The Court affirmed the decree of the circuit court on an appeal
by a materialman who had filed a libel
in personam in the
admiralty side of the district court to recover the amount of work
done and materials furnished for a vessel bound on a foreign
voyage, he having taken a promissory note for the amount of his
claim, which it did not appear by the record, had been tendered to
be given up.
This was a libel filed in the district court by the appellant
Ramsey against the respondent, Allegre, alleging that the
appellant, at the special instance and request of the respondent,
owner, ship's husband, or consignee of the schooner
Dorothea, had performed various work and labor and found
and provided various materials for the use of the said schooner to
equip and prepare her for a voyage on the high seas, amounting to
the sum of $2,428.84; that the appellant had often applied to the
respondent for payment and been refused, and praying process
according to the course of the admiralty, &c. A plea was filed
by the respondent alleging, among other things, that he had given
the libellant his negotiable promissory note for the debt. It
appeared at the hearing that the appellant had furnished the
materials in question at the respondent's request, and
Page 25 U. S. 612
that the latter had given his negotiable promissory note for the
same, which the appellant accepted, giving the following receipt
therefor: "Received a note, at four months, which, when paid, will
be in full for the above amount." The note not having been paid,
this suit was brought. The district court dismissed the libel upon
the ground that the jurisdiction of that court, as an instance
court of Admiralty in the cause, was waived by the acceptance of
the promissory note, and the decree having been affirmed in the
circuit court, upon the same ground, the cause was brought by
appeal to this Court.
Page 25 U. S. 613
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court
that, as it did not appear by the record that the note had been
tendered to be given up, or actually surrendered,
Page 25 U. S. 614
at the hearing in the court below, the decree would be affirmed,
it not being necessary to consider the general question of
jurisdiction.
MR. JUSTICE JOHNSON.
I concur with my brethren in sustaining the decree below, but
cannot consent to place my decision upon the ground on which they
have placed theirs. I think it high time to check this silent and
stealing progress of the admiralty in acquiring jurisdiction to
which it has no pretensions. Unfounded doctrines ought at once to
be met and put down, and
dicta, as well as decisions that
cannot bear examination ought not to be evaded and permitted to
remain on the books to be commented upon and acquiesced in by
courts of justice, or to be read and respected by those whose
opinions are to be formed upon books. It affords facilities for
giving an undue bias to public opinion, and, I will add, of
interpolating doctrines which belong not to the law.
There need be no stronger illustration given than this case
affords. Here is a libel
in personam on a contract, in the
admiralty filed expressly upon the authority of the case of
The
General Smith. I had never read the report of that case that I
recollect until the argument in this cause, or if I had, I attached
so little importance to anything in it besides the point that it
decides as to have forgotten that such doctrines were to be found
in the reports of our decisions. But upon being examined, what does
it amount to? A gentleman of the bar whose knowledge, particularly
in the admiralty commanded the highest respect in this Court, is
reported to have laid down a doctrine in very explicit terms which,
I will venture to say, has no authority in law, and the court,
carried away probably by the influence of his concessions, echoes
them in terms which are not only not called for by the case, but
actually, as I conceive, contradicted by the decision which is
rendered.
The correctness of the decision in the case of
The General
Smith cannot be questioned; it dismisses the libel upon the
ground, "that materialmen and mechanics, furnishing repairs to a
domestic ship, have no particular lien upon the ship itself for the
recovery of their demands."
Page 25 U. S. 615
But why have they no lien upon the ship? or, to speak more
correctly, why are they precluded from a remedy in the admiralty
for subjecting the ship to arrest and sale in order to satisfy
their demands? It is because jurisdiction over the contract has
been taken from the courts of admiralty and the exercise of
jurisdiction, in such a case, prohibited to them by the common law
courts of Great Britain for hundreds of years. And it is a fact of
the most positive certainty and notoriety that so far from
retaining jurisdiction over this contract
in personam,
after being driven from jurisdiction
in rem, that the
former was first surrendered, and that in the most unequivocal
terms.
I refer to the resolutions of February, 1632, adopted by the
King in council and subscribed by all the judges in England, and to
be found in the collection of the sea laws, and in various other
books, by the second section of the second article of which it is
declared that
"if suit be in the court of admiralty for building or mending,
saving or necessary victualing of a ship against the ship itself,
and not against any party by name, but such as for his interest
makes himself party (
i.e. a claimant), no prohibition is
to be granted, though this be done within the realm."
This resolution implies an express recognition that if such suit
be instituted against the person, a prohibition shall issue. And
this I hold to be the test of admiralty jurisdiction, for wherever
a prohibition will issue, the jurisdiction has been taken away from
the admiralty, or it never possessed it. And accordingly, for two
hundred years has this jurisdiction been abandoned by the British
courts, with the single exception of seamen's wages, an exception
of which it may emphatically be said,
"probat regulam."
For if anyone will take the trouble to refer to the language of
Ch.J. Holt in the case of
Clay v. Snelgrave, he will there
find it said
"that it is an indulgence that the courts at Westminster permit
mariners to sue for their wages in the admiralty court, because
they may all join in suit, and is grounded upon the principle that
'communis error facit jus.'"
Lord Raym. 576.
This privilege is denied to the master, and even to a mate
succeeding to the master when he sues for his wages as
Page 25 U. S. 616
master, so rigid are the courts of Westminster in confining the
admiralty to the few contracts over which it is permitted to retain
jurisdiction. And when it is argued that this discrimination to the
prejudice of the master is confined to his suit
in rem,
and that no case can be found in which his remedy
in
personam, in the admiralty, has been denied him, it becomes
necessary to remind counsel, that this may have proceeded from no
one's ever having had the temerity to prefer such a suit -- a
consequence which would necessarily follow from what I hold to be
undeniable -- that except on the contract for seamen's wages, the
proceeding
in personam upon contracts is now unknown to
the British admiralty tribunals.
I will sketch a brief history of the admiralty jurisdiction over
contracts and a view of its present state.
The study of the history of the admiralty jurisdiction in
England, in common with that of all the courts of that kingdom,
except the common law courts, presents an instructive lesson on the
necessity of watching the advancement of judicial power, in common
with all power; inasmuch as it shows in what small beginnings, and
by what indirect and covert means, aided by perseverance and
ingenuity, originated the mighty structures against which,
ultimately, the legislative and judicial power of the country had
to exert the full force of their united efforts.
The vast variety and importance of the subjects which the
admiralty had appropriated to itself, will appear in a variety of
authors; but I would refer the reader to Godolphin's "View of the
Admiral Jurisdiction," as well for its antiquity as the great
learning and respectability of the author. There, it will be seen
that the admiralty, before the time of Richard II, had arrogated to
itself a scope of judicial, legislative, and ministerial power,
which withdrew from the trial by jury, and placed under the
surveillance of the Crown, of which the admiralty was only the
representative, more than half the jurisprudence, and particularly
the commercial jurisprudence of the kingdom.
