A collision between two vessels by the fault of one of them
creates a maritime lien upon her for the damages to the other,
which is to be preferred, in admiralty, to a lien for previous
supplies.
A lien upon a tug, for damages to her tow by negligent towage
bringing the tow into collision with a third vessel is to be
preferred, in admiralty, to a lien for supplies previously
furnished to the tug in her home port.
In a pending appeal in admiralty by Edward H. Loud and others,
owners of the schooner
C. R. Flint, from a decree of the
District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of New
York in favor of Frederich H. Gladwish and others, coal merchants
under the name of Gladwish, Moquin & Co., the Circuit Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit certified to this Court a question
of the priority of maritime liens on the steam tug
John G.
Stevens, arising, as the certificate stated, upon the
following facts:
"The home port of the tug was New York. Between December 7,
1885, and March 7, 1886, Gladwish, Moquin & Co. furnished coal
to the tug in her home port, and filed notices of liens therefore
under the Laws of the New York of 1862, c. 482, thereby creating
statutory liens on her. On March 8, 1886, the tug
John G.
Stevens was employed in the port of New York to tow the
schooner
C. R.
Page 170 U. S. 114
Flint through the waters of said port, and, while
towing, negligently allowed the
C. R. Flint to collide
with the bark
Doris Eckhoff in tow of the tug
R. S.
Carter."
"On March 16, 1886, Loud and others, owners of the
C. R.
Flint, libeled the
John G. Stevens and the
R. S.
Carter in admiralty in the District Court of the United States
for the Eastern District of New York for the collision damage. On
March 16, 1886, Gladwish and others libeled the
John G.
Stevens in the same court to enforce their supply lien under
the state law. The Loud libel resulted in a decree condemning both
tugs for damages exceeding $15,000. The Gladwish libel resulted in
a decree condemning the
John G. Stevens for the coal
supplied, and costs -- in all, $218.07."
"The district court awarded priority to the supply lien, which
exhausts the fund resulting from the sale of the
John G.
Stevens, leaving the Loud decree unsatisfied."
58 F. 792.
Upon these facts, the circuit court of appeals desired the
instruction of this Court upon this question of law:
"Is the lien for the damages occasioned by negligent towage,
which arose on March 8, 1886, to be preferred to the previous state
lien for supplies, the libel for supplies being filed last?"
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the case, delivered the opinion
of the Court.
The question presented by this record is whether a lien upon a
tug for damages to her tow by negligent towage bringing the tow
into collision with a third vessel is to be preferred in admiralty
to a statutory lien for supplies furnished to the tug in her home
port before the collision.
This question may be conveniently divided, in its consideration
by the Court, as it was in the arguments at the bar, into
Page 170 U. S. 115
two parts: first, is a claim in tort for damages by a collision
entitled to priority over a claim in contract for previous
supplies?; second, is a claim by a tow against her tug, for damages
from coming into collision with a third vessel by reason of
negligent towage a claim in tort?
In the case of
The Bold Buccleugh, 7 Moore P.C. 267,
decided in 1852 by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council,
upon appeal from the English High Court of Admiralty, and ever
since considered a leading case both in England and in America, it
was adjudged that a collision between two ships by the negligence
of one of them created a maritime lien upon or privilege in the
offending ship for the damage done to the other, which attached at
the time of the collision and might be enforced in admiralty by
proceedings
in rem against the offending ship even in the
hands of a
bona fide purchaser, and Chief Justice Jervis,
in delivering judgment, said:
"A maritime lien does not include or require possession. The
word is used in maritime law not in the strict legal sense in which
we understand it in courts of common law, in which case there could
be no lien where there was no possession, actual or constructive,
but to express, as if by analogy, the nature of claims which
neither presuppose nor originate in possession. . . . This claim or
privilege travels with the thing into whosesoever possession it may
come. It is inchoate from the moment the claim or privilege
attaches, and when carried into effect by legal process by a
proceeding
in rem, relates back to the period when it
first attached."
