Bangs v. Little

2 F. Cas. 587, 1 Ware 520, 1839 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedAugust 12, 1839
StatusPublished

This text of 2 F. Cas. 587 (Bangs v. Little) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bangs v. Little, 2 F. Cas. 587, 1 Ware 520, 1839 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15 (D. Me. 1839).

Opinion

WARE, District Judge.

The pleadings and the evidence in this case present a question of considerable delicacy and importance, as it affects the general police of our commercial marine. The libel is for an assault and battery by the master. The master in his answer admits the battery, as charged in the libel, and pleads a special justification. That the master has a general authority to inflict corporal punishment on one of his crew, in a reasonable and moderate manner, for any act of wantonness or carelessness by which the property intrusted to his care is injured or put in jeopardy, or for disobedience, or for riotous, disorderly, or insolent conduct, when it is necessary to maintain the discipline and subordination of the crew, is not denied. If that "were the only point involved in the case, the inquiry would simply be whether any such offence has been committed, which the safety of the ship or the maintenance of good order and discipline required to be punished; and if there had been, whether the punishment were greater than the occasion required. That, however, is not the precise question which is presented in this case. It is, whether the master is authorized by the marine law to punish a seaman for any moral delinquency, which does not endanger the ship or cargo, and does not tend directly to the subversion of the discipline or good order of his own crew. For this is the ground on which the master puts his justification. It is, that the libellant “regardless of his duty as a mariner and a man,” for the purpose of creating disaffection in the crew of another vessel towards the master, fabricated and told the crew of that vessel the false stories stated in the answer.

It is true that the master in his answer charges the libellant with listening at the cabin door to overhear his private conversation with the captain of the Franklin, who was then in his cabin; and if this fact were satisfactorily proved, it might undoubtedly be relied upon as an offence against the police and good discipline of the ship’s crew. For the seamen are not only required to obey the orders of the master in all that relates to the navigation of the vessel and to the services for which they are engaged, but they are bound to observe towards him a decorous and respectful demeanor. Listening at doors and windows, for the purpose of overhearing and prying into the private affairs of another, is in any case a gross impertinence; it is particularly so when practised by a seaman towards the master of a vessel. But if the master relies on this charge of eavesdropping as a justification of the punishment, he must produce satisfactory evidence of the fact. Grimes and faults are never presumed without proof. The evidence in this case is, that the libellant was sent by the second mate to the round-house to get some spun-yarn, and in going for it he passed by the cabin door, so near that he might hear any thing which was spoken in the cabin in the ordinary tone of conversation. On his return he stated to one of the crew that as he was passing the cabin door, he heard Captain Brazier repeat the words alleged in the master’s answer. No blame can be attached to him for hearing, while he was in the performance of his duty, what he could not avoid hearing, and there is no direct proof that he stopped to listen at the door. Neither the officer who sent him, nor any of the rest of the crew, saw any thing of the kind; and the manner in which he mentioned the conversation when he returned, rather implies that he had not come to any stop; for he said that he heard it as he was passing the door. The only part of the evidence, from which it is inferred that he stopped to listen, is that of Van Buskirk, one of the crew of the Franklin, to whom he mentioned the conversation. According to his testimony, he said that he listened and heard the conversation. So far as an inference can be drawn against the libellant from this mode of expression, it is met and neutralized, at least, by the form of the expression used when he stated it to one of the crew of the Brutus, immediately after it was heard.

Assuming, then, the allegation of the master in his answer to be true, that the story told to the crew of the Franklin had no foundation in fact, but was fabricated and told for the purpose of producing discord and trouble in that vessel between the master and the men, the whole justification turns upon this point, whether the master is authorized by the maritime law to inflict corporal punishment on one of his crew for general immorality. The counsel of the master have placed his defence on this broad ground. It is contended that his authority to correct and chastise their moral delinquencies is coextensive with that of a parent over his children, and with that of a schoolmaster over his scholars. It is time that the text writers on maritime law, in treating of the authority of the master over his crew, compare it to that of a parent, and of a schoolmaster. But it does not follow, because the authority is similar, that it is identical. The objects and purposes, for which the law allows to one man an authority of control and discipline, over another, must determine the limitation and extent of that authority. The parental power has its foundation in natural relations, and its objects are the protection, the discipline, and instruction of the [589]*589child during the period of infantile imbecility and youthful thoughtlessness and improvidence; and it is indispensable to the well-being of the child, through that period in which he is progressively acquiring the bodily strength and moral experience which are necessary for his support and for the government of his own conduct in life. It is a dutj' imposed by nature on the parent, who is under a natural and moral obligation to train up his child in such habits and in such modes of thinking and acting, as will make him a useful member of the community, and at the same time be a guaranty of his happiness in after-life. The understanding and the will of the parent are substituted for those of the child, until the intellect of the child is sufficiently matured and enlightened by experience to be safely relied upon as his own guide. A preceptor, of youth is placed for many purposes in loco parentis, and the authority which he exercises over his pupils is a delegation of the paternal power. But the authority of the master of a vessel over his ship’s crew, though it bears a certain analogy to that of a parent and schoolmaster, stands upoD very different reasons, and is allowed for different purposes. The service in which he is employed is one of uncommon peril, not only requiring great skill, but often demanding great promptitude of decision and action, and admitting no time of delay for deliberation, reasoning, or expostulation. Upon him the obligation is imposed to meet and provide for these emergencies, and if there is not an instantaneous obedience to his orders, it may involve the loss of the ship and all who are in it. The law invests him, therefore, with the absolute power of command, and clothes him with all the authority which is necessary to enforce the most prompt obedience to his orders. The office of master is also one of great personal responsibility. He is answerable to those who have intrusted their property to his care, for losses and damage, which may happen not only from his own personal faults or neglect, but for such as arise from the negligence or unfaithfulness of the men, whom he employs.

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Bluebook (online)
2 F. Cas. 587, 1 Ware 520, 1839 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bangs-v-little-med-1839.