The statutes of 13th and 15th Richard II were passed to set
limits to this power, but such was the stability it had already
acquired, that it was not until the Act of 2 Henry IV,
Page 25 U. S. 617
which gave to the subject exactly the right which the
Constitution of the United States gives to its citizens, against
unconstitutional laws, was passed that this overgrown power could
be effectually restrained. For it could then no longer prescribe
its own limits in prejudice of the individual and to the exclusion
of his common law rights. Neither the King nor his proctor could
any longer justify or secure the individual who resorted to the
admiralty in a case in which the common law could give redress. 3
Levinz 353.
The act of 13 Richard says, upon complaint of encroachments made
by the admirals and their deputies, it is enacted, "that the
admirals and their deputies shall meddle with nothing done within
the realm, but only with things done upon the sea;" and the 15th
Richard, c. 3. "that in all contracts, pleas, and quarrels, and
other things done within the bodies of counties, by land or water,
the admiral shall have no cognizance, but they shall be tried by
the law of the land." And the 2d Henry IV. c. 11. provides, "that
he that finds himself aggrieved against the form of the statutes of
Richard, shall have his action by writ grounded upon the case
against him that so pursues in the admiralty and recover double
damages."
The check given by legislative provision was followed up by
prohibitions from the common law courts, and suits under the
statute of Henry until, upon the murmurs of the Lord High Admiral
at the checks imposed upon his power, the subject was taken up by
the King in council in 1632, and a kind of compromise entered into,
to which all the different tribunals appear to have at first
conformed, but in which, after a time, the common law judges appear
to have discovered, that the Crown and the admiralty had gained too
decided an advantage over them to admit of its being adhered to as
a correct exposition of the statutes of Richard. Hence, in the 3d
edition of Croke's Reports at the end of the 2d volume, we find
these resolutions declared to be of no authority, as undoubtedly
they were not, since it was not a regular judicial act. But in this
it must be noticed that the authority denied to those resolutions
was not on the subject
Page 25 U. S. 618
of those powers which the admiralty renounced, but of those
which they retained.
Upon this ground it is well known that these resolutions,
although printed in the 1st and 2d editions of Croke's Reports,
were omitted from the 3d. The mantissa at the end of the edition of
1767 declares their rejection as authority. But even before the
adoption of those resolutions, a decision had taken place, which
was conclusive, as well against their jurisdiction over the
particular contract here under consideration, as against their
right of proceeding upon it by process
in personam.
I allude to
Craddock's Case, 2 Brownl. 37, which was
decided in the 7th of James or in the year 1608, twenty-four years
before the date of these resolutions. This was distinctly the case
of a materialman; his purchases were of cordage, powder, and shot
for a ship, and the party of whom they were bought sued Craddock in
the Court of Admiralty. A prohibition was granted, and the reason
assigned by the court is that the statute 13 Richard II
"That the admiral shall not meddle with things made within the
realm, but only of things made upon the sea, and here the contract
was at St. Katharine's Stairs, in the body of a county."
And thus we see that in the resolutions alluded to, the claim to
jurisdiction
in personam, denied the admiralty by the
effect of that adjudication, is abandoned by them; at the same time
that they assert the right to exercise jurisdiction
in rem
upon the same class of contracts. It was not long after, however,
that the exercise of jurisdiction
in rem was also taken
from them. And yet there is a semblance of authority for their
having exercised it during the interval of time between the
adoption of the resolutions of 1632, and when they were declared to
be of no authority. I allude to that quotation from 1 Rolle's Abr.
533. which is copied into Bacon's Abridgment 196, of the 1st vol.
and there, together with the note which refers to Cro.Charles 296,
has remained the permanent source of many an error to those who
have not taken the trouble to examine into the authority for the
law there laid down.
This subject will be found learnedly examined in the cases of
Clinton v. brig Hannah and ship General Knox, decided
Page 25 U. S. 619
in the admiralty by judge Hopkinson of Pennsylvania in the year
1781, and by judge Bee in the admiralty of South Carolina in the
case of
Shrewsbury v. Sloop Two Friends, in 1786, in both
which cases the authority of those quotations is rejected, and the
lien of the shipwright to sue
in rem in the admiralty
denied. Bee's Adm. 419, 433.
Both those cases go to show the law of this subject at the
adoption of our Constitution, and they merit high respect, both for
the known abilities of the judges who pronounced them, and the
intrinsic learning they display. They show plainly that the
quotations mentioned rest altogether on the authority of the
resolutions of 1632, to which certainly no lawyer will attribute
authority any further than they go to show, that the admiralty did
not even then pretend to the jurisdiction
in personam upon
contracts at all, and upon very few even in rum.
It may seem surprising that from the time of Richard the Second
down to the beginning of the 17th century, the jurisdiction of the
admiralty court should have attracted so little of the attention of
the common law courts. One principal cause will be found in the
civil wars and the low state of commerce, and when the nation
returned to a state of tranquility, the power and vigor of her
monarchs left little scope for legislative or judicial action. Yet
there are cases to show that the subject was not forgotten, and
when the increase of commerce and the weak reign of the Stewarts
presented a motive and an opportunity, that the attention of the
nation was attracted to the usurpations and unconstitutional power
exercised by that court.
It is obvious also from the cases and discussions of that day
that the common law courts were embarrassed by a technical
difficulty, arising out of the necessity of laying a venue to every
action. As soon as this was removed (and the advocates of the
admiralty murmur very much at the supposed absurdity of removing
this absurdity), the progress of the common law courts was rapid in
wresting from the admiralty every species of contract, leaving them
none to act upon, on which they could themselves render complete
justice according to the established rights of the parties.
Page 25 U. S. 620
They are charged with absurdity and inconsistency, but I
pronounce the charge utterly groundless, for the one principle runs
through all their decisions -- that of subjecting to the trial by
jury every cause in which that form of trial could be applied
without injury to the parties' rights. It is true that where they
found them in the exercise of a power analogous to that of a court
of equity, they did not take from the admiralty a power which they
should only have handed over to another civil law court; they had
no motive, if they had the power, to make the transfer. And hence
the admiralty is left in the exercise of jurisdiction in cases of
hypothecation, bottomry, and a kind of specific execution between
part owners of ships. Their jurisdiction of prize and salvage are
royalties, and that over seamen's wages is a peculiarity, but
perfectly reasonable and consistent in whatever light it be viewed.
In the sea laws it is called "a custom of the realm." Ch.J. Holt,
we have seen, puts it on the ground of a positive concession and
communis error. And the judges often say
"we permit them to exercise this jurisdiction, because they may
sue together there, and must sue severally in the common law
courts, and there they can have remedy upon the body of the vessel,
which they cannot have here,"
thus placing the exception in their favor upon the conceded
ground of incapacity in the common law courts to do complete
justice, and the equitable ground of preventing a multiplicity of
suits.
My own opinion is that it stands on a much higher ground, and
has its basis in the same policy which makes their wages to depend
on the safety of the ship they navigate by giving them, in that
event, every possible chance of getting compensated. To which we
may add that their thoughtless character and ignorance renders them
emphatically the wards of the admiralty while the law on which they
earn or lose their wages is a system of the admiralty. The
assertion of the general principle against the captain's contract
finds its solution in his right to receive the freight in
preference even to his owner, and thus to pay himself, and in the
perfect competence of the common law courts to do justice in his
contract with the owner. In the case of ransom, he still may resort
to the admiralty and proceed
in rem.
