157 Mass. 152 | Mass. | 1892
The principal question in this case is concerning the construction to be given to the U. S. Rev. Sts.
Section 4391 provides that the master shall make an agreement in writing with every fisherman who may be employed in such a voyage, except only an apprentice or servant of the master or owner, “ and, in addition to such terms of shipment as may be agreed on, shall, in such agreement, express whether the same is to continue for one voyage or for the fishing season, and shall also express that the fish or the proceeds of such fishing voyage or voyages which may appertain to the fishermen shall be divided among them in proportion to the quantities or number of such fish which they may respectively have caught. Such agreement shall be indorsed or countersigned by the owner of such fishing vessel or his agent.”
The first part of § 4393 is as follows: “ Whenever an agreement or contract is so made and signed for a fishing voyage or for the fishing season, and any fish caught on board such vessel during the same are delivered to the owner or to his agent, for cure, and sold by such owner or agent, such vessel shall, for the term of six months after such sale, be liable for the master’s and every other fisherman’s share of such fish, and may be proceeded against in the same form and to the same effect as any other vessel is by law liable, and may be proceeded against for the wages of seamen or mariners in the merchant service.”
It is contended by the plaintiff that the seamen on a fishing voyage have a lien on the catch, and that, if the catch is delivered to the owner of the vessel to be sold, the lien still remains, and can be enforced against the money received from the sale of the fish. Reliance is placed upon certain remarks of Judge Sprague and Judge Lowell, in cases before them in admiralty, relating to whaling voyages. In Hussey v. Fields, 1 Sprague, 394, which was a libel in personam, brought by an officer of a whaling ship against the owners to recover his share of the proceeds of the sale of certain oil which had come to their hands, the oil having been shipped home from Honolulu, no question
In delivering the opinion, Judge Sprague said : “ By the ninth article [of the shipping contract] it is provided 6 that each and every officer and seaman . . . shall be entitled to the payment of his share of the net proceeds of the voyage ... as soon after the return ’ of the vessel to her home port, as the oil and other products of the voyage can be sold, and the settlement adjusted by the owner. This is the only express provision in the contract as to the time of payment, and it contemplates a payment only after a return of the vessel to Nantucket, an event which became impossible by perils of the sea.” After stating that he had reason to believe that in the whale fishery there was an established usage for the master to pay a seaman his lay or share, by delivery of oil or otherwise, in a foreign port when the voyage is there broken up, or the seaman is-otherwise rightfully discharged, but that he could not judicially assume the usage to exist, he went on to say: “ I must, therefore, consider this voyage as having been broken up by a calamity not contemplated by the shipping articles, nor covered by any usage. The rights of the parties upon such a contingency must be deduced from the terms of their contract, the'
In Two Hundred and Ninety Barrels of Oil, 1 Sprague, 475, it appears that a libel in rem was brought by seamen against oil, the product of a whaling voyage. The only questions discussed in the opinion relate to costs, and the circumstances of the case do not appear. An examination of the record of the case shows that the libellants had been discharged in a foreign
In The Antelope, 1 Lowell, 130, a whaling vessel had been wrecked, certain oil had been sent home, and the crew brought a libel against the oil to recover for services as salvors and for their lays. Judge Lowell expressed the opinion, that until a sale was made the seamen had a lien on the oil for their wages; and that it might be worked out by analogy to the lien of a seaman in the merchant service on the freight; and it was said that, “ where the owners of the vessel own the cargo, they would be liable for a reasonable freight in all controversies and adjustments in which that question became important; and no doubt the right might be enforced in any proper case against the cargo itself.”
We do not understand Judge Lowell to intend to assert that a seaman has a lien for his wages against the cargo of a vessel, even if that cargo belongs to the owners of the vessel, except so far as to compel the owners to bring an amount equal to a reasonable freight into court. Whether this can be effected by a proceeding in rem against the cargo is a question about which there is some conflict of authority. See Sheppard v. Taylor, 5 Pet. 675, 712; Poland v. Brig Spartan, 1 Ware, 134; Skolfield v. Potter, 2 Ware, 394, 402.
