In these cases, exceptions have been filed to various libels and intervening petitions preferred by the holders of claims for labor, materials, and supplies furnished the steamers in their home port. The intervenors, who have filed the exceptions, are mortgagees of a part interest in the steamers; the mortgages having been given to secure the purchase money agreed to be paid for an interest sold by the intervenors in the respective steamers after some, at least, of the various claims against the steamers had accrued. As the intervenors’ mortgages, on account of which they have appeared, are only good as against “remnants and surplus,” if there shall be any after all admiralty liens have been discharged, their right to file exceptions, at this time, as against those who have demands based on maritime contracts, has jbeeen contested.
Waiving that question, however, I proceed to the main exception taken by the intervenors to the various libels, which is, in substance, that the libelants have no lien, under the maritime law, for labor, materials, or supplies furnished in the home port, and that the local law of the state, which attempts to create such lien, is, in this instance at least, void. The first branch of the proposition is not denied. As administered and interpreted in this country, it is, of course, conceded that the admiralty law gives no lien for supplies or materials furnished in the home port. The Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558. The second branch of the proposition, that no lien exists, under and by virtue of the local law of the state, which an admiralty court can entertain or enforce, must be denied. This *550is but a renewal of an old controversy which must be regarded as determined by TheLottawanna Case, 21 Wall. 579, 580, and by the construction-that has since been placed on that decision by various admiralty courts. In the case of The Guiding Star, 18 Fed. Rep. 264, Mr. Justice Matthews held that a lien given by a local statute of Ohio for materialsand supplies furnished .in a home port was of equal dignity with the lien given by the maritime law for like materials and supplies when furnished in a foreign port, and that the lien might be enforced in an admiralty court. Speaking of this subject, and predicating his views on what was decided in The Lottaioanna Case, he says:
“Tiie claims [that is, for supplies furnished in a home and foreign port] are m their character, both classes being maritime, alike, and of equal merit. The lien is given by the law; and although the source of one is the maritime law, and that of the other a local statute, nevertheless they°are both so distinctively of a maritime nature that they are exclusively cognizable in the admiralty courts. * * * In both eases the lien is given by the law administered in admiralty courts, and there is no circumstance * * * that takes from the local law its equal force and effect With that of the general maritime law. It is because the latter, by virtue of its own principles, recognizes the efficacy of the local statutes to confer a lien, that courts of admiralty acquire jurisdiction to enforce it at all. In doing so, they are in fact enforcing the general maritime law; and that law, in adopting and enforcing the lien given by the local law, incorporates it into its own system, and puis it on the same footing as if it had been given by the maritime law originally.”
•This view of the subject was adopted by Judge Browh, of the Southern district of New York, in the cases of The J. W. Tucker and The Arctic, 20 Fed. Rep. 134, and 22 Fed. Rep. 128. To the same effect, see the case of The Burnside, 3 Fed Rep. 228, and 9 Fed. Rep. 521.
There is no substantial difference between the Ohio statute which creates a lien for supplies furnished in a home port and the Missouri statute on the same subject. Any attemjet, as it appears to me, to distinguish between the statutes of the two states, and to say that the Missouri statute is void, and ought not to be recognized by an admiralty court, while the Ohio statute is valid, must end in failure. It is of no importance that the statute of Missouri classifies the various liens created, and gives them a certain priqrity. Although, in a general way, the Missouri statute follows the classification of the maritime law, yet, if that were not the case, this court would not be bound to adopt the classification prescribed by the local statute as to those claims that grow out of maritime contracts. With reference to all that class of demands that are founded on maritime contracts, an admiralty court, while recognizing the efficacy of the local statute to create a lien, will apply its own rules in determining questions of priority. The Guiding Star, supra, 267, 268. The Missouri statute creates a lien, in clear and unmistakable language, in favor of the demands described in the several libels, and all the essential steps have been taken to secure the liens. In so far, therefore, as the exceptions filed proceed on the theory that the local statute is inoperative to create a lien for materials, labor, or supplies furnished in the home port that will be recognized in this court, they must be over*551ruled. Lions of that sort will lie recognized as of equal dignity with liens for like claims contracted in' foreign ports. As above explained, such is the tendency of the later decisions on the subject, and this court will adopt that view.