Page 25 U. S. 621
But, right or wrong, it is not to be questioned at this day that
the admiralty has lost its jurisdiction over contracts, with the
exceptions stated. The most animated advocates of the admiralty do
not deny this. They mourn bitterly over its fall, but uniformly
acknowledge that they are eulogizing the dead. In Godolphin, Sir
Leoline Jenkins' Works, and the collection of the Sea Laws, will be
found all in substance that ever was said on this subject. Yet they
all unequivocally acknowledge that its jurisdiction has long since
been at an end over contracts, and
in personam, with the
exceptions I have stated, while they dwell eloquently on the folly
of plucking this "diamond from the Crown," and enlarge greatly on
the inconvenience of leaving to a jury the decision of causes which
could be so much more advantageously disposed of by a single judge,
and by a system of laws peculiar to the admiralty courts, and
arraign with severity the inconsistencies, absurdities, and
unkindly feelings, with which the common law courts have stripped
the admiralty of its ancient and eminent power. Even Brown, the
modern champion in Europe of the admiralty jurisdiction, but who
obviously has only caught the feelings and borrowed the arguments
of those who have gone before him, is forced reluctantly to
acknowledge that the admiralty has for ages been stripped of these
powers, though he would spare no effort to restore them if he
could.
See appendix to his 2d vol. and note at the end,
said to be omitted at p. 100.
It has sometimes been contended that the decisions of the common
law courts, as exemplified by their granting prohibitions, is not
conclusive against the admiralty jurisdiction -- that it is a
disputed jurisdiction, and therefore that the admiralty judges
themselves should be heard in this "Litis Contestatio."
But this is obviously incorrect, for the Court of King's Bench,
by its acknowledged jurisdiction, as exemplified in the very
exercise of its power to prohibit, is the very source to which we
are to look for lights to determine the respective powers of the
inferior courts. And the decisions that have taken place on this
subject are nothing less than judicial expositions of the statutes
which limit the powers of the admiralty. They amount to the
construction and application
Page 25 U. S. 622
of the law of the realm, of the statute law, and are therefore
conclusive. So every lawyer knows they are held to be in the
British courts, and together they make up that system of law which,
by universal consent, was adopted in the admiralty courts in this
country before the Revolution, at least on the subject of
jurisdiction over contracts and
in personam. I will now
take a brief view of some of the leading decisions in England and
in this country on the subject of contracts.
The quotations I shall first make have two objects in view --
first to show that the particular contracts under consideration,
to-wit, of materialmen, have been denied to their jurisdiction, and
secondly that in every instance in which they have been prohibited
from the exercise of jurisdiction over contracts, it has been upon
a ground that is fatal to the exercise of jurisdiction in this and
similar causes.
On this latter subject it would be unnecessary to search further
than that article in the 4th Inst., pp. 138, 141, in which Sir
Edward Coke gives a detailed account of his own answers to the
complaints of the Lord High Admiral to the King against the
restraints then recently imposed by the common law courts upon his
jurisdiction. This was early in the reign of James the First, and
notwithstanding the revival of the clamors against that learned
judge on the same subject, I cannot but express the opinion that it
is a calm, dignified, learned, and triumphant answer. The
authorities which he cites are valuable for their antiquity, as
they show that the courts in his time were only treading in the
steps of those who had preceded them.
Thus, to prove that charter parties were without their
jurisdiction, he cites
Hare v. Unton, 31 Hen. VI, and
observes that there were an infinity of cases to the same
point.
To prove that policies of insurance were not of admiralty
jurisdiction, he cites Crane & Pell, 38 Hen. VIII.
To prove that maritime contracts, notwithstanding a foreign
origin, are not to be taken from the common law courts, he cites
28th, 39th, and 40th Eliz.
And finally it is important to advert to the manner in which he
explains the rule by which it is to be determined whether any given
contract is or is not of admiralty jurisdiction,
Page 25 U. S. 623
which is no other than by showing from adjudged cases that the
common law courts have exercised and can exercise jurisdiction over
the same contract. P. 141.
Sir Matthew Hale, in his History of the Common Law, when
sketching the jurisdiction of the admiralty, says
"The jurisdiction of the admiral court, as to the matter of it,
is confined by the laws of this realm to things done upon the high
sea only; as depredations and piracies upon the high sea; offenses
of masters and mariners upon the high sea; maritime contracts made
and to be executed upon the high sea; matters of prize and reprisal
upon the high sea. But touching contracts or things made within the
bodies of English counties, or upon the land beyond the sea, though
the execution thereof be in some measure upon the high sea, as
charter parties, or contracts made even upon the high sea, touching
things that are not in their connection maritime, as a bond or
contract for payment of money, &c., these things belong not to
the Admiral's jurisdiction. And thus the common law and the
statutes of 13 Rich. II, chap. 15; 15 Rich. II, chap. 3, confine
and limit their jurisdiction to matters maritime, and such only as
are done upon the high sea."
Chap. 2, p. 35.
I have before cited the case of
Craddock, from
Brownlow, to show how early the admiralty was prohibited from
exercising jurisdiction, and that
in personam, on the
contracts of materialmen. In a note to Abbot on Shipping, page 136,
it is asserted that the same is reported in Owen under the title
Leigh against Burleigh. But I think it clearly a distinct
case, as not only the parties but the facts are different, Owen, p.
122, but the principle of the decision is the same.
In Sheppard's Abridgment, vol. 1, p. 125, is to be found an
excellent summary of the ancient admiralty law, and one article
merits notice as it serves very distinctly to show the true origin
of the articles in Rolle and Bacon's Abridgment which have been so
often relied upon as authority for a contrary doctrine. He quotes 3
Cro. 296-297 for the following doctrine,
"that a suit may be in the admiralty court for building, saving,
amending and victualing of a ship against the ship itself, not
against the party, but such as make themselves for their interest
parties."
This is the very language
Page 25 U. S. 624
of the resolutions of 1632, and those are the pages in which
they were inserted in the two first editions of Croke, before they
were exploded.
Sir Leoline Jenkins, whose authority certainly no advocate of
the admiralty will deny, acknowledges in so many words that the
admiralty could not exercise jurisdiction over the contracts of
materialmen, 1 vol., p. 83.
That the remedy against the ship itself has long since been
taken away is established by many authorities. In the American
edition of Abbott on Shipping a work entitled to great respect, it
is laid down in very general terms
"That a shipwright, who has once parted with the possession of a
ship or has worked upon it without taking possession, and a
tradesman who has provided ropes, sails, provisions, or other
necessaries for a ship, are not, by the law of England, preferred
to other creditors, nor have any particular claim or lien upon the
ship itself for the recovery of their demands."
P. 135.
That the author is here speaking of a "claim or lien" in the
admiralty is fully established by reference to the cases which he
cites and comments upon. The authorities he cites fully bear him
out in his doctrine. They are chiefly
Hoare v. Clement, 2
Show.;
Justen v. Ballam, 2 Lord Raym. 805.
