2 Paine 229 | U.S. Circuit Court for New York | 1830
This cause-comes up on appeal from a decree of the-district court, by which the respondents were allowed the amount of wages claimed for services as seamen, on board the brig Cadmus. This claim was resisted by the appellants on two grounds: 1. That the voyage had not terminated when the proceedings were commenced; and, 2. That the seamen had forfeited their wages. The voyage as described in the shipping articles, is, “From the port of Boston to port or ports in the West Indies, and back to port or ports in the United States, one or more times, for
This suit was commenced before the expiration of the six months, on the ground that the seamen were discharged from their contract, either actually by the master, or by operation of law by reason of an alleged deviation. The deviation set up in the libel is, that from St. Thomas, in the West Indies, the voyage was continued to Maracaibo on the Spanish Main, before returning to the United States. The answer denies that this is any deviation, but alleges that Maracaibo is a port in the West Indies, within the meaning of the shipping articles, and is so considered by nautical and mercantile men conversant with voyages to the West Indies. The case was left upon these allegations in the pleadings, without any proofs on the one side or the other, and the district court pronounced no opinion upon the point. It was a question px-operly open to proof, and not one which the court can decide as matter of law; it is a question relating to usage and the course of trade, and is to be determined as a question of fact upon the evidence introduced by the parties, and cannot be judicially noticed by the court as a question of law. I am not, therefore, called upon to decide this question, as it seems to have been waived by the libellants, and passed by without any opinion expressed by the district court.
The questions upon which the cause turned in the court below were, that in point of fact the seamen were discharged by the master in the port of New York, before the expiration of the six months, and that they had not, by anything that had taken place, forfeited their wages. If the seamen were discharged by the master in the port of New York, there can be no doubt but that a right of action accrued immediately, and they were not bound to wait until the expiration of six months. It becomes an important point, therefore, to inquire how the evidence stands upon this question; and the bearing of this evidence will be bettor understood by seeing what are the allegations in the libel with respect to the voyage for which the seamen shipped, and the discharge set up by them. The libel describes the voyage to be ■“from the port of Boston to St. Thomas, from thence to Wilmington, N. 0.. from thence to ■one or more ports in the West Indies, and from thence back to a port in the United States.” And it is then alleged, that the ■Cadmus arrived in the port of New York on the 25th day of December, in the same year, and that three of the libellants. Matthews, Estrom and Smith, were on the same day discharged; and that Harrison was discharged on the second day of January thereafter. It is very evident that the proctor who drew this libel had not the shipping articles before him, or he would not have so misdescribed the voyage: and from the testimony of some of the seamen, it is equally clear that they had forgotten or were ignorant of the voyage for which they shipped. The libel appears to be shaped on the assumption that the voyage ended on the return of the vessel to a port in the United States, and such would seem to have been the understanding of the seamen; and that the question first raised by the seamen was, whether they were bound to unlade the cargo before they were entitled to their discharge, and not-whether they were bound to remain the six months, according to the shipping articles. And the libel accordingly alleges the discharge, in fact, on the very day the brig arrived in New York. The evidence, however, is entirely insufficient to support this allegation, and it was not relied upon by the district court; but the discharge is placed upon what took place at a subsequent day. The evidence in support of the alleged discharge on the 25th of December, is, that several of the seamen swear, that, whilst they were making the vessel fast, the captain told the mate that when he had made her fast, he should let the men go ashore; and that after they had made her fast, the mate told the men they might go ashore and go to hell, if they liked. This language, although extremely reprehensible in the mate, could not have been intended by him. or understood by the seamen, as a general discharge from the brig. The order of the captain to the mate was given in then
The discharge relied upon by the district court, and which has been pressed upon the argument of the case here, is inferred from what took place on the 6th or 7th oí January. It does appear from the testimony of several of the seamen, that the captain did declare to Matthews, Smith and Estrom. that he had nothing more to do with them; that he did not know them any more than men that never sailed with him. This, it will be perceived, was eleven or twelve days after the arrival of the brig; and to a right understanding of the force and effect of this declaration of the captain, we must look at the attending circumstances, and what had previously taken place between the captain and the seamen, with respect to their refusing to do duty on board the brig. These three men had done no duty on board the vessel after the 25th of December, the day of her arrival; although they were occasionally on board, and at some times intimated a willingness to assist in discharging the cargo, but utterly refused to do duty generally. Under these circumstances, and according to
I entirely concur in the opinion of the district judge, that the entry in the log-book, in order to lay the foundation for a forfeiture of wages under the act of congress, — 2 Bior. & D. Laws, 117 [1 Stat. 133], — must state substantially the absence to be w;thout leave; and that such entry must be made on the same day the seaman absented himself, that is, the entry can take effect only from the day when made. Such are the plain and explicit requirements of the act. The entry in the log-book on the 26th of January, as to two of the respondents, is as follows: “John Smith and Charles Matthews have been absent from the vessel during the day without permission.” This entry as to them is sufficient, and the forty-eight hours began to run from that day; and. the question is, whether they afterwards returned to their duty, so as to stop the time running against them, .and save the forfeiture. The evidence, independent of the log-book, is very conclusive to show that these men, although they came on board again within the forty-eight hours, absolutely refused to do duty. Was such appearance accompanied by a refusal to do duty, a return within the sense and meaning of the act? I think it was not. It cannot be necessary, in order to bring the case within the act, that the seaman should keep himself concealed and beyond the reach of the captain. If he presents himself on board the vessel, the master might probably have the right to cause him to do duty; but the law does not impose upon him the necessity of exercising force. He may rely upon the more mild and peaceable redress provided by the shipping articles, and the law applicable to the case; and I should say, generally speaking, when the vessel is in a home port, and the place of the seaman can be supplied, coercive measures had better be avoided. The absence contemplated by the act must mean a total withdrawing himself from his duty as a seaman. He is, in such case, as to every benefic’al purpose, absent. It appears to me to be inconsistent with the spirit and object of the act to permit the seaman to redeem the time, by appearing from day to day, and insulting or treating with contempt the authority of the captain. The return of the seaman, which shall save the forfeiture, is, according to the language of the act, a return to his duty within the forty-eight hours: and can it be said, that his personal presence, accompanied by an absolute refusal to do duty, is a return to his duty? This, it appears to me, involves an inconsistency that ought not to be allowed in the construction of the act; nor would it, in my judgment, have saved the forfeiture, if
