UNITED STATES of America, Libellant-Appellee,
v.
The S.S. LUCIE SCHULTE, her engines, boilers, etc. and Three Bays Lines, Inc., Respondents,
Schulte & Bruns, Claimant-Appellant.
No. 251.
Docket 29110.
United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit.
Argued December 15, 1964.
Decided April 6, 1965.
Nicholas J. Healy and Nicholas J. Healy, Jr., New York City (Healy, Baillie & Burke, New York City), for appellant.
Robert V. Zener, Washington, D. C. (John W. Douglas, Asst. Atty. Gen., Robert M. Morgenthau, U. S. Atty., Morton Hollander, Washington, D. C., Attorney), for appellee.
Before FRIENDLY, HAYS and MARSHALL, Circuit Judges.
FRIENDLY, Circuit Judge.
This libel, tried on a stipulation of facts and exhibits before the late Judge Dawson,
On two occasions in 1957, Schulte & Bruns, a German partnership owning the Lucie Schulte, time-chartered her to Three Bays Corporation, Ltd. of Nassau, Bahamas. The charters on a standard form (designated "Government Form, approved by the New York Produce Exchange") contained a provision that
"Charterers will not suffer, nor permit to be continued, any lien or encumbrance incurred by them or their agents, which might have priority over the title and interest of the owners in the vessel."
On three occasions during the charter periods the United States, acting through the Navy's Military Sea Transportation Service and the Transportation Office, Patrick Air Force Base, made shipments on the Lucie Schulte from Port Canaveral, Florida, to installations in the British West Indies. The bills of lading, standard Government forms, designated the "transportation company" as "Three Bays Line (MS MV Lucie Schulte)," and were signed by an officer or agent of Three Bays Lines, Inc., apparently a branch of the charterer organized as a Florida corporation. Under a "conference tariff concurrence" filed with the Federal Maritime Board by Three Bays pursuant to 46 U.S.C. § 817, the charges on the Government's shipments were limited to those specified in the Leeward & Windward Islands & Guianas Conference Southbound Freight Tariff No. 6. Freight was demanded by Three Bays Lines, Inc., and paid by the Government at dates ranging from three weeks to four months after the respective deliveries. Although the vouchers certified "that the rates charged are not in excess of the lowest net rates available for the Government, based on tariffs effective at the date of service," the amounts paid exceeded such rates by $4,288.86. Some three and a half years later the Government brought this libel to recover that amount from the ship in rem and Three Bays Lines, Inc., in personam; the latter was not served and apparently is insolvent.
The alternative defenses relied on by the claimant-owner were that the overcharges had been made after cessation of the "union of ship and cargo," see Krauss Bros. Lumber Co. v. Dimon S.S. Corp.,
(1) Supporting its first defense, the owner relies on policy arguments against maritime liens, summed up in the oft-quoted statement that the lien "is a secret one which may operate to the prejudice of general creditors and purchasers without notice and is therefore stricti juris and cannot be extended by construction, analogy or inference." Osaka Shosen Kaisha v. Pacific Export Lumber Co.,
The loss of the carrier's possessory lien on the goods on the latters' delivery is similarly irrelevant. "Mutuality" is no more appealing in this branch of the law than elsewhere, see Cardozo, The Growth of the Law 14-16 (1924); Zdanok v. Glidden Co.,
(2) It is well settled that an owner who has entrusted his vessel to a charterer, whether on a time or a bare boat basis, cannot escape maritime liens for non-consensual transactions, such as tort claims of a sort that could not also be enforced in contract, and statutory penalties. The Barnstable,
The serious questions are whether and, if so, how "the general owner" can effectively negate the "just and reasonable implication" of assent. The Court limited its ruling in The Schooner Freeman to "a party who has no notice of any restriction upon that apparent authority" of the person in control of the ship to create liens upon her for the breach of maritime contracts whose violation by an owner would give rise to a lien; and the actual holding was that no lien existed where the "special owner" and his master fraudulently issued bills of lading for nonexistent goods, for such bills do not "grow out of any employment of the vessel." Most of the later cases as to chartered vessels deal with lien claims of materialmen. The Kate,
The prohibition of lien clause in the instant charters was adequate to defeat lien claims of a materialman who could have ascertained its existence by reasonable diligence. United States v. Carver,
We see no adequate reason for not reaching the same result in a case where the shipper could have ascertained the facts by exercise of reasonable diligence — a rule which, without statutory directive, The Kate and The Valencia had applied to the equally worthy materialman. It is true, as the Government suggests, that many shippers could not fairly be charged under this principle, e. g., a tourist who had ordered goods and neither knew nor cared on what vessel they would be shipped, but this goes to the factual question of what diligence reasonable under the circumstances would have disclosed and not to the legal principle. We are dealing in this case with a shipper in large volume and of extraordinary sophistication. There is nothing to suggest that if the Government knew the Lucie Schulte was chartered, there would have been the slightest difficulty in its ascertaining before the shipments were made whether the charter contained a "prohibition of lien" clause. So the case comes down to the narrow issue whether the Government has borne the burden of showing that the exercise of reasonable diligence would not have informed it that the goods were to be transported on a chartered vessel. We think it has not; since it elected to submit the case on a meagre stipulation, it should take the consequences rather than have us put the owner to the further expense of a remand.3
Reversed, with instructions to dismiss the libel in rem.
Notes:
Notes
A possible analogy is afforded by cases where the charterer violates the charter-party and the shipowner seeks a lien on the freight money owed to the charterer by a shipper and often still secured by the cargo. The cases suggest that if the shipper can be charged with notice of a charter provision giving the shipowner "a lien upon all cargoes and all subfreight for charter money due," a lien will attach. See American Steel Barge Co. v. Chesapeake & O. Coal Agency Co.,
Gilmore & Black, supra, § 4-24, contend that a "prohibition of lien" clause, even in a bareboat charter, cannot overcome the Congressional policy that regardless of contract the vessel be charged with cargo damage caused by fault, see Carriage of Goods by Sea Act, §§ 3(8), 5, 46 U.S.C. §§ 1303(8), 1305. Where COGSA applies, however, its special protection is balanced by such restrictions as the one-year statute of limitations fixed by § 3(6), 46 U.S.C. § 1303
Under the principle of laches, well established in admiralty lien cases, The Key City,