Watkinson
v. Barnardiston, 2 P.Wms. 367. And numerous other cases might
be cited, both ancient and modern, to the same effect, upon which
the doctrine seems fully established in England that neither
shipwrights nor materialmen can sue in the admiralty either
in
personam or
in rem, without express hypothecation,
and all assigning the universal reason that they have the common
law courts open to them.
See also Bushnel v. Suel, 1 Vesey
155.
Some of those loose
obiter dicta in which the most
eminent and prudent judges sometimes indulge have been attributed
to an eminent English jurist, which have been thought to cast some
doubt upon these doctrines in modern times. The facts stand thus:
in 17th Geo. III, Lord Mansfield is reported to have said, in the
case of
Rich v. Coe, Cowp. 636, "that a person who
supplies a ship with necessaries, has not only the personal
security of the master and owner, but also the security of the
specific ship." And again,
Page 25 U. S. 625
nine years after, he is reported to have repeated the same
dictum in the case of
Farmer v. Davis, 1 Term
108, in both instances, however, mere
gratis dicta with
regard to the points decided.
But in opposition to this we have the expression of Lord Kenyon
in the case of
Westerdell v. Dale, which occurred eleven
years after, in which he is reported to have said that he doubted
whether the doctrine had not been too generally laid down by Lord
Mansfield, and referred to the authority of some of the old
decisions which establish the contrary doctrine. Indeed, when we
refer to the language of Lord Mansfield himself in the case of
Welkins v. Carmichael, which occurred only two years after
Rich v. Coe, it is difficult to imagine how the same judge
could have held such inconsistent doctrines. For there, 3 Dougl.
101, he is reported to have decided
"that a carpenter, in parting with his possession, had lost his
lien, if he ever had one; . . . that creditors for stores and
provisions had no lien, . . . and that work done for a ship in
England is supposed to be on the personal credit of the employer,
although, in foreign ports, the master might hypothecate."
This is all consistent with the established doctrines of the
English courts, and the truth is that if this learned judge had had
the subject fully before him on a motion for a prohibition, he
would never have confounded the law of other states or other times
with the common law of England in his time. To do him justice, what
he decides in the last case should be received as what be meant in
the two former.
In the third American edition of Abbott on Shipping. p. 160, I
find a note in these words:
"It does not appear that it has ever been held in the courts of
the United States that shipwrights and furnishers of supplies in
the ports of the United States have not a lien on the ships, or a
right to admiralty process, to recover the amounts due them. The
question has not, to my knowledge, arisen in the Supreme Court of
the United States. But in the District Court of Maryland, after a
very learned discussion, Winchester, Justice, decided that a
shipwright, by the maritime laws, has a lien on the ship for
repairs done, and materials found by
Page 25 U. S. 626
him while the ship is in a port of the United States.
Stevens v. Ship Sandwich, 1 Peters 233, note. The same
opinion was given by Peters, Justice, in Pennsylvania in
Gardner v. Ship New Jersey, 1 Peters 223.
See
also 1 Roll.Abr. 533, l, 15, Cro.Car. 296."
From this note it appears that the learned editor, to whom, I
presume it is to be attributed, was not aware of the two decisions
rendered by judges Hopkinson and Bee to which I have above alluded.
Both of them will be found directly in point against the
shipwright's lien, and the research and learning which they display
will be found worthy of the high reputation of the judges who
rendered them. These cases will also be found interesting from the
circumstance of their containing criticisms upon the authority of
the law upon which both judges Peters and Winchester appear to have
been misled -- I mean the standing quotation from 2 Bacon, with its
usual accompaniments from Roll. and Cranch Ch.
i.e.
Roll.Abr. 533, and Cro.Ch. 296.
I cannot, however, admit that the decision of Mr. Peters in the
case of the New Jersey is a case in point on the proposed subject.
For the question of the lien of materialmen or shipwrights did not
there arise. It is only mentioned
arguendo, as an apology
for making an allowance to the captain out of funds in the
registry, for wages paid and supplies furnished the vessel from his
own funds. An allowance, which he at last excuses in a note by
saying, "that it was not opposed," and for which he might also have
plead the high authority of the case of
Watkinson v.
Barnardiston, 2 P.Wms. 367, in which the same thing was done,
and that of
The John, 3 Rob. 288. But the doctrine laid
down as to materialmen and shipwrights by the learned judge, are
gratis dicta, and, as is fully shown in the case of
The General Knox, cannot be sustained by the authority
quoted.
With regard to Judge Winchester's decision in the case of
The Sandwich, it cannot be denied that it is directly in
point. But it is equally true that it appeals to no authority that
can sustain it. It is not by an exhibition of learning that
decisions are to be tested, but by sound conclusions from
unquestionable premises. To obstruct our inquiries by
Page 25 U. S. 627
a battery of cases\ or learned and remote quotations, often
obtain from faith concessions that ought to be yielded only to
investigation. I admit that Judge Winchester's decision is
characterized by learning, but certainly his premises cannot be
conceded to him; they are founded in error. His course of reasoning
is this:
"The Constitution of the United States vests in the United
States admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, and that jurisdiction
is vested in the district court. . . . In England (I now quote his
words), where the jealousy of the civil law was most conspicuous,
while its authority was openly denied, the principles of equity
derived from that code influenced the decisions of their courts in
as great a degree as in countries where it was adopted. In all of
which, from the books within my power, I can obtain any legal
information, every contest or dispute between the owners and
mariners, and the owners and builders, or equippers of a ship for
navigation on the sea, is of a maritime nature, and cognizable in
the admiralty."
He then goes on to observe, "that the statutes of 13th and 15th
Richard II have received a construction which must at all times
prohibit their extension to this country," and finally, when he
comes to state the proposition, "Has a shipwright a lien on the
vessel by him repaired for the value of his materials, labor,"
&c.? he says, "to decide this question, it is necessary to
examine the nature of liens and privileged debts at the civil law,"
and accordingly he proceeds to examine what is the law of various
countries of the continent which are subject to the civil law and
concludes with adopting two propositions, thus:
"I am therefore of opinion, that a ship carpenter, by the
maritime law, has a lien on the ship for repairs in port, and that
the cause being a maritime cause, the court has a jurisdiction over
the person as well as over the ship."
The authorities which he quotes are, Zouch, Beawes, Valin,
Rolle's Abr. 533, and 1st Bacon, p. 178.
Now learned as this decision may be, it is obvious that it is
but a tissue of errors, since it adopts the civil law as its guide,
and the admiralty law, in the time of its most extravagant
pretensions, positively denying the authority of
Page 25 U. S. 628
the statutes of Richard and the modifications which they
introduced into the law maritime.
The laws of the continent of Europe furnish no authority on this
question. Every state has its own laws on these contracts, as have
most of the states of this Union. The ordinance of Louis XIV on
which Valin comments is the statute law of France, and expressly
vests in its courts maritime jurisdiction over a variety of
contracts which the common law court has taken from the
jurisdiction of the admiralty. The question is not what the civil
law would give, but what remains to the admiralty of that
jurisdiction which no one denies that it had assumed under the
authority of civil law principles.
The laws of Oleron, which may be called the statute law of Great
Britain in maritime affairs and which I and pleased to find
published in Mr. Peters' first volume, together with
Postlethwaite's Commentaries, give none of these powers over
contracts to the admiralty.
