Stern, Hays & Lang, Inc. v. m/V Nili

Decision Date06 May 1969
Docket NumberNo. 24990.,24990.
Citation407 F.2d 549
PartiesSTERN, HAYS & LANG, INC., Appellant, v. M/V NILI, her engines, tackle and appurtenances, et al., Appellees.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Fifth Circuit

Raymond T. Greene, Harvey I. Reiseman, Miami, Fla., for appellant.

Richard F. Ralph, Eugene C. Heiman, Richard E. Reckson, Miami, Fla., for appellees.

Before BROWN, Chief Judge, CLAYTON*, Circuit Judge, and SCOTT, District Judge.

Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied May 6, 1969.

JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge:

On an expensive record of 162 printed pages, which contains much interesting, but unnecessary, information, as one sees the State of Israel put its financial imprimatur on the construction and financing of an Israeli merchantman, contracts with British shipbuilders for her construction and with Scottish bankers for her financing, and a bareboat — sometimes referred to as a "bear" boat — charter between the Israeli corporation as shipowner and a New York corporation as charterer, the overture to what we have here is best described in the opening three lines of appellant's brief. What passes for confusion in later aspects is characterized there by very, very guarded intimations which the italics reveal — no one knows, or at this stage has even the remotest idea what the facts are: "The Israel cruise ship M/V NILI while operating out of the Port of Miami in November, 1966, apparently developed certain financial problems including an alleged failure to make payment against an alleged maritime mortgage." This is just about as factual as anything becomes.

The M/V NILI, owned by Car Ferries,1 was chartered — or so uncontradicted photostats reflect — to Arison2 under a charter which, to expand the interesting irrelevancies for this stage, had a pretty positive lien prohibition clause. Trouble set in, and trouble spelling money as it often does, the State of Israel, as some kind of a mortgage lender, found the United States Courts an effective resource for settling at least this mild international financial crisis between this sovereign, her corporate subject, a ship of her flag, and such flotsam creditors of all nations as might follow in M/V NILI's wake.

One of these was the present pursuing appellant — an advertising agency who had a commitment with Arison, whom appellant thought to be the Israeli corporation's agent, but who turns out perhaps to be more of an operating charterer. With the ship thoroughly seized by Israel's libel of foreclosure and generally under a series of plasters of intervening and hopeful creditors, the orders of consolidation confected a glorious Donnybrook Fair, with each turning on the other as he felt the exigencies of the moment warranted.3

By complaint and amended complaint, signed by counselors invoking the cherished title of proctor and consequently possessed of all the detailed allegations of a former libel, the creditor sued the M/V NILI in rem, her owner Car Ferries (note 1, supra), and Arison (note 2, supra) as agent — each in personam.4 Admiralty, as well as diversity, jurisdiction (well in excess of $10,000) was expressly invoked.

Acting from that premise of self-preservation which characterizes all nations and nationals, the State of Israel, apparently apprehensive that American maritime liens might eat up the mortgage security ostensibly offered by its corporate national, lashed out against each who claimed or looked as though he might claim a sou, pound, or dollar. This sovereign therefore moved to dismiss the claim. This was done.5

Perhaps the case is an unwashed blessing of integration of admiralty and the civil rules.6 For to the esoteric legends of salt water litigation must now be added such prosaic concepts as those of Conley v. Gibson, 1957, 355 U.S. 41, 78 S.Ct. 99, 2 L.Ed.2d 80, and of our own Barber v. M/V "BLUE CAT", 5 Cir., 1967, 372 F.2d 626, all of which add up on land, shore, or water as proof that dismissal on pleadings is precarious, and the probability is high that such dismissal will hit a strand here.7

Things move too fast, too much happens in this sometimes mixed up world of ours for Judges to have some sort of perpetual claim on insight into business affairs for them to transport an ancient case8 from 1893 down to 1967 or 1969 as a kind of deliverance that advertising once held not to give rise to a lien could never do it now. As we have recently held, printing can — or at least may — be sufficient. Colonial Press of Miami, Inc. v. The Allen's Cay, 5 Cir., 1960, 277 F.2d 540, 1960 AMC 1598. If the printing may be a service or supply furnished to the vessel under the Maritime Lien Act,9 then the direct labor in determining what is to be printed in the copy differs only as "a matter of degree." J. Ray McDermott & Co. v. Offshore Menhaden Co., 5 Cir., 1959, 262 F.2d 523. Indeed, so vital may be advertising for cruise ships that the Federal Government engages in its regulation. See 46 U.S.C.A. § 362(b).

But our decision does not float or ground under such decisive currents. In many respects Israel's commencing a mortgage foreclosure invited a concursus in which at this day and time the disposition will be to let the Chancellor stride the quarterdeck to transport into the Admiralty all of the Court's equity powers.10 It is far too early to tell whether, under the Florida Lien Act11 or, more likely, under usual principles of non-maritime creditors participating in surplus proceeds generated by maritime liens,12 this creditor can qualify.

And, finally, there is an outright express claim for an amount well in excess of $10,000 between the creditor, identified as a resident of Florida, and Arison, the charterer, a New York corporation. The melding of the civil with admiralty does more than obliterate the cherished hoary title of proctor. It invests the Judge with all of the statutory powers, whether their genesis be formerly at law, in equity, or in admiralty.

What will come of this only the facts will tell. It now goes back two years later to find out what they are.

Reversed and remanded.

PETITION FOR REHEARING AND PETITION FOR REHEARING EN BANC

PER CURIAM:

We find no merit in the petition for rehearing. Concerning the importance and direct relation of advertising literature, in the cruise trade to the Congressional view of safety at sea for passengers, see Nicholas J. Healy 3d, Admiralty & Shipping, 1968 Annual Survey Am.L. 575.

The Petition for Rehearing is denied and no member of this panel nor Judge in regular active service on the Court having requested that the Court be polled on rehearing en banc, (Rule 35 Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure; Local Fifth Circuit Rule 12) the Petition for...

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