40 F. 538 | W.D. Mich. | 1889
On the 17th day of September, 1888, Charles G. Alley and others, composing the firm of C. G. Alley & Co., filed their libel in this court against the propeller Daisy Day, for the purpose of enforcing an alleged lien for supplies furnished the vessel during the season of navigation for that year. The owners having made default, a decree was entered pursuant to the claim of the libelants on the 21st day of November following, and the vessel ordered sold. Meantime a number of additional libels had been filed, some for sailors’ wages, some for supplies, some for material and repairs, some for repairs, and one (that of G. F. Gunderson) for damages arising from the negligent towage by, the propeller of the schooner G. Barber, belonging to that libelant. The vessel was sold under the decree upon the original libel, and the proceeds brought into the registry of the court. Supplemental decrees'
1. And first, with regard to the seamen’s wages. The Gunderson claim for damages in tort contests with that class the priority of 'lien. It is not contended that any other claims could do this. Notwithstanding what is said in Norwich Co. v. Wright, 13 Wall., at page 122, namely, “Liens for reparation for wrong done are superior to any prior liens for money borrowed, wages, pilotage, etc., but they stand on an equality with regard to each other, if they arise from the same cause,” 1 am satisfied that the rule iu the admiralty law of this country is to prefer the claims of seamen for wages to claims for such torts as negligence in towage, provided the seaman whose claim is in question was free irom fault. It would most generally happen that the subordination of common seamen in the marine service would render them guiltless in such occasions as collisions, and accidents from negligent towage; but if it appeared (as it does not here) that the seaman was in fact in fault, his claim should be postponed to the damages to which he had contributed. If I were satisfied that this question was present to the mind of the supreme court in Norwich Co. v. Wright, and intended to be adjudged, I should, of course, unhesitatingly follow what was there held; but I do not understand that it was so presented and adjudged. The line of reasoning in which the court was employed did not involve it. The lion for seamen’s wages is a highly favored one, and, with the proviso above stated, I am of opinion that the rule declared and acted upon in The Orient, 10 Ben. 620, and The Samuel J. Christian, 16 Fed. Rep. 796, that this claim should be preferred to claims against the offending vessel for torts of such a character as the one in question, is correct.
2. The next question arises upon the relative rank of the claim for damages, as compared with the claims for supplies and repairs and insurance. And here I feel compelled to adopt the rule affirmed by Judge Nixox in the case of The M. Vandercook, 24 Fed. Rep. 478, and which I think the supreme court by necessary implication did adopt and hold in Norwich Co. v. Wright, supra, namely, that such claims in damages outrank the claims arising ex contractu, above enumerated. It is
8. The third question arises in regard to the different claims for supplies, material, and repairs, upon the circumstance that some of them were furnished at the home port of the vessel, and within the state, while others were furnished abroad. The statute of Michigan (How. St. § 8236) giyes a lien for such furnishing at the home port. But it was held by Withky, J., in The St. Joseph, Brown, Adm. 202, that liens for supplies and repairs furnished in foreign ports, which 'are strictly maritime liens, should have priority over liens under state laws. That rule has been followed in this district ever since by acquiescence and without question. Its correctness is challenged now. The question also arose in the eastern district, in the case of The General Burnside, 3 Fed. Rep. 228, and was decided by Judge BbowN in the same way; but on appeal to the circuit court this decision was reversed by Baxter, J., who held, for reasons which wore then stated, that claims for which the state law gives a lion should have equal rank with claims for which a lion is given by the maritime law, and should share with them pro rata in case of deficiency. This rule was followed by the district judge in the southern district of Ohio in The Guiding Star, 9 Fed. Rep. 521, and on appeal the decree below was affirmed by Mr. Justice Matthews in the same case, (18 Fed. Ltep. 263,) the circuit judge being also present and concurring. I feel bound to follow this ruling, without entering upon any discussion of it. The effect of the latter cases is to overrule The St. Joseph, supra. The supplies, etc., in the home port, will therefore stand on the same footing with the foreign claims in respect to those items.
4. The remaining question is in regard to the location on the schedule of the claim for insurance. It was held in The Dolphin, 1 Flip. 580, that the maritime law gives a lien for such claims, but that they were of low rank, and should go to the foot of the schedule. In The Guiding