Court Opinion

ID: 3600831
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:47:20.768387+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:34:01.767936
License: Public Domain

[EDITORS' NOTE:  THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 440 
The statute under which these proceedings were instituted provides, that "whenever a debt, amounting to fifty dollars or upwards, shall be contracted" in the manner therein specified, "such debt shall be a lien," c. In this case it becomes an important matter to determine when the debt was contracted, within the meaning of the statute. The agreement was made about the 15th of April, and in one sense the debt was contracted at that time; but it is manifest that the statute has relation to a subsisting debt for supplies, materials or labor, furnished vessels, and not to the initiatory bargain out of which the debt may arise. On this point the reasoning of Judge Betts in the case of the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company v. The Alida is very conclusive. The opposite construction, says he, would subvert the whole design and policy of the privilege, which is intended to give security for labor and materials actually put to vessels, and not to the mere contract or stipulation to supply them. The contract may be entered into in anticipation of the time when the vessel is to receive repairs or supplies, and she may continue her business, leaving the port where the contract is made, until the time agreed upon for its fulfilment. Preparations may be made, and materials provided, in accordance with a previous stipulation, while the vessel is pursuing her regular course of business from port to port, for months perhaps, and then when she has received them to hold her discharged from liability, on the ground that she had departed from the port more than twelve days after the contract was made, would render the assurance held out by the act to creditors a sheer delusion. Such a construction, too, would be adverse to the plain meaning of the act; for the debt must be contracted for work done or materials or articlesfurnished; clearly implying that the contract to work or furnish materials must be followed by an actual performance, before the lien provided by the statute attaches. *Page 441 
But the respondent's counsel contends that no debt was contracted till a sum of money became due to the respondents under the contract. The statute clearly intends that the contract shall be made by the master, owner, c. and the work done, or materials furnished by the contractor, before any right arises under it. It also clearly implies that this debt is perfected so soon as the work is done or materials furnished; and the only difficulty in this case arises from the fact that an extended credit was given by the party furnishing the materials, beyond the actual delivery; and the decision must turn upon the question whether he has a right to give such credit, for his own convenience, and at the same time retain his privilege under the lien law.
There can be no doubt that the intention of the parties in this case was that the goods should be delivered from time to time through the season as they were wanted; but that payment should be postponed until the close of the season, and then the whole should become due and payable at one time. In this contract I presume no reference was had to the rights of the party under the lien law. Payment was anticipated from the steward, with whom the contract was made, as the agent of the Alida; but insolvency having occurred on the part of the owner, resort is had to this mode of securing the debt.
The obvious intention of the first section of the law was to provide a mode by which mechanics and others, furnishing supplies to vessels temporarily in port, might promptly and certainly secure payment for work or materials furnished, and necessary for the repair or equipment of such vessel, without the uncertainty or delay attending the ordinary process of collection of debts in our courts of law. It is a privilege granted to certain descriptions of creditors by a specific law, applicable to specific cases, in derogation of the common law, and can not be extended or enlarged by construction. (In the matter of Dennyand others, 2 Hill, 220.)
The law, I apprehend, does not contemplate any credit beyond such as is absolutely necessary to perfect the contract. Whenever therefore the work is done, or the materials furnished, in pursuance of a previous stipulation, then the debt has been *Page 442 
contracted within the meaning of the act, and the right to attach accrues. If then the creditor gives an extended credit, thereby relieving the vessel from the existing liability, and she pursues her employment, leaving the port; although the parties may agree that the liability shall continue and attach at a future day, there can be no doubt that the lien would be lost: for the condition upon which the statutory remedy is suspended no longer exists; and that condition of things can not be restored in reference to such a debt, by a subsequent agreement of the parties. I think the same doctrine would apply to an original contract, if that contract is so made, as by giving an extended credit, to take the case out of the immediate operation of the statutory remedy. The statute intends that the lien shall attach immediately on the doing of the work or furnishing the materials; the contract of the parties provides that the statutory remedy shall be suspended until a future period. The remedy must be strictly pursued, as provided by the statute, or it is lost.
If this be the true construction of the statute, there can be no further difficulty in disposing of this case. The second section provides that when the ship or vessel shall depart from the port at which she was when such debt was contracted, to some other port within the state, every such debt shall cease to be a lien, at the expiration of twelve days after the day of such departure. The judgment of the court below must be reversed.
Judgment reversed.