(after stating the facts). In the case of the American Steel-Barge Co. v. Cargo of Coal (D. C.) 107 Fed. 964, there was a libel by the owner of a steamer chartered by a transportation company, by a charter, the material parts of which were substantially like those in this case. The facts of that case were that the steamer took on a cargo of coal at Newport News, belonging to the claimant, consigned to the claimant’s agent in Boston. The bill of lading was in the usual form, signed by the master. The freight payable was stated to be “as agreed.” There was an agreement between the charterer and the-claimant as to the rate of freight. The amount as fixed by the contract was, in the aggregate, $2,348.46. The steamer left Newport News on December 30, 1898. On that day the claimant paid to the charterer in New York, at the charterer’s request, $1,500 on account of the freight to be earned by the steamer, and took from the charterer a receipt therefor. The charterer then was, and had been for some time, indebted to the claimant for coal to an amount largely exceeding the freight on the cargo in question. Upon the arrival of the steamer in Boston the libelant libeled the coal, and sought to hold it for the total amount of freight due thereon, at the rate agreed on. It asserted a lien upon the coal for freight, as the owner of a vessel which has earned freight in the carrying of a cargo ; and relied especially upon the clause in the charter party giving “a iien upon all cargoes and all subfreight for charter money due under this charter.”
The court said:
“The Hen on subireight given by the charter does not help the libelant, which here seeks to enforce, not a Hen on freight, but a Hen for freight. That a knowledge of the existence of the charter party does not bind the property of shippers other than the charterers for the rent due under, the charter partylias been decided [Paul v. Birch, 2 Atk. 621; The Volunteer, 1 Sumn. 551, 573, Fed. Cas. No. 16,991; The Albert Dumois (D. C.) 54 Fed. 529]; and this even where the bill of lading refers expressly to the charter. * * * A lien, upon a cargo for its freight is created by the maritime law In favor of the person' in possession of the ship". A Hen upon the cargo for the charter rent is created by the charter in favor of the general owner of the vessel. That the libelant, as not in possession of the vessel, cannot avail itself of the first Hen has been already stated. * * * ”
*785The court concluded by saying that: •
“The shipper dealt with the charterer as charterer, or rather with the charterer as it was entitled to deal with one who had control oí the vessel, whether owner or charterer.”
In short, the court held that the provision in the charter giving a lien upon all cargoes and all subfreight for charter money due under the charter could not be construed to give the owner a lien upon cargo owned by third persons, and shipped under contract with the charterer for charter money, nor has he any lien on such cargo under either the charter or the maritime law to compel the shipper to pay freight to him; such lien being created by the maritime law in favor of the person in possession of the ship.
The case was appealed to the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. That court held that it was competent for a time charterer, by a provision in the charter, whether it is or is not a demise of a vessel, to pledge the freight to be earned by her during the term to secure the payment of the charter hire; that such a provision gives the owner an equitable lien in admiralty, as of the date of the charter, on any freight subsequently stipulated to be paid, and subrogates him to the lien of the charterer for the freight, and to the remedies of the charterer to enforce its payment. American Steel Barge Co. v. Chesapeake & O. Coal Co., 115 Fed. 669, 53 C. C. A. 301. It also held that a cargo owner who, on the issuance to it of a bill of lading, paid to the charterer a portion of the freight, in good faith, is protected in such payment as against a lien on subfreight reserved by the shipowner in tlie charter, of which the shipper had no knowledge or notice. In the course of the opinion, the Court of Appeals said:
“At tlie proper time, and under the proper circumstances, a libelant holding a lien on sub freight becomes subrogated to all the remedies of tlie charterer, which * * * includes a proceeding against the cargo in the event the lien for freight has not been lost; but. also like the charterer, he could not properly institute this proceeding until there had been default in payment of the freight, unless under very peculiar circumstances, which do not arise here.”
The court also said:
“We have also shown that the owner of the cargo was entitled to look to the charterer as the party with whom he was dealing with reference to the cargo and the freight thereon.” 115 Fed. 669, 53 C. C. A. 301.
So in this case the libelant, holding a lien on the subfreights, would be subrogated to any remedy possessed by the charterer, which would include a proceeding against the cargo of sisal grass in question in the event the lien has not been lost or satisfied by the payment of the freight on it. I] ere there has been no default in the payment of the freight. The freight having been paid to the charterer, he could not properly institute, this proceeding, and hence there is no remedy to which the libelant could be subrogated, and, like the charterer, he could not properly institute this proceeding. The Court of Appeals, in the case cited, recognized as valid and binding the payment to the charterer of the $1,500 on account of the freight, which was paid in advance to the charterer by the shipper, but reversed and remanded the case to the court below, with directions to enter a decree in favor of the libelant for the amount of the freight agreed on and earned *786less the sum paid on account of the same to the charterer, and an amount advanced to the master to provide for certain charges against the ship. The difference between the amount of freight claimed by the libelant and the sum paid by the claimant of the cargo on account of freight and the charges referred to was $1,701.64, which amount the claimant undertook to set off against the demand and lien for the freight. This the court held could not be done. The set-off was based on an indebtedness of the charterer to the claimant which the court held could not be maintained on certain equitable grounds announced by it, and said: “Under the circumstances, the equity of the libelant must prevail against a general set-off, and the decree of the District Court must be reversed to that extent.” Raymond v. Tyson, 17 How. 53, 15 L. Ed. 47; Drinkwater v. The Brig Spartan, 1 Ware, 149, Fed. Cas. No. 4,085.
On the authorities cited, and which seem to me to be in accordance with reason and equity, the libel is dismissed.