29 F. Cas. 1342 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan | 1873
Having recently, before the argument in this cause, decided in the case of the steamer Robinson, in the Western district of Tennessee, substantially the principle here involved, we should not, but for the history of the cause, have deemed the question one of doubt. Without any very thorough examination at the time, but drawing mainly upon what we had ever assumed to be the law, we ruled that all maritime contracts made within the scope of the master’s usual authority did per se hypothecate the ship; and that those of af-freightment, insurance, towage, the fitting out and discharge of vessels, and for aiding them in distress, were instances only of the application of the rule. After such examination as the great pressure upon our time will permit, we see no reason to modify this ruling; but hold that the contract in this case did ex vigore, the instant it was consummated, pledge both vessels, that which was to aid and that to be aided, for the security of the agreement. Performance in whole or in part works no consequence in reference to jurisdiction generally, or in the character of the remedy, whether in rem or in personam. It affects only the measure of recovery.
The practical importance of this question to our northwestern commerce; the numerous analogous rights which will fail of protection by even a limited application of the contrary doctrine; the protective power which the jurisdiction we sustain will exert in preventing the disregard of agreements; and the fear that a brief unreasoned judgment may be less influential to extend and support it, is our excuse for pursuing somewhat at length the reasons for our ruling, although forced to do so with much want of form. That contracts for salvage, towage and of affreightment, are in the most unqualified sense maritime, and therefore of admiralty cognizance, will not be questioned: and that New Jersey Co. v. The Merchants' Bank, 6 How. [47 U. S.] 344. Morewood v. Enequist, 23 How. [64 U. S.] 493, Insurance
It will be noticed the term salvage is used to denote the nature of the service, even where an absolute compensation is agreed on. And so are other cases. In Hennessey v. The Versailles [Case No. 6,365], Judge Curtis remarks that he doubts whether there is any such head, properly speaking, as tow-age. It should all, he thinks, be termed salvage, whether the ship is in distress or not. whether there is an agreed price or for fixed wages, as in the case before us. It is. however, but a name. He followed only what Judge Story a little less plainly said in The Emulous [supra], where he was seeking to lodge the power under some well-known head and among the old, familiar classes of admiralty jurisdiction, that it might escape the contests in the supreme court. That high tribunal has now settled this and some other questions, fortunately for the commerce of the country, and declared that over all maritime contracts our courts have cognizance, and that our only duty is to determine they are such. We need not now. in order to take jurisdiction, maintain that the towage of a staunch and seaworthy ship through the safe and land-locked straits of Detroit is a salvage service. We believe that the partial adoption of this inapplicable nomenclature is the parent of the objection in this case. It illustrates the impolicy of applying names to things and acts in unusual senses. Towage, however, is generally called towage, and jurisdiction over it taken not because it is salvage or in the nature of salvage, but because it is performed in pursuance of a maritime contract over which the constitution and laws give the district courts jurisdiction. In most such cases the more appropriate, but. in our opinion, unnecessary terms of ordinary and “extraordinary towage” are employed. See The Princess Alice, 3 W. Rob. Adm. 138; The Kilby. 26 Eng. Law & Eq. 596. note 1; The Kingaloch. Id. Dr. Lushington points out at length the difference between salvage and towage, and what he terms extraordinary towage, the latter being such as demands some extra labor. He cannot, he says, where all is fair, break in upon agreements for the latter, and allow salvage properly so called. The Harbinger, 20 Eng. Law & Eq. 641, and The Graces, 2 W. Rob. Adm. 294, were like cases, where similar terms, familiar in England. are used. In the latter, it is said, the going to the ship was a part of the services as much as the labor after arrival. And see The White Star. L. R. 1 Adm. & Ecc. 68; The Banner [Case No. 17,149]. Judge Wilkins. in this district, said, there was a lien for towage: that it might be necessary in cases of stranding. The Susan [supra], and many of the more modern American eases employ the same terms, and treat the jurisdiction, as it should be, as depending upon
It is. however, broadly contended in argument here that, irrespective of all notions peculiar to salvage, there is no hypothecation of the ship while the contract is. execu-tory. That, unless the performance is entered upon in such mode as to bring the subjects of the agreement into actual contact. there can be no remedy in rem. We were referred to no judgment or book countenancing such a doctrine beyond The Freeman, 18 How. [59 U. S.] 182, and The Yankee Blade, or Vandewater v. Mills, 19 How. [60 U. S.] 82, which, in their now expressly overruled dicta, do sustain in some degree such a doctrine in reference to contracts of af-freightment. They affirmed extrajudicially that there was no lien in favor of the shipper until the cargo was laden on board. From this error it was argued that, unless the tug in this instance actually laid hold of the Williams, and made at least a single pull, she was not drawn within the jurisdiction in rem. It will be seen that even this farfetched analogy fails not only for want of similitude, but the doctrine from which it is sought to be deduced, never had a resting place in law.
We think it may now be considered as settled that such a delivery to a carrier as imposes upon him the extraordinary liabilities attaching to his character creates a lien upon the ship to secure the performance of the contract of carriage. There is no necessity for actual contact of cargo with ship. Whether there is a remedy in rem where there has been no delivery, has not as yet been decided by the court of last resort, but in the absence of all authority to the contrary and sustained by express judgments in the district and circuit courts, and. as we said upon the argument, by what we deemed unquestionable principles, we should readily sustain a libel for the breach of a contract of affreightment wholly irrespective of delivery to the carrier. Such act may. and in most instances would, be requisite to launch the duty of carriage. But jurisdiction in rem does not depend upon it. That vests, if without it a maritime contract within the usual authority of the master has clearly created a duty to carry, to tow, to aid in distress, or do any other act within the common duties of the department of commerce in which the vessel is engaged. If the agreements are obligatory, and the conditions for performance occur as contemplated, they do. of their own force, hypothecate the ship. The contract, the obligation which it imposes, does so.
