. S. 1-21, 13 Sup. Ct. 498, in which the previous rulings of the supreme court
I am unable to find from the evidence that the Washington Rubber Company, the Puget Sound Machinery Depot, the Seattle Hardware Company, or the Gutta-Percha & Rubber Manufacturing Company have liens upon either of the vessels, either under the general maritime, law or the statute. As to each of these interveners there is a failure of proof to show that the supplies and materials sold to the defendant company were necessary for use in connection with the work of either of the dredgers, or that they were so used. Their demands in the amounts claimed will be recognized as valid debts of the corporation, but not as preferential.
The question of interest will be determined when there are funds to distribute. If the assets should be insufficient to pay all the debts of the defendant, with legal interest, or the contract rate, where there have been promises in writing to pay interest, then each creditor will receive a dividend upon a pro rata distribution of the funds, based upon a computation of the principal amounts.
The payments to be credited against the claim of P. J. Sullivan will be applied as he has shown by his amended petition that he has applied the same.
A decree will be entered allowing the clai ms of all the inter veil' ers for the amounts admitted to be due, and directing that the Anaconda and Python be sold separately, and that the debts due to the employés, and to C. J. Smith, the Moran Bros. Company, and P. J. Sullivan, rank as preferred claims against the proceeds for the several amounts which the evidence shows to be properly chargeable against each vessel.