1 Paine 336 | U.S. Circuit Court for New York | 1824
This case comes up on a writ of error to the district court for the Southern district of New York, and the error assigned grew out of a bill of exceptions, taken at the trial, and may lx* arranged under the following heads: (li Whether the bond upon which the suit is founded may be considered as taken under and by virtue of the act of congress of February 28. 1S03, entitled “An act supplementary to the act concerning consuls and vice consuls, and fór the further protection of American seamen.” (2) Whether the alteration made in the bond after its execution by tlie defendants made it void. (3) Whether the certificate of the American consul at Lisbon. and the parol testimony offered, shott-ing the reason why the seamen were left, were properly rejected. (4) Whether the
Under the first point it is alleged, that it ought to appear upon the face of the bond that it was taken under the statute, and if it does not so appear, it ought at least to be averred in the declaration that it was so taken. The act of congress does not prescribe the form of the bond. It points out the duty to be performed by the master, before he can obtain a clearance on a foreign voyage. He is required to deliver to the collector of the customs, a list containing the names, places of birth, residence, and description of the persons who compose his ship’s company, as far as he can ascertain them, to which he is to annex his oath verifying the same. The collector is to deliver to the master a certified copy of this list; and the master is required to enter into bond with sufficient security, in the sum of four hundred dollars, that he shall exhibit the said certified copy of the list to the first boarding officer, at the first port in the United States at which he shall arrive on his return thereto, and produce the men named in the list. The act however, contains a proviso, that the bond shall not be forfeited, on account of the master not producing any of the persons contained in the list, who may be discharged in a foreign country, with the consent of the consul, vice consul, commercial agent, or vice commercial agent there residing, signified in writing under his hand and official seal, to be produced to the- collector with the other persons composing the crew, nor on account of any such i>erson dying, or absconding, or being forcibly impressed into other service, of which satisfactory proof shall be exhibited to the collector.
The bond describes .'Joseph Hatch as master or commander of the ship called. the India, of New York, and lying in the district of New York, and it is recited in the condition, that he had delivered to the collector of the customs for the district of New York a verified list of his ship’s company, and concluding with a condition, substantially, according to the provisions of the act. I can perceive no reason why the bond should expressly refer to the- act; no form is prescribed by the act; that is left in the discretion of the collector. It is not necessary for the information of the obligors. The authority under which it is taken grows out of a public law, with a knowledge of which the defendants are chargeable, and it is not to be presumed they were ignorant of the duty imposed upon them. The condition of the bond which points out the obligations assumed by them is in strict accordance with the law.
It was urged in argument under this point, that the bond does not distinguish who was-principal and who security. A sufficient answer to this would be simply that the act does not require it. But another, and decisive answer may be given; that the objection is not warranted by the fact. The bond does not to be sure, say in terms who was principal and who security, but it states what is equivalent to it. It describes Hatch as the master of the ship, and recites that he has furnished the collector with a verified list of his ship’s company, and performed the duty required by the law before he could obtain a clearance, all which are amply sufficient to show that he was the master and of course the principal in the bond; and it follows as a necessary consequence, that the other must be the security, as there cannot be two masters of the ship. Nor is there any ground for the objection that the declaration contains no averment that the bond was given pursuant to the statute.
2. The alteration made in the bond after it was executed, consists in erasing the word “of” and inserting the word “to” in that part which requires the master on his return to the United States, to exhibit the certified copy of the list of the -ship’s company which he had received of the collector. In the bond as it stood originally, it read thus; “If the said Joseph Hatch shall exhibit the aforesaid cer-titled copy of the list of the first boarding officer,” &c. The word “of” immediately preceding the words “the first,” was changed for the word “to,” so as to read as the bond now stands, “shall exhibit the aforesaid cer-titled copy of the list to the first boarding officer,” &c. The alteration was made by the witness to the bond, and who was a clerk in the custom-house in New York, but must be considered a mere stranger so far as relates to the custody or taking of the bond. This duty is by the law entrusted to the collector; and even admitting his acts to be’ deemed the acts of the United States, it would be carrying the principle to an alarming extent, to consider all the clerks in tile custom-house the agents of the United States, and their acts as the acts of the United States.
