98 Mass. 124 | Mass. | 1867
There is no material difference between the two reports of the auditor. The facts as found by him, and upon which the ruling of the superior court was based, were as follows:
By a contract made in the United States on the 13th of March 1863, the plaintiff employed the defendant as master of a ship then in the port of New York and bound on a foreign voyage, at the rate of one hundred dollars a month, without any express stipulation that it should be paid in gold. The plaintiff, on the day on which the contract was made, and twice afterwards, wrote letters to the defendant, directing him upon delivery of the cargo to collect and deposit the freight money to the credit of the plaintiff. It does not appear that the defendant either assented or objected to these instructions, and they do not affect the contract which is proved to have been made between the parties.
After the defendant had been sailing the ship for seventeen months under this contract, he arrived at a British port, and, collecting the freight money there due in pounds sterling, paid himself out of the same the sum of three hundred and forty
The defendant’s wages were payable in money of the United States, without specifying the metal or material of which that money should consist. Throughout the term of the transaction in question, gold coin and treasury notes were equally a legal tender at their nominal value for the payment of debts; and a payment in either, without special agreement as to the rate at which it should be taken, was a satisfaction of so many dollars of the debt. Bush v. Baldrey, 11 Allen, 367. Howe v. Nickerson, 14 Allen, 403. Sears v. Hewing, 14 Allen, 426. The rate at which a pound sterling is to be estimated by our courts, in the absence of special agreement, is $4.84, which is less than the defendant charged himself with in his account. Commonwealth v. Haupt, 10 Allen, 38. Babcock v. Terry, 97 Mass. 482. The defendant, having taken, out of the freight money collected by him as master, no more than 'egally belonged to him, is not accountable to the plaintiff for the subsequent investment or profits thereof. Exceptions overruled.