I think it has been sufficiently shown, and indeed, in denying
authority to the British decisions under the statutes of Richard,
Judge Winchester must be held to admit, that the British decisions
are contrary to his decision on the lien of the shipwright.
Mr. Brown, in his 2d vol., pp. 80-81, distinctly acknowledges it
to be settled
"that no person can sue in the admiralty for work and labor done
in the port before the voyage begins or necessaries sold for the
ship's use before she sails, nor even where supplied to a foreign
ship lying in a British port."
Where money is lying in the registry, as in the case decided by
Judge Peters, there has been a disposition manifested recently to
get over the rigid rule if there could be found an excuse for it,
but none yet, I believe, has been found except for money actually
expended by the captain and for which he might have hypothecated.
There, perhaps, it may be considered as a
quasi-hypothecation. 3 Term 323; 2 P.Wms. 367; 2 Rob.
I will now show that Judge Winchester is equally unsustained in
his other principle, to-wit that "on a maritime contract, as a
general proposition, the court of admiralty has jurisdiction over
the person as well as over the ship."
Page 25 U. S. 629
I will not refer to the instance of bottomry by the master,
because I do not believe that he had in mind that case, but will
confine myself to the distinct proposition "that in no case of
contracts except that of seamen's wages can the admiralty proceed
in personam," which is the point now before this
Court.
I have referred to the celebrated resolutions of 1632 in which,
when the admiralty were solemnly gathering up and consecrating, as
they thought, the remains of their jurisdiction, this right is in
express terms relinquished; to Sheppard's Abridgment, in which, at
a period long subsequent, such is given as the purport and
exposition of that document; and I have quoted
Craddock's
Case and
Leigh and Burleigh's Case, in which the
court of admiralty was expressly prohibited from proceeding
in
personam in behalf of materialmen. I should think here I have
a right to demand, if from the whole library of law books, and God
knows we have enough of them already, "camel loads," a single
attempt to proceed
in personam, upon a contract in the
admiralty except for seamen's wages, since the date of the
resolutions of 1682, can be extracted. Adjudged cases cannot be
found, because, since the antique cases to which I have referred,
the right has been abandoned.
Dicta enough can be
produced, and some of those very modern.
Godbolt speaks of the process
in rem, as the only
process issuable in the first instance from the admiralty. P.
260.
In the edition of Abbott, which I have quoted, in a note upon
the case of
Hoare v. Clement, p. 136, a case arising on a
contract for necessaries, it is admitted "that the court of
admiralty had no jurisdiction over the person in that case."
In
Johnson v. Shippen, 2 Salk. 983, in which a libel
was filed against ship and owners on an hypothecation for money
borrowed abroad on her voyage, it was argued that if suit lay
against the owners at all, it lay at common law, and a prohibition
was granted as to the suit against the owners, but refused as to
the vessel.
In
Bull v. Trelawney, 16 Ch. 1, Trelawney had sued in
the admiralty on a foreign contract
in personam, obtained
judgment, and Bull was in gaol. The latter brought his action
Page 25 U. S. 630
under the stat. 2 Hen. VI, c. 11, recovered double damages, and
was discharged on habeas corpus on the ground of being in
confinement in a cause "
coram non judice." Cro.Ch. 603,
and 3 Lord Raym. 982.
Brown, 2 vol., p. 100, lays down the rule in these terms:
"The general rule, however, at present is that the admiralty
acts only
in rem, and that no person can be subject to
that jurisdiction but by his consent, expressed by his entering
into a stipulation."
And even this mode of subjecting the person, through the medium
of a stipulation, it is well known was itself resisted at first,
and acquiesced in only on the ground of its being an indispensable
incident to the exercise of the jurisdiction
in rem.
In Keble's Reports, p. 500, quoted by Brown, it is expressly
said "that without a stipulation, the admiralty has no jurisdiction
at all over the person."
In the case of
Ousten v. Hebden, 1 Wils. 101, where one
libeled in the admiralty to compel his part owner in a ship to join
in a sale, a prohibition was granted upon the ground that this was
in fact an attempt to exercise a jurisdiction
in
personam.
There is a class of cases which may appear at first view to
maintain a contrary doctrine, but which upon examination will be
found consistent with the general principle.
The case of
Manro v. Almeida, decided in this Court,
was one of that description. They are cases in which the admiralty
proceeds
quasi in rem when the subject of the suit is
withdrawn from its jurisdiction. These cases proceed upon the
supposed contempt in withdrawing the
res subjecta from the
process
in rem. This was the case of
Smart v.
Wolf, 3 Term 323, in which the prize court had improvidently
ordered the cargo of the captured vessel to be delivered to the
captors, reserving the question of freight, but without taking a
stipulation bond, in a sum equal to what afterwards appeared due
for freight. A monition from the admiralty was sued out to the
captor's agent to respond to the captain's demand for freight to
the full amount decreed to him, and against this proceeding the
Court of King's Bench refused a prohibition.
Page 25 U. S. 631
Here the prize court acted upon a
quasi-hypothecation
of the goods for the freight, resulting from their reserving the
question of freight, and considered the captors in the light either
of their own bailee of the goods or in his original relation of
captor, against whom, if the goods are not returned on monition,
the court proceeds as on contempt.
In
Manro v.
Almeida, 10 Wheat. 472, the libellant claimed
redress against a foreign captor in a cause peculiarly of admiralty
jurisdiction. The captain of a foreign privateer had on the ocean
seized a sum of money in the property of the libellant which the
libellant alleged had been piratically taken, and finding property
of the captor here, sued out process against the captor for the
purpose of examining before the admiralty the correctness of the
seizure and obtaining indemnity for it. The principal question
considered in that case arose on the form of proceeding, but the
object was the prosecution of a suit
in rem, to-wit, to
obtain restitution of the $5,000 seized by Almeida on the ocean as
prize.
A case very similar to this is to be found in a note to the case
of
Smart v. Wolf, in which the admiralty proceeded against
the agents of a captor to subject to its jurisdiction a sum of
money that had been taken out of a prize, and passed into account
between the agent and his principal.
On the cases of this class, two remarks will always hold good:
1st, they are instances in which the court of admiralty had
jurisdiction of the principal question, not contracts, but maritime
torts and prize causes, or their incidents, and 2dly, that the
process
in personam is only the means to get possession of
the
res subjecta -- that is, of exercising an
unquestionable jurisdiction
in rem.
We sometimes hear of a concurrent jurisdiction between the
admiralty and common law courts. But on the subject of contracts,
which is the subject now under consideration, I deny that, with the
exception of seamen's wages, any such concurrent jurisdiction can
exist. It is an absurdity in terms for the rule which goes through
all the cases is in direct hostility with it. If the common law can
try the cause and give full redress, that alone takes away the
admiralty jurisdiction. This is the principle on which the
decisions rest
Page 25 U. S. 632
from the remotest periods. The contract of bottomry is sometimes
cited as an instance of concurrent jurisdiction. But it is a
mistake, and an instance cannot be cited better to illustrate the
true doctrine on this subject than this species of contract. If
executed by the master, jurisdiction of it is exclusive in the
admiralty because it gives remedy only
in rem. But if
executed by the owner, it becomes also a personal contract. Yet who
ever heard of a remedy upon it as such, anywhere but in a common
law court or a court of equity? The contract of
respondentia, which is as much a maritime contract as
bottomry, gives no jurisdiction to the admiralty either
in
rem or personam. 2 Brown 196-197 and 4 East. 319.
