delivered the opinion of the court.
This case .is before us upon,a question certified by the *265 ."United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit under the act of-March 8, 1891, c. 517, 26 Stat. 826.
The facts out of which the question arises are as follows: Upon orders given by the New York Steamship Company, a New Jersey'corporation engaged in business at .the city of New York, the libellants at different times, at- that port, furnished and delivered coal on board of the steamship Valencia for its specific use. The vessel was registered at "Wilmington, North Carolina, but was owned by citizens of New York. •The coal was necessary to enable it to make a series of regular trips from New York to and from the ports of Maine; In some instances the orders for the coal were sent direct by mail; in others, through a broker, either hy the general manager of the company or by the superintendent of the dock. The libellants began to supply the coal on the 30th day of April, 1890, and furnished, from time to time down to and including July 5th, six cargoes, bills for which were sent to the office of the steamship company in the city of New York, and were paid by it.
None of the coal was delivered by the order of the'master or by his procurement or with Ms expressed consent.
The corporation operated the steamship • under a charter requiring it “ to provide and pay for all the coals,”, etc. The libellants were not aware of the existence of-'the charter at the time they furnished the coal, nor did they know where the ship hailed from, whether she was foreign or domestic, nor what was her credit.' They were at the time without knowledge of the ownership of the vessel or of the relations between it and the New York Steamship Company, except that that company “ appeared' to be directing its operation.” They made no inquiry as- to the solvency of the steamship сompany, or as to the ownership or nationality of the vessel, but, in the belief that -the ship was responsible for supplies furnished, delivered the coal as above stated, charging the same on its books to “S. S. Valencia and owners, New York,”in some cases “city,” in others “Pier 49, E. it., New York.”
No fact proved in the cáse warranted the inference that *266 either the master or the charterer agreed to pledge the сredit of the vessel for the coal.
By the laws of New York (c. 482 of 1862) it is provided: “§ 1. Whenever a debt amounting to fifty dollars or upwards as to a seagoing or ocean-bound vessel . . . shall be contracted by.the master, owner, charterer, builder or consignee of any ship or vessel, or the agent of either of them, within this State for either of the. following purposes: 1st. On account of work done or materials or other articles furnished in this State for or towards the building, repairing, fitting, furnishing or equipping such ship or vessel; 2d. For such provisions and stores furnished within this State. as may be, fit and proper for the use of such vessel at the time the. same were furnished, ... such debt shall be a lien upon such vessel, her tackle, apparel and furniturе,” etc. No lien was filed under the statute of the State.
Libellants insisted that for other supplies of coal of the aggregate value of $1608.75, furnished, in. the ' months' of June, July and August, they were entitled to a maritime lien on the ship. The District Court having sustained their claim, an appeal was prosecuted to the Circuit Court of Appeals. -
The question certified to this court is: WTiеther, upon the above facts, the libellants obtained a maritime lien on the steamship for the supplies thus furnished and not paid for.
In
The
Kate,- decided at the present term — in which case the libellant claimed a maritime lien on a vessel for coal furnished upon the order of a charterer who was bound by the charter party to provide and pay for all. coal required by the vessel.,— this court said: “ The principle would seem to be firmly-established that .when it is sought to create a lien upon a vessel for supplies’ furnished upon the order of the master, the libel will be dismissed if it satisfactorily appears that the libellant knew, or ought reasonably to be charged with knowledge, that there was no necessity for obtaining the supplies, or, if they viere ordered on the credit of the vessel, that the master had at the time in his hands funds which his duty required that, he should' apply in the purchase of needed sup-.
*267
plies. Courts of admiralty will not recognize and enforce a lien upon a vessel when the transaction, upon which the claim rests originated in the fraud of the master upon the' owner,, or in some breach of the master’s duty to the owner, of which the libellant had knowledge, or in respect of which he closed his eyes, without inquiry as to the facts.” Again: “ If no lien .exists under the maritime law, when supplies are fur-, nished to a vessel upon the order of the master, under circumstances charging the party furnishing them with knowledge that the master cannоt rightfully, as. against the owner, pledge the credit of the vessel for such supplies, much less is one recognized under that law where the supplies are furnished, not upon the order of the master, but upon that of the charterer who did not represent the owner in the business of the vessel, but who, as the claimant knew,' or by reasonable diligence could have аscertained, had agreed himself to provide and pay for such supplies', and could not, therefore, rightfully pledge the credit of the vessel for them.?’
