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(e) If bills of sale covering such transfers are presented to a collector of customs, the procedure outlined in paragraph (c) (1), (2), (3), (4), and (5) of this section shall be followed, except that the collector shall communicate directly with the Commissioner of Customs. Thereafter, if the transfer appears to be in good faith and it is not contrary to the policy of this Government, the Commissioner of Customs will award signal letters to the vessel and, through the usual channels, will promptly request the State Department to authorize the appropriate consular officer to issue a provisional certificate to the vessel. The State Department will then cable, at the expense of the parties concerned, instructions and data for the issue of the provisional register. No provisional certificate of registry shall be issued in any case unless authorized by the Commissioner of Customs.

(f) A duplicate provisional certificate, customs Form 1266-A, shall be forwarded as soon as practicable in every case by the issuing officer through the usual channels to the Commissioner of Customs.

(g) No provisional certificate shall be issued to any vessel abroad which at the time of its transfer to a citizen of the United States was documented as a vessel of the United States. Such a vessel may be redocumented at a port in the United States upon compliance with the requirements outlined in § 3.35 or if not so redocumented while abroad, it shall nevertheless be entitled to all the privileges and benefits of a vessel of the United States up to and for the purpose of its first arrival thereafter within a customs collection district or in a port of documentation outside any such customs collection district.

(Sec. 1, 38 Stat. 1193, as amended, R.S. 4166, as amended; 46 U.S.C. 12, 35)

§ 3.4

Yachts entitled to documents.

(a) Any vessel, other than one navigating the waters of the northern, northeastern, or northwestern frontiers otherwise than by sea, may be licensed as a yacht if under 20 but not under 5 net tons and used exclusively as a pleasure vessel, and if otherwise entitled to be documented.

(b) Any vessel may be enrolled and licensed as a yacht if used exclusively as a pleasure vessel and otherwise entitled to be documented, provided it is of 5 net tons or over in the case of a vessel

navigating the waters of the northern, northeastern, or northwestern frontiers otherwise than by sea, or 20 net tons or over in any other case.

(R. S. 4214, as amended; 46 U. 8. C. 103) § 3.5 Vessels exempt from documentation.

(a) The following classes of vessels are exempt from documentation:

(1) Boats or lighters not masted, or masted but not decked, used in the harbor of any town or city, and not carrying passengers.

(2) Canal boats, barges, or other boats used in whole or in part on canals or on the internal waters of a State, without sail or internal motive power of their own, not engaged in trade with contiguous foreign territory, and not carrying passengers.

(3) Barges or boats without sail or internal motive power of their own plying in whole or in part on inland rivers or lakes of the United States, not engaged in trade with contiguous foreign territory, and not carrying passengers.

(4) Vessels plying upon waters which are wholly within the limits of a State and which have no outlet into a river or lake on which commerce with foreign nations or among the States can be carried on.

(5) Vessels of less than 5 net tons.

(b) All other vessels engaged in trade between ports in the United States or engaged in the fisheries, if not registered, shall be enrolled and licensed, or licensed, or will be liable to a penalty of $30 on every arrival, unless the vessel has not been within a customs district since the expiration of the license.

(c) No vessel exempt from documentation under the provisions of paragraph (a) (1), (2), (3), or (5) of this section and owned by a corporation which is a citizen of the United States as defined in § 3.19(a) (4) shall be operated in trade on the navigable waters of the United States unless there is on file with the collector of customs for the district in which the vessel business of the owner is conducted a valid and current certificate under oath on customs Form 1260 as required by § 3.21(f).

(Sec. 7, 24 Stat. 81, as amended, 21 Stat. 44, R.S. 4385, 18 Stat. 31, 72 Stat. 1736; 46 U.S.C. 319, 332, 335, 336, 883-1)

§ 3.6 Marine documents; kinds of.

(a) Marine documents are of two descriptions, (1) permanent, granted to

vessels at their home ports and (2) temporary, granted to vessels at ports other than their home ports."

(b) A register or enrollment shall be valid until a contingency arises requiring its surrender. (See §§3.26, 3.27.) A license shall be valid for one year only, but may be renewed or changed at any time during the year for which it is granted. Care shall be taken that only one license, and for one employment, be granted to a vessel for the same period, except that a license may be granted for the "coasting trade and mackerel fisheries."

(c) No enrollment and license or license shall be considered in force longer than the vessel to which it is granted is owned as stated in the document, nor shall it be valid if the description of the vessel is changed, nor if the vessel engages in any business or employment other than that for which the document was granted.

