delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a libel in admiralty against sub-freight alleged to be in the hands of the Palmer and Parker Company of Boston in the District of Massachusetts. It was dismissed by the District Court for lack of jurisdiction,
The United States, owner of the -Steamship Mount' Shasta, in May, 1920, made a bare boat charter of the vessel to the Mount Shasta Steamship Company through Victor S. Fox and Company, Inc., an agent of that co!mpany, stipulating for a lien upon all cargoes and all sub-freights for any amounts due under the charter party. Victor S. Fox and Company in July, 1920, made a sub-charter to Palmer and Parker Company for a voyage, to bring a cargo of mahogany logs from the Gold Coast,, Africa, to Boston. The vessel arrived in Boston with its cargo on February 19, 1921. There is due to the libellant $289,680-for the hire of the steamship,- and the libel alleges that there is due and unpaid freight on the cargo of logs, $100,000, more or less, in the.hands of Palmer and Parker Company,-on which this libel seeks to establish a lien. It prays a monition against Palmer and Parker Company and all persons interested, commanding payment of the freight money into Court, &c. Palmer and *470 Parker Company was served. That Company filed exceptions to the libel, denied the jurisdiction of the Court and answered alleging ignorance of the original charter party and of the relations of the United States and the Mount Shasta S. S. Company to the vessel, and setting up counterclaims more than sufficient to exhaust the freight. The cargo had been delivered. The District Court assumed that a libel in rem could be maintained against freight money admitted to be due and payable, but was of opinion that the fund must exist when the suit is begun, or that the jurisdiction fails. The Court held that where, as here, the liability was denied in good faith, it did not appear that there was any res to be proceeded against and that the suit must be dismissed. The counsel for Palmer and Parker Company pressed the same considerations here in a somewhat more extreme form.
By the general logic of the law a debt may be treated as a
res
as easily as a ship. It is true that it is not tangible, but it is a right of the creditor’s, capable of being attached and appropriated by the law to the creditor’s duties. The ship is a
res
not because it is tangible but because it is a focus of rights that in like manner may be dealt with by the law. It is no more a
res
than a copyright. How far in fact the admiralty has carried its proceeding
in rem
is a question of tradition. We are not disposed to disturb what we take to have been the understanding of the Circuit Courts for a good many years, and what the District Court assumed.
American Steel Barge Co.
v.
Chesapeake & Ohio Coal Agency Co.,
But if it be conceded that the Admiralty Court has jurisdiction to enforce a lien on sub-freights by a proceeding
in rem,
and a libel is filed alleging such sub-freights
*471
to be outstanding, we do not perceive how the Court can be deprived of jurisdiction merely by Jin answer denying that such freights are due. The jurisdiction is determined by the allegations of the libel.
Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co.
v.
Rice,
Decree reversed.
The separate opinion of
I am unable to accept the view that an admiralty court may entertain an action
in rem
when there is nothing which the marshal can take into custody. The technical term
in rem
is used to designate a proceeding against some thing. This court and text writers again and again have pointed out the essential nature of such thing. The jurisdiction is founded upon physical power over a
res
within the district upon the theory that it is
“
a contracting or offending entity,” a “ debtor ” or “ offending
*472
thing,” something that can be arrested or taken into custody, or which can be fairly designated as tangible property.
The Sabine,
Here the thing supposed to be within the district and proceeded against was an unliquidated, uncertain and disputed claim for freight, which manifestly could not be arrested or taken into custody. To base jurisdiction for an action in refit upon this intangible claim would amount to a denial of the essential nature of the proceeding.
Of course, jurisdiction of an admiralty court — that is, power to hear and adjudge the issues, not merely to send out a monition — is not finally to be determined by mere allegations of the libel any more than jurisdiction of a court of law ultimately depends upon the plaintiff’s allegation that the defendant is alive and within the district. If it appear that the defendant has never been there or was dead when the action began, certainly the court can go no further.
' An examination of
Freights of the Kate,
The decree below should be affirmed.