The case of
Menetone v. Gibbons, 3 Term 267, has
nothing new in it; it is a recognition of doctrines as old as the
hills. The question was whether an hypothecation was taken out of
the admiralty jurisdiction, because it was, in that instance, a
sealed instrument. The general jurisdiction of the admiralty to
proceed
in rem on a bottomry bond was not denied. The
court explicitly acknowledge the doctrine
"that if the common law can try the cause, the admiralty shall
not, and affirm the jurisdiction of the admiralty merely on the
ground that there was no action against the party at common law,
and the common law courts could not proceed
in rem under
the hypothecation."
As to the rule there laid down, "that the jurisdiction of the
admiralty shall be adjudged
secundum subjectam materiam,"
it is as ancient as
Bridgam's case, in the time of Hobart.
But this decision is of importance here in two points of view,
since the court reasons upon the principle throughout that the
admiralty jurisdiction is to be tested by the common law remedy,
and the grant of prohibitions.
There was a case decided in this Court in the year 1824 which
merits some attention. I mean the case of
The St. Jago de
Cuba, in which the Court, at first view, would seem to have
given a decision in favor of the claims of materialmen upon a
foreign ship in a case where no actual hypothecation had been
executed. But there are several considerations from which it will
appear that the Court did not commit itself on that subject. The
most material is
Page 25 U. S. 633
that the question arose upon the application of money in the
registry of the court arising from the sale of the vessel for
another cause. And in such instances it will be seen from several
cases, some of which have been noticed in the course of this
discussion, that the court may act towards creditors as if that had
been done which might lawfully have been done in their favor. And
there is a peculiar propriety in doing this when the court, by
selling the vessel, has put it out of the power of the captain to
give that security to creditors which it is reasonable to suppose
would have been given, where the captain had no other means of
getting advances made of money or materials. Several cases have
been noticed of the captain himself having the benefits of an
actual hypothecation extended to him when he expends his own money
where he might have raised it on bottomry, and the proceeds of the
vessel are in the registry of the court. Yet this has been severely
questioned in the British courts. 9 East 426. Attention to the
language of the court also will show that it has been guarded on
this subject.
The question which the court is examining is not whether the
lien of a materialman attaches independently of an actual
hypothecation, but whether, if the master has exercised this "power
of pledging or subjecting the vessel to materialmen," the
forfeiture to the government without notice would supersede their
rights. And although speaking of implied liens, whether the
materialman here retained his supposed lien on the money in the
registry was distinctly the question, and the language of the court
ought not to have any other effect given to it.
Yet I am free to confess individually that in a case in which an
hypothecation would be so clearly valid and legal if actually made,
I should want nothing but authority to induce me to sustain such a
claim against the vessel; with regard to money in the registry, I
think this case is authority for sustaining it, and that it is
sanctioned by other authorities.
Vide case of
The New
Jersey and the John, 3 Rob. 288.
Mr. Brown, 2d vol., p. 100, has thought proper to charge
Page 25 U. S. 634
the common law courts with having "involved the subject we are
now upon in endless confusion."
To me it appears that the charge may more correctly be made upon
those who have engaged, like himself, with so much zeal in an
effort to shake the authority of a course of decisions that are
uniform and consistent, and with one single exception (which
exception is acknowledged as arbitrary or positive law), reducible
to a single principle -- a principle altogether fatal to this
action in its origin, since there can be no question that the party
here had his common law remedy.
And I consider the effort particularly ungracious in an author
who is driven to acknowledge its futility so often; one who
confesses in so many words "That if the parties have bound
themselves to answer personally, the admiralty cannot take
cognizance of the question." Vol. 2, p. 101.
"That the admiralty has, in a great measure [he should have said
altogether], dropped its claim to taking cognizance of charter
party, freight, and suits by materialmen, and almost all other
proceedings upon contract, except those for recovery of seamen's
wages, or enforcing bottomry bonds."
P. 103.
"That the admiralty is excluded from jurisdiction of contracts
if personal, or sealed, or made on land." P. 107.
"That the jurisdiction of the instance court of admiralty which
is at present seemingly [he should have said actually] allowed by
the law courts is that it is confined in matters of contract to
suits for seamen's wages or those on hypothecations; in matters of
tort, to actions for assault, collision, and spoil; and in
quasi-contracts, to actions by part owners for security,
and actions of salvage."
P. 122.
"That the contract of insurance is, in practice, uniformly and
decidedly out of the cognizance of the admiralty." P. 188.
And finally, to acknowledge, in the last page of his book, among
his
errata et omissa, "That personal contracts are held
not to be cognizable in the admiralty."
It has sometimes been said that this is a disputed
jurisdiction,
Page 25 U. S. 635
but by whom is it disputed? Not by the courts of Great Britain,
for in all their courts, as well of common as of civil law, when
called distinctly to act upon the jurisdiction of the admiralty,
there is no dispute, no contrariety of opinion; they all are
governed by the same rules of decision. From time to time some
extravagant admirer of admiralty jurisdiction or royal prerogative
has risen up in England who has revived the ancient murmurs uttered
by the friends of that court when reluctantly putting on its
usurped powers; but with that exception, I know of no part of the
English law that seems more clearly fixed than that of the
admiralty jurisdiction. The misfortune is that people will not be
content to leave it as they find it, but employ themselves in
efforts to revive what they cannot but acknowledge has been long
since extinct. If the learning upon this subject should appear
remote and antiquated, let it be remembered that the law has been
fixed in England for two centuries. And since the futile attempt of
Sir L. Jenkins to revive it, no one, I believe, until Mr. Brown
appeared before the public, had made any attempt to change the law
of the admiralty in that kingdom.
I have felt it my duty to pay some attention to the subject for
several reasons.
In the first place, I stand before the public as bearing my
share of the responsibility incurred for certain opinions expressed
in the case of
The General Smith. For the just extent of
my responsibility in that case, I must rely on the repeated
decisions which I have made in my circuit in hostility with that
doctrine. But I am willing to treat it as my own error, and shall
on that ground claim the privilege of treating it with the greater
freedom -- at least I shall endeavor to administer the antidote if
I have diffused the poison, and claim credit for an unequivocal
proof of my repentance by a public acknowledgement that it was
inexcusable.
I will now examine that case upon its authorities and its
consistency with itself.
The case of
The General Smith was a case of the most
extravagant attempt ever made to enforce this supposed lien of
materialmen. It serves to show to what embarrassments
Page 25 U. S. 636
the commercial world might be exposed by pushing these maritime
liens to excess. Since, upon the same principle on which the libel
was there filed, however long the time that had elapsed, whatever
number of voyages the vessel had made, and whatever changes of
property she might have passed through, she would still have
remained liable to materialmen. For in that instance
The
General Smith had made a voyage and the property of her been
changed before the libel was filed. She was admitted, too, to be an
American ship, in her home port. The court below very properly
dismissed the libel, and this Court did not hesitate to affirm the
dismission, and, confined to its just import as an adjudication, it
is most unquestionably correct.
