delivered the opinion of the court.
This case is one of a number of' similar cases arising within
The laws of Hawaii regulating attachments in cases, such as are now under consideration, authorize proceedings supplementary to execution, as follows (chap. 135, Laws 1905):
“Sec. 2118. Attachment of debts, order. — It shall be lawful for a judge of any court upon the ex parte application of such .judgment creditor either before or after such oral examination and.upon affidavit by the judgment creditor or his attorney stating that judgment has been recovered and that it is still unsatisfied, and to what amount, and that any other person is indebted to the judgment debtor and is within the'jurisdiction, to order that all debts owing or.accruing from such third person(hereinafter called the 'garnishee’) to the judgment debtor, shall be attached to answer the judgment debt, and by the same or any subsequent order it may be ordered that the garnishee shall appear before the judge to show cause why he should not pay the judgment creditor the debt due from him to the judgment debtor or so much thereof as may be sufficient to satisfy the judgment debt; provided that the judge may in his discretion, refuse to interfere when from the smallness of the amount to be recovered, or of the debt sought to be attached or otherwise, the remedy sought would be worthless or vexatious.”
It was under this section of the Hawaiian statute that the order was made for the payment of the judgment out of the wages due to Tullet, and the question for decision in this case is: Can such an order be made consistently with the .maritime law as declared in the Revised Statutes of the United States? The section of the statute construed in the Supreme Court of Hawaii is 4536, which provides :
“No wages due or accruing to any seaman or apprentice shall be subject to attachment or arrestment from any court; and every payment of wages to a seaman or apprentice shall be valid in law, notwithstanding any previous sale or assignment of wages, or of any attachment, incumbrance or arrestment thereon; and no assignment or sale of wages, or of salvage, made prior to the .accruing thereof, shall bind the party making the same, except such advance securities as are authorized by this title.”
This section was first enacted into the statutes of the United States in 1872, and was § 61 of the act of June 7, 1872, entitled “An Act to authorize the Appointment of Shipping-commissioners by the several Circuit Courts of the United States, to superintend the Shipping and, Discharge of Seamen engaged in Merchant Ships belonging to the United States, and for the further Protection of Seamen.” 17 Stat. 262, 276. It afterwards became, in the revision of 1874, § 4536, Rev. Stat. This section appears to have been copied from § 233 of the 17 and 18 Victoria, 1854, chap. 104, which act provides:
“No wages due or accruing to any seamán or apprentice shall be subject to attachment or arrestment from any court; and every payment of wages to a seaman or .apprentice, shall be valid in law, notwithstanding any previous sale or assignment of such wages, or of any attachment, incumbrance, or arrestment thereon; and no assignment or salp of such wages, or of salvage made prior to the accruing thereof, shall bind the party making the same, and no power of attorney, or authority for the receipt of any such wages shall be irrevocable.”
We have been unable to discover any English case construing this statute, and none has been called to our attention. In MacLáchlan on Merchant Shipping (4th ed.), 231, that author states the effect of the statute to be to except seamen’s wages from liability to attachment by a judgment creditor, as.payment of such wages is valid, notwithstanding any previous sale or assignment thereof, or any attachment', in-cumbrance, or arrestment thereon." In this country the cases, state and Federal, in which this statute has been under consideration are not in accord. In Telles v. Lynde, 47 Fed. Rep. 912, and The Queen, 93 Fed. Rep. 834, the Circuit Court in the Ninth Circuit reached the conclusion that the statute did not prevent the seizure of seamen’s wages after judgment upon proceedings in aid of execution, although the seamen’s wages were not liable to attachment in advance of judgment.
The question was very fully considered by Judge Benedict in the case of McCarty and another v. Steam Propeller City of New Bedford, 4 Fed. Rep. 818. In that case Judge Benedict held the view that the statute of 17 and 18 Victoria, above cited, was but declaratory of the law of England as it theretofore existed, and that in view of the remedies given in the United States courts in admiralty, and the provisions of the Federal statutes enacted in reference to the recovery and protection of the wages of seamen, there was no jurisdiction in the state courts to garnishee the wages of seamen at the instance of a creditor.
