I think the libelant is entitled to a maritime lien for his services as bartender. There could, of course, have been no doubt under the early decisions that admiralty would not have taken jurisdiction over such a claim, for by a great number of authorities the lien was limited to services which were in aid' of the navigation of the ship or the preservation of the-ship. In 1815 Lord Stbwell refused to allow the lien even of á surgeon. The Lord Hobart, 2 Dodson, 100. Judge Peters in The New Jersey, Fed. Cas. No. 5,233, made the same ruling- in Í806; and more recent cases are not infrequent to the effect that the lien is limited to services in aid of the navigation of the ship. Trainor v. Boat Superior, Gilp. 514, Fed. Cas. No. 14,136; *315Gurney v. Crockett, Fed. Cas. No. 5,874; The W. F. Brown (D. C.) 46 Fed. 290.
0While the cases to the contrary are few in number, there is some unquestioned authority for the proposition that, v/herever the services are in aid of the purposes of the voyage, a lien arises, even though they are for the navigation of the ship or its preservation. The Ocean-Spray, 4 Sawy. 105, Fed. Cas. No. 10,412; The Minna (D. C.) 11 Fed. 759. In the last, case Mr. Justice Brown, then District Judge, said:
“AH'hands employed upon the vessel, except the master, are entitled to a lien ii their services are in furtherance of the main objects of the enterprise in which she is engaged-.”
No doubt the learned justice would have modified this by the assumption that the services were rendered upon the ship. See, also, The Sultana, 1 Brown’s Adm. 13, Fed. Cas. No. 13,602, which seems, however, to disagree with The Emma, Fed. Cas. No. 18,218. There is a dictum of the .Circuit Court of Appeals, likewise, in Saylor v. Taylor, 77 Fed. 476, 23 C. C. A. 343, to the same effect. The earlier restriction of the rule reflects the contemporaneous conflict of jurisdiction between the courts of common law and the courts of admiralty, a-conflict the significance of which has long since disappeared.
Section 4612 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3120), while not. controlling, is an indication of the breadth of meaning which Congress, at least, means to put upon the word-“seamen,” and if the statute did in terms apply, there could be no question of its including the services of the libelant in this case.
As I can see in principle no reason why there should be an artificial limitation of rights to those engaged in the navigation of the ship, to. the exclusion of others who equally further the purposes of her voyage, and as there is.at least some competent authority for the broader construction of the rule, I shall decide that the libelant has a lien for his wages as bartender, and direct a reference to compute the damages.
In the case of The j. S. Warden, for the year 1908, I cannot allow the libelant anything for the period before the ship went into commission, which was on July 4th, unless the master says that his services were of a maritime character. The Hattie Thomas (D. C.) 59 Fed. 297. The master will also decide whether between September 1 and 25, 1909, the libelant was in fact the ship’s master, though he went’ by the name of purser. It is not a defense that between the 12th and the 24th of September the ship was in the custody of the marshal. The Alanson Sumner. (D. C.) 28 Fed. 670. In the case cited Judge Coxe ruled that when a ship was in the sheriff’s cuslody wages continued, if the seamen remained ready and willing. I can see no distinction because here the ship was in the marshal’s custody.
In regard to The Mt. Desert I decide that the libelant was not kept there out of charity. Wily he should have been employed is not clear, but the ship’s time-book satisfies me that he was in fact regarded as employed. The master will compute the time and rate in accordance with the showing of the book. The master will also determine the character of the services during the days when the ship did not make *316excursions. While it may, perhaps, be unlikely that the libelant’s services were not in furtherance of the purposes of the ship, it is possible that they were of a purely nonmaritime character; at least, the claimant should be allowed to go into that issue.
In regard to The Orient, between May 27th and June 26th, the master will also determine the character of the services during the days when the ship was not on excursions, as in the case of The Mt. Desert/
Prepare a decree to compute damages.