The Maud Carter

Nelson, J.,

(orally.) This schooner is a British vessel, owned by British subjects, having her home port in Bay of Isles, Newfoundland, and is subject to British law. The libelants are citizens of Boston, and the mortgagee contesting his claim is a citizen of Halifax and a British subject. Two items in the account are contested. The first is for insurance premiums, which were paid at the express request of the ship-owner, for insurance upon the vessel, for his benefit, when she was in a British port. The second item is for the acceptance of a draft drawn by the owner in payment of the vessel’s indebtedness for spars furnished in Halifax for the construction and original outfit of the vessel. If this was a United States vessel, the court would perhaps be obliged to reject both these items. The claim for spars, under the decisions of the supreme court, could not be recovered in rem, because no maritime lien is recognized for materials furnished in the original construction of a vessel. The only right of lien in such ease comes from state statutes. The claim for insurance premiums would be disallowed upon the dictum of Judge Lowell in The Jenny B. Gilkey, 19 Fed. Rep. 127. In that case the court decided that there was not sufficient proof of authority from the owners to effect the insurance claimed, but intimated that, even if the insurance was authorized, there was no maritime lien upon the vessel for it, and the dictum of Judge Lowell is entitled to great weight.

*157But this vessel is a British vessel, and subject to British law. Under the circumstances, it is the duty of the court to administer and apply the British law exactly as it would be applied if the vessel were in an English court. The court, under the decision in The Higa, L. It. 3 Adm. & Ecc. 516, must hold that insurance, expressly authorized by the owners, is a “necessary,” within the English act defining the jurisdiction of the admiralty court, and that, under that act, it created a maritime lien upon the vessel. The claim for payment for the spars used in the original construction of the vessel must also be allowed, because the English admiralty would allow it as a lien upon the vessel. The act of 24 & 25 Yict. c. 10, merely .restores to the English admiralty the general admiralty and maritime jurisdiction of which the common-law courts had deprived it. While the United States supreme court has held that under the admiralty jurisdiction in this country there is no lien for materials furnished in the construction of a vessel, yet the general maritime law of the world gives such a lien, and the jurisdiction to enforce it has been restored to the English admiralty. As the lien would be recognized and enforced against this vessel in an English court, it can, as between the parties here, bo enforced in this court. A decree will therefore be entered for the whole amount of libelant’s claim, with interest and costs.