(R.S. 4138, 4191, 4315, as amended, 4324, 4327; 46 U.S.C. 16, 62, 255, 266, 269)

$3.7 Marine documents; execution of. All marine documents shall be signed and sealed by the collector before being issued.

(R. S. 4157, as amended, 4158, as amended; 46 US.C. 27, 28)

$3.8 Marine documents; new.

When a new marine document is issued in lieu of one surrendered, such new document shall in every case cite the previous document by number, date, and port of issue, carry any notation of the authority for redocumentation or of the existence of unsatisfied preferred mortgage appearing on the surrendered document, and give the cause of surrender of the old document. A certifi

cate of the builder shall not be required, nor shall a certificate of admeasurement be required unless some change of ton

'Under the "Seattle plan," which is in force in a number of customs districts, a vessel having its home port within the customs collection district may secure a permanent document at any other port in the same district at which marine documents are issued.

The ports at which marine documents may be issued are indicated in § 1.1 of this chapter.

The penalty for neglecting to surrender a document when required by law is the forfeiture of all privileges and benefits of a vesel of the United States. (R.S. 4169; 46 U.S.C. 38)

nage has taken place since the time of the previous documentation. (See §§ 3.26, 3.27 and 3.30.)

§ 3.9 Marine documents to include dimensions and tonnage.

The marine document of every vessel shall express her length, breadth, and depth; the number of decks and masts; the tonnage under the tonnage deck; the tonnage of the poop or other enclosed space above the deck; the gross tonnage; each deduction made from the gross tonnage; and the net or register tonnage. In appropriate cases it shall also show the height under the third or spar deck and the tonnage on the between decks above the tonnage deck.

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Vessels of the United States engaged in the foreign trade shall be registered, except as provided for in § 3.40 with respect to vessels on the northern, northeastern, and northwestern frontiers. Vessels engaged in domestic trade only, other than vessels owned by citizens of the United States as defined in §3.19 (a) (4) and documented or to be documented under the Act of September 2, 1958 (46 U.S.C. 883-1), may be registered. (See § 3.30.)

(R.S. 4132, as amended, sec. 22, 41, Stat. 997, sec. 27A, 72 Stat. 1736; 46 U.S.C. 11, 13, 883-1) § 3.11 Enrollment and license; coasting trade and fisheries.

(a) When employed in the coasting trade and fisheries, a vessel of 20 net tons or over shall be enrolled and licensed and a vessel of 5 net tons or over but less than 20 net tons shall be licensed, unless such vessel is registered. § 3.10.)

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(b) A vessel engaged exclusively in the cod fishery shall be licensed for that fishery. A vessel engaged in whaling shall be licensed for the whale fishery. A vessel engaged in taking fish of any other description shall be licensed for the mackerel fishery. A vessel licensed for the fisheries shall not be deemed to be used in employment for which not licensed solely because it occasionally takes on board on the high seas and transports without a monetary consideration to a port of the United States the catch of another fishing vessel of the United States. A vessel which engages in both the coasting trade and fishing (other than whaling) may be li

censed for the "coasting trade and mackerel fishery." A vessel engaged in taking out fishing parties is not a fishing vessel and shall be licensed for the coasting trade unless it intends to proceed to a foreign port, in which case a certificate of registry is required. (See § 3.10. See § 3.40 for vessels on the Great Lakes.)

(c) The trade expressed in the body of a document is controlling and may not be limited or expanded by the statement of service in the space provided therefor.

(d) An enrolled and licensed vessel may engage in trade with the Canal Zone or Guantanamo Bay Naval Station. (R.S. 4311, as amended, 4321, as amended, sec. 7, 24 Stat. 81, as amended, 75 Stat. 410; 46 U.S.C. 251, 263, 319, 404)

§3.12 Builder's certificates.

(a) In order to document a vessel of class 1, 2, 6, or 7, built in the United States and not before documented, the owner shall produce to the collector a certificate on customs Form 1261 from the builder under whose direction the vessel was built that she was so built, stating the place and time of building, the person or persons for whom built, number of decks and masts, length, breadth, depth, tonnage, and such other particulars as are usually descriptive of a vessel. This certificate shall be sufficient to authorize the removal of a new vessel, if in ballast only, from the district where she was built to another district in the same or an adjoining State where the owner or owners actually reside.

(b) When for any cause it is found impracticable to obtain the certificate of the builder, other competent evidence establishing the particulars and facts required to be certified by him may be accepted with the approval of the Commissioner of Customs.

(c) The place of build is where the hull was built. The time of build is the year of completion. Both shall appear in all marine documents.

