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CHAPTER X

MORTGAGES AND BONDS

1. Definitions. A vessel mortgage is a conveyance of the ship as security. A bottomry bond is a contract in the nature of a mortgage by which the ship is pledged as security for the repayment of money borrowed and the lender assumes the risk of loss if the ship does not survive in consideration of maritime interest, usually at a high rate. Respondentia is a loan on the cargo, to be repaid if the goods arrive, but, if lost, the borrower is exonerated. Like bottomry, it is essentially a loan without personal liability beyond the value of the property mortgaged. Vessel bonds are a modern form of security in the form of debentures of the owner, carrying interest coupons and secured by a trust deed or mortgage of the ship.

2. Bottomry Bonds.- The name of this class of security on the ship arose from the fact that the bottom or keel of the ship was figuratively used to express the whole and to indicate that the entire vessel secured the loan. The repayment of money borrowed on bottomry depends on the safe arrival of the ship; if she is lost the loan is lost with her. The money is at the risk of the lender. Under an ordinary mortgage, the borrower must pay at all events and his personal liability survives the loss of his vessel. Under bottomry, the risk is shifted. In consideration of this risk, the lender is permitted to charge a high rate of interest without violating the law of usury. Rates of interest as high as 25 per cent. and higher have been upheld, and while in some cases the courts have ordered a reduction in the rate when it was regarded as clearly extortionate, the strong inclination of the courts is to carry out the bargain as made by the parties. The bond must be in writing. No particular form is essential but it must rest on the assumption of maritime risks by the lender or it will be no bottomry. It may be expressed after the precedent of a commonlaw bond, with a recital of the circumstances, provisions showing that the usual risks are on account of the obligee; and stipulations providing that the condition of performance or discharge is the safe arrival of the ship at her designated haven. The lender may

secure himself against loss by taking out insurance. Such bonds may be made by the owner, in the home port, although this is not usual. He may, of course, make them anywhere. The master, however, can only do so as in cases of great necessity and the absence of the owner. His power, in this respect, is like his power to sell. His first duty is to obtain funds on the personal credit of the owner. The duty of the master to communicate with the owner, if possible, before giving a bottomry bond is the same as his duty to communicate before selling the vessel (Chapters II, § 14; IV, § 9). For this reason and in view of modern facilities for communication the giving or making of bottomry bonds by masters has, like the sale of a vessel by her master, become rare in modern times.

A good illustration of a bottomry bond is found in the case of the Grapeshot, 9 Wall. 129. There the libel recited that the Grapeshot was at Rio de Janeiro in April, 1858, was in great need of reparation, provisions and other necessaries to render her fit and capable of proceeding to New Orleans, the master having no funds or credit in Rio de Janeiro, and the owner not residing there and having no funds or credit there, the libellants at the request of the master loaned him $9,767.40, on the bottomry and hypothecation of the bark at the rate of 191⁄2 cents, maritime interest; that the master did expend the sum borrowed for repairing, victualing and manning the bark to enable her to proceed to New Orleans and that she could not possibly have proceeded with safety without such repairs and other necessary expenses attending the refitting of her. Chief Justice Chase described the general characteristics of a bottomry bond as follows:

A bottomry bond is an obligation, executed generally, in a foreign port, by the master of a vessel for repayment of advances to supply the necessities of the ship, together with such interest as may be agreed on; which bond creates a lien on the ship, which may be enforced in admiralty in case of her safe arrival at the port of destination; but becomes absolutely void and of no effect in case of her loss before arrival.

Such a bond carries usually a very high rate of interest, to cover the risk of loss of the ship as well as a liberal indemnity for other risks and for the use of the money, and will bind the ship only where the necessity for supplies and repairs, in order to the performance of a contemplated voyage, is a real necessity, and neither the master nor the owners have funds or credit available to meet the wants of the vessel.

The Court also quoted with approval the decision in the old case of the Aurora, 1 Wheat. 96, in which it was said:

To make a bottomry bond, executed by the master, a valid hypothecation, it must be shown by the creditor that the master acted within the scope of his authority; or, in other words, that the advances were made for repairs or supplies necessary for effecting the objects of the voyage, or the safety and security of the ship. And no presumption should arise in the case that such repairs or supplies could be procured on reasonable terms with the credit of the owner, independent of such hypothecation.

And in summarizing the conclusion reached in the case it was said:

To support hypothecation by bottomry, evidence of actual necessity for repairs and supplies is required and, if the fact of necessity be left unproved, evidence is also required, of due inquiry and of reasonable grounds of belief that the necessity was real and exigent.

These bonds are not required to be placed on record but great diligence should be employed in enforcing them so that the rights of innocent purchasers or subsequent lienors may not be impaired.

