Affirmеd by published opinion. Judge WIDENER wrote the opinion, in which Judge RUSSELL and Judge HALL joined.
OPINION
Appellant, the South Carolina State Ports Authority, appeals from a finding of the district court that certain charges incurred at the Port of Charleston in the sеrvicing of two vessels, the Tyson Lykes and the Tillie Lykes,
First American chartered the ships to Top-gallant, which made Southeastern its authorized agent in Charleston. In 1987, Topgal-lant and the Ports Authority negotiated for a variance in the terms of the Ports Authority tariff, which governs the cost of services provided by the Port Authority in Charleston, but the negotiations were never consummated. Upon the Port Authority’s request, Southeastern guaranteed the Authority’s сharges incurred while Topgallant’s ships were in port at Charleston. Topgallant contracted with Allsouth, a stevedoring company, to load and discharge containers of the ships in Charleston. Allsouth was compensated on a “pick-rate” basis, which is a flat rate per container basis out of which Allsouth paid the Authority for all its services to Allsouth. The Ports Authority was the only entity at the Port of Charleston that possessed the cranes and container-handling equipment necessary to perform certain of the stevedoring services.
Topgallant declared bankruptcy in December 1989. The ships were arrested in Germany to satisfy creditors of Topgallant, but the Ports Authоrity did not participate in those proceedings, instead notifying Southeastern that it was calling Southeastern’s guarantee. A plan was worked out whereby Southeastern would repay Topgallant’s debts to the Authority, and a similar рlan was agreed to by the Authority and Allsouth for amounts owed by Allsouth to the Authority. At some point in May or June 1990, Southeastern ceased payments to the Ports Authority, as did Allsouth. When the ships, renamed and rechartered, returned to Charlestоn in 1990, the Ports Authority asserted its liens against them, and First American offered a letter of undertaking in October 1990 to avoid the arrest of the ships in Charleston.
The Ports Authority brought suit against the ships in rem and First American as claimant of the ships, seeking recovery of various terminal sеrvice charges in a total amount of $241,550.33. The district court dismissed certain claims for lack of jurisdiction. It then found that all the remaining claims were secured by hens under the Maritime Lien Act as “necessaries to a vessel,” 46 U.S.C. § 31342(a),-but that those incurred by Allsouth
We review the fact findings of the district court on the first issue, Allsouth’s authority to bind the vessels, for clear error, McAllister v. United States,
On the evidence in this ease, we agree with the district court that the Authority failed to satisfy its burden of proving that Allsouth was Topgallant’s agent. See Hofherr v. Dart Indus., Inc.,
We now address First American’s cross-appéal. The parties dispute the appropriate standаrd of review of the district court’s conclusions. Although the issue of intent to waive a lien is one of fact reviewed for clear error, see Farrell Ocean Servs., Inc. v. United States,
In the “President Arthur”, the owner of the vessel wished to purchase coal for the ship which could not be obtained on usual terms because the owner was not financially responsible. The coal dealer demanded endorsed trade assurances instead of open account credit and that the trade assurances be endorsed by financially responsible people. The trade assurances could then have been converted into cash by discounting prior to their maturity. The contracts for purchase of the coal were reduced to writing and provided that the owner should “pay for the said coal as follows: by delivering to the company two trade acceptances.” The contracts also provided that they were “the entire contract between the parties” and that “there is no outside condition, warranty, agreement or understanding.”
In this circuit in Jeffrey v. Henderson Bros.,
We are thus of opinion that by taking the guarantee of Southeastern the Authority did not waive its lien for such necessaries as the
In summary, we affirm the judgment of the district court so far as it establishes liens in favor of the Ports Authority in the amount of $118,781.76, and we also affirm thе judgment of the district court insofar as it declined to establish any further lien on the vessels because Allsouth was not a person authorized.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. At times relevant to these proceedings, the ships were chartered under the names Delaware Bay and Chesapeake Bay. There is no dispute as to the identity of the ships.
. Container crane, and handling equipment rental charges and stevedore usage charges.
. Dockage, wharfage and harbor master fees and labor.
. The Ports Authority relies heavily on the theоry that Topgallant dealt directly with the Authority and that Allsouth was merely an intermediary. Given the undisputed fact that the Topgallant-Ports Authority negotiations were never consummated, we do not understand how the Authority so conceptualizes the situation. Once Topgallant rejected the Authority’s offer to vary the tariff, any dealings between Allsouth and the Authority were clearly not controlled by those negotiations, and Allsouth and the Authority were free to reach their own agreements. We thus uphold the district court’s determination that this intermediary theory is unsupported in the record.
