29 F. Cas. 363 | E.D.N.Y | 1868
This is an action to recover a bill of repairs furnished by the libellant, Young Tall, in Baltimore, to a vessel foreign to that port, for the amount of which a lien is claimed by the libellant to have been created under the maritime law; while the claimant insists that no such lien exists. Since the decisions of Mr. Justice Nelson, in the recent cases of The James Guy [Case No. 7,196], and The Neversink [Id. 10,133]. it must be considered that any doubts which may have arisen as to the law, applicable to the demands of material men against foreign vessels, no longer exist. Those decisions put a construction upon the opinion of the supreme court, in the case of Pratt v. Reed [19 How. (60 U. S.) 359], which restóles the law to its ancient, and, as was supposed, well-settled ground. Whether, then, a lien has been created in any particular instance depends upon the circumstances of the case, as they appear in evidence. If it appear that the vessel was in apparent need of the repairs for her employment or preservation, and if she was foreign to the port where the necessity was supplied, then, in the absence of contradictory circumstances, the maritime law presumes a necessity for the credit