In The Edwin [Case No. 4,300], affirmed in 24 How. [65 U. S.] 386, was sustained a proceeding in rem for the loss of cotton upon a lighter on its way to the ship. Judge Sprague reviews the 18th and 19th Howard [59 and 60 U. S.], and anticipates what the supreme court on appeal says of the dicta in those two judgments. He says it is worthy of much consideration whether there is not a hypothecation of the ship by a contract of carriage without any delivery to the carrier, and cites The Flash [Case No. 4,857], decided by the learned Judge Betts, of the Southern district of New York, so holding, but adds that, subsequently, in 1857, according to a newspaper report, he refused to enforce the doctrine in obedience to the dicta in 18th and 19th Howard [59 and 60 U. S.]. They out of the way, The Flash is not extinguished, although the learned judge who decided it felt himself no longer at liberty to follow its light. In The Edwin, or Buikley v. Cotton Co., 24 How. [65 U. S.], the court say that what is said in 18th and 19th Howard [59 and 60 U. S.] and in Grant v. Norway, 2 Eng. Law & Eq. 337, all refer to circumstances where there had been no such delivery as to impose on the carrier the duty of carriage or to care for the property. It is said “the unloading of the goods at the end of the voyage, on the wharf, does not discharge the lien, and we do not see why the lien may not attach if the cargo is delivered to the master before it reaches the hold of the vessel, as consistently as its continuance after it is unloaded on the wharf or within the warehouse.” The scope of what is here meant will be better understood in connection with the at one time much discussed, but now settled doctrine in all courts. English, federal and state, that a delivery at the usual place where a carrier receives goods, whether upon a wharf, in a warehouse of his own or others, fixes his liability as insurer. See Ang. Carr. §§ 129-148; 2 Redf. R. R. 55-59; Ben. Adm. § 287; 1 Conk. Adm. 193; 1 Pars. Adm. p. 183. Nowhere is any distinction made between the absolute liability of the carrier as insurer and the right to enforce it by a proceeding in rem. the abandoned dicta in 18th and 19th Howard, and the few cases dependent upon them excepted. In The Robinson [unreported], we had occasion to go somewhat into the distinction between contracts which did and those which did not bind the ship in rem. We found the line wholly drawn between those which were maritime and the undertakings of the master in reference to the sale
The rectitude of the jurisdiction now taken, however, may be vindicated more fully than simply to answer the accidental objections made to it. It may be quite true that the analogies from the doctrines in salvage fail because the service is not such, and that the breach of an executory contract of af-freightment may be compensated by proceedings in rem, and still the present decree fail of affirmative support. We do not repose upon this negative argument. The wider principle, that every maritime agreement binds the ship as well as the owner, is that upon which we rest our decision. That such is the law of the American admiralty, and substantially so, as now restored, of the English, and that the ship is bound by the contract, and not by force of part performance, will be seen by the following judgment and authors. It would be a mere affectation to go back of the more modern decisions, which, if we might suppose what no one suggests, that they misconceive the older doctrines, are nevertheless in the conditions of this court to be followed. No separation of cases which announce the general rule, and those which apply it, where the services have not been rendered in, or upon, or in contact with the ship will be made. Judgment in the erroneously so-called salvage cases and towage cases, where the agreements are implied from signals and cireum-stances, are promiscuously referred to, as their applicability will be sufficiently apparent.
In Insurance Co. v. Dunham, 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 1, although a proceeding in personam upon a policy of insurance, its mode of argument and approval of cases would, without more, oblige our inferior courts to say that for all purely maritime contracts there is a remedy in rem. It extensively reviews the former judgment, and sums up its able argument by the broadest announcement of the jurisdiction generally, and declares that “the only duty is to apply the general principle to the differing cases as they arise.” From The Belfast, 7 Wall. [74 U. S.] 624, is quoted “that contracts, claims or services purely maritime are cognizable in the admiralty,” and from Morewood v. Enequist, 23 How. [64 U. S.] 493. that part of Judge Grier’s opinion which says that “over all maritime contracts there is jurisdiction in the admiralty. both in rem and in personam.” New Jersey Co. v. Merchants’ Bank, 6 How. [47 U. S.] 344, is referred to, and the following passage from Judge Nelson’s opinion approved: “If the cause is maritime the jurisdiction is as complete over the person as over the ship. It must, in its nature be complete;. it cannot be confined to one of the remedies on the contract where the contract itself is within its cognizance.” In 6 How. 344, the contest was whether the proceeding must not be solely in rem, and the learned argument of counsel as well as its treatment by the court show how free from doubt is such a remedy here. We do not overlook the fact that these broad announcements are not literally and universally applicable. The exceptions, however, are so far from this ease that it would be a useless criticism to suggest them. In Four Thousand Eight Hundred and Eighty-Five Bags of Linseed. 1 Black [66 U. S.] 108, Chief Justice Taney says. “As contracts
This jurisdiction is all the more necessary now that so large a portion of our transportation is done by corporations whose ships are frequently covered by bonds and mortgages, and whose personal responsibility is doubtful. To send the proposed shipper in all instances to the often distant home of the owner is a hardsnip which the rule was established to prevent, and which no evil growing out of its administration demands. No class of contracts requires promptness so much as those connected with commerce. The buyers of produce, the merchant and manufacturer all have adjusted their most continuous and common transactions upon a basis which involves the utmost fidelity and regularity in the carrying trade. The proprietor of a tug, ■which in virtue of a fair contract is sent hundreds of miles to aid a ship in distress,- should not be compelled to go to another state and sue without security for the agreed price, because the accidents of the winds and waves may have rendered its labors unnecessary. Decree for libellant.