Under the agreed statement of facts in this case, the contract to tow the steam dredge-boat Alabama and the two scows from the port of Mobile to Tampa bay was a maritime contract, and
“It is not the form, the construction, the rig, the equipment, or the means of propulsion that establishes the jurisdiction, but the purpose and business of the craft as an instrument of naval transportation.” Section 218.
The agreed statement of facts in this case recites:
“That the dredge-boat and scows are not engaged in, nor were they built to be used in, carrying freight or passengers as a business; that the sole business for which said dredge-boat and scows were built, and in which they have been used, is dredging out and deepening the water-ways of commerce, though in prosecuting that business the said dredge-boat and scows carry on them said machinery, and large quantities of coal to be used as fuel on said dredge-boat and the tow-boat in towing the dredge and scows.”
From the same statement It appears further:
“That the mode of business of said dredge-boat and scows was for the •dredge with its machinery to dig the earth out under the water in the channel to be deepened, deposit the earth in the scows, which were then towed to the dumping-ground, unloaded by dumping the earth through their bottoms, •and then towed back for the operation to be repeated.”
The parties to this case have treated the dredge and scows as one thing, one plant, built and operated as one; as one complete whole carrying on one business, and having but one purpose. If the parties are right in thus treating the dredge-boat and scows as one craft or thing, then it seems clear that the purpose and business of that craft is largely navigation and water transportation. It would be of no use to dig up the earth in the channel unless it should be transported away, and it could not be transported away unless it should be first dug out; and the whole business seems to be the transportation by water of earth and dirt from one place to another place. According .to the test authorized by the supreme court in the case of The Bock Island Bridge,
The case of the floating elevator, The Hezekiah Baldwin,
The next point made by the claimants under the pleadings and evidence is that the maritime lien for towage was waived because notes were taken by libelants for the towage, and those notes not being paid at maturity were supplemented by other notes, which were not due at the filing of the libel, from which it is claimed that not only was the lien lost, but, if not lost, the suit is premature. In the case of the steamer St. Lawrence,
There is nothing in the agreed state of facts in the present case to show that the libelants agreed to receive notes in place of their original claim. It is true that on receiving the original notes libelants signed the towage account presented under the words “Received payment by note, 90 days,” but this fact of itself is not sufficient to warrant the inference that receiving the notes was intended to waive the lion. See Pride of America, 19 Fed. Rep. 607. As to the suit being premature, because the notes were not due, it follows that as the lien was not lost by taking the notes, whenever the lien was in danger of being lost by transfers of the craft upon which the lien rested, libelants would have a clear right to surrender the notes and insist upon their lion. The prematurity claimed in this case, as the notes are now' shown to he long past due and unpaid, would at most only affect the question of costs.
