THE STEAM-SHIP MISSISSIPPI.
District Court, D. Massachusetts.
February 11, 1881.
1. USE OF DRY DOCK—MARITIME CONTRACT—WHARFAGE—MARITIME LIEN—MASS GEN. ST. c. 151, § 1.
NELSON, D. J. Libel by the Simpson Patent Dry Dock Company, a Massachusetts corporation, to enforce against the steam-ship Mississippi, owned and registered in this port, a lien for the use of a dry dock in Boston. The libel alleges 544 that in the year 1879 the steam-ship Mississippi, then lying in the port of Boston, stood in need of certain supplies, disbursements, and services to render her seaworthy, and to enable her to proceed on her intended voyage; that the libellants, at the request of the master or agents of the steam-ship, furnished a berth in their dry-dock yard for the steam-ship to lie in while undergoing said repairs, the wharfage or dockage whereof amounts to $519; that said berth or wharfage or dockage was necessary for said steam-ship, and was furnished upon the credit of the vessel. It appeared that after leaving the dry dock the steam-ship made a voyage to the Western islands and Madeira and return, and that no statement of the libellants' claim was ever filed in the city clerk's office.
Upon these facts the court decided as follows:
Libel dismissed.
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