And, after observing that this rule could not be better
illustrated than by the circumstances of
The Aline (1839),
1 W.Rob. 111, in which Dr. Lushington had expressed the opinion
that in a proceeding
in rem, the claim for damages must be
preferred to a bottomry bond given before the collision, but was
not entitled, as against the holder of a like bond given after the
collision, to the increased value of the vessel by reason of
repairs effected at his cost, Chief Justice Jervis summed up the
matter as follows:
"The interest of the first bondholder taking effect from the
period when his lien attached, he was, so to speak, a part owner in
interest at the date of the collision,
Page 170 U. S. 116
and the ship in which he and others were interested was liable
to its value at that date for the injury done, without reference to
his claim. So, by the collision, the interest of the claimant
attached, and, dating from that event, the ship in which he was
interested, having been repaired, was put in bottomry by the master
acting for all parties, and he would be bound by that transaction.
This rule, which is simple and intelligible, is in our opinion
applicable to all cases."
7 Moore P.C. 284, 285.
The decision in
The Bold Buccleugh has never been
departed from in England, but has been constantly recognized as
sound law in the courts exercising admiralty Jurisdiction.
The
Europa, Brown. & Lush. 89, 91, 97;
S.C., 2 Moore
P.C. (N.S.) 1, 20;
The Charles Amelia, L.R. 2 Ad. &
Ec. 330, 333;
The City of Mecca, 6 P.D. 106, 113, 119;
The Rio Tinto, 9 App.Cas. 356, 360;
The Dictator,
(1892) P.D. 304, 320. And in a very recent case in the House of
Lords, that decision has been deliberately and finally declared to
have established beyond dispute, in the maritime law of Great
Britain, that a collision between two vessels by the fault of one
of them creates a maritime lien on her for the damage done to the
other.
Currie v. McKnight, (1897) App.Cas. 97.
It has been generally laid down in the English textbooks that a
maritime lien for damages by a collision takes precedence of all
earlier maritime liens founded in contract. Abbott on Shipping
(Shee's ed.), pt. 6, c. 4, § 2; Coote's Admiralty Practice 118;
Maclachlan on Shipping, c. 15; Foard on Shipping 217; Marsden on
Collisions (3d ed.) 82. And the English and Irish courts have even
held that a claim for damages from a collision by the negligence of
a foreign ship creates a lien upon the whole value of the ship and
freight, without deduction for seamen's wages, because, it has been
said, the owner of the ship, being personally liable to the seamen
for their wages, should not be permitted to deduct expenses for
which he is liable, and thus benefit the wrongdoer at the expense
of him to whom the wrong has been done.
The Elin, 8 P.D.
39, 129, and cases there cited.
That a claim for supplies furnished to a vessel should be
Page 170 U. S. 117
preferred to a claim for damages for a subsequent collision
appears never to have been even suggested in England, probably
because, by the law of England, materialmen, without possession,
have no maritime lien for supplies even to a foreign ship, but a
mere right to seize the ship by process in admiralty, in the nature
of an attachment.
The Rio Tinto, 9 App.Cas. 356;
The
Henrich Bjorn, 10 P.D. 44, and 11 App.Cas. 270. "Claims for
necessaries," said Dr. Lushington, "do not possess,
ab
origine, a lien, but carry only a statutory remedy against the
res, which is essentially different."
The Gustaf,
Lush. 506, 508.
There can be no doubt therefore that in the English admiralty
courts, the lien for damages by collision would take precedence of
an earlier claim for supplies.
In this country, the principle, applied in the case of
The
Bold Buccleugh to a claim for damages by collision, that a
maritime lien is created as soon as the claim comes into being, has
long been held to be equally applicable to all claims which can be
enforced in admiralty against the ship, whether arising out of tort
or of contract.
General Ins. Co. v.