The libellants contend that although the coal was furnished on the order of the charterer, and not on that of the master, they have a maritime lien on the vessel to secure their claim, and cite in support of that view,
The Grapeshot,
In The Grapeshot, it was said, among other-things, that “ where proof is made of necessity for the repairs or supplies, or for N ;ds raised to pay for them by the master, and of credit given to the ship, a presumption will arise, conclu-sivo, in the absence of evidence to the -contrary, of necessity for credit ”; in The Lulu, that “ experience shows that ships and vessels employed in commerce and navigation often need repairs and supplies in course of a voyage, when the owners of the same are absent, and at times and places when and where the master may be without funds, and may find it impracticable to communicate seasonably with the owners of the vessel upon the subject,” and thаt “ contracts for. repairs and supplies-, under such circumstances, may be made by the *268 master to enable the vessel to proceed on her voyage, and if the repairs and supplies were necessary for that purpose, and were made and furnished to a foreign vessel or to a vessel of the United States in a port other than the port of the State where the vessel belongs, th q prima facie presumption is that the repairs and supplies were made and furnished on the credit of the vessel, unless the contrary appears from the evidence in the case”;, and in’ The Kalorama — in which, case all the. advances were made at the request of the master, in the absence of the owner, or by the owner in person when he was presént; and with the understanding that they were made on the-credit of the vessel — that “the necessity for credit must be presumed where it appears that the repairs and supplies were ordered by the master, and that they were necessary for the ship, unless it is shown that the master had funds or that the owner had sufficient credit, and that the repаirers, furnishérs and lenders of the money knew those facts or one of them, or that such facts and circumstances were known to them as were sufficient to put them upon inquiry, and to show that if they' had used due diligence they, wpuld have ascertained that the master, was not authorized to obtain any such- relief on the credit of the vessel.”
These were cases of supplies furnished oh the. order of the master, and what was said by this court must, therefore, be taken in the light of the principle^ that as the master of the ship stands in the position of agent or representative of the owners, the latter “ are bound to the performance of all lawful contracts made by him, relative to the . usual employment of the ship, а,nd the repairs arid.other necessaries furnished for her use,”
The Aurora, 1
Wheat. 96, 101 ; or, as expressed in
The St. Jago de Cuba,
In the case of The -Paiapsco it appeared’ that the supplies were furnished to the vessel in a foreign port. This court, recognizing the case to be an embarrassing one and not free from difficulty, proceeded on the ground that, as according to the weight of the evidence the supplies were furnished on the credit of thе ship, and not on that of the company which used it, and which was notoriously insolvent, there was a lien on the vessel that should not be displaced except upon affirmative proof that the credit was given to the company to the exclusion of the vessel. Nothing, however, was said in that case to justify the contention that a lien will arise for necеssary supplies furnished a vessel, in a foreign port, on the order of a charterer, if the libellant at the time knew, or by reasonable diligence could have ascertained, that it was being run under a charter that obliged the charterer to provide and pay for all needed supplies. That case turned largely upon its special facts, and wаs so presented to this court as to restrict its inquiry to the single point whether the coal was furnished to the Patapsco on the credit of the vessel or of the owners. In point of fact, the Patapsco was run under a charter party by the Commercial Steamboat Company, a corporation of Rhode Island. But that corporation ownеd and operated steamers of its own on the same line in which the Patapsco "was employed ; and the court in examining the case seemed to have *270 treated that company as the owner of all the vessels used on its line. This is apparent from the opinion, which states that “ whether the coal was furnished on the credit of the vessel or оf the owners is the only point of inquiry in this case.”