(R.S. 4147; 46 U.S.C. 24)

§3.13 Official number and signal letters.

(a) Every documented vessel shall have an official number" awarded by the

"The Secretary of the Treasury shall have power, under such regulations as he shall prescribe, to establish and provide a system of numbering vessels so registered, enrolled and licensed; and each vessel so numbered shall have her number deeply carved or

Commissioner of Customs. Application therefor shall be made on customs Form 1320 by the owner or his agent through the collector of customs. When the application is filed with the collector at the port designated as the home port of the vessel, the application shall be in triplicate. When the application is filed with the collector at any port other than the home port of the vessel, the application shall be in quadruplicate. The name or names of any former owner or owners shall be stated on the application. If there was no former owner, that fact shall be stated. In the case of corporate ownership, the application shall be signed in the corporate name by the president, secretary, or a specially authorized officer of the corporation, or by an authorized agent. In the case of a partnership, the partnership name shall be signed by one of the partners, or by a duly authorized agent; the name of each of the partners shall be stated but the proportionate interest of each in the partnership business shall not be stated. In the case of individual ownership by two or more persons, the application shall be signed by all the owners, by a duly authorized agent, or by one of the owners as managing owner, provided there is filed with the collector a written authorization for him to act in that capacity signed by the owners of a majority interest in the vessel; in every case, the name of each owner shall be stated. In every case the capacity in which the person signs, whether as owner, managing owner, agent, etc., shall be clearly stated below his signature. If a signature is by mark, it shall be witnessed by two persons, or acknowledged. Any acknowledgment valid under the law of the state where made may be accepted. No customs officer or employee is authorized by section 486, Tariff Act of 1930, to take such acknowledgments.

(b) Each application for an official number shall be accompanied by a designation of home port on customs Form 1319.

(c) When an application for an official number is filed with the collector at the port designated as the home port of the

otherwise permanently marked on her main beam; and if at any time she shall cease to be so marked, such vessel shall be liable to a fine of $30 on every arrival in a port of the United States if she have not her proper official number legally carved or permanently marked." (46 U. S. C. 45)

vessel, the original and one copy of customs Form 1320 shall be forwarded to the Bureau. When an application for Van official number is filed with the collec

tor at any port other than the home port ** of the vessel the original and two copies e of the application shall be forwarded to the Bureau. When an official number is the awarded, the Bureau will return the original to the collector from whom it was received. The collector shall make a Enotation of the official number awarded on the retained copy of the application far and shall deliver the original to the applicant. When the application for > official number is filed with the collector that any port other than the home port of the vessel, and an official number is awarded to the vessel, a copy of the notice of award will also be forwarded by the Bureau to the collector at the home port together with a copy of the application.

(d) Any seagoing vessel of 100 tons or over, in addition to an official number, may have signal letters awarded. Applibycation therefor shall be made by the Owner or his agent through a collector of customs on the application for official number, customs Form 1320, or, if the application is made subsequent to the filing of an application for an official number, by a letter transmitted through the collector of customs. Signal letters will not be forwarded to a seagoing vessel of less than 100 tons except upon special authorization by the Commissioner of Customs.

ni (e) A new application for the award of signal letters to a vessel of the United States shall not be required by reason of any change in status or ownership of such vessel or by reason of the redocumentation of such vessel after a period during which it has been out of documentation. The award of such letters shall not be canceled except upon special authorization of the Commissioner of Customs.

(f) The Bureau will give consideration to granting a special authorization for the cancellation of the award of signal letters upon application by or on behalf of a person having a permit issued by the Federal Communications Commission for the construction or operation of a broadcast station or the operation of ship station who desires to use such letters in connection with the operation of such station if the vessel to which such letters are awarded is no longer documented as a vessel of the United

States, and if, in the case of an application relating to a ship station, the vessel has not been so documented for a period of not less than 10 years. Such application shall be submitted to the Commissioner of Customs in writing and shall state (1) the name and address of the permittee, (2) the date of the granting of such permit, (3) the type of station to which such permit has been granted, (4) the letters desired, and (5) the name and official number of the vessel to which such letters are awarded, if known to the applicant.

(R.S. 4177, as amended; 46 U.S.C. 45) §3.14 Evidence as to marking of official number, net tonnage, name, and hailing port.

(a) Except as provided for in § 3.51(k), marine documents shall not be issued until proper evidence is produced that the official number and net tonnage have been properly marked upon the vessel's main beam, that her name has been properly marked upon both sides of her bow, and that her name and hailing port have been properly marked upon her stern, or in the case of a yacht that her name and hailing port have been properly marked on the hull. (See § 2.60a of this chapter.)

