The appellee filed its libel in admiralty against “the boat Nuska, her engine, boilers, machinery, tackle, apparel, and furniture, and against all persons intervening for their interest in a cause of action,-civil and maritime,” for the alleged
The libel was excepted to on the following grounds:
“(1) Because the allegations- thereof do not disclose any admiralty or maritime claim or lien upon said vessel whereupon a judgment should be founded.
“(2) Said libel is defective in form, in that the nature of the cause is nowhere stated therein, nor whether it be a cause civil and maritime.
“(3) The libel fails to show that the material and machinery furnished were furnished upon the faith of the boat.
“(4) The allegations of the libel and the contract thereto attached show simply a contract or debt without admiralty jurisdiction.”
In argument, the just set out grounds numbered 1, 2, and 4 were sought to be supported by the contention that the allegations of the libel fail to show that the claim asserted is maritime in its nature, in that those allegations do not show the Nuska was a completed boat when the libel was filed or when the mentioned equipment and materials were furnished and the mentioned labor was done. We think that the allegations of the libel fairly import that the structure libeled, namely, the boat Nuska, was a water craft, not an uncompleted structure intended to be a boat when it was finished. In common usage the words “boat” and “vessel” are understood to describe structures so far completed as to be capable of being used as a means of transportation on water. R. S. § 3 (Comp. St. § 3). The statute (41 Stat. 1005, § 30, subsee. P [Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1923, § 8146}4ooo]) provides that “any person furnishing repairs, supplies, * * * or other necessaries, to any vessel, whether foreign or domestic, upon the order of the owner of such vessel, * * * shall have a maritime lien on the vessel,” etc. The use of a qualifying adjective or expression in connection with the word ‘“vessel” was not needed to indicate the absence of an intention to give that statute the effect of conferring a maritime lien for labor or material furnished for a structure before it became capable of being used as a means of transportation on water. The word “vessel” was there used to describe an instrum'ent of navigation. It is not customary for a structure to be called a “boat” or “vessel” and to have a name before it is launched. “In the baptism of launching she receives her name, and from the moment her keel touches the water she is transformed, and becomes a subject of admiralty jurisdiction.” Tucker v. Alexandroff, 22 S. Ct. 195, 201, 183 U. S. 424, 438 (46 L. Ed. 264). We think that as used in the libel the words “Boat Nuska” meant a completed water craft, capable of navigation. It was open to the appellant by its answer to set up a defense on the ground that the equipment, material, and labor in question were furnished for the original construction of the Nuska. The answer set up no such defense. This circumstance re-enforces the conclusion that the grounds of exception under consideration constitute a hypercritical and unsustainable attack on the sufficiency of the libel.
The above set out ground of exception No. 3 was without merit, because, under the terms of the above-quoted statute, one who furnishes repairs, supplies, or other necessaries to a vessel upon the order of its owner has a maritime lien on such vessel, whether he does or does not allege or prove that he did so on the credit or faith of the vessel.
In argument in this court, the libel was challenged on the ground that it showed that the appellee retained title to the property which was the subject of the written contract alleged. It does not seem that this objection was suggested by the exceptions to the libel. But the libel as a whole was not subject to objection on that ground, because its allegations showed that appellee, upon the order of the boat’s owner, furnished to it labor and material the title to which was not shown to have been retained by the appellee. Furthermore, the libel showed that the equipment covered by the written contract was furnished by the appellee to the boat on the order of its owner. The retention by contract of the title to such equipment as security for the purchase price was
The action of the court on exceptions to parts of appellant’s answer to the libel and to its cross-libel had the effect of eliminating claims of the appellant that the alleged written contract was not complied with. It is enough to say that the allegations of neither of those pleadings showed a noneomplianee with that contract by the appellee. The record shows that the material allegations of the libel were sustained by proof, and does not show that appellant was improperly denied the benefit of any alleged valid defense or counterclaim.
The decree is affirmed.