3. Respondentia.- This is security for a loan on marine interest created on the cargo. It may be created by the cargo-owner, at home, if he sees fit, but ordinarily, only arises out of necessity during the course of the voyage. The master has the same authority to borrow on the security of the cargo as he has in cases of bottomry. The proceeding must be sanctioned by great necessity and liability to communicate with, or obtain relief from, the owner of the goods. The duty of communication is the same as in the case of bottomry bonds (see preceding sections). The rule with respect to interest is the same as that governing bottomry bonds. The instrument may be in any form which expresses the facts and conditions; an ordinary bill of sale may be used or the form of a bottomry bond. The instrument is not required to be recorded.

The case of Ins. Co. v. Gossler, 6 Otto 645, contains an example of a bond, which was both bottomry and respondentia. The bark Frances en route from Java to Boston with a cargo of sugar encountered a hurricane which compelled the master to cut away her mast to save the vessel and put into Singapore for repairs. Destitute of funds and without credit, the master executed a bond with maritime interest at 271⁄2 per cent., secured upon the boat, cargo and freight. When nearing the completion of her voyage the bark was cast away on the shore of Cape Cod. She could not

be salved as an intact vessel, but was sold as a wreck and subsequently broken up by the purchaser in order to make use of the parts of her. Some of her cargo was saved. The Court held that the salvaged portion of the cargo and the wreck as she lay on the beach must respond to the obligation of the bond, saying that nothing but an utter annihilation of the thing hypothecated would discharge the borrower on bottomry, the rule being that the property saved, whatever it may be in amount, continues subject to hypothecation.

Unless the ship be actually destroyed and the loss to the owners absolute, it is not an utter loss within the meaning of such a contract. If the ship still exists, although in such a state of damage as to be constructively totally lost, within the meaning of a policy of insurance; . . . she is not utterly lost within the meaning of that phrase in the contract of hypothecation.

Thus, the doctrine of "constructive total loss," which is important in the law of marine insurance, has no application to bottomry. It is customary in bottomry and respondentia bonds to insert a clause reserving to the lender, in case of utter loss, any average that may be secured upon all salvage recoverable.

4. Necessity for Advances.-The lender of money on a bottomry bond is under obligation to satisfy himself that the supplies or refitment for which the money is borrowed are necessarily required by the vessel. The act of June 23, 1910 (discussed in § 9 of preceding chapter), apparently has no application to money advanced on bottomry bonds and certainly has no application to respondentia bonds. If the actual need for the advance sought to be secured by the bottomry or respondential bond does not exist, the bond will not constitute a lien upon the vessel or cargo.

5. Mortgages. These are species of chattel mortgages. The ship is a chattel or personal property, for many purposes. Prior to June 5, 1920, these mortgages were not recognized as maritime transactions. The Merchant Marine Act of that date makes radical changes in the law governing ship mortgages. The new provisions are to be found in Section 30, which is to be cited, independently of the rest of the statute, as the "Ship Mortgage Act, 1920," and is printed in full with the rest of the Merchant Marine Act in the Appendix.

6. Are Mortgages Maritime Contracts? - An ordinary mortgage upon a vessel, whether made to secure the purchase money

or to obtain funds for general purposes, is not a maritime contract. This is the rule in this country, as announced by the Supreme Court in the J. E. Rumbell, 148 U. S. 1, although it is different under the general maritime law in other countries. Accordingly, courts of admiralty in the United States, have no jurisdiction of a libel to foreclose a mortgage or to enforce title or right to possession under it. If, however, the ship has been sold under admiralty process, and there are proceeds in the registry after satisfying maritime liens, the court will pay over the surplus, to a mortgagee in preference to the owner or general creditors.

The Ship Mortgage Act (supra) makes a sweeping exception to the foregoing rule in cases of American vessels where the mortgagee is an American citizen and where the parties fulfill certain formalities required by the Act and discussed in the next section. The Act provides that these mortgages shall be known as "preferred mortgages" and confers upon the courts of admiralty exclusive jurisdiction to foreclose them. There has yet been no judicial interpretation of this Act. Some doubt may be entertained whether it is within the power of Congress to convert ship mortgages into maritime contracts; that is to say, can Congress take a transaction, which has always been regarded as wholly foreign to the admiralty and confer upon it a maritime quality? The decision of this point is of the utmost importance and will be awaited with the greatest concern by every one interested in ships and shipping.

7. When Postponed to Other Liens.- An ordinary vessel mortgage is a very inferior grade of security because it is subordinate to all maritime liens and has only a qualified and dubious standing in the only courts which enforce them. One who advances money to a ship or her owner on mortgage is bound to know that the ship navigates on credit, and must continue to accumulate liens in order to earn freight, and that she may be pledged for bottomry or incur liability for torts. He is therefore postponed to sailors' wages, salvage, towage, advances, bottomry, general average, repairs, supplies, collision, personal injury, damage to cargo, breach of contract, penalties, and liens created by local law which the admiralty will enforce.

Here again the Ship Mortgage Act, 1920, makes a radical change in the case of "preferred mortgages" given upon American vessels to secure American investors. The Act makes the

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