274 F. 1019 | S.D.N.Y. | 1921
(after stating the facts as above). It was apparently the early rule that mere incompetence would not justify a master in discharging a seaman at a foreign port. Capillo v. Bristol Packing Co. (D. C.) 112 Fed. 439; Sherwood v. McIntosh, Fed. Cas. 12,778 (semble). The master’s powers were only to degrade the seaman to such services as he was capable of performing and upon eventual payment to deduct from his services whatever was the loss occasioned by his incompetence. In this respect the incompetence was put upon a different basis from insubordination or deliberate shirk
On their face, the charges bear an appearance of being trumped up, nor are they mended by the two letters written to the owners on May 8th, which may well have been to lay a foundation to his case. Again, I think it unlikely that the men were willing to go home, and thought they would have a “jolly holiday.” Work proved scarce when they got here, and it is fair to assume that they knew it would be so. They swear that they had a good berth and there is no reason to doubt them, if the abundance of food, which the officers insist they gave, was in fact supplied. Moreover, why did he retain the two cooks, around whom much of the trouble centers ? He says that they did not want to leave, but a more likely reason, I suspect, was that Arab cooking would be worse. Was there an adequate motive for wishing to be rid of them? I think there was.
The Wabasha had shipped a Chinese crew at Calcutta or Bombay, and these deserted in New York. Their desertion may be attributed to the recent laws, which enable them to ship here at higher wages, and the result was that intended; i. e., to compel the captain either to raise his wages to the American standard, $85 or $95, or to take on a new crew at those rates. Finding his hand so forced, it was obviously to his advantage, if he could, to get rid of this crew as soon as
There were, indeed, serious losses involved in discharging the American crew at Algiers and shipping an Algerian crew to Calcutta. The cost of shipping the American crew back was about $12,600, and the cost of the Algerian crew $13,000, making a total of over $25,000. The cost of the American crew between June 8th and September 15th was about $12,000, making a difference there of $13,600, which the ship lost. This, the respondent answers, is conclusive evidence against the master’s putative motive. I think that this analysis of the situation is not complete. The master was under engagement to take the American crew back to New York; he would there have had to engage a second American crew, presumably at the same high wages. Had he carried them to Calcutta and discharged them, the expense would have been greater, and by discharging them at Algiers and employing an Algerian crew only to Calcutta, he had his ship free at that place, and could then begin with a Rascar crew for a round trip, which would end again in India.
Once he got his ship manned with cheap labor, he could continue to work her at Indian wages, and he would make up his loss in five months. If he did not, he was condemned indefinitely to pay American wages. True, in so doing he ran the risk that the Rascar crew in turn would desert at New York, just as the Chinese crew had done; but that depended upon his being able to keep his Rascars out of the hands of those who might advise them of their rights' in New York. That risk, it appears to me, he might well have accepted. Moreover, it seems to me very strange that he could not get his Algerians to work the ship back from Calcutta to Algiers, but must hire them only for the voyage out. That is an unexplained and indeed surprising circumstance, which fits much better with the plan which I think he had in mind from the outset, to get his wage scale back upon the Indian level.
Thus, merely as between the officers’ assertions, which are to me significantly vague, and the crew’s denials, I should find it impossible to accept the excuse. There is, however, another circumstance which appears to me to put the case beyond any doubt. The master was in a port where there was a British consul, whose sanction he professes orally to have obtained to what he insists was a voluntary discharge. Now, section 188 of the British Merchant Shipping Act of 1894 provides that no master shall discharge a seaman without the “sanction” of the local consul indorsed on the articles, and the consul must examine into the causes of the discharge before he sanctions it. In cases of “leaving behind,” he must issue a certificate stating the causes thereof, and, if the master violates this section, he commits a misdemeanor.
Therefore it seems to me as clearly proved as such facts can be that the discharge was colorable, a cover to avoid the continued payment of American wages. Whether under British law the discharge, which had never the written sanction of the consul, could under any circumstances be valid, I need not inquire. It follows that there must be a reference 1o compute the wages of the libelants between June 8 and September 15, 1920, less such earnings as they made, or could have made, during that time. In addition to wages the libelants are entitled to their keep, which the parties have agreed upon at the rate of $10 a week.
There will be an interlocutory decree for the usual reference before a commissioner.
<§saFor other eases see same topic & KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests & Indexes