Sherwood, 14 How. 351,
55 U. S. 363;
The Creole, 2 Wall.Jr. 485, 518;
The Mayurka, 2
Curtis 72, 77;
The Young Mechanic, 2 Curtis 404;
The
Kiersarge, 2 Curtis 421;
The Yankee
Blade, 19 How. 82,
60 U. S. 89;
The Rock Island
Bridge, 6 Wall. 213,
73 U. S. 215;
The China, 7
Wall. 53,
74 U. S. 68;
The Siren, 7
Wall. 152,
74 U. S. 155;
The
Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558,
88 U. S. 579;
The J. E. Rumbell, 148 U. S. 1,
148 U. S. 10-11,
148 U. S. 20;
The Glide, 167 U. S. 606.
Accordingly, in our own law, it is well established that a
maritime lien or privilege, constituting a present right of
property in the ship,
jus in re, to be afterwards enforced
in admiralty by process
in rem, arises not only from a
collision and for the damages caused thereby,
General Ins. Co.
v. Sherwood, The Rock Island Bridge, The Siren, and
The
China, above cited, but also for necessary supplies or repairs
furnished to a vessel, whether under the general maritime law in a
foreign port or according to a local statute in her home port.
The Young Mechanic, The Kiersarge, The Lottawanna, The J. E.
Rumbell, and
The Glide, above cited.
Page 170 U. S. 118
Some years before the decision in
The Bold Buccleugh,
Mr. Justice Story had clearly recognized the existence of a
maritime lien, as well for damages by collision,
The Malek
Adhel, 2 How. 210,
43 U. S. 234,
as for supplies in a foreign port, regarding which he observed:
"A materialman who furnishes supplies in a foreign port, or to a
foreign ship, relies on the ship itself as his security. He may, if
he pleases, insist upon a bottomry bond, with maritime interest, as
the security for his advances, in which case he gives credit
exclusively to the ship, and must take upon himself the risk of a
successful accomplishment of the voyage. But if he is content with
receiving the amount of his advances and common interest, he may
rely on that tacit lien or claim which the maritime law gives him
upon the ship itself, in addition to the personal security of the
owners. Wherever a lien or claim is given upon the thing by the
maritime law, the admiralty will enforce it by a proceeding
in
rem, and indeed it is the only court competent to enforce
it."
The Nestor, 1 Sumner 73, 78. And it is worthy of note
that the last part of this observation was quoted and relied on in
the judgment in
The Bold Buccleugh, 7 Moore P.C. 284.
By our law, then, a claim for damages by collision and a claim
for supplies are both maritime liens. The question of their
comparative rank is now for the first time presented to this Court
for adjudication, and it has been the subject of conflicting
decisions in other courts of the United States, and especially in
those held within the State of New York.
In
The America (1853), Judge Hall, in the Northern
District of New York, appears to have held liens for collisions and
those for supplies to be of equal rank, without regard to the date
when they attached to the ship. 16 Law Reporter 264. A claim for
damages by collision has been postponed to an earlier claim for
supplies by Judge Brown, in the Southern District of New York, in
The Amos D. Carver, 35 F. 665, but has been preferred to
such a claim by Judge Benedict, in the Eastern District of New
York, and by Mr. Justice Blatchford, on appeal, in
The R. S.
Carter and
The John G. Stevens, 38 F. 515, and 40 F.
331, and, in an
Page 170 U. S. 119
earlier case, a claim for collision had been allowed by Judge
Benedict a like preference over a previous bottomry bond.
The
Pride of the Ocean, 3 F. 162.
The preference due to the lien for damages from collision over
earlier claims founded on contract has been carried so far as to
allow the lien for damages to prevail over the claim of seamen for
wages earned before the collision, by Judge Lowell, in the District
of Massachusetts, in
The Enterprise, 1 Lowell 455; by
Judge Nixon, in the District of New Jersey, in
The Maria &
Elizabeth, 12 F. 627; by Judge Gresham and Jenkins, in the
Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, in
The F. H.
Stanwood, 49 F. 577, and by Judge Swan, in the Eastern
District of Michigan, in
The Nettie Woodward, 50 F. 224.
