Barnes v. Taylor
Barnes v. Taylor
Opinion of the Court
The laws of the United States provide, that whenever a ship or vessel, registered in conformity with the statute requirements, shall be sold wholly or in part to a citizen or eitizens of the United States, the former certificate or register shall be delivered up to the collector, and by him, without delay, be transmitted to the secretary of the treasury to be canceled. And a ship or vessel so sold or transferred, shall be registered anew, by her former name, and a certificate thereof shall be granted by the collector. U. S. Laws of 1789, c. 11, § 10. Every ship or vessel shall be registered by the collector of the district in which shall be comprehended the port, to which such ship or vessel shall belong at the time of her registry; which port shall be determined to be that at or nearest to which the owner, if there be but "one, or
If the transfer of “ the Palo Alto" by the plaintiff to C. C. Mitchell & Son was absolute, they residing ixx the district of Portland, it was necessary in order to prevent a forfeiture of all the privileges and benefits of a vessel of the United States, that a new enrollment should be made in the district of Portland, upoxx the surrender to the collector of that port, of the certificate of the former enrollment and license in the district of Wiscasset.
Upon the sale or transfer of a ship or vessel from oxxe to another, it is well understood, that the certificates of registry or enrollment pass to the purchaser ; axxd from these alone, he is enabled to cause a new registry or exxrollmexxt to be made, and proper certificates, thereupon obtained, uxxless they have been lost or mislaid. Consequently, in such cases, the former certificates are without value, and will secure no privileges or
It is contended in defence of the action, that, from the evidence reported, the defendant was made reasonably to believe, by the plaintiff, the transfer of the vessel to C. C. Mitchell & Son was absolute at the time of the demand; and that therefore, the refusal to deliver the papers demanded was justifiable, and was not sufficient evidence of a conversion.
It appears that the certificates in question had been surrendered to the defendant on July 15, 1847, and the reason for their being so deposited ceased on Dec. 22, 1847, when the vessel was delivered by the deputy marshal to the plaintiff, by authority of a precept then in his hands. On July 24, 1847, the plaintiff gave to C. C. Mitchell & Son a mortgage of the vessel, for the security of two notes of hand, which became payable in four months from July 10, 1847, which mortgage was duly recorded. This mortgage was deposited in the custom house, on Oct. 18, 1847, and remained there till after the demand was made for the papers. The mortgage was not foreclosed by operation of law, although there was a breach of the condition at the time of the demand. R. S. c. 125, § 30. Upon these facts alone, the defendant might have been bound to deliver the certificates upon the demand made by the plaintiff in his own behalf. But we understand from the evidence, that before the vessel was delivered by the deputy marshal to the plaintiff, the latter, in presence of the defendant, requested the delivery to be made to one Beals, who was acting as the agent of C. C. Mitchell & Son, Beals being present, and he and the plaintiff at the time asserting that the vessel was their property. The deputy marshal declined to deliver the vessel to Beals, giving as a reason, that he was directed in the precept under which he acted, to make the delivery to the plaintiff. Upon the delivery to the plaintiff, he immediately delivered the same to Beals for C. C. Mitchell & Son. The plaintiff and Beals afterwards, on the same day, went to the defendant, and at his office demanded the papers, saying that the vessel would be
Although the mortgage was not foreclosed by lapse of time, after the breach of the condition, the title of the vessel might have been absolute in the mortgagees, by an agreement between the parties to the mortgage; the mortgage continuing in the custom house was not inconsistent with such agreement. A sale and transfer of a vessel, like any other chattel, may he valid without any bill of sale or document in writing, though it may be necessary to entitle the purchaser to a new registry, giving an American character to the vessel; and the consequence of a non-registry is, that the vessel becomes a foreign vessel. Bixby v. Whitney, 8 Pick. 86; Vinal v. Burrill, 16 Pick. 401; United States v. Willings, 4 Cranch, 55; 3 Kent’s Com. 5th ed. 130, 131; 1 Greenl. Ev. §. 261; Balkam v. Lowe, 20 Maine, 369.
The evidence, therefore, necessary to give to C. C. Mitchell & Son the privileges and benefits of an American vessel, in the one, which they might have purchased, was not required to be known to the defendant, to justify him in retaining the papers in their behalf. Any notice which should be reasonably satisfactory, that they were really the owners, was sufficient to protect him in'withholding the papers upon the demand.
The facts, which were presented to the defendant at the time of the first demand, were such evidence of an actual sale to C. C. Mitchell & Son, that he cannot be regarded as tortiously refusing to surrender the papers. It is not pretended, that the papers were called for, with the view of causing a new enrollment in another district; and that the same might be delivered up to the collector thereof. And no request was made of him of that character, by the plaintiff, as master of the vessel. The declarations of the plaintiff were full and unequivocal, that C. C. Mitchell & Son were the owners of
On December 25th, 1847, the plaintiff went to the collector’s office, accompanied by Beals, presented the order of C. C. Mitchell & Son, and demanded the papers. They were refused by the defendant.
It does not appear, that at the time the order was presented, the plaintiff claimed to have any other rights, than such as would be given by the order; and he can have no benefit therefrom, excepting so far as it was proof that he was entitled to the papers in his own behalf. If it was a request to deliver the papers as belonging to them, and to no other, the refusal to deliver them was a wrong upon their owners and not upon their agent, sent to receive them. If the order had expressly declared or required the construction, that the signers of it had no title to the vessel, such as gave them an exclusive right to the papers, and that a delivery of them to the plaintiff as his, would interfere with none of their rights, and he had made the demand in his own name, a refusal might have created a liability. But the meaning of the order is not of such a character. It contains a request to the defendant to deliver the papers to the plaintiff, “ as we wish him to continue master of said schooner, till further orders; although she is mortgaged to us, we wish him to manage the vessel.”
This shows that they professed to have the control of the vessel, and to retain the plaintiff as master, so long as they should choose to permit it, but to be subject to their order.
Plaintiff nonsuit.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.