Caffray v. Kingsland

25 F. 856, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 165
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 10, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 25 F. 856 (Caffray v. Kingsland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caffray v. Kingsland, 25 F. 856, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 165 (S.D.N.Y. 1885).

Opinion

Brown, J.

By the agreed statement of facts, the libelant, about the fifteenth of November, 1884, shipped on the schooner Cornelia M. Kiugsland, for tho cod-fishery, upon an oral agreement to servo as fisherman, and to share equally with the master the proceeds of the sale of the fish, after deducting from such proceeds all the store bills and expenses of the vessel, and the wages of the rest of the crew that were on monthly wages, and 40 per cent, of the balance to be credited to the owners of the vessel. Under this oral agreement he served as fisherman on several voyages, qntil the twenty-sixth of November, 1885; but they all proved unsuccessful, and did not realize the expenses. During most of the period he performed the duties of a seaman and of first mate, as is customary for fishermen on shares to do. Nothing being due to the libelant under this oral agreement, this libel was filed under section 4523, Rev. St., to recover $40 per month, which, as it is stipulated, was the highest rate of wages at the port of New York, during the three months previous.

The suit has been brought to test the question whether section 4523 is applicable to fishermen who ship under an oral agreement for a “lay,” or shares in the catch. That section is as follows:

“All shipments of seamen made contrary to the provisions of any act of congress shall be void, and any seaman so shipped may leave the service at any time, and shall be entitled to recover the highest rate of wages of the port from which the seaman was shipped, or tho sum agreed to be given him at his shipment. ”

To bring the case within section 4523 it must appear—First, that the libelant was shipped as a seaman within the meaning of that section; and, second, that he was shipped contrary to law. I am not satisfied that either point is established.

1. I have great doubt whether section 4523 was intended to apply [858]*858to fishermen. Fishermen, in the Revised Statutes, and in all our legislation from the inception of the government downwards, have been treated distinctively under the name of “fishermen;” never under the name of “seamen.” Seamen in the “merchant service” have been the subject of numerous acts of congress; and fishermen and the fisheries the subjects of numerous other acts. They are always treated of under these distinctive designations. Sections 4392 and 4393 recognize the distinction in express terms. These two classes of mariners have never been confounded in legislation. In the Revised Statutes fishermen and the fisheries are treated of under title 51. Title 53 treats of “merchant seamen.” Section 4523 is found in the title relating to merchant seamen. Fishermen, although not necessarily seamen, are in practice usually seamen also; inasmuch as they usually perform seamen’s duties, so far as may be necessary, upon the particular voyage. But the object of the voyage is to catch a fare of fish. Their labors as seamen are incidental to this main purpose. Some of the fishermen may be employed to catch fish only; others to fish and to man the ship. The latter are seamen and more. As seamen, they are indeed entitled to the benefits of the marine law applicable to seamen; such as the right to be cured at the ship’s expense. Knight v. Parsons, 1 Spr. 279. But the question here is not as to the rights of fishermen as seamen under the marine law, but as to the intention of this particular section of the statute, which is found, not in the title relating to “fishermen,” but in the title relating to “merchant seamen.”

Section 4523 is taken from section 10 of the act of July 20, 1840, (5 St. at Large, p. 395,) and section 15 of the act of June 7, 1872, (17 St. at Large, p. 265.) The act of July 20, 1840, does not in its title express whether it is designed exclusively for seamen in the merchant service or not. Most, if not all, of the sections of that act show that it has reference to the merchant service; while section 15 of the act of. June 7, 1872, shows clearly by its context that it applies to merchant seamen, of whom that section' treats, and to merchant seamen only. The phrase “the highest rate of wages of the port from which the seaman shipped,” is the language of the act of 1872, not of the act of July 20,1840. These considerations, as it seems to me, point, strongly to the conclusion that section 4523 was designed for merchant seamen only, as its place in the Revised Statutes would naturally indicate. There are, indeed, a few sections in title 53 that are applicable to fishermen, because fishermen, in those sections, are expressly mentioned. See sections 4569, 4573, 4576. But the express mention of the fisheries in these sections would indicate, in connection with the caption of title 53, their intended exclusion from the other sections of that title, in which the fisheries are not named.

2. The language of section 4523 is not apt, and doe’s not seem intended, for a case like the present. It provides that the seaman shall be entitled “to recover the highest rate of wages of the port at which [859]*859he was shipped, or the sum agreed to he given him.” The latter alternative seems to indicate that the act has in view cases only in which the ordinary mode of shipping is on wages and at some definite sum of money; not cases in which the ordinary course of employment is not on wages strictly, but on a “lay.” Here there was no “sum agreed” on. An agreement for a “lay” is subject to a general average contribution, to which wages are not subject. Utpadel v. Fearse, 1 Spr. 559.

3. Again, there is a further difficulty in this case in holding that shipments of seamen not in writing are “contrary to the provisions of any act of congress,” within the moaning of section 4523. There is no act of congress prohibiting the employment of fishermen under an oral agreement; nor is there any act that requires agreements with fishermen to be in writing, other than section 4391. That section reads as follows :

“The master of any vessel •- * * to be employed in the cod or mackerel fishery at sea shall, before proceeding on such fishing voyage, make an agreement in writing with every fisherman who may be employed therein; * * * and, in addition to such terms of shipment as may be agreed on, shall, in such agreement, express whether the same is to continue for one voyage or for a fishing season, and shall also express that fcho fish, or proceeds of such fishing voyage or voyages, winch may appertain to the fishermen, shall be divided among them in proportion to the quantities or number of such fish which they may respectively have caught.”

The language of the act of 1813 is the same. This act does in terms require the agreement with fishermen to be in writing; but it also requires much more, viz.: that “such agreement shall express that the fish, or the proceeds of the voyage, that may appertain to the fishermen, shall be divided among them in proportion to the quantities or number which the fishermen may respectively have caught.”

The statute, clearly, cannot be divided up into parts, and the different clauses enforced separately and independently of each other.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 F. 856, 1885 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caffray-v-kingsland-nysd-1885.