No man will subscribe more implicitly than myself to the
authority of decisions in this Court, and I am ready at all times
to adhere to the principles necessarily deducible from or conducing
to such decisions. But further than this no judge is bound to
subscribe to authority, for no other subjects are considered and
adjudicated.
But the report informs us that Mr. Pinkney, who argued against
the materialmen,
"admitted the general jurisdiction of the district court as an
instance court of admiralty over suits by materialmen
in
personam and
in rem, but denied that a suit could be
maintained in the present case, because the parties had no specific
lien upon the ship for supplies furnished in the port to which she
belonged. That in the case of materials furnished or repairs done
to a foreign ship, the maritime law has given such a lien, which
may be enforced by a suit in the admiralty. But in the case of a
domestic ship, it was long since settled by the most solemn
adjudications of the common law (which was the law of Maryland)
that mechanics have no lien upon the ship itself for their demands,
but must look to the personal security of the owner."
17 U. S. 4
Wheat. 441- 442.
Now I have too high an opinion of Mr. Pinkney's law reading and
of his talents as an advocate not to be well convinced that in this
as well as the residue of the argument attributed to him, he must
have been misunderstood. And I find my sanction for this belief
upon the face of the report itself, for, with the exception of the
nullity of the
Page 25 U. S. 637
lien claimed against a domestic ship, the authority which he
quotes to sustain his doctrine contradicts it in so many words.
His quotations are Abbott on Ship. pt. 2, ch. 3, secs. 9 to 13,
and the case of
The Levi Dearborne, 4 Hall's Am.L.J. 97.
The last quotation was a case of materialmen suing
in rem
in a home port, and was in point. But the quotation from Abbott was
no other than the very passage on which I have before commented,
and which, although commencing with stating the doctrines ascribed
to Mr. P. as prevailing on the continent of Europe, shows most
distinctly that the law is otherwise in England. Mr. P. never would
have quoted to support such doctrines an author who has been shown
to assert
"that a shipwright who has once parted with a ship or has worked
upon it without taking possession and a tradesman who has provided
ropes, sails, provisions, or other necessaries for the ship
(
i.e. materialmen) are not by the law of England preferred
to other creditors, nor have any particular claim or lien upon the
ship itself for the recovery of their demands."
Mr. Pinkney's quotation from Abbott comprises and is limited to
the sections that are occupied in maintaining the doctrine thus
laid down by the author and in showing expressly that it extends to
a foreign as well as a domestic ship. In section 10, the author
cites
Justin v. Ballam, 2 Lord Raym. 805, which he
considers as conclusive against the foreign ship. The distinction
taken is not between a domestic and foreign ship, but between a
ship "on her voyage and absent from her owner, and one in her home
port." And even in that case the law as laid down by the learned
annotator to Abbott in a note to the 8th section, upon 9 East 426,
in the language of Lord Ellenborough, is "that the master may
hypothecate, not that the hypothecation attaches
per se on
the contract for necessaries." It is true, he cites judge Peters'
decision in the case of
The New Jersey for a contrary
doctrine, but he seems not to have adverted to the distinction
recently admitted between distributing money in the registry, which
is Judge Peters' case, and that of arresting the vessel and
subjecting her to sale. Nor has he adverted to the fact that Judge
Peters places his decision on the authority
Page 25 U. S. 638
of the English cases, which the text of Abbott alone will show
are directly hostile to it. To which may be added that even Judge
Peters does not countenance the doctrine of a right of proceeding
in personam, attributed to Mr. Pinkney. But this also,
when we find the rest of his reported argument so clearly a
mistake, we have good reason for hesitating to ascribe to him. And
the rather for that so well read a lawyer would not have advanced
so bold a doctrine without attempting to find some shadow of
authority for it. Even Mr. Winder, who argued against Mr. Pinkney,
does not venture to put his case upon the law of England, but
relies upon the law of the continent, and insists on a right
arbitrarily to adopt it here.
Mr. Winder quotes Judge Winchester's decision and the case of
De Lovio v. Boit, from 2 Gallison 400. But Judge
Winchester affords no authority, since he decides on grounds which
I have shown to be altogether heterodox or exploded.
With whom the idea originated that the admiralty and maritime
jurisdiction vested by the Constitution on the United States was
that which the admiralty possessed or pretended to before the time
of Richard II I am at a loss to conceive. Judges Hopkinson, Bee,
and Peters, all distinguished revolutionary men, educated before
the revolution and deeply engaged in public life until long after
the Constitution, concurred in fixing the period of the revolution
for the law of the jurisdiction of the admiralty. And who can doubt
that the doctrine of that day was that the jurisdiction anciently
claimed by that court was founded in usurpation. The acts of
Richard expressly declare it; that of Henry treated it as vain and
void, and such all history proves it. Yet it is only by going back
to those early times that shadow of authority can be found for the
pretensions which it seems disposed to put forth in our day.
Of the case in 2 Gallison I will only remark that it was a
decision in the first circuit, in which the right to proceed
in
personam in the admiralty was asserted in a suit upon a policy
of insurance, and if the
nisi prius decisions of the
judges of this Court are of any authority here, it is only
necessary to observe that a contrary decision has been rendered in
the Sixth Circuit. Let them therefore fall together, and
Page 25 U. S. 639
let the question be tested upon principle and authority
independent of those decisions.
I now come to the consistency of the opinion of the Court in
The General Smith with itself.
That decision is that the common law is the law of Maryland with
regard to the rights of materialmen, and that it has long since
been settled that they have no remedy
in rem. But the
opinion is introduced with a
dictum purporting that, had
they sued in the admiralty
in personam, there would have
been no doubt of their right to proceed.
And here the question is whether there can be found anywhere in
the books a case in which an action
in personam could be
maintained in the admiralty wherein the action
in rem was
denied to that court. No such case can be found, and the reason is
obvious -- that right alone would take away the admiralty
jurisdiction altogether, since it would follow that the right might
be pursued at the common law, the case of seamen's wages always
excepted, which I regard as positive law and which indeed has been
supposed by some to be retained by the admiralty under the
authority given that court by a statute of one of the Henrys to
control mariners in regard to the amount of their wages.
Let the cases be searched from the remotest period down to the
time of
Menetone v. Gibbons, and the ground of prohibition
and of recovery under the 2d of Henry IV will uniformly be found to
be the competency of the common law to enforce the contract. This
is the principle by which even their jurisdiction
in rem
is controlled, and hence it follows that in no case in which they
are prohibited from proceeding
in rem can they have the
action
in personam.
I consider the decision, therefore, in the case of
The
General Smith, as conclusive against the doctrine which
asserts the right of materialmen to proceed
in personam,
and upon the authority of which the present suit is avowedly
instituted. At least as there is no authority given for it by the
court, we may conclude that it has no better authority than that on
which we are given to understand Mr. Pinkney relied for the same
doctrine.