In each of the above cases decided by Judge Sprague and Judge Lowell, the contract entered into by the crew could not be performed according to its terms. But where the contract is not put an end to, it is difficult to see how there can be a lien, inasmuch as the seamen have agreed that owners have the right to sell the oil and bone, and that they will receive their pay out of the proceeds. “ This agreement,” as said by Judge Lowell in The Antelope, 1 Lowell, 130, 132, “ must undoubtedly confer upon them [i. e. the owners] the right to give a good title, clear of all liens; and they might probably sell the oil and bone before its arrival home.” If a lien exists, it cannot be enforced in violation of the express terms of the contract; and the remedy of the seamen is either by an action in personam in the admiralty, as in Hussey v. Fields, 1 Sprague, 394, or by an action at common law, as in Bishop v. Shepherd, 23 Pick. 492.
If the statute gave the same right of action which exists in the case of a seaman in the merchant service, it might well be argued that the statute was merely declaratory, and did not cut soff other remedies which exist by the maritime law. But this, as we have seen, is not the case. It would also have been very easy, if Congress had intended that the seamen should have the right to proceed against the fish for their wages, to have inserted a clause to this effect. Under the statute, a fisherman has the right to take his share of the fish; and this was probably at one time the custom. In Abbott on Shipping, (7th Am. ed.) 868, and in Curtis on' Merchant Seamen, 389, is found the form of the shipping papers formerly used in the New England States. This recites “ that, in consideration of the said master or skipper, and the fishermen being entitled to five eighth parts of the fish which may be caught on board said schooner during their service on board the same, and also to five eighth parts of the money which by law is allowed to said schooner during the same term, after deducting the general supplies and other supplies, according to the usage and custom of . . ., they severally shall and will perform their duty,” etc.
The case of Re Low, 2 Lowell, 264, while it applies, without any discussion of the question, the principle applicable to whaling voyages to fishing voyages, does not carry the doctrine further than the cases above referred to, decided by Judge Sprague. The facts were these. Before the vessel’s return from a fishing voyage her owners failed, and went into bankruptcy. On the arrival of the vessel at her home port, the marshal took possession of the vessel and her catch, and turned them over to the assignees in bankruptcy, who sold part of the catch. The seamen libelled the vessel in admiralty for their wages, and obtained a decree. The mortgagees of the vessel were allowed to be subrogated, as against the assignees in bankruptcy, to the lien of the crew against the proceeds of the fish. The .case was decided on the authority of The Antelope, ubi supra. It will be noticed that in the case of Re Low, the contract could not be carried out.
It is further suggested that the language of § 4394 recognizes a lien on the fish and the proceeds. This section, after providing for the release of the vessel by the owner’s giving a bond, proceeds as follows: “ Nothing in this or the preceding section shall prevent any fisherman from having his action at common law for his share or shares of fish, or the proceeds thereof.” This simply reserves an action at common law, and cannot be construed as recognizing a lien, which, after possession is given up, cannot be enforced at common law. There is nothing peculiar in the clause. It is similar to the language in § 4557, in which, after an action in rem is given to seamen in merchant vessels for wages, it is provided: “ But nothing herein contained shall prevent any seaman from maintaining any action at common law for the recovery of his wages,” So in § 563, cl. 8, giving the District Courts jurisdiction in admiralty, there is the
The existence of these clauses is doubtless due to the jealousy which formerly existed against tribunals which proceeded, according to the course of the civil law, without a jury.
As, in the opinion of a majority of the court, the seamen in the case at bar had no lien on the fish or their proceeds, inasmuch as the contract was performed, and the fish delivered, it follows that there was nothing to which the plaintiff could be subrogated. The judgment for the plaintiff must therefore be reversed; and the demurrer sustained.
So ordered.
Holmes, Knowlton, and Morton, JJ. dissent from this decision.