The opposite view has been maintained, in the Southern District of
New York, by Judge Choate in
The Orient, 10 Benedict 620,
as well as by Judge Brown in The Amos D. Carver, 35 F. 665, above
cited, and in the Eastern District of New York by Judge Benedict in
The Samuel J. Christian, 16 F. 796, and in the Western
District of Michigan by Judge Severens in
The Daisy Day,
40 F. 538.
The case at bar, however, presents no question of the
comparative rank of seamen's wages, which may depend upon peculiar
considerations and which, according to the favorite saying of Lord
Stowell and of Mr. Justice Story, are sacred liens, and, as long as
a plank of the ship remains, the sailor is entitled, against all
other persons, to the proceeds as a security for his wages.
The
Madonna D'Idra, 1 Dodson 37, 40;
The Sydney Cove, 2
Dodson 11, 13;
The Neptune, 1 Hagg.Adm. 227, 239;
Sheppard v.
Taylor, 5 Pet. 675,
30 U. S. 710;
Brown v. Lull, 2 Sumner 443, 452;
Pitman v.
Hooper, 3 Sumner 50, 58; Abbott on Shipping, pt. 4, c. 4, § 8;
3 Kent Com. 197.
Yet see 80 U. S. v.
Wright, 13 Wall. 104,
80 U. S. 122.
Nor does this case present any question as between successive
liens for repairs or supplies, the general rule as to which is that
they are to be paid in inverse order, because it is for the benefit
of all the interests in the ship that she should be kept in
condition to be navigated. Abbott on Shipping pt. 2,
Page 170 U. S. 120
c. 3, § 32;
The St. Jago de
Cuba, 9 Wheat. 409,
22 U. S. 416;
The J. E. Rumbell, 148 U. S. 1,
148 U. S. 9;
The Fanny, 2 Lowell, 508, 510.
Nor does it present a question of precedence between two claims
for distinct and successive collisions, as to which there has been
a difference of opinion in the Southern District of New York, Judge
Choate, in the district court, giving the preference to the later
claim upon the ground that the interest created in the vessel by
the first collision was subject, like all other proprietary
interests in her, to the ordinary marine perils, including the
second collision, and Mr. Justice Blatchford, in the circuit court,
reversing the decree, because the vessel libeled had not been
benefited, but had been injured, by the second collision.
The
Frank G. Fowler, 8 F. 331 and 17 F. 653.
Nor yet does it present the question whether a lien for repairs
made after the collision, so far as they increase the value of the
vessel, may be preferred to the lien for the damages by the
collision, in accordance with the English cases of
The
Aline and
The Bold Buccleugh, cited at the beginning
of this opinion.
But the question we have to deal with is whether the lien for
damages by the collision is to be preferred to the lien for
supplies furnished before the collision.
The foundation of the rule that collision gives to the party
injured a
jus in re in the offending ship is the principle
of the maritime law that the ship, by whomsoever owned or
navigated, is considered as herself the wrongdoer, liable for the
tort and subject to a maritime lien for the damages. This
principle, as has been observed by careful text writers on both
sides of the Atlantic, has been more clearly established, and more
fully carried out, in this country than in England. Henry on
Admiralty, § 75, note; Marsden on Collisions (3d ed.) 93.
The Act of Congress of December 22, 1807, c. 5, laid an embargo
on all ships and vessels within the limits and jurisdiction of the
United States bound to any foreign port or place, and the
supplemental Act of January 9, 1808, § 3, provided that any ship or
vessel proceeding, contrary to the provisions
Page 170 U. S. 121
of the act, to a foreign port or place, should be forfeited. 2
Stat. 451, 453. Upon the trial of a libel in the circuit court of
the United States to enforce the forfeiture of a vessel under those
acts, Chief Justice Marshall said:
"This is not a proceeding against the owner; it is a proceeding
against the vessel, for an offense committed by the vessel, which
is not less an offense, and does not the less subject her to
forfeiture, because it was committed without the authority and
against the will of the owner."
