14 Johns. 260 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1817
delivered the opinion of the court. The court are of the opinion that the judgment of the court below is erroneous, and that the defendant below was not bound by the new articles entered into at Beaufort, for several reasons:
1. As being in contravention of the policy of the act of congress of the 20th of July, 1790 (Vol. 1.134.) This statute requires, un
2. It is very clear that the owners are not bound by the master’s contract; because he had no power to make it. They were already bound by the shipping articles, and the obligation was mutual. He had no authority to give more than the sum for which they had originally stipulated to perform the voyage. If so, then the exaction of higher wages may be considered as an undue advantage taken of the master’s situation.
3. The promise to give higher wages is void for the want of consideration. The seaman had no right to abandon the ship at Beaufort; and a promise to pay them an extra price, for abstaining from doing an illegal act, was a nudum pactum.
4. The written agreement, at the port of departure, is the only legitimate evidence of the contract, and a mariner can recover nothing not specified in the shipping articles, where those articles have been entered into. (1 Comyn on Contracts, 369. 5 Esp. Rep. 85. Peahens Nisi Prius, 72. 2 Bos. <§* Pull. 116.)
5 In the present instance, the master never intended to be bound, for he never executed the new agreement.
On these grounds, the court' cannot hesitate in saying the judgment below must be reversed.
Judgment reversed.
Vide Callagan and others v. Hallett and Bowne, 1 Caines' Rep. 104.