12. How Divested.—

Maritime items are only completely divested by payment or by an admiralty sale. Laches—that is to say delay or sloth—on the part of the lienor may prevent their enforcement against the rights of subsequent lienors or purchasers for value in good faith, but the ship is really only absolutely free from them when she has passed through a sale in proceedings in rem—that is, a suit against the ship. This transfers all claims to the proceeds in the registry of the court and passes a clear title to the purchaser. The Garland, 16 Fed. 283, is illustrative; she had sunk a yacht in the Detroit River with great loss of life; her business was that of a ferry between Detroit, Michigan, and Windsor, Ontario, and her value was about $20,000; libels were filed against her in Detroit on account of the collision and she was then arrested in Windsor, by process from the Maritime Court of Ontario, for a coal bill of $36.30; that court sold her in accordance with the usual admiralty practice. She then resumed her business and was arrested under the Detroit libels. These were dismissed by the United States court because all liens had been divested by the admiralty sale in Ontario and such sales are good throughout the world. No other sales, judicial or otherwise, have this effect since they convey only the title of the owner in the thing and not the thing itself. Maritime liens, therefore, are not divested or affected by the foreclosure of a mortgage, or a sheriff's sale on execution, or a receiver's sale, or any other form of conveyance of an owner's title. Nor are they divested by a writ of execution issued out of a court of common law, nor postponed to such execution. This has been held, even where the execution was in favor of the government.