The alteration must therefore lie considered as made by a stranger, and the inquiry will be whether it was such an alteration as the law denominates material: and I think it was not. Looking at this clause in the bond in connexion with the context, the meaning and construction must be the same with or without the alteration. The bond would be incongruous and absurd, with the word “of” instead of “to.” The recitals showed the certified list to be that of the collector and not of the boarding officer. No such document existed, and to require the exhibition of such a list, would be requiring an impossibility. The document to be exhibited was the aforesaid certified list. This of course referred to a paper before mentioned and described
3.There was no error in excluding the consul’s certificate, and the parol evidence offered to show the reason why the seamen were left at Lisbon. This evidence was offered for the purpose of bringing the case within one of the exceptions in the act, which would excuse the master for not producing the seamen on his return to the United States, and save the forfeiture of .his bond. But the testimony did not satisfy the requisitions of the act. The law excuses the master for not' producing any person contained in the list who was discharged in a foreign country, with the consent of the consul, vice consul, commercial agent, or vice commercial agent there residing, signified in writing, under his hand and official seal. The certificate of the consul offered in evidence, states that the two seamen, Gardner and Williams, were left in the hospital at Lisbon, in consequence of their being unable to proceed on the voyage, by reason of sickness; that the captain had paid for their maintenance in the hospital, and left the amount he said was due them for wages, but that he had not paid any extra wages as the act for the protection of seamen directs, to provide for their passage home. This certificate does not state in terms, nor any tiling that will admit of the construction, that these seamen were left with the consent of the consul; on the contrary, the necessary conclusion to be drawn from it is, that he did not consent. For the master had not complied with what the law required of him. By the third section of the act already referred to, it is provided among other things, that, when any seaman, or mariner, a citizen of the United States, shall, with his own consent, be discharged in a foreign country, it is made the duty of the master to produce to the consul, vice consul, commercial agent, or vice commercial agent, the certified list of his ship’s company, and pay to the consul. A-c. for every seaman so discharged, being designated on said list as a citizen of the United ijtates. three months’ pay over and above the wages then due. The ease shows that these seamen were American citizens, and the master offered to prove, that they were left in the hospital at Lisbon by their own request, which must be taken as equivalent to a consent to be discharged in a foreign country. If all this had been shown to the consul, and three months’ wages advanced, he would no doubt have certified his consent to their being left at Lisbon, and the ease would then have been brought- within the act. That the consul -would have given the requisite certilV icate, is fairly to be inferred, from the parol evidence offered on the part of the defendants, that the consul verbally expressed his satisfaction at the course pursued by the master in relation to these seamen. The law has very wisely placed American seamen in foreign countries, under the protection and guardianship of some of our public agents, to guard against their being left destitute and in want. It is very probable these seamen were left at Lisbon by their consent; but the requisite evidence to establish that fact was not produced. It required the sanction of the consent of a public agent, and that signified in writing and under his official seal. This being the evidence required by the statute, the parol evidence, both as to the consent of the seamen and the satisfaction of the consul, was not admissible to establish the fact.
4.The next and more difficult inquiry relates to the question of damages. In the case of Taylor v. Sandford (in the supreme court of the United States), 7 Wheat. [20 U. S.] 17, the chief justice in delivering the opinion of the court observes, that “in general a sum of money in gross, to be paid for the non-performance of an agreement, is considered as a penalty, the legal operation of which is to cover the damages, which the party in whose favour the stipulation is made may have sustained, from the breach of contract by the opposite party.” It wih not be considered, of course, as liquidated damages, and it will be incumbent on the party who claims them as such, to show they were so considered by the contracting parties. and considerable stress is laid upon the circumstance in that case, that the gross sum named is called by the parties a penalty. Taking the general rule to be as here stated, the proposition admits that the inquiry in every case must be in a great measure a question of intention, and whatever right is attached to the circumstance that the gross sum is called a penalty, does not apply to this ease. The act does not call it a penalty. It directs a bond to be taken in the sum of four hundred dollars, and then goes on to point out the duty imposed on the master, to secure the performance of which the bond is intended. The act does not expressly declare that the bond shall be forfeited if he fails to perform the duty. But this is a necessary inference; and the proviso points out what shall save the forfeiture, although the master does not. in point of fact, comply with the stipulation. I consider, therefore,
It may, I think, be laid down as a general rule, admitted in all the eases on this subject. that where, from the nature of the case, damages cannot be ascertained, the gross sum agreed upon between the parties, must be understood as stipulated damages. If actual damages must be proved in eases arising under this section of the act. the law is a dead letter, for there is no rule by which they can be ascertained. Questions of national policy were undoubtedly taken into view in the passage of this law. It was wise and prudent to guard against our seamen being left in a foreign country. Our national strength is intimately concerned in the question; and by what rule can a jury estimate damages on this account? It is too limited and narrow a view to take of this provision in the law, that it was intended to indemnify the United States against payment of the passages of seamen on their return to this country, or for whatever assistance should be afforded them in a foreign country. Higher and more important considerations, in a national point of view, dictated the policy of this provision. This is evident .from other provisions in the act. The United States could be under no obligations to provide for the return of our seamen who voluntarily quit the vessel and remained in a foreign country; yet masters of vessels are not oven in such case permitted to discharge them without paying to the consul or commercial agent, for each seaman, three months’ wages, over and above what may thus be due; and two thirds of this advance is to be paid to the seamen, upon their engagement on board a vessel to return to the United tates. This is held out as a premium to induce their return, and not as a mere indemnity for the expenses of a passage. If the bond is only to indemnify for actual damages sustained, when does the right of action accrue? The master returns to the United States, having left his whole crew in a foreign country, and without being furnished with the documents or evidence required by the act to save the forfeiture of the bond. If actual damages must be shown, no suit can be brought until the United States are damnified by payment of passage money, or for some other expenses. Such never could have been the policy or intention of the law; and the alternative must necessarily follow, that a non-compliance by the master with his engagements, works a forfeiture of his bond, and subjects him to the payment of four hundred dollars.
The judgment of the district court must therefore be affirmed.