(b) The evidence of proper marking required by the preceding paragraph shall be a certificate by a customs officer on customs Form 1322. If the vessel is at a place not readily accessible to a customs officer, the owner or his agent shall certify as to the proper marking; but as soon as she arrives at a place accessible to a customs officer, a certificate on customs Form 1322 shall be required. (Sec. 4, 28 Stat. 743, as amended; 46 U.S.C. 79) §3.16 Name and hailing port on documented vessel.

(a) The name of every documented vessel (yachts excepted) shall be marked in full upon each bow and upon the stern, and the hailing port shall also be marked in full upon the stern. These names shall be painted, carved, or gilded in Roman letters in a light color on a dark ground or in a dark color on a light ground, and shall be distinctly visible. The letters shall not be less than 4 inches high. Every steam vessel of the United States shall, in addition, have her name conspicuously placed in distinct, plain letters not less than 6 inches high on each outer side of the pilot house, if it has one, and if the

vessel has side wheels, also on the outer side of each wheel house.

(b) On a so-called "double-ender" vessel the required names shall be placed on the parts corresponding to the bow and stern. If either the bow or stern, or both, of any such or other vessel does not afford sufficient space for marking the required name or names, or if the name marked in such a place would be obscured or concealed while the vessel is in operation (for example, by a fender), the names shall be placed on an appropriate adjacent part.

(c) The name of a scow, barge, or other vessel "scow-built" or with square bow may be marked on the bow instead of the side when such marking would be speedily obliterated by chafing against other vessels, piles, or rocks.

(d) The hailing port to be marked on the stern may be either the port where the vessel is permanently documented, or the place in the same district where the vessel was built or where one or more of the owners reside.

(e) Every documented yacht shall have its name and hailing port placed on some conspicuous part of its hull. (R. S. 4178, as amended, sec. 21, 23 Stat. 58, R. S. 4214, as amended, 4495; 46 U. S. C. 46, 47, 103, 493)

§3.17 Home port; definition; change of.

(a) A vessel's home port is that port where marine documents may be issued to vessels (see § 1.1 (c) of this chapter) which has been fixed and determined by the owner with the approval of the collector, assistant collector, or deputy collector in charge of marine work at the port designated or at the port where a temporary document is to be issued to

"For the purposes of the navigation laws of the United States, every vessel of the United States shall have a 'home port' in the United States, including Puerto Rico, which port the owner of such vessel, subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, shall specifically fix and determine, and subject to such approval may from time to time change. Such home port shall be shown in the register, enrollment, and license, or license of such vessel, which documents, respectively, are referred to as the vessel's document. The home port shown in the document of any vessel of the United States in force on February 16, 1925, shall be deemed to have been fixed and determined in accordance with the provisions hereof. U.S. C. 18)

(46

the vessel. It is the port at which the vessel's permanent documents are issued.

(b) Before a marine document is issued to a vessel never before documented or to a documented or previously documented vessel when there has been some change in ownership in whole or in part or when a change in home port is desired, the owner of the vessel shall submit his designation of home port for the vessel on customs Form 1319, signed as provided for in § 3.13 (a), to the office of the collector of customs for the port designated or the port where a temporary document is to be issued. When the designation is filed with the collector at the port designated as home port, it shall be filed in duplicate; when filled at a port where a temporary document is to be issued, it shall be filed in triplicate. If the home port so designated is different from the last previous home port of the vessel, the owner shall also request the collector at the previous home port to forward to the collector at the designated port an abstract of title on customs Form 1332, or on customs Forms 1332 and 1332-A (see § 3.33 (1)).

(c) If an owner desires that the home port be elsewhere than the port at or nearest the place in the same customs collection district where the vessel business of the owner is conducted, he shall submit with his designation of home port a detailed statement setting forth the

reasons.

(d) Whenever an owner submits a designation of home port to a collector the collector shall examine the instruments transferring title to the vessel and the abstract of title on customs Form 1332 or customs Forms 1332 and 1332-A if any, and satisify himself that the home port has in fact been designated by the owner of the vessel or some person authorized to act for him.

(e) Any designation presented shall be forwarded to the Bureau for recommen dation before approval and before the is suance of any document under such designation if:

(1) A port or place is designated which is other than the port at or nearest th place in the same customs collection dis trict where the vessel business of th owner is conducted;

(2) The vessel is of foreign build and has not been previously documented a a vessel of the United States;

(3) The vessel has been transferred to an alien in whole or in part or ha been placed under foreign registry afte

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