392
FEDERAL REPORTER.
tainties of the situation as it actually existed, and as it appeared at the time. When a vessel is clearly chargeable withthe primary fault leading to a collision, she cannot make the other vessel answerable as for contributory negligence merely because the latter could not foresee the extent to which such fault would be continued; or because she did not take extraordinary means to avoid its consequences. The tug was bound only to the use of ordinary nautical skill; and she had a right to rely upon the steamer's observing her own signals. The City of Hartford, 11 Blatchf. 72. In this case I think the tug and bark were not deficient in either ordinary skill or judgment, and that the steamer alone was in fault. In the first case the libelant is entitled to judgment, with costs against the Galileo; as against the Edgar Baxter the libel is dismissed; and in the second the libel is dismissed, with costs.
THE JOHN W. CANNON. 1 MCCAN and another v. THE JOHN W. CANNON, (D. C. MCCAN & SON, . Intervenors.)l (Oircuit Oourt, JiJ. D. Louisiana. June 13. 1885.) Holders of a promissory note taken by them long after maturity, take it sub. ject to all equities existing between the original parties; and, when the note was dishonored long prior to the date of sale of the vessel (upon which it was secured by mortgage) to the claimants, so far as the mortgage right is concerned no agreements or conduct bctween the original parties, subsequent to the sale, can bind the claimants. 2.· PLEDGE-CIVIL CODE LA. AUT. 3142. By article 3142 of the Civil Code of LOUlslana, a dentel' may gIve III pledge Whatever belongs to him, but cannot pledge any further right than he has himself; but article 3145 of the same Code permits a person to pledge the property of another with the express or tacit consent of the owner.
1.
PnOMISSORY NOTES-MORTGAGE OF VESSEL.
Admiralty Appeal. John D. Rouse and W,illiam Grant, for libelants and intervenors. John H. Kennard, W. W. HOlVe, and S. S. Prentiss, for claimants. PARDEE, J. The original libel in this case is for $1,787.93 for repairs and supplies, and is not contested. The intervening libel is to recover the amount of a certain promissory note made by John W. Cannon on the eighteenth of November, 187D, for the sum of $2,500, payable to the order of said John W. Cannon, six months after the date thereof, with 8 per cent. per annum interest from maturity until .raid; the same being indorsed and delivered in blank, and secured by mortgage on the steam-boat John W Cannon. 1 Heported
by Joseph P. Hornor, Esq., of the New Orleans bar.
THE JOHN W. CANNON.
393
Intervenors allege that said note was duly transferred to them for value; that they are subrogated in law to the mortgage security; and that the note remains unpaid in principal and interest. The answer to the intervention admits the making d the note and mortgage, but denies the consideration, the recording, the transferring for value to intervenor, and the subrogation. The answer avers the purchase by claimant from the late John W. Cannon of said steam-boat John W. Cannon, on the first day of October, 1881, and the due enrollment of the bill of sale at the home port of the vessel; that the note sued on is one of a series of notes secured by mortgage made by the late John W. Cannon in "November, 1879, and delivered to George Moorman, an employee, for the sole purpose of raising money for the use of the boats mortgaged, and of securing the obli- ' gations of said Cannon in his business; that said Moorman had the custody of said notes as such employe for use as aforesaid; that the recital of indebtedness in the mortgage was purely formal, according to custom in Louisiana; that in fact said Cannon owed said Moorman nothing; that said Moorman gave to said Cannon, De-; cember 23, 1879, a counter-letter stating the facts, and that he (Moor-. man) had advanced nothing on said notes, but only held them as collateral; that after the maturity of the note sued on, in the year 1882, Moorman had, without authority, given the note to intervenors to secure a personal debt of his own, not inuring to the benefit of Cannon nor the mortgaged boat; that the intervenors had knowledge of the facts; that the note sued on had been issued by said Cannon, and afterwards taken up and extinguished, and that the claimant has a right to plead all equities against said mortgage claim. The undisputed facts in the case are that in the fall of 1879 John W. Cannon was the owner of the steam-boat Cannon, and at least seven-eighths owner of the steam-boat Lee, and was engaged in running them both in the carrying trade on the Mississippi; that on November 1, 1879, Capt. Cannon employed George Moorman for a period of two years as general manager at New Orleans of the said steam-boats, at a salary of $10,000 per year,-$5,000 thereof to be paid in cash, and $5,000 to be paid in an interest to the extent of of $2,500 in each of said steam-boats; that Moorman continued for the two years in the employ of Capt. Cannon, under said contract, and received therefor the amount to be paid in cash, to-wit, $5,000 per year, and subsequently oollected the $2,500 per year interest in the Lee by transferring mortgage notes on the Lee, held under the same terms and oontract as the present note; that on the eighteenth of November 1879, Capt. Cannon exeouted and delivered to Moorman notes in various sums, due at various dates, to the amount of $25,000, among whioh was the present one, and secured $10,000 of them by mortgage on the Lee, and $15,000 of them, including the present one, by mortgage on the Cannon, in which latter mortgage Cannon declared that he was justly and truly indebted to Moorman in the fun
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Bum of $15.000, represented by certain notes, describing them; that the mortgage on the Cannon was duly recorded in New Orleans, November 19,1879, and in Louii>Vllle, Kentucky, June 17,1881; that December 23, 1879, said Moorman delivered to Capt. Cannon a doctlment or counter-letter in the tenns following: "December 23, 1879. "The within mortgage notes of given by Capt. Jno. W. Cannon, are simply held by·me as collateral for any sum of money he may owe me, and for security for the payment of the paper on which my name is pnt as drawer, indorser, or acceptor for Capt. Cannon. I have not advanced Cannon any money on the notes; they are only heLl as stated."