In the case of
The City of New Bedford,
20 Fed. Rep. 57, Judge Brown sitting in admiralty in-the Southern District of New York, adhered to the views expressed by Judge Benedict
From this conflict of views upon the subject we turn to the consideration of '.the section (4536) itself. We may premise that no contention was made in the Supreme Court of Hawaii, or in the assignments of error or argument in this court, that §4536 was inapplicable because the steamship company was engaged wholly in the coastwise trade. This removes any question on that subject from the case and renders it unnecessary to decide whether the act of 1874, c. 259, 18 Stat. 64, had the effect to repeal § 4536, so far as vessels thus engaged are concerned. In the first clause of § 4536 it is provided that no wages due or accruing to any seamen shall be .subject to attachment or arrestment from any court, and it is the contention of the plaintiff in error that the words “attachment” or “arrestment” only forbid such proceedings before judgment, but do not protect such wages from proceedings in attachment after judgment. Undoubtedly the word “attachment,” as ordinarily understood in American law, has reference to a writ the object of which is to hold property‘to abide the order of the court for the payment of a judgment in the event
“An attachment has but few of the attributes of an execution; the execution contemplated by the statute being’ the judicial process for obtaining the debt or damage recovered by judgment, and final in its character, while the attachment is but mesne process, liable at any time to be dissolved, and the judgment upon which may or may not affe'ct the property seized.”
“Arrestment,” a word derived from the English statute, is a word of Scotch origin, and derived from the.Scottish law, and thus defined by Bouvier:
“The order of a judge, by which he who is debtor in a movable obligation to the arrester’s debtor is prohibited to make payment or delivery till the debt due to the arrester be paid or secured. Erslcine, Inst. 3, 6, 1; 1, 2, 12. Where arrestment proceeds on a depending action it may be loosed by the common debtor’s giving security to the arrester for his debt, in the event it shall be found due.”
And in the Century Dictionary it is defined to be :
“A process by which a creditor may attach money or movable property which a third person holds for behoof of his debtor. It bears a general resemblance to foreign attachment by the custom of London.”
Neither of the words used in the statute, “attachment” or “arrestment,” considered literally, have reference to executions or proceedings in aid of execution to subject property to the payment of judgments, but refer, as we have seen, to the process of holding property to abide the judgment. But we are of opinion that this statute is not to be too narrowly construed, but rather to be liberally interpreted with a view to affecting the protection intended to be extended to a class of persons whose improvidence and prodigality have led to legislative provisions in their favor, and which has made them,
We think too that the section is to be construed in the light of and in connection with the. other provisions of the Title, of which it. is a part. And we may notice that after providing against attachment or arrestment of wages, this very section' goes on to enact that payment of wages to seamen shall be valid, notwithstanding any previous sale or assignment, or any attachment, incumbrance, or arrestment thereon; and that no assignment or sale of wages made prior to the accruing thereof shall bind the party making the same, except such advance securities as are authorized by this statute. When we look to the provisions of the Title we see that the field of “advanced securities” for which assignment is authorized is very narrow indeed. 3 United States Compiled Statutes, §§3079
et seq.
It is made unlawful to pay any seaman his wages in advance, and an allotment of his wages is permitted only to grandparents, parents, wives, or children, or, under regulations of the Commissioner of Navigation, made with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, not to exceed one month’s wages to a creditor in liquidation of a just debt for board or clothing. And it is provided that no allotment note shall be valid unless signed and approved by the shipping commissioner. ■- This statute has been held a valid enactment
(Patterson
v.
Bark Eudora,
Section 4536, therefore, has the effect of not only securing the wages of the' seaman from direct attachment or arrestment, but further prevents the assignment or sale of his wages, except in the limited cases we have mentioned, and makes the payment of such wages valid notwithstanding any "attachment, incumbrance or arrestment thereon.”
It seems to be clearly inferable from these provisions that wages which have thus been carefully conserved to the seaman were not intended to be subject to seizure by attachment, either before or after judgment.
Furthermore, there an; other sections in the Title which
We think that these provisions, read in connection with §4536, necessitate the conclusion that it was intended not only to prevent the seaman from disposing of his wages by assignments or otherwise, but to preclude the right to compel a forced assignment, by garnishee or other similar process, which would interfere with the remedy in admiralty for the recovery of his wages by condemnation of the ship. These provisions would be defeated if the seaman’s wages, to be recovered at the end of the voyage, could be at once seized by an execution or attachment after judgment in an action at law. The evident purpose of the Federal statutes, that the seaman shall have his remedy in admiralty, would be defeated, and the seaman, in many cases, be turned ashore with nothing in his pocket, because 'of judgments seizing his wages, rendered, it may be, upon improvident contracts, from which it was the design and very purpose of the admiralty law to afford him protection.
“Ordinarily,” says Judge Nelson, in
Boss
v. Bourne, 14
We think that § 4536, construed, in the light of the other provisions of the same Title, prevents the seizure of the seaman’s wages, not only by writs of attachment issued before judgment, but extends the like protection from proceedings in aid of.execution, or writs of attachments, such as are authorized by the Hawaiian statutes, after judgment.
Finding no error in the decision of the Supreme Court of Hawaii, the same is
Affirmed.