The Little Charles, 1 Brock. 347, 354.
Upon a libel of information for the condemnation of a piratical
vessel, under Act Cong. March 3, 1819, c. 77, continued in force by
the Act of May 15, 1820, c. 113, 3 Stat. 510, 600, Mr. Justice
Story, delivering the opinion of this Court, and referring to
seizures in revenue causes, said:
"The thing is here primarily considered as the offender, or
rather the offense is attached primarily to the thing, and this
whether the offense be
malum prohibitum or
malum in
se. The same principle applies to proceedings
in rem
on seizures in the admiralty."
The Palmyra, 12
Wheat. 1,
25 U. S. 14.
In
The Malek
Adhel, 2 How. 210,
43 U. S.
233-234, Mr. Justice Story, in delivering judgment,
stated the principle more fully, saying:
"It is not an uncommon course in the admiralty, acting under the
law of nations, to treat the vessel in which or by which, or by the
master or crew thereof, a wrong or offense has been done, as the
offender, without any regard whatsoever to the personal misconduct
or responsibility of the owner thereof. And this is done from the
necessity of the case, as the only adequate means of suppressing
the offense or wrong or insuring an indemnity to the injured
party."
And, after quoting the passages above cited from the opinions in
The Little Charles and in
The Palmyra, he
added:
"The ship is also, by the general maritime law, held responsible
for the torts and misconduct of the master and crew thereof,
whether arising from negligence or a willful disregard of duty --
as, for example, in cases of collision and other wrongs done upon
the high seas or elsewhere within the admiralty and maritime
jurisdiction, upon the general policy of that law, which looks to
the instrument itself, used as the
Page 170 U. S. 122
means of the mischief, as the best and surest pledge for the
compensation and indemnity to the injured party."
In
The China, 7
Wall. 53,
74 U. S. 68, by
the application of the same principle, a ship was held liable for
damages by collision through the negligence of a pilot whom she had
been compelled by law to take on board, and Mr. Justice Swayne, in
delivering judgment, said:
"The maritime law as to the position and powers of the master
and the responsibility of the vessel is not derived from the civil
law of master and servant, nor from the common law. It had its
source in the commercial usages and jurisprudence of the Middle
Ages. Originally, the primary liability was upon the vessel, and
that of the owner was not personal, but merely incidental to his
ownership, from which he wad discharged either by the loss of the
vessel or by abandoning it to the creditors. But, while the law
limited the creditor to this part of the owner's property, it gave
him a lien or privilege against it in preference to other
creditors. . . . According to the admiralty law, the collision
impresses upon the wrongdoing vessel a maritime lien. This the
vessel carries with it into whosesoever hands it may come. It is
inchoate at the moment of the wrong, and must be perfected by
subsequent proceedings."
The same principle has been recognized in other cases.
The John
Fraser, 21 How. 184,
62 U. S. 194;
The Merrimac,
14 Wall. 199;
The Clarita & The
Clara, 23 Wall. 1;
Ralli v. Troop,
157 U. S. 386,
157 U. S.
402-403.
That the maritime lien upon a vessel for damages caused by her
fault to another vessel takes precedence of a maritime lien for
supplies previously furnished to the offending vessel is a
reasonable inference, if not a necessary conclusion, from the
decisions of this Court above referred to, the effect of which may
be summed up as follows:
The collision, as soon as it takes place, creates, as security
for the damages, a maritime lien or privilege,
jus in re,
a proprietary interest in the offending ship, and which, when
enforced by admiralty process
in rem, relates back to the
time of the collision. The offending ship is considered as herself
the wrongdoer, and as herself bound to make compensation
Page 170 U. S. 123
for the wrong done. The owner of the injured vessel is entitled
to proceed
in rem against the offender, without regard to
the question who may be her owners or to the division, the nature,
or the extent of their interests in her. With the relations of the
owners of those interests, as among themselves, the owner of the
injured vessel has no concern. All the interests, existing at the
time of the collision, in the offending vessel, whether by way of
part ownership, of mortgage, of bottomry bond, or of other maritime
lien for repairs or supplies, arising out of contract with the
owners or agents of the vessel, are parts of the vessel herself,
and as such are bound by and responsible for her wrongful acts.