With respect, therefore, to Matthews and Smith, their cases. I think, are brought within the act of congress, and that they have forfeited all claim to wages. With respect to the other respondents, their cases must be considered unaffected by any entries in the log-book. They are not included in the entry of the 26th of December; and all the other entries, down to the 7th of January, are defective, and not in compliance with the requisites of the act of congress: and this last entry must be laid out of view, having been made after the commencement of the proceedings in this case. I have looked with considerable attention, and not without some, wish, to find in the cases of the other two respondents, Estrom and Harrison, something upon which I might distinguish their cases from those already noticed, and protect them from an absolute forfeiture of their wages; but I have been unable to find any safe and satisfactory ground upon which to stand. They certainly appear in a less blamable point of light; and there is reason to conclude they were influenced by the bad example, if not by the persuasions of Matthews and Smith. They returned on board the morning after leave had been given them to go on shore and perform some trifling service, and seemed to manifest some disposition to return to their duty; for, on being told by the captain that they were not discharged, and that they must continue to do duty on board, they said they were perfectly satisfied. This was on Saturday; but on Monday morning Estrom came on board with Smith and Matthews, and the captain asked them if they would go to their duty, and they all said they would not, and went away, and did not afterwards return and offer to do duty, except on one occasion, when they offered to unlade the cargo; but even this was after it had been discharged: and although Harrison continued doing duty until the second of January, he then declared that he had found another vessel, and that he did not intend to do any more work on board, and left the vessel without leave of the captain or mate, and did not afterwards return to his duty. Here was, therefore, an abandonment of duly both by Estrom and Harrison, and a voluntary withdrawing or departure from the vessel without leave and without any reasonable cause, and which, according to the authorities I have referred to, constitute a desertion under the marine law, and work a forfeiture of wages; and in the act of congress on this subject, absence without leave is spoken of as importing the same thing as a desertion.
The decree of the district court must, accordingly, be reversed, and the libel dismissed.
Mr. Abbott (Tr. Shipp, pt. 4, c. 3, § 4) says: “Neglect of duty, disobedience of orders, habitual drunkenness, or any cause which will justify a master in discharging a seaman during a voyage, will also deprive him of his wages.” Judge Story, in the ease of The Mentor (Case No. 9,427], comments upon the foregoing language of Mr. Abbott, as follows: “In a limited and restricted sense the proposition here stated may be, and doubtless is, true. But it is not a single neglect of duty, or a single act of disobedience, which ordinarily carries with it so severe a penalty. There must be a case of high and aggravated neglect or disobedience, importing the most serious mischief, peril or wrong; a case calling for exemplary punishment, and admitting of no reasonable mitigation; a case involving a very gross breach of the stipulated contract for hire, and
Chief Justice Kent, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: — ;“It is the general rule of the marine law, that freight is the mother of wages, and that the safety of the ship is the mother of freight. The reason of the rule is, that the seamen may have an interest in the safety of the ship, and may thereby be induced not to desert her in cases of danger, but to use their utmost endeavor, even at the hazard of their lives for her preservation. No freight was earned in this case on the homeward voyage, because no part of the cargo was delivered by the ship. The contract was not fulfilled; the voyage was not performed; and no freight was earned: it follows, as a necessary consequence, that no wages were due. The salvage of part of the cargo does not take this case out of the general rule, because no freight was earned by the ship on the goods saved. It is not the saving of the cargo, but the earning of freight, that entitles the seamen to wages. The owners of the ship had no valid claim for freight, as for a part performance of the entire contract, because the fulfilment of the contract was not dispensed with by any act of the owners of the goods, nor, indeed, was there even a part performance by the owner of the ship. A salvor, and not ship-owner, was here the deliverer of the goods saved. The seamen might, perhaps, have had a valid lien on the goods saved, for an equitable compensation, in the light of salvage, but this gave them no right of action against the ship-owners or master, on their contract for wages. The claims of salvage and for wages are totally distinct, and are to be tested by different rules. It must, however, be admitted, that the loose manner of using these terms in some of the books, and in the old marine codes, tends to mislead; but the confusion is easily cleared when the terms themselves, and the principles upon which those claims respectively rest, come to be understood and applied with due precision.”
The general rule of maritime law is, that if freight be lost during the course of the voyage by disaster or peril, arising from accident or superior force, the seamen lose their wages; but if the same be lost by the fraud or other wrongful act of the master, the reason of the rule does not apply. It is just, as well as agreeable to the maritime law, to distinguish between the cases in which the services of the seamen have not been rendered, in consequence of the perils at sea, and in which they have not been rendered, by reason of the act of the master or owner. If a seaman be wrongfully discharged from the service, his wages will still continue down to the termination of the voyage. Abb. Shipp. 354. So if the voyage be interrupted and lost, by the act of the master or owner, the seamen have a valid claim for an adequate compensation. The maritime ordinance of Lewis XIV. (des Loyers des Mate-lots, art. 3) provides for this case, by ordaining that if the voyage be broken up, after it has commenced, by the act of the owner or master, the seamen hired for the voyage shall be- paid their entire wages for the voyage, and those hired by the month the wages due for the time