The libellant, Johnson, employed as a messman on board the S. S. Kearny, on April 21, 1948, while the vessel was in the Pacific, attacked without justification another member of the crew, Brandon, stabbing him so severely that it was necessary to divert the Kearny from its course to the Island of Tonga in order to hospitalize him. Various issues in the court below have been disposed of by stipulation and the sole question remaining for disposition is whether the respondent, Isbrandtsen, is entitled to set-off or recoup the losses incurred by it by reason of the diversion of the Kearny to Tonga and Brandon’s hospitalization against wages earned by Johnson up to the time of the stabbing. The court below held that there could be no set-off or recoupment and entered an order requiring Isbrandtsen to pay Johnson’s wages and his expenses to the port of “signing on”. See
Reliance is placed by Johnson primarily on the provisions of R.S. Sections 4529, 4530 and 4596, 46 U.S.C.A. §§ 596, 597 and 701, though other statutes may be deemed to be of some aid in determining the intent of Congress.
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R.S. Section 4529 provides for prompt payment of the seaman upon his discharge and if the master or owner refuses to make the payment within the time prescribed - “without sufficient cause” double wages shall be recoverable for each day of delay. R.S. Section 4596 sets up eight offenses which the seaman may commit and. prescribes penalties for each of the eight. Johnson contends that it is only when a seaman has committed one of these offenses that justification is afforded the master or shipowner under R.S. Section 4529 to withhold payment of wages. Isbrandtsen takes the contrary position, asserting that under circumstances such as those at bar set-off or recoupment has been allowed. .It relies on such decisions as The T. F. Whiton, Fed. Cas. No. 13,849; Macomber v. Thompson, Fed.Cas. No. 8,919; The W. F. Babcock, 2 Cir.,
We agree with the court below and not with the views expressed by Judge Fee in his able opinion in the Oldfield case. In that case the court found in effect that the right of recoupment had been revitalized by the Shilman decision in the Second Circuit. But Judge Augustus Hand, after a review of the statutory provisions section by section, including those referred to in this opinion, said, “The above sections look towards payment to the seaman by his employer, at the termination of the employment, of all of his earned wages, without any deductions except those which are expressly "authorized by statute.” [
In Eldridge v. Isbrandtsen Co., D.C.,
We think it unnecessary to discuss here all of the causes sufficient to warrant the withholding of wages. It is clear that Sections 4529 and 4596 must be liberally construed in favor of seamen, wards of the a0miralty. See Garrett v. Moore-McCormack Company,
Isbrandtsen contends that Johnson’s conduct falls within the seventh paragraph of R.S. Section 4596 3 but we cannot construe the phrase “damaging the vessel” as the equivalent of doing injury to a member of the crew. We also have given consideration to the proposition that Johnson’s conduct might fall within the fourth paragraph of R.S. Section 4596, which prescribes a penalty “For willful disobedience to any lawful command at sea”. But we have concluded that paragraph four provides a penalty for disobedience to specific commands and is not intended to relate to the general discipline on shipboard.
We are brought to the conclusion that Johnson can recover. The sixth paragraph of R.S. Section 4596 prescribes punishment “For assaulting any master, mate, pilot, engineer, or staff officer, by imprisonment for not more than two years.” Congress provided a specific penalty for assault by a seaman on any of the persons designated in the sixth paragraph and that penalty does not include loss of wages. Had Johnson’s assault been upon the person of the master of the Kearny nevertheless his wages could not have been withheld. Seamen are not included in the designated group but Congress has legislated in the field of assaults committed by seamen and saw fit to prescribe no penalty for an assault by seaman on seaman. By reason of this fact we do not take the view that such an assault must result in the loss of wages of the seaman assailant. To so hold would savor of judicial legislation.
Policy suggests the reason why Congress refrained from such legislation. Under the best of conditions many voyages result in tensed nerves and sharpened animosities. Assaults, though usually not of a dangerous character, occur occasionally on shipboard. To hold that because of an assault a master or shipowner may withhold a seaman’s wages would emasculate the protective statutes upon which seamen are entitled to rely.
Accordingly the judgment of the court below will be affirmed.
Notes
. See, for example, R.S. Section 4535, 46 U.S.C.A. § 600, and the Act of March 4, 1915, c. 153, Section 12, 38 Stat. 1169, 46 U.S.C.A. § 601.
. We cited the decision of Mr. Justice Stone in Collie v. Fergusson,
. This paragraph states: “For willfully damaging the vessel, or embezzling or willfully damaging any of the stores or cargo, by forfeiture out of [the seaman’s] wages of a sum equal in amount to the loss thereby sustained, and also, at the discretion of the court, by imprisonment for not more than twelve months.”