Anyone who had furnished necessary supplies to the vessel before
the collision, and had thereby acquired, under our law, a maritime
lien or privilege in the vessel herself, was, as was said in
The Bold Buccleugh, before cited, of the holder of an
earlier bottomry bond, under the law of England,
"so to speak, a part owner in interest at the date of the
collision, and the ship in which he and others were interested was
liable to its value at that date for the injury done, without
reference to his claim."
7 Moore P.C. 285.
We are, then, brought to the question whether a claim by a tow
against her tug, for damages from coming into collision with a
third vessel because of negligent towage is a claim in tort
standing upon the same ground as a claim of the third vessel for
damages against the tug.
Upon this question, again, there have been conflicting opinions
in the district courts of the United States.
On the one hand, it has been held by Judge Benedict, in the
Eastern District of New York, in several cases, including the case
at bar, that a claim by a tow against her tug for damages caused by
the negligence of the latter is founded on a voluntary contract
between the owner of the tow and the owner of the tug, and should
be postponed to a claim against the tug for necessary supplies or
repairs furnished before the contract of towage was made.
The
Samuel J. Christian, 16 F. 796;
The John G. Stevens,
58 F. 792;
The Glen Iris, 78 F. 511. The same conclusion
has been
Page 170 U. S. 124
reached by Judge Brown in the Southern District of New York,
proceeding upon the hypothesis that the security for the maritime
obligation created by the contract of towage is subject to all
liens already existing upon the vessel, and upon the theory that,
by the general maritime law, liens
ex delicto, including
all liens for damage by collision, are inferior in the rank of
privilege to liens
ex contractu. The Grapeshot,
22 F. 123;
The Young America, 30 F. 789;
The
Gratitude, 42 F. 299.
On the other hand, the claim by a tow against her tug for
damages caused by negligent towage has been held to be founded in
tort, arising out of the duty imposed by law, and independent of
any contract made or consideration paid or to be paid, for the
towage, by Mr. Justice Blatchford, when district judge, in
The
Brooklyn, 2 Benedict 547, and in
The Deer, 4 Benedict
352; by Judge Lowell in
The Arturo, 6 F. 308, and by Judge
Swing, in the Southern District of Ohio, in
The Liberty, 7
F. 226, 230. In
The Arturo, 6 F. 312, Judge Lowell
said:
"These cases of tow against tug are, in form and fact, very like
collision cases. The contract gives rise to duties very closely
resembling those which one vessel owes to others which it may meet.
There is therefore an analogy between the two classes of cases so
close that the tow may sue, in one proceeding for damage, her own
tug and a strange vessel with which there has been a
collision."
And it has accordingly been held, by Judge Nixon and by Judge
Severens, that such a claim by a tow against her tug is entitled to
priority of payment over liens on the tug for previous repairs or
supplies.
The M. Vandercook, 24 F. 472, 478;
The Daisy
Day, 40 F. 538.
The decisions of this Court are in accordance with the latter
view, and are inconsistent with any other.
It was argued that the liability of a tug for the loss of her
tow was analogous to the liability of a common carrier for the loss
of the goods carried. But even an action by a passenger, or by an
owner of goods, against a carrier, for neglect to carry and deliver
in safety is an action for the breach of a
Page 170 U. S. 125
duty imposed by the law, independently of contract or of
consideration, and is therefore founded in tort.
Philadelphia & Reading
Railroad v. Derby, 14 How. 468,
55 U. S. 485;
Atlantic & Pacific Railroad v. Laird, 164 U.
S. 393.
In
Norwich Co. v.
Wright, 13 Wall. 104,
80 U. S. 122,
Mr. Justice Bradley, referring to Maclachlan on Shipping (1st ed.)
