43 F. 926 | W.D. Pa. | 1890
Although the libelant’s services on the Nixon were rendered at her home port, yet it is very clear that he has a lien against the boat for his wages by virtue of the Pennsylvania act of April 20, 1858,,relating to vessels navigating the rivers Allegheny, Monongahela, and Ohio. 1 Purd. Dig. 126. The debatable question is-whether-the libelant’s services were performed under a maritime contract, or were of a maritime character, so as to give him a right to s.ue in rem in admiralty, agreeably- to the practice sanctioned by the cases of Peyroux v. Howard, 7 Pet. 324, and The Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558. The libelant was .called a “watchman,” but he was much more; ánd indeed his services went far beyond those of an ordinary ship-keeper.
I find the material facts of .the. case to be these: The Nixon is a steam ■tow-boat: In .-November, 1889, upon the termination of a trip, the boat was moored in the Monongahela river, at the public wharf in the pbrt of Pittsburgh,'awaiting anticipated employment'; The libelant;-whó is
Now, in view of the facts shown, it seems to me that the contract here was essentially maritime, and that the services actually rendered by thee libelant were nautical. The contract related to a vessel afloat and about to proceed on a voyage, and it concerned not only her preservation from marine dangers, but her reparation, and the fitting of her for navigation. The libelant’s services directly promoted all those objects. The principal dangers to which the boat was exposed, and from which she was to be protected, were perils of the river. The services in that regard here rendered were not those of a landsman. They could be performed properly by a mariner only. It is settled that a claim for wharfage is cognizable in admiralty. Ex parte Easton, 95 U. S. 68. But if the contract of a wharfinger is maritime, why not such a contract as the one involved here? Again, we find it decided in Leathers v. Blessing, 105 U. S. 626, 629, that the fact that a vessel had completed her voyage, and was" securely moored to the wharf where her cargo was about to he discharged, and had communication with the shore by a gang-plank, did not deprive her of the character of a water-borne vessel, or oust the jurisdiction in
This conclusion by no means conflicts with the ruling of this court in McGinnis v. The Grand Turk, 2 Pitts. R. 326, or the decision of the district court of the eastern district of Pennsylvania in the case of The E. A. Barnard, 2 Fed. Rep. 712. The ruling in the 'latter case was that a watchman and ship-keeper had no lien, under the general maritime law, for services rendered at the home port of the vessel; and this really was the point decided in the case of The Grand Turk. Moreover, there the boat was laid up for repairs at the marine railway, and the service of the watchman was but the work of a landsman. But here there is a statutory lien, and the special facts of the case distinguish it from the cases upon which the respondent relies.
Touching the merits of the controversy, I deem it unnecessary to redte or discuss the proofs. It is sufficient to say that, upon a careful consideration ,of all the evidence, I am, of the opinion that the defenses based on the alleged negligence and misconduct of the libelant are not made out, and I think the libelant is justly entitled to recover the full amount of his: claim. Let a decree be drawn in favor of the libelant for the amount of his. claim, with interest from date of suit, and costs.