-That October 1, 1881, Capt. Cannon sold the steam-boat Cannon to the claimant, giving deed duly recorded, and possession; that J anuary 28, 1882, George Moorman, for value, gave his note at 90 days for $2,500, to intervenors, and secured the same by pledge of mortgage note on steamer Cannon for $2,500, (the one in present suit,) which note of Moorman was afterwards, with same collateral, exteuded to October 15, 1882; and that Capt. John W. Cannon died April 19, 1882. The evidence in the case, consisting of letters of Cannon to Moor-. man, and letters from Moorman to Cannon, accounts from Capt. Caenon's books made up by Moorman, and Moorman's testimony, do not show any indebtedness from Cannon to Moorman, October 1, 1881, or afterwards, that would, under the terms of the counter-letter, show any interest in the said note on the part of Moorman, or any right of his to pledge it or retain it, unless such right and interest existed on account of the indebtednes from Cannon to Moorman for that part of the salary of Moorman which was to be paid by a $2,500 per year interest in the Cannon. I take it to be clear that as intervenors took the note in controversy long after it had matured, they took it subject to all equities existing eond further, as the note was dishonored between the original long prior to the first of October, 1881, the date of sale to claimant, so far as the mortgage right is concerned, no agreements or conduct between the original parties subsequent to the sale can bind the claimant; so that, if intervenors have any rights on the Cannon, they only have Moorman's rights as t:"ey existed on the first day of October, 188!. Indeed, the claimant denies that if Moorman held the note as simple security he had a right to repledge it; relying upon article 3142 of Civil Code of Louisiana, to the effect that a debtor may give in pledge whatever belongs to him, but cannot pledge anyfnrther right than he has himself. On this point it is unnecessary to decide fllrther than to refer to article 3145 of the Civil Code of Louisiana, which permits a person to pledge the property of another with the express or tacit consent of the owner, and to the fact that in the evidence of Moorman it is expressly stated that Capt. Cannon consented to Moormau's right to repledge;
395
so that if it is found that Moorman had a right to hold the note as security, he had an undisputed right to repledge it, at least to the extent of his interest. The question for decision in the case is then reduced to this: Taking the parties as they stood on October 1, 1881, had Moorman on that day, under his contract with Capt. Cannon, a right to hold, and was he then holding, the present note in pledge to secure the $2,500 per year interest Cannon was to pay him in the steamer Cannon towards his year's salary as manager? If he then had such right, and was then so holding it, he had the right to repledge to in. tervenors, who now have the right to enforce payment in this suit, and otherwise the intervenors fail. From the undisputed facts in the case it would seem that the can· tract of pledge of the mortgage notes between Capt. Cannon and Moorman was a verbal one. If, however, it is considered as having been reduced to wl'iting in the counter-letter signed by Moorman, and heretofore given in full, then the contract is found to be ambiguous, and not only susceptible of but requiring explanation by evidence and the surrounding circumstances. The expression therein, "any sum of money he may owe me," may relate to an indebtedness accrued, or to an indebtedness to accrue. That it should be construed most favorably to Cannon, on the ground that it was Moorman's negligence that caused the obscurity, may be taken for granted. See article 1958, Civil Code La. Still the ambiguity may be explained by the surrounding circumstances and parol evidence of the parties, so far as obtainable. It does not appear from the evidence that, at the date of the notes, there was any indebtedness from Cannon to Moorman, except the indebtedness that had, up to that date, accrued on account of salary under the peculiar contract recited among the undisputed facts of this case, while there is evidence tending to show that at that time Moorman was indebted to Cannon in the sum of over $2,000. The letter itself shows that it was contemplated that indebtedness to accrue on account of Moorman's becoming a drawer, acceptor, or indorser of bills for account of Cannon, was to be secured by the mortgage notes held as collateral, all of which is specifically providdd for in the letter; but it is nowhere suggested in the evidence that any other indebtedness from Cannon to Moorman was contemplated, except for moneys advanced, and that arising from unpaid salary. Moorman (called in the ·case as a witness for claimant) testifies positively that it was the understanding and agreement between him and Capt. Cannon that the mortgage notes were to be held by him to use as might be required as collateral to raise funds for the necessities of the steam-boat business of Capt. Cannon, to secure him in such cases as he might be on the paper of Capt. Cannon, and to secure him the sums that Capt. Cannon had agreed to pay him in an interest in the steam-boats as salary. And Moorman is corroborated by the fact that $5,000 of the notes on the Lee were used by him in paying his $5,000 interest in the Lee; and that such use was acqui-