598, laid down these general propositions:
"Liens for reparation for wrong done are superior to any prior
liens for money borrowed, wages, pilotage, etc. But they stand on
an equality with regard to each other if they arise from the same
cause."
Although these propositions went beyond what was required for
the decision of that case, which was one of a collision between two
vessels owing to the fault of one of them, causing the loss of her
cargo as well as of the other vessel and her cargo, yet the very
point adjudged was that the lien on the offending vessel for the
loss of her own cargo was a lien for reparation of damage, and
therefore was upon an equality with the lien upon her for the loss
of the other vessel and her cargo.
This Court more than once has directly affirmed that a suit by
the owner of a tow against her tug, to recover for an injury to the
tow by negligence on the part of the tug is a suit
ex
delicto, and not
ex contractu.
In
The Quickstep,
9 Wall. 665,
76 U. S. 670, a
libel by the owner of a tow against her tug set forth a contract
with the tug, for a stipulated price, to tow directly, and a
deviation and unreasonable delay in its performance, and that the
tug negligently backed into the tow and injured her. An objection
that the libel could not be maintained because the contract alleged
was not proved was overruled by this Court. Mr. Justice Davis, in
delivering judgment, said:
"The libel was not filed to recover damages for the breach of a
contract, as is contended, but to obtain compensation for the
commission of a tort. It is true it asserts a contract of towage,
but this is done by way of inducement to the real grievance
complained of, which is the wrong suffered by the libelant in the
destruction of his boat by the carelessness and mismanagement of
the captain of the
Quickstep. "
Page 170 U. S. 126
Again, in
The Syracuse,
12 Wall. 167,
79 U. S. 171,
which was a libel by a tug against her tow for negligently bringing
her into collision with a vessel at anchor, the Court, speaking by
the same Justice, said:
"It is unnecessary to consider the evidence relating to the
alleged contract of towage because, if it be true, as the appellant
says, that, by special agreement the canal boat was being towed at
her own risk, nevertheless the steamer is liable if, through the
negligence of those in charge of her, the canal boat suffered loss.
Although the policy of the law has not imposed on the towing boat
the obligation resting on a common carrier, it does require, on the
part of the persons engaged in her management, the exercise of
reasonable care, caution, and maritime skill, and if these are
neglected and disaster occurs, the towing boat must be visited with
the consequences."
And see The J. P. Donaldson, 167 U.
S. 599,
167 U. S.
603.
The essential likeness between the ordinary case of a collision
between two ships and the liability of a tug to her tow for damages
caused to the latter by a collision with a third vessel is
exemplified by the familiar practice in admiralty (followed in the
very proceeding in which the question now before us arose) which
allows the owner of a tow injured by a collision caused by the
conduct of her tug and of another vessel to sue both in one libel,
and to recover against either or both, according to the proof at
the hearing.
The Alabama & The Gamecock, 92 U. S.
695;
The Atlas, 93 U. S.
302;
The L. P. Dayton, 120 U.
S. 337;
The R. S. Carter & The John G.
Stevens, 38 F. 515 and 40 F. 331.
The result of applying to the case at bar the principles of the
maritime law of the United States, as heretofore declared by this
Court, is that the lien for the damages occasioned by negligent
towage must be preferred to the previous lien for supplies.
In the argument of this case, copious references were made to
foreign codes and commentaries which we have not thought it
important to consider because they differ among themselves as to
the comparative rank of various maritime liens and because the
general maritime law is in force in this country,
Page 170 U. S. 127
or in any other, so far only as administered in its courts or
adopted by its own laws and usages.
The
Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558,
88 U. S. 572;
The Belgenland, 114 U. S. 355,
114 U. S. 369;
Liverpool Steam Co. v. Phenix Ins. Co., 129 U.
S. 397,
129 U. S. 444;
Ralli v. Troop, 157 U. S. 386,
157 U. S.
407.
Question certified answered in the affirmative.