Burdett v. Williams

27 F. 113, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedMarch 22, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 F. 113 (Burdett v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burdett v. Williams, 27 F. 113, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43 (D. Conn. 1886).

Opinion

Shipman, J.

This is a libel in personam, claiming seaman’s wages, and damages for short allowance of food, and for an unnecessary and wrongful detention for nearly 10 months in the waters of British North America. Francis H. Yon, Thomas J. Kelly, and Isaac 1). Sampson have, by petition, become eo-libelants since the libel was filed. The facts in the case are as follows:

In the spring of 1884 the respondents, C. A. Williams & Co., were the owners of two whaling vessels, the Boswell King and the Lizzie P. Simmons, which were then on whaling voyages upon the east coast of British North America. The King had been there two years. Neither vessel had been heard from for 18 months, and neither was expected to return home during that season. The respondents were also owners of the whaling schooner Era, and during that spring fitted her out thoroughly, with 17 months’ provisions for 23 men, with a whaling equipment, with provisions and stores for the Boswell King, and with two casks containing whaling lines, an anchor, rigging, and sail for the Simmons. The object of the voyage was to carry the above-named freight to the two vessels, and to bring home whatever oil and bone they. had. If not enough freight was received from them to fill the schooner, which would take 600 or 700 barrels, then the Era was to remain upon a whaling voyage.

Early in June, 1884, John O. Spicer, one of the respondents, with the captain, Timothy F. Clisby, and the second mate, shipped a crew’ at New Bedford for the voyage of the Era. Each one of the officers and crew intelligently signed a partly printed and partly written shipping paper or contract. The printed part of the paper was the usual “whalemen’s shipping paper,” and described the voyage as a “whaling voyage from the port of New London to Cumberland inlet and elsewhere.” The seamen’s wages were called “shares of the net proceeds.” The written part of the contract was as follows:

“It is also further understood and agreed that we are to receive monthly-wages as set opposite our names, in lieu of our lays in freight earnings,from the time the said schooner leaves the port of New London until all freights are discharged, and all freight is taken on hoard at stations Arkolea, Cumberland inlet, and New Guneuke. If, on taking aboard all freights at the above-named stations, the vessel has not sufficient quantity, say from six to seven hundred barrels, then our wages are to cease, and we are to stop to whale at New Guneuke or elsewhere, and receive the lays set opposite our names on all catchings taken after such date in lieu of wages; hut if the quantity taken on hoard is sufficient to come home, then our wages are to continue until arrival of vessel at New London, fall of 1884.”

This contract was explained to, and was understood by, each of the crew. Monthly wages were to be paid in lieu of the lay in freight earnings, and if the vessel got sufficient freight to fill her, monthly wages were to be paid continuously, and the vessel was to return forthwith in the fall of 1884. if a sufficient quantity of freight was not [115]*115received, whaling was to begin, and thereafter monthly wages were to cease. If whaling commenced, it was undoubtedly .the hope or expectation of both owners and crew that the voyage would end in six months, but from the provisioning of the vessel for 17 months, her equipment as a whaler, and the well-known uncertainties of the wdiale fishery, it is manifest that no contract was made that the whaling voyage should cease in the fall of 1884. The number of the crew, and the equipment of the vessel, plainly showed that whaling was one of the intended objects of the voyage; and if the voyage was for whaling, it is not easy to believe that there was any agreement or understanding that it must end in six months. It would have in fact ended in that time if the vessel had not been caught by such stress of weather that she was compelled to winter.

The Era left New London on June 10, 1884, and reached Hudson straits in July, 1884, where she was jammed in the ice, and delayed 20 to 25 days. She reached Arkillie about August 28, 1884, and found the Boswell King and a crew of 23 men belonging to the shipwrecked schooner Isabella, who were being fed by the Boswell King. The Era discharged all the freight that was destined for the King, took on board her cargo, consisting of 118 barrels of oil, between 1,400 and 1,500 pounds of bone, and some skins, the crew of the Isabella, and two of the King’s crew, and started on September 9th for the Simmons, at Cumberland inlet, 450 or 500 miles by water from Arkillie. There was a head wind, and at the request of the Isabella’s captain her crew were put ashore at New Guneuke on September 15th. A tent was built, and provisions were left for them. The Era was delayed somewhat by bad weather, and started again for Cumberland inlet on September 24th, and three times got within 40 miles of her destination and was blown back. The ice was 18 inches thick upon her deck. The captain consulted with his officers, and all agreed that if he undertook to keep on his course the vessel would be unmanageable. The Era turned back, reached New Guneuke on October 4,1884, and commenced whaling on the same day, when monthly wages stopped. Three boats were fitted out for whaling. All were Unsuccessful, and the captain returned on October 24th, and started to go home on the same day, with the Isabella’s crew on board, when he decided, upon consultation with the Isabella’s officers and his own, that it was unsafe to attempt leaving the harbor. He concluded, from examination, that the heavy pack ice had commenced to come down the straits, and to shut in, and, if so, that he could probably never return to his harbor. In this opinion the captain of the Isabella concurred. No one contradicts the wisdom of this conclusion. The objection which is made to the captain’s course is that he was negligent, and ought to have known earlier that the ice was filling the straits, and ought not to have been caught.

Upon the evidence, there can be no affirmative finding of negligence. The next winter the Era left her anchorage October 28th, [116]*116and Capt. Spicer had left in different years on November 4th, 6th, and 7th, and found no pack. Capt. Clisby has been master of the Era twice, and of the King once; has made five voyages to British North America; and was caught in the ice, and .wintered there the winter of 1883-84. When the desirableness of avoiding an Arctic winter; the burdensome necessity, if the Era remained, of feeding the Isabella’s crew; the fact that apparently winter set in earlier at this season than was usual; and the fact that no witness can charge negligence,—are all considered, the only finding that I can properly make from the evidence is that the vessel was detained by stress of weather, without the fault of the captain.

The vessel was put in readiness for the winter as well as they were able. An account of the provisions on hand was taken, and the men were told that they could have a navy ration, or could have what the captain thought best, as they preferred. They decided to take what the captain thought best. The provisions grew scarce, for double the expected number were to be fed. On December 2d the captain sent a dog team, with natives, to the Simmons to obtain provisions. None were obtained. On June 28th meat was scarce, and after July 31st the rations were cut down one-half. There was no positive distress on account of lack of food.

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Bluebook (online)
27 F. 113, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burdett-v-williams-ctd-1886.