Court Opinion

ID: 8635336
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 19:44:15.818831+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:55:54.495451
License: Public Domain

STORY, Circuit Justice.
I am of opinion, that the evidence is not admissible. I think that a title to a ship cannot pass by parol, when she is sold, to a purchaser. The general maritime law requires a ship to have some written documents of ownership, at least when sailing on the ocean; and there is nothing in our jurisprudence, which dispenses with such a written instrument of transfer. Lord Stowell has observed (The Sisters, 5 C. Rob. Adm. 155 [438]) that a bill of sale is “the universal instrument of transfers of ships, in the usage of all maritime countries, and in no degree a peculiar title deed or conveyance known only to the law of England. It is what the maritime law expects, what the court of admiralty would, in its ordinary practice, always require.” Prom such an authority one would be little inclined to differ, unless upon some urgent occasion. But here is a bill of sale and a registry of the schooner as an American vessel, at the port of Philadelphia, under and by virtue of that instrument. A bill of sale is indispensable to pass the title to a ship under our registry act of 1792, c. 1, § 14 [1 Stat. 294], so as to preserve her American character.
When the sale was made in this case, the bill of sale was made out and executed by the vendor in the joint names of the plaintiff and Remington. The legal title, therefore, passed to both; and to introduce the parol proof, would be to contradict the direct allegations of the deed. This is not all. The register was taken out in the joint names of both parties, and the ownership was sworn to by the plaintiff to be as stated in the register. The schooner has always sailed under that register, and Remington has continued in possession as master, during the whole period since the purchase. It appears to me, that the plaintiff cannot now be permitted to show that the ship’s papers are false, and that the ownership is solely in himself, in opposition to them all. So far as he is concerned, the underwriters have a right to deny that he has more interest than the ship’s documents disclose. A different rule would be productive of the grossest frauds. I think, too, that there is always an implied representation on the part of the ship owner, that the ship’s documents contain a true statement of the ownership, at least where she sails under a register. The evidence is rejected; and the plaintiff can recover a verdict only for a moiety of the value of the schooner and freight. Verdict accordingly.