delivered the opinion of the Court.
These two cases raise issues which, as the facts set out below indicate, are controlled by our decision in Cosmopolitan Shipping Co. v. McAllister, ante, p. 783, decided this day.
The petitioner, Fink, signed on the S. S. George Davidson on June 8, 1943, as an able seaman. The shipping articles showed as the “Registered Managing Owner or Manager” the “War Shipping Administration (Owner) Shepard Steamship Co. (Gen. Agents).” The contract pursuant to which respondent, Shepard Steamship Co., handled certain phases of . the ship’s business was the standard form General Agency Agreement, GAA 4 4-42. Petitioner was procured by respondent from a union hiring hall for employment by the master of the vessel.
In August, 1943, while the ship was at sea, Fink was ordered by the master and boatswain to empty a garbage
Petitioner instigated this action for damages against respondent under the Jones Act
1
in a Circuit Court of Oregon, alleging that respondent was “in possession of, controlled, navigated, managed and operated” the
Davidson
and was negligent in ordering petitioner to dump the garbage in a heavy' sea without assistance.
2
Respondent denied all these allegations. The jury was charged that the officers of the ship were agents of respondent and that their negligence, if any, should be imputed to respondent. Judgment was entered on a jury verdict for petitioner. The Supreme Court of Oregon reversed,
Fink
v.
Shepard S. S. Co.,
The question here is identical with that in
McAllister-, i. e.,
whether the general agent of a vessel owned by the
We desire to point out, however, that the testimony in this case confirms the conclusions which we have drawn from a study of the standard form General Agency Agreement. It establishes that respondent was neither the employer of officers on vessels such as the Davidson nor a party to such a relation with them that it could be held vicariously liable for their torts. It shows that such officers were required to fill out an application form for employment captioned “War Shipping Administration, Division of Operations, Service Record.” Consideration and approval of these applications by the W. S. A. made the applicants employees of the United States. Thereafter, transfer to other W. S. A. vessels for which different companies were general agents could be accomplished by furnishing to W. S. A. a transfer form. No new application for employment was required. It shows that the general agent had no voice in determining the destination or route of the vessel, in what service it would be operated, or how it would be handled in foreign ports. The soliciting and loading of cargo and the collection of freight were functions of the berth agents.
Petitioner Gaynor signed shipping articles in 1945 as a member of the crew of the S. S.
Christopher Gadsden,
a vessel which was owned by the United States and operated by the War Shipping Administration. The ar
Petitioner sued respondent for wages and maintenance and cure, alleging that,respondent “possessed, owned, operated and controlled” the vessel. Agwilines denied these allegations, averred that it was merely the general agent under the standard form contract, that the ship was “owned, operated and controlled by the United States,” and that petitioner had failed to comply with the Clarification Act, which required complaints of this sort to be brought pursuant to the Suits in Admiralty Act.
On the pleadings, an agreed statement of facts as summarized above, the shipping articles, the standard form agreement,, and the delivery and redelivery certificates evidencing the allocation of the vessel to respondent by the W. S. A., the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania dismissed the action on the ground that petitioner’s only remedy was a suit against the United States pursuant to the Clarification Act.
Although this case involves the right to wages and maintenance and cure, whereas
McAllister
and
Fink
concern damages for negligent injury, the reasoning and decisions in those cases are dispositive here. This is so because the right to maintenance and cure is “annexed to the employment,”
Cortes
v.
Baltimore Insular Line,
The delivery certificate, relied upon by petitioner as showing that the
Gadsden
was in the possession and control of Agwilines, recites in pertinent part that the ship “was on the 31st day of December, 1942 . . . delivered . by War Shipping Administration to Agwilines, Inc. Under Terms and Conditions of ‘Service Agreement, Form GAA’ ...” It is quite obvious, .we
Nos. 860 and 430 affirmed.
Notes
41 Stat. 1007, 46 U. S. C. § 688.
He also filed claim on account of his injuries with the War Shipping Administration and sued the United States pursuant to the Suits in Admiralty Act and the War Shipping Administration (Clarification) Act, 57 Stat. 45, 50 U. S. C. App. § 1291. This.suit was later dismissed without prejudice.
See Hust v. Moore-McCormack Lines, supra, at 727.
Note that wages and maintenance and cure are treated along with claims for injuries in § 1 of the Clarification Act, which, in the case of seamen employed on United States or foreign vessels as employees of the United States through the W. S. Á., directs that all of these rights shall be enforced pursuant to the provisions of the Suits in Admiralty Act.
