1. How Created.—

In general and within the limits hereinafter mentioned, every service rendered to a ship and every injury done by a ship, creates a maritime lien upon her for the benefit of the individual who did the work or suffered the wrong.

Those who furnish supplies or fuel or provisions, or make repairs, or render services, as well as the members of the crew and officers (except the master) acquire such liens for the collection of the amounts due them. A like right or privilege accrues for the damage done through negligence on the part of the ship resulting in damage to persons or property, as by collision or injury to cargo. So these liens are divided into two classes, those ex contractu (arising out of agreements, express or implied) and those ex delicto (arising out of wrongs or torts).

The authority of the master to obligate the ship so that a lien arises has been discussed under the title "Master."

The managing owner, ship's husband, master or any person to whom the management of the vessel at port of supply is entrusted may by ordering supplies, repairs, render the vessel liable to a maritime lien. If the master be drunk or disabled and another person is discharging his duties and is in effect for the time being master of the ship, such person may create a valid lien. Thus it has been held that the vessel is bound for supplies ordered by the mate acting during the illness of the master. The vessel is also bound for supplies furnished on the order of any member of the ship's company and with the master's knowledge and acquiescence. It is customary in the administration of a large modern ship for the head of each department, e.g., the steward, chief engineer, to order supplies and for these the vessel is responsible, but only on the theory that the purchases are made with the master's authority, and if the person contracting the obligation has acted in excess of the powers delegated to him by the master, the ship will not be bound. It is incumbent on the person furnishing goods to a vessel to inquire into the authority of the individual ordering the same. Moreover, if the goods ordered are greatly in excess of the vessel's needs, it is incumbent upon the supplier to know that fact and if the goods ordered, even by the master personally, are greatly in excess of the vessel's needs the ship will not be bound.

A maritime lien attaches to the offending ship only, and not to her cargo (except for unpaid freight) and this is true even though the cargo belonged to the owner of the offending ship. As was said by Mr. Justice Brown in the case of the Bristol, 29 Fed. 867:

The cargo, except for the collection of the freight due, cannot be held for the faults of the ship. There being no lien beyond freight due, no proceeding in rem lies against the cargo for damages by collision, if the freight be paid, whether the cargo belongs to the owner of the offending vessel or not; and, if arrested, the cargo must be released upon the payment of the freight due.

A maritime lien, being essentially a remedy against the vessel, may attach even in a case in which the owners are not personally responsible; as for instance, where a state pilot, in charge of a ship under a state statute which renders his employment compulsory, negligently brought the ship into collision, she was subjected to a lien for the damage done, although the pilot was in no sense the agent of the owners, and no personal liability rested upon them. The China, 7 Wall. 53.

The lien attaches only by virtue of contracts or torts which are wholly maritime in their nature. It is frequently difficult to determine the nature of a contract or tort. Thus persons digging ice and snow from around a vessel on a beach, and about to be launched did not acquire a maritime lien because the service was performed on shore. Whereas persons who floated a vessel which had been carried far ashore were held to have performed a maritime service and to be entitled to a lien. In a case in which a vessel communicated fire to a wharf to which she was made fast, it was held that the tort was not maritime, whereas, had she been in the stream and had communicated fire to another vessel in the stream, the tort would have been maritime and would have given rise to a maritime lien (Hough v. Trans. Co., 3 Wall. 20). Conversely a tort having its inception on land and completed on shipboard will give rise to a lien. As for example where a man working on board ship was injured by a piece of lumber thrown through a chute by a man working on a wharf. (Herman v. Mill Co., 69 Fed. 646).

A lien arises in favor of the owners or temporary owners of a vessel upon cargo actually on board for unpaid freight and for demurrage. This is the only case in which possession of the security is essential to the existence of a maritime lien. If the cargo is removed from the ship the maritime lien is lost. In this class of cases suit to enforce the lien should be instituted before the cargo is discharged.