13 F. Cas. 690 | D. Me. | 1858
This is a libel in rem., claiming extra wages, on the ground of an alleged short allowance of provisions. The libellant shipped on board of the John L. Dimmiek, on the sixth of November, 1S57, for a voyage from Portland to Mobile, thence to one or more ports in Europe, and thence back to her port of discharge in the United States, for wages at the rate of if IS per month. The ship arrived at Mobile on the 28th of November, and lay there, before proceeding to Havre, till the 7th of May, 1858, about six months. The first week after her ar
What constitutes a full or short allowance in the merchant service, is not fixed by the law. In the want of such a rule, the courts have thought that it ought to be equivalent to the navy ration. That is fixed at one pound of meat and fourteen ounces of hard bread, with one quarter of an ounce of tea, or one ounce of coffee or cocoa, and an addition of other farinaceous or vegetable food, as rice, peas or beans, or dried fruit. It is a liberal allowance for a hearty, hard-laboring man. If the witnesses of the libellant are to be believed, the allowance to this crew was far below the navy ration. The case of a short allowance is then clearly made out, unless this testimony is overcome by that offered by the claimant. Two witnesses were examined on this point, the mate and the steward. They appeared not unwilling to give a coloring to their testimony favorable to the owners. But when fairly examined, their testimony, I think, leaves the case about where it stands on that for the libellant. The credit of his witnesses is rather confirmed than impaired, and it may be added that they gave their testimony with a degree ot coolness, deliberation, and apparent freedom from prejudice and passion, unusual in such cases. It ought, also, not to be forgotten, that during the whole of this four months of short allowance, there was no insubordination; the crew were uniformly obedient and submissive, with no appearance or pretence of even disrespectful language or behavior on their part, except in a single instance towards the mate, which is the ■ subject of another suit now pending in court. There is one part of the mate’s testimony that calls for attention, as it serves, if true, to explain and extenuate any complaint of this exclusive diet on oysters. He says that before the crew were piit on this diet they were consulted by him, the whole crew being present, and that they unanimously expressed a preference to have oysters rather than fresh meat. In this I think the mate must be mistaken, as all the other witnesses say, including the steward, that they never heard anything of the kind until they heard it from the mate in the court-room.
Upon these facts, the claimant has brought a libel claiming double wages, under the act of congress, of July, 1790, chap. 29, sec. 9, for the period of four months, while the crew were on short allowance. That act provides that every ship or vessel of 150 tons burthen, or more, bound on a voyage across the Atlantic, shall, on leaving her last port, have on board, under deck, 00 gallons of water, 100 pounds of salted flesh meat, and 100 pounds of ship bread, for each and every person on board, besides such other stores as may be put on board by the master or any passengers, and in a like proportion for a
This statute penalty does not, and was not intended to, affect the mutual rights and obligations of the parties resulting from the nature of the Contract. What are these within its fair meaning? The seaman engages to render faithfully all the services that pertain to the navigation of the ship, and all those that are naturally or by custom incident to that duty, as the making some slight reparations of the ship in calking or painting the deck or other part of the vessel, which is occasionally required, and, also, in the loading and unloading the cargo, according to the custom of the trade in which she is engaged. But it has never, to my knowledge, been, considered an incident to their general duty as mariners to occupy their time, while lying in port, in procuring provisions for the ship’s use, either by fishing or otherwise. On the other hand the seamen stipulate for and the owners promise to pay the agreed wages. This stipulation and promise is embodied in the written contract. But there is always implied another stipulation and promise, though not put in writing, that provisions for the board of the crew shall be furnished by the master and owners,' and that these shall be served out to them in sufficient amount and of suitable quality. This proviso is just as binding on the owners as the written promise to pay their wages. To withhold from them an adequate supply, or to furnish food that is unwholesome, or of an unsuitable quality, is just as much a fraud in the contract, as it would be to pay them their wages in clipped coin or depreciated bank bills. I am unable to see the ground on which a distinction can be made between one and the other. If it be a manifest wrong and fraud on the contract, it would be a reproach to the law not to furnish a remedy. What difficulties might present themselves in the refined and subtle technicalities of the common law it is unnecessary here to inquire. The wrong is not beyond the remedies of a court, professing, like the admiralty, to decide ex aequo et bono, on enlarged principles of natural equity and the universal justice.
The seamen’s contract so obviously includes board that it may be deemed unnecessary to refer to authorities in support of this. But the old sea laws were curiously directory on this as well as on other subjects. The Conselato del Mare (chapter 145) obliges the master to give the seamen meat three times a week, that is Sunday, Tuesday, and Thursday, and wine every morning and afternoon, and to double their rations on festival days. And if during the voyage he is in want of provisions or other necessaries, and if he is without money, the ship is bound. Chapter 239. And it seems that they were purchased on the credit of the ship solely, for if that was lost the creditor lost his debt. But this is a libel in rem against the vessel, and it is argued that even admitting there is a wrong for which the seamen are entitled to a remedy, that it is one for which neither the owners nor the ship are liable; that when the owners have put on board the vessel provisions to the amount and of the quality required, if the master unnecessarily puts the men on short allowance, this is his own -personal delinquency, for which he alone is responsible.
The law of this country, as to the liability of owners for the acts of the master, as I understand it, is the same as the general maritime law of the world. And it stands on the general principles of the law of agency. The principal is always responsible to third persons for the acts of his agent, for his faults, his acts of misfaisance or nonfaisance. committed in the transactions of the business confided to him, as well as for his own- contracts. Story, Ag. § 452. It is, without question, entirely within the scope of the master's authority to di-' rect and regulate the allowance of provisions for the crew. In doing this, he acts strictly within the limits of his powers. If he puts the crew on short allowance during the voyage, and the vessel was not. when she sailed, provided with the required amount of provisions, the act of congress determines the nature and the extent of the indemnity to the crew. They shall be allowed and paid double wages, and the penalty may be recovered with the stipulated wages. The seamen have the same remedies for both against the masters, owners, and the ship. If he puts them on short allowance in a case that does not fall within the statute, as when the vessel has been supplied with the amount of provisions required, or when the vessel is not at sea on the voyage, but lying in port, or if he provides for them food of an unwholesome or unsuitable quality, and that without necessity, it seems to me to be not only an injury to the crew in the nature of a tort or nonfeasance, as it appears to have struck Judge Betts in the case of The Ghilde Harold [supra], but, also, a plain breach of the well-understood terms of the contract by the authorized agent of the owners, for which they are answerable on the ordinary principle of the law of agency. And as this was an economy practiced by the captain for the benefit of the ship and owners, and at the expense of the crew, it is most equitable that the ship's owners should pay for it. The crew had not only cause to complain of the insufficiency of their allowance, but for being restricted almost exclusively to a single article of animal food, and for part of the time, one or two weeks after the oysters had, from the heat of the weather, become unwholesome, and absolutely unfit for food at all.
I allow, under the circumstances of the ease, to the libellant, two months additional wages, one-half the time the crew were on short allowance. Decree $36 damages and costs.