Court Opinion

ID: 6115648
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-03 15:49:52.196235+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:21:53.414162
License: Public Domain

By the Court.*-—Daly, F. J.
The judge below dismissed the case, upon the ground that the master, not being the owner of the vessel, could not maintain an action in his own name to recover for the freight. In this he erred.
In Clarkson a. Edes (4 Cow., 470), Justice Woodworth stated that an action for the freight may be sustained in the name of the master on the bills of lading for the benefit of the owners and possessors of the vessel.
In Shields a. Davis (6 Taunt., 65), the objection was taken that the master who brought an action in his own name to recover for freight, was not the owner of the vessel. It was objected that in the declaration he averred that the goods were earned in his vessel, and as the evidence showed that he was merely the master, and not the owner, that the variance was fatal. But the court said that the master had a special property in the ship, because he had necessarily the control of it, and that the action was properly brought in his name.
In Ward a. Felton (1 East, 507), the master, who was not the owner,'brought an action in his own name for the freight; and in the elaborate discussion which the case underwent, the general right of the master to maintain such an action was not questioned either by counsel or by the court.
The master has a special interest in the freight. He may hypothecate it. (“ The Gratitudine,” 3 Chr. Robinson Ad. R., 196.) He has a lien upon it for any responsibility necessarily incurred on behalf of the vessel in a foreign port, which, after notice, he may enforce against the consignee, even though the latter may have paid the freight to the owner. (Gardner a. Ship “New Jersey,” 1 Pet. Adm. Dec., 227; Van Bokkelin a. Ingersoll, 5 Wend., 315; 7 Cow., 670; American Ins. Co. a. Coster, 3 Paige, 323.) As the general agent of the owner, in *76respect to ttie vessel and the voyage, he is authorized to collect it; and when collected, he has the right, as against the owner, to retain it for his wages or advances (Van Bokkelin a. Ingersoll, supra); and as master, he has a lien upon the cargo while it remains in his hands, and may retain it until the freight is paid. (2 Brown's Civ. & Adm. L., 82.) These rights and powers bring him within that class of persons who, having a special interest in the subject-matter, or thing, may always sue for it in their own name. (White a. Chouteau, 10 Barb., 202.)
He is enumerated among this class in Brown’s excellent treatise upon Actions.at Law (p. 162), who says, “A captain of a ship for freight may sue in his own name to enforce a contract entered into by him as agent, as he has an interest in the contract.”
Without pursuing the subject further, it is sufficient, upon these authorities, to say that the master, in his character as such, may maintain an action in his own name to recover for the freight.'
The judgment should be reversed, with costs.

 Present, Daly, F. X, Hilton and Bbady, JJ.