3 F. 577 | S.D.N.Y. | 1880
This is a libel by the master and seamen of a British vessel for balance of wages due upon the termination of the voyage, which ended in this port. The libellants also claim extra wages under section 187 of the British
I think the extra pay due to the seamen is to be treated as wages,, for which they have a prior lien on the vessel. The statute provides that it shall be recovered as wages. This clearly .means by the same methods or modes of procedure. The customary mode of recovering wages is by libelling the ship. The language, therefore, necessarily implied that the ship is holden for this extra pay. And, aside from this particular language of the statute, I think that, from the nature of the provision, and the purposes it was intended to sub-serve, the extra pay may be properly regarded as an addition or increase of wages in the event of the neglect of the master or owner to provide for their prompt payment. "We have a similar provision in our own act. These statutes are designed for the protection of seamen; to prevent the abuse of withholding their pay, and thereby keeping them in port at expense and out of employment while waiting for a settlement. It
The master’s claim of a lien for his wages arises under the one hundred and ninety-first section of the same act, which provides that “the master of every ship shall, so far as the case permits, have the same rights, liens, and remedies for the recovery of his wages which, by this act, or, by any law or custom, any seaman not being a master has for the recovery of his wages.” It has been held that this statute gives the master a lien on the vessel for his wages enforceable in the admiralty courts of this country, although, by the maritime law, the master has no lien, and although the lien is given by a foreign statute. The Havana, 1 Sprague, 402; The Enterprise, 1 Low. 455. I see no reason to doubt the correctness of these rulings. The contract with the master is made with reference to the statute, and the lien or interest in the vessel is thereby given to him as part of the consideration for his service. It is immaterial that the lien is not created by the maritime law'. The admiralty courts enforce liens
It is suggested that it is discretionary with the court to entertain jurisdiction of a claim of foreign seamen against a foreign vessel. This is so. But the question here is not whether the court will take jurisdiction over this vessel. It has already done so, and seized and sold her under its process. It cannot refuse now to distribute the proceeds according to the rights of the respective parties who appear to claim them. While, therefore, the master must be held to have a lien for his wages which can be enforced against the vessel or its proceeds in this court, it does not follow, as in the case of the seamen, that his lien will have priority over that which may be established by other claimants. He may by his contracts with material men, or parties furnishing supplies, have waived his lien in their favor, or made it subordinate to theirs. In the ease of The Selah, 4 Sawy. 40, it was held that a foreign master did so by contracting with such parties on the credit of the ship in an American port. The claims of these other parties have not yet been proved, nor until they are adjusted, and the nature of them and the circumstances under which they arose shall be understood, can it be determined what are their rights in respect to priority of lien relatively to the claim of the master. The master is, therefore, entitled to a decree for his wages, reserving all questions of priority of payment and of distribution till all the claims made have been adjusted. The question, also, whether the master is entitled to extra pay as a seaman is also reserved. If the prior liens are sustained it is immaterial.
Decree accordingly.