396
esced in by Capt. Cannon j and by the further fact that, except such provision for paying and securing that part of Moorman's salary as was to be paid in "an interest in" the steam-boats, no provision for payment, nor payment, appears to have been made or contemplated. On the other hand, it appears that in a diary kept by Moorman of Capt. Cannon'A debts, running up to March, 1882, no mention is made of this claimed indebtedness to Moorman, nor of the mortgage notes. !\Ioorman explains this by saying that, as both he and Capt. Cannon understood the condition of affairs between them, no such mention was considered necessary, and it was omitted by Cannon's direction. In two letters written by Moorman to Capt. Cannon on January 4 and 15, 1882, both of about the same purport, in relation to the condition of affairs, and the claims or demands of Moorman against Cannon, und where it would seem Moorman was called on to be explicit, he again uses ambiguous language to describe in what right he held the $25,000 mortgage notes: "And to secure me for any amount you might owe me for money advanced, or otherwise." These letters were written after the sale of the Cannon, and just before Moorman pledged the present note to intervenors. It is further to be noticed that Moorman's claim that the contract was that he should hold any of the mortgage notes to secure him the payment of the interest to be paid him in the steam-boats, on account of salary, is inconsistent, not only with the fact that nowhere in the letters that he gave Capt. Cannonwhich were given to show in what capacity and under what circumstances he held possession of the notes-does he state Rpecifically any such contract, but also with the fact conceded by him-iterated and reiterated in the letters-'that he was holding the notes to pledge at any time for the purpose of raising such funds as the necessities of Capt. Cannon's Bteam-boat business might require. All these matters bear strongly against the right of Moorman to hold the note as claimed; and yet, after considering all the circumstances, inferences, inconsistencies, and evidence bearing against the intervenors, with a decided bias in that direction, from the nature of the case, I am unable to make them overcome the positive evidence of Moorman, corroborated as he is by circumstances on his side. Were Moorman impeached or flatly contradicted by witnesses, or by any fact in the case, I could find for the claimant; but, unimpeached and uncontradicted by.the testimony, and standing before the court (as proctors undisputably declared) as a man of character and good repute, his testimony must give the case to the intervenors. And it is so ordered.
THE MARY ELIZABETH.
897
THE MARY ELIZABETH. 1 RUSSELL
v.
THE MARY ELIZABETH.1
JACKSON V. SAME. 1
(Oircuit Oourt, S. D. Alabama. June. 1885.) PILOT'S LIEN FOR WAGES.
Where a steam-boat is engaged in a regular trade, making short and frequent trips, and a pilot is always necessary, in fact required by the laws of the United States, it is to the interest of the boat and the pilots that contracts shall be made for stated terms of reasonable duration, and as such contracts are lawful, both parties should be hound thereby, and if the boat is bound a lien necessarily results. The Wander61', 20 FED. REP. 655, followed.
Admiralty Appeal. L. H. Faith and W. S. McKinstry, for libelants. G. W. Duskin, U. S. Atty., for claimants. PARDEE, J. These suits are brougl;lt to enforce a lien on contracta made by the master of said steam-boat Mary Elizabeth with the reo spective libelants to serve as pilots on the said boat for fixed terms of four and six months. Services were rendered under the contracts for over half of the fixed periods, when the owner discharged the libelants, with full payment to the time of discharge. The libelants demand compensation for the balance of the term for which they were respectively hired. A pilot, being a person employed in the navigation of a vessel, is deemed a seaman, and his claim for wages is within the admiralty jurisdiction. See Cohen, Adm. 28,234; U. S. v. Thompson, 1 Sumn. 170.
Pilots employed on steam·boats making regular trips on navigable rivers form a part of the crew. "The master being the person to whom the owners have intrusted the navigation of the ship, and some , other powers in relation to it, he has power to make certain con· tracts, which it is not material here to enumerate, but among which is included that of hiring the other mariners. * * · In general, however, the master is left to hire the seamen at his own discretioll, both at home and abroad; and unlesB the owner interferes, the engagements entered into by the master, within the scope of his agency, bind the owner to a performance." Ourt. Mer. Seam. 15, 16. The present cases show that the owner of the Mary Elizabeth, contemplating running his boat for the season in the Tom Bigbee river, employed T. J. Butler as master, and authorized and instructed him to employ pilots, and that, in pursuance of such instructions, Butler, as master, contracted with the libelants for the fix.ed terms aforesaid. 'lteported by Jl)sc,:Jh P. Hornor, Esq., of the New Orleans bar.