I have now said a great deal on this subject, and I could not
have said less and discharged the duty which I feel that
Page 25 U. S. 640
I owe to the community. I am fortifying a weak point in the wall
of the Constitution. Every advance of the admiralty is a victory
over the common law, a conquest gained upon the trial by jury. The
principles upon which alone this suit could have been maintained,
are equally applicable to one-half the commercial contracts between
citizen and citizen. Once establish the rights here claimed and it
may bring back with it all the admiralty usurpations of the
fifteenth century. In England there exists a controlling power, but
here there is none. Congress has, indeed, given a power to issue
prohibitions to a district court when transcending the limits of
the admiralty jurisdiction. But who is to issue a prohibition to us
if we should ever be affected with a partiality for that
jurisdiction?
I therefore hold that we are under a peculiar obligation to
restrain the admiralty jurisdiction within its proper limits.
That in case of contracts it has no jurisdiction at all
in
personam, except as incident to the exercise of its
jurisdiction
in rem.
That with regard to the contracts of shipwrights and materialmen
in her home port, the vessel cannot be subjected unless by express
hypothecation by the owner.
That on her voyage, and where the master is destitute of other
means of raising the necessary funds, she may be so subjected by
the master, but it must be by actual hypothecation.
But that when the ship has been sold for other claims and the
money in the registry, so that the master no longer has it in his
power to raise money on her bottom to satisfy demands which have
been legally incurred, cases may arise in which the claims of
materialmen and shipwrights, and of the master himself, may be
sustained without actual hypothecation.
Decree affirmed.
*
* The Editor of these Reports feels it to be a duty which he
owes to self-respect and to the independence of the bar to take
some notice of the comments made in the above opinion upon the
account
Page 25 U. S. 641
given in the third volume of this work, Mr. Pinkney's argument
in the case of
The General Smith. Whether the Editor was
so unfortunate as to misunderstand the argument of that truly
learned person, he is willing should be determined by the test
proposed in the above opinion. No other reason is there given for
questioning the accuracy of the report than that Mr. Pinkney was
too well read a lawyer, and too able an advocate to have urged an
argument which is contradicted by the authorities he cites in its
support.
This argument includes the following positions:
1. An admission of "the general jurisdiction of the admiralty
over suits by materialmen
in personam and
in
rem."
All that is necessary to remark upon this passage is that it was
superfluous for Mr. P. to cite any authority for a concession
voluntarily made by him,
argumenti gratia, and it does not
appear that the authorities subsequently referred to in the margin
were intended for that purpose. On this occasion, as on many other
occasions, he probably spoke from the fullness of his learning, and
with a confidence inspired by his well grounded reliance upon its
accuracy
2. That no "suit could be maintained in the present case,
because the parties had no specific lien upon the ship for supplies
furnished in the port to which she belonged."
This is admitted to be an exception to the sweeping denunciation
against the applicability to the argument of the authorities cited
in its support. The authorities cited are Abbott on Shipp., pt. 2.
ch. 3. s. 9-1S. & R. the cases there cited.
Woodruff v.
Levi Dearborne, 4 Hall's Am.Law Journ. 97.
3. "That in the case of materials furnished, or repairs done to
a foreign ship, the maritime law has given such a lien, which may
be enforced in the admiralty."
The passage cited from the text of Abbott, s. 9, shows that by
"the maritime law" of all Europe, England only excepted,
materialmen have such a lien, which may be enforced in the
admiralty. Such was the law of Rome, and such is the law of all the
maritime countries of the European continent. Such too was the law
of Scotland until it was recently altered by a decision "founded
principally, as it seems, upon a desire to render the law of
Scotland conformable to the law of England upon this subject."
Abbott, pt. 2. ch. 3. s. 14, 142. How far the limits prescribed to
the jurisdiction of the admiralty in England over maritime
contracts, by the decisions of the common law courts, after ages of
controversy, had been adopted in this country before the revolution
and how far the grant of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction in the
Constitution of the United States is to be construed with reference
to those decisions, are questions foreign to the purpose of this
note. The only question here is whether Mr. Pinkney was warranted
in quoting this passage,
Page 25 U. S. 642
"and the cases there cited," as an authority for the position,
that "the maritime law has given such a lien, which may be enforced
in the admiralty." The question is not whether the authority is
conclusive to support the position; but whether it is sufficiently
pertinent to render it probable that it was actually referred to
for that purpose. It may be that there is, as is contended in the
above opinion, some discrepancy among the decisions of the
admiralty judges in this country on the subject; but still the
cases collected in a note to the American edition of Abbott, p.
160, are believed to be sufficient to rescue the argument
attributed to Mr. Pinkney from the imputation of being directly
contradicted by the authorities quoted to sustain it. The case of
The Levi Dearborne, determined by Mr. Justice Johnson in
the Circuit Court of Georgia, is also quoted by Mr. Pinkney for the
same purpose. That "this quotation was in point" will appear by the
following extract from the opinion of the learned judge, as we find
it reported by Mr. Hall.
"The lien on vessels for materialmen and shipwrights exists only
in a foreign port. Where the owner is present and resident, the
common law principle must govern. In such case, no lien on the
vessel is created. In the case of the owner, who, though present
when the work and materials are furnished, is transient and
nonresident, I am disposed to think otherwise, and that in such
case the lien attaches. It is proper also to state what shall be
deemed a foreign, and what a domestic port, as to this question:
the sea ports of the different states ought, in this respect, to be
considered as foreign ports in relation to each other. Charleston,
for instance, is a foreign port, as to a claim of this nature made
in Savannah."
4 Hall's Law Journ. 101.
4. That
"in the case of a domestic ship, it was long since settled by
the most solemn adjudications of the common law (which was the law
of Maryland) that mechanics have no lien upon the ship itself for
their demands, but must look to the personal security of the
owner."
This position is not denied to be supported by the authorities
said to have been quoted by Mr. Pinkney, but the error imputed to
the report consists in the asserted liability of a foreign ship to
such a lien, which (as it has been seen) is recognized and enforced
by the general maritime law, and which appears also to have been
maintained by several admiralty judges in this country, and
especially by MR. JUSTICE JOHNSON although it may not have been
adopted by the peculiar law of England.
In making these remarks, the editor has certainly not been
influenced by any feelings of disrespect towards the learned judge
by whom the above opinion was delivered, nor even by a desire to
controvert the peculiar doctrines maintained in that opinion. It is
his own character for accuracy and integrity as the reporter of the
decisions of this Court which the editor feels to be assailed, and
therefore
Page 25 U. S. 643
seeks to vindicate. It is a duty which he owes to the court, to
the profession, and to his own reputation to maintain the fidelity
of the reports which are received as authentic evidence of the
proceedings and adjudications of this high tribunal. If they are
not to be relied on in this respect, they are worthless. In closing
his labors, the editor has the consolation of reflecting that it
has been his humble aim to do justice to the learning and talents
of the bar and to uphold the honor and dignity of the bench. How
far he has succeeded in this attempt, it does not become him to
speak; but he is willing to submit to the impartial judgment of his
professional brethren, whether the above accusation is supported by
evidence.