3. Shipbuilding Contracts.—
The builder of a ship is the first owner unless there is a special contract under which he merely performs labor upon materials which the other party supplies. This is unusual. The shipbuilder generally constructs the vessel upon an order or contract, which, if properly drawn, provides for the time when the title shall pass away from him. Such contracts should be explicit in their details, especially as to the terms of payment and state of the title as the work goes on. Otherwise, the title may remain in the builder until delivery; if so, and the vessel be injured or destroyed, it will be his loss; or, if he becomes bankrupt before delivery, the vessel may be appropriated by his general creditors in spite of the fact that the purchase price may have been largely paid.
In the United States v. Ansonia Co., 218 U. S. 452, a shipbuilder in Richmond, Va., became insolvent while engaged in constructing three vessels for the government; one war dredge for the War Department; one a revenue cutter for the Treasury Department; and the third a cruiser for the Navy. In each instance the shipbuilder was to furnish the labor and materials and perform the work and was to receive partial payments from time to time as the construction progressed. In the case of the dredge, the contract provided that the parts of the vessel as its construction progressed should become the sole property of the United States, although it was further provided that the government might subsequently reject defective work or parts and might even reject the completed vessel, should it fail to pass inspection. The contracts for the revenue cutter and cruiser, on the other hand, contained no provision for the passing of title before completion, but did provide that the government should have a superior lien upon the vessels for all payments made on account. The Supreme Court (Day, J.) said:
It is undoubtedly true that the mere facts that the vessel is to be paid for in installments as the work progresses, and to be built under the superintendence of a government inspector, who had the power to reject or approve the materials, will not of themselves work the transfer of the title of a vessel to be constructed, in advance of its completion. But it is equally well settled that if the contract is such as to clearly express the intention of the parties that the builder shall sell and the purchaser shall buy the ship before its completion, and at different stages of its progress, and this purpose is expressed in the words of the contract, it is binding and effectual in law to pass the title.
The court further held that the lien reserved in the contracts for the revenue cutter and cruiser was not superior to the liens of material men under the laws of Virginia.