Broux v. The Ivy

62 F. 600, 1894 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 58
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJuly 26, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 62 F. 600 (Broux v. The Ivy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broux v. The Ivy, 62 F. 600, 1894 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 58 (D. Del. 1894).

Opinion

WALES, District Judge.

This suit is brought by Theophile Broux and 16 others against the American ship Ivy, and all persons intervening, to recover extra wages on account of a reduction in the allowance of provisions which were issued to the libelants while serving on board the said ship during her voyage from Vancouver, B. G., to Wilmington, Del., between April 22 and August 29, 1893, lasting 328 days. The libelants demand this extra compensation under section 4568 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, which is in these words:

“¡See. 4568. If, during a voyage, tlie allowance of any of the provisions which any seaman has, by his agreement, stipulated for, is reduced, except in accordance with any regulations for reduction by way of punishment, contained in the agreement, and also for any time during which such seaman willfully, and without sufficient cause, refuses or neglects to perform his duty, or is lawfully under confinement for misconduct, either on board or on shore; or if it is shown that any of such provisions are, or have been during the voyage, bad in quality and unfit for use, the seaman shall receive by way of compensation for such reduction of bad quality, according to the time of its continuance, the following sums, to be paid to him in addition to and to bo recoverable as wages: First. If his allowance is reduced by any quantity not exceeding one-third of the quantity specified in the agreement, a sum not exceeding fifty cents a day. Second. If his allowance is reduced by more than one-third of such quantity, a sum not exceeding- one dollar a day. Third. In respect of bad quality, a sum not exceeding one dollar a day. But if it is shown to the satisfaction of the court before which the case is tried, that any provisions, the allowance of which has been reduced, could not be procured or supplied in sufficient quantities, or were unavoidably injured or lost, and that proper and equivalent substitutes were supplied in lieu thereof, in a reasonable time, the court shall take such circumstances into consideration, and shall modify or refuse compensation, as the justice of the case may require.”

.Fourteen of the libelants signed the shipping articles, at Vancouver, as able-bodied or ordinary seamen. Of the three remaining libelants, one served as cook, one as cabin boy, and one as second mate who was, before the end of the voyage, disrated and sent forward. The whole number of persons on board the ship, including officers and men, was 21. The officers, including the cabin boy, took their meals in the cabin, and were well supplied with a variety of food, besides the bread, beef, pork, and soup which they had from the general ship’s stores in common with the crew. By the shipping articles the crew promised “to conduct themselves in an orderly, faithful, honest, and sober manner,” and the master agreed to pay them their stipulated wages, “and to supply them with provisions according to the annexed or above scale,” which was incorporated into and made a part of the shipping articles, and is established by section 4612 of the Revised Statutes, and called in the testimony “the government scale.” By this scale the crew were to receive one pound of bread per day, one and a half pounds of beef [602]*602four times á week, and one and a quarter pounds of pork, one-half pound of flour, and one-third pint of peas three times a week. It was also stipulated that one pound of potatoes, one-half pound of flour or rice, one-third pint of peas, or one-qnarter pint of barley might be substituted for each other. When fresh meat was issued the proportion was to be two pounds per man per day, in lieu of salt meat; and flour, rice, and peas, beef and pork, might be substituted for each other. But bread was made indispensable, for which no substitute or equivalent was allowed. The allegations of the libel are that there was a shortage, during the entire voyage, of at least one-third in the quantities of the provisions to which 'the libelants were entitled; that such shortage was not by way of punishment for any misconduct or neglect of duty on the part of libelants, nor because provisions could .not have been procured, or were unavoidably lost or injured in the voyage; that the libelants repeatedly complained to the master of the insufficiency of the food, but, although he promised to do better, he failed at any time during the voyage to give them two-thirds of their lawful- allpwances. These charges are denied by the master, and his denial is supported, in the main, by the first and second mates and by the carpenter. But, without going into a discussion of the evidence, it is enough to say that there is conclusive proof that there was a shortage of the three articles of bread, pork, and peas; the deficiency in the last two articles, however, was made up by lawful equivalents, — there having been a surplus of beef issued to take the place of pork, and potatoes and rice were substituted for peas when the latter gave out. It is admitted by the expert witness and accountant who was produced on the part of the defendant that the bread fell short of the standard allowance by 466 pounds. This witness arrived at his conclusions by taking the quantities of the different provisions which were on board of the ship at the beginning of the voyage, and deducting therefrom the quantity of each kind remaining unconsumed at the end of the voyage. It is claimed on the other side that the bread shortage was upwards of 900 pounds, and I am inclined to believe that it was nearer the latter weight. The captain says that he did not issue the daily allowance of food according to the government scale, but fed the crew by his own method, up to the 15th of June, when they made a formal complaint of not getting enough, and requested to be allowed the quantities fixed by law. The captain professes to have complied with this request for a few days, — until the 18th of June, — when the libelants asked him to return to his "method,” which he consented to do on condition that the libelants would “agree to be perfectly satisfied in the future, and make no more complaints.” An agreement to this effect was entered on the log book and signed by 14 of the crew. The libelants became dissatisfied with the manner in which the provisions were weighed and sex-ved out to them under the government scale, and there is evidence to the effect that the captain designedly made this mode of issuing the provisions as inconvenient and troublesome as he could. At all events, he was hot in favor of it. -In the course of his testimony the captain [603]*603said chat he had no regular scale oí his own made out, but fed his crew according to the method which he liad used ever since the law came in force, and that he never gave any one, except the cook, authority to supervise the provisions, either as to quantity or quality. The cook testifies that he was forbidden by the captain from giving the men their full allowance of ship bread from the first to the last of the voyage. Kelly, the first mate, uses very guarded language in answering the question:

"Q. Judging from what you saw, — judging' as best you could, — what would you answer: üiat they did get a pound of bread or biscuit, or not? A. Judging from what I saw, they had about the average of what others get on American ships, especially on long voyages.”

The hard tack on board did not exceed 850 pounds, and, allowing one pound per day for each person on board the ship, would not hold out for one-third of the voyage; and the deficiency does not appear to have been made good by the quantity of soft bread which was made by tiie cook and issued to the men.

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Bluebook (online)
62 F. 600, 1894 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broux-v-the-ivy-ded-1894.