Decrees in favor of the material men, on their several libels, according to the amounts found due on confirmation of the commissioner’s reports in the several cases, are to be entered and satisfied, out of the funds in the registry of the court arising out of the saie of the ship, in the order in which the libels were filed. The amount of each decree, together with the costs, in the above named order, is first to be paid, until the fund is exhausted. The claim of priority set up by the libellants, Charles Wall and others, is disallowed. The libel in this latter case seeks to enforce the lien given by the local *171law of the state of New York, and not to eniorce the lien given by the general maritime law. Since the alteration of the twelfth rule of the supreme court of the United States, these local liens cannot be enforced by proceedings in rem in this court, although the language of the rule, as modified, refers only to domestic ships. The object of that court in the alteration was to relieve the courts of the United States from the “necessity of examining and expounding the varying lien laws of the state, and of carrying them into execution.” The St. Lawrence, 1 Black, [66 U. S.] 530. This libel avers no lien, except that under the state law, but expressly avers that the libellants filed specifications and items of the articles furnished in the county clerk’s office in the county of New York, under the state law, and that the claim thereby became a lien. As I understand the law, the process in rem cannot be used in this court for the enforcement of such a local lien, and, therefore, this court is without jurisdiction. Let a decree be entered, dismissing this case of Charles Wall and others, without costs.