Bradley v. The J. M. Griffith

71 F. 317, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedDecember 2, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 71 F. 317 (Bradley v. The J. M. Griffith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradley v. The J. M. Griffith, 71 F. 317, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94 (S.D. Cal. 1895).

Opinion

WELLBORN, District Judge.

The libelants are seamen, and have sued for wages claimed to be due them, respectively, for services as members of the crew of the barkentine J. M. Griffith. The voyage for -which they engaged was, by the shipping articles, not to exceed six calendar months, and is particularly described in said articles as follows, to wit: “From the port of San Francisco to Port Hadlock, and thence to San Francisco for final discharge, either direct or via one or more ports of the Pacific coast.” The facts material to this opinion are undisputed, and as follows, to wit: Three of the libelants —Bradley, Anderson, and Francis — signed the agreement above indicated, on the 25th of March, 1895, at San Francisco, Cal., and the others — Bill and Lyunggren — on the 9th and 22d days of April, 1895, respectively, and at Port Hadlock, Wash. Said agreement, besides describing the voyagé, contains, among others, this provision:

“And it is herein expressly agreed, .without reservation of any sort, that in ease of the desertion from the vessel of any of the crew the said persons so deserting shall forfeit to the owners of the said vessel all the wages due them.”

And also the following provision:

“It is expressly understood that these shipping articles shall be construed to be a civil contract between the master of the vessel and the members of the crew, and that the essence of the contract is the undertaking of each member of the crew to complete the specified voyage before becoming entitled to any portion of his pay.”

On or about the 28th day of March, 1895, the vessel sailed from San Francisco to Port Hadlock, and from thence to the port of San Pedro, in the state of California, arriving at said last-named port about the 7th day of May, 1895.' The vessel’^ cargo was discharged at said port of San Pedro, and thereafter, on the 15th day of May, 1895, the libelants, without the consent of the master of said vessel, abandoned said vessel, when the same was ready and about to sail for Port Hadlock. The libelants contend that by going to San Pedro the vessel deviated from the course of the voyage designated in the shipping articles, and, further, that the voyage so designated did not include a return or second voyage to Port Hadlock, and that this deviation and proposed return to Port Hadlock were such breaches of the shipping articles, by the master of the vessel, as justified libelants in leaving the same at San Pedro; and therefore they are entitled to recover their wages, up to the time they left, at the rate specified in said articles. Defendant insists that the libelants, by abandoning the vessel at San Pedro, under the circumstances named, were guilty of desertion, and therefore forfeited their wages.

The first question to be determined involves the interpretation of the contract; that is, whether or not the voyage therein described included the port of San Pedro, and a return thence, or second voyage, to Port Hadlock. If it did not, the libelants are entitled to recover, for by going to San Pedro, and proposing a return thence to Port Hadlock, the master of the vessel violated his contract with the libelants, and they had a right to leave the vessel. If, however, the voyage included San Pedro and a return to Port Hadlock, there arises the further question, w-hat sort of proof is essential to establish the fact of desertion, and was such proof adduced on this trial? Recur[319]*319ring to the question first above indicated, it will be observed that San Francisco, by the terms of the contract, was the port of final discharge, and the vessel was to go there from Port Hadlock, either directly or by one or more ports of the Pacific coast. Did the words, “via one or more ports of the Pacific coast,” authorize the vessel to sail by San Francisco, to a port not intermediate between Port Had-lock and San Francisco, but several hundred miles to the south of the latter port, and then return, or make a second voyage, to Port Hadlock? Among the authorities cited to this point in the briefs of the respective parties there are two which seem to me determinative of the question. In Anon., Fed. Cas. No. 449, the voyage was described as follows; “From the port of' Baltimore to the port of Curacoa, and elsewhere,” etc. In construing this phraseology, the court used the following language:

“The voyage from Baltimore to Curacoa is therefore a specified voyage, the labor and hazard of which is known to all parties; and for that voyage the agreement is such as the statute requires. But the terms ‘and elsewhere’ are added to this specification of voyage, and it is insisted by the respondent’s counsel that under these words lie was authorized not only to invert the order of voyage specified in the articles, but to go to any other port, — as to tit. Domingo. If tills construction was sound, the provisions of ihe act of congress which require a specification of the voyage when the hiring of seamen is not for a given time become a dead letter, because there would be no terminus ad quem, which is essentially necessary to the legal sense of the term ‘voyage.’ The terms ‘and elsewhere’ must therefore be construed as subordinate io the voyage specified, and can only authorize the pursuing such a course as may be necessary to accomplish the principal voyage, or, in oilier words, to import no more than the law would imply as incidental to the main contract. All arguments which rested on the defendant’s rigid to construe these articles as giving him the alternative of several ports must fail, of course. Indeed, there is nothing in the words of the contract which, independently of the ground before taken, would warrant, by rules of law or grammatical construction, snch an interpretation. The term ‘and’ is properly conjunctive, and is never construed to lie disjunctive, unless when coupled with a manifest intent, apparent upon the writing itself, that it was used m such sense and for such purposes by the parties. The only intent manifested upon the face of the articles before the court is such as is fairly to lie understood by the words ‘from Baltimore to Curacoa and elsewhere’; and it would be doing very great violence to these words to invert the order of ports, for, if the respondent is once exempt from the necessity of proceeding to Curacoa, — the specified voj age, — there is nothing which would restrain his entering upon the most remote and perilous voyage the adventurous and enterprising spirit of commerce could suggest.”

The principle of the above case has been adopted and applied by Justice Story in a case where the voyage was described thus; “From Boston to the Pacific, Indian, and Chinese Oceans, or elsewhere, on a trading voyage, and from thence hack to Boston.” In this last case, it was held (quoting from the syllabus):

“That the outward voyage terminated at Canton, and that the shipping articles did not authorize a return from Canton to the northwest coast; and that, therefore, it was not a desertion in a mariner to leave the ship at Canton, it being the intention of the ship to return to that coast.”

This case is strikingly in point, as further shown by the following fads, which I quote from the statement accompanying the opinion of the court:

“In fact, the ship was bound on a trading voyage to the northwest coast for furs. The ship sailed from Boston in January, 1800, went around Cape [320]*320Horn to California, thence to the Sandwich Islands, and thence to the Rus-, sian settlements on the northwest coast of America.

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The Grace Dollar
160 F. 906 (Ninth Circuit, 1908)
Rury T. McKay
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 F. 317, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-the-j-m-griffith-casd-1895.