Nor is there anything in
The Guy,
In /the present case, the question of lien or no lien on the vessel arises under circumstances not disclosed or discussed in any' of the cases upon which libellants rely. Although the fibellants were not aware of the existence of the charter party under which the Valencia was employed, it must be assumed upоn the facts certified that by reasonable diligence they could have ascertained that the New York Steamship Company did not own the vessel, but used it under a charter party providing that the charterer should pay for all needed coal. The libellants knew that the steamship company had an office in the city of New York. They did business with them at that office, and could easily have ascertained the ownership of the vessel and the relation of the steamship company to the owners. . They were put upon inquiry, but they chose to shut their eyes and make no inquiry touching these matters or in reference to the solvency or credit of that company. It is true-that libellants delivered the coal in thе belief that the vessel, whether a foreign or a domestic one, or by whomsoever owned, would be responsible for the value of such coal. But such a belief is not sufficient in itself to give a maritime lien. If that belief was founded upon the supposition that
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the steamship company owned the vessel, no lien would exist, because in the absence of аn agreement, express or implied,»* for a lien, a contract for supplies made directly with the owner in person is to be taken as made “on his ordinary responsibility, without a view to the vessel as the fund from which compensation is to be derived.” '
The St. Jago de Cuba,
In Beinecke v. Steamship Secret, 3 Fed. Rep. 665, 667, United States District Court for the Southern District of-. New York, which was a suit against a vessel owned by a foreign corporation having an office and transacting business in New York, and. with good credit there, but' operated by Murray, Ferris & Co., a New York firm, under a charter party requiring the charterers to furnish all supplies, Judge.Choate said: “They [the libellants] knew:they were dealing with' New York parties, and not with the foreign owner or the master, who presumably reprеsents the owner; and they were put upon inquiry as to the interest and relation of Murray, Ferris & Co. to the vessel, and are chargeable with the facts they might have ascertained on such inquiry. They could easily have learned that Murray, Ferris & Co. had no right or power to bind the owners or the vessel for the supplies, and that they were, in fact, the owners, so far as concerned parties supplying the ship.” So, in The Norman, 28 Fed. Rep. 383, 384, Judge McKennan said: “But Murray, Ferris &.Co. [the *272 charterers] were residents of . New York, at which port the vessel was lying when the coal was furnished, and they furnished it directly, without the intervention of the official representative of the vessel. They were owners pro hao vice, because they had possession of the vessel, and she was at their “sole disposal” until the end of the charter. These facts repel the implication that the coal' was furnished upon the credit of the vessel, but warrant the inference- that it was furnished upon the personal credit of the charterers and ostensible owners. At least they were sufficient to put the libellant upon inquiry as to the actual relations of Murray, Ferris & Co. to the vessel, and their obligations -under the charter party; and this must have resulted in the knowledge that the act of the charterers could not, under the circumstances, impose a lien upon the vessel.” In The Samuel Marshall, 49 Fed. Rep. 754, 757, affirmed in 6 U. S. App. 389, Judge Severens said: “ If the vessel is then in the use, pos: session and control of others than the owner, a presumptiоn arises that such others are liable to pay the charges incident to the employment; and if the party furnishing the supplies knew, or should have known, the facts in regard to the use and control of the vessel, there is the same reason for the presumption against the credit being given to the vessel, when the charterer or other person standing in a similar rеlation to the vessel residds at the port of supply, as in cases where the owner operating the vessel on his own account resides at such port, and ‘ where there is the same reason there should be the same law.’ ” See also The Suliote, 23 Fed. Rep. 919; The Pirate, 32 Fed. Rep. 486; The Glenmont, 34 Fed. Rep. 402; The Golden Gate, 1 Newberry, 308.
Under what circumstances, if under any, a charterer who has control and possession of a vessel under a сharter party requiring him, at his own cost, to provide for necessary supplies and repairs, may pledge the credit of the vessel, it is not necessary now to determine. We mean only to decide, at this time, that one furnishing supplies or making repairs on the order simply of a person or corporation acquiring the control and possession of a vessel under such a charter party can *273 not acquire a maritime lien if the circumstances attending the transaction put him on inquiry as to.the existence and terms of such charter party, but “he failed to make inquiry, and chose to act on a mere' belief that the vessel would be liable for his claim.
For the reasons stated the question certified to this court is answered in the negative.
