Dustin v. Murray

8 F. Cas. 144, 5 Ben. 10
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1871
DocketCase No. 4,201
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 F. Cas. 144 (Dustin v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dustin v. Murray, 8 F. Cas. 144, 5 Ben. 10 (E.D.N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

BENEDICT, District Judge.

This action is brought by a large number of persons, mostly colored seamen, who formed part off the ship’s company of the steamer Algonquin, to recover of the defendant, as the owner of that vessel, three months’ extra wages, under the provisions of the act of congress, passed February 2S, 1S03. The Algonquin was a vessel of war, fitted out in this port by the defendant, who had an agreement with the Haytian government for her purchase of him, and her delivery by [145]*145him in Port au Prince. On the 13th day of October, 1S70, a large crew was shipped for her, in New York, by the defendant; and, having been cleared from New York as a merchant vessel, the steamer proceeded to Port au Prince. Upon her arrival there, eight days afterwards, she was transferred, to the Haytian government, and entered the naval service of that government as a vessel of war. The libellants continued' on board of her as mariners, firemen, cooks, &e., and served in the Haytian navy for different periods of from two to three months, and were finally dismissed from that service in Port au Prince. They now bring this action to recover the three months’ extra wages, which they insist the act of 1S03 entitles them to recover of the defendant.

That seamen have the right to maintain an ! action against the shipowner, to recover as wáges their portion of the three months’ wages, required, by the act of 1803 to be paid by the master'on a discharge in a foreign port, is not, and cannot now be questioned in this court. Wells v. Meldrun [Case No. 17,402]; Emerson v. Howland [Id. 4,441]; Orne v. Townsend [Id. 10,583]. “Everything due from a ship to a sailor, as incident to his services, may be recovered in a court of admiralty, under the name of wages.” Woodworth v. Fennel [Id. 18,015], j The question here is, whether the case is j brought by the proofs within the scope of I the statute relied on.

At the outset, a controversy has arisen as to what was the voyage for which the seamen were shipped. The libel avers that' ! the voyage was from New York to Port au ¡ Prince, thence to such ports or places in the ¡ island of San Domingo as the master might j direct, and back to a port of discharge in j New7 York. The answer denies that such i was the voyage, but avers that the seamen I were hired by the respondent to serve on j board said vessel from the port of New ■ York to the port of Port au Prince, and to ¡ no other port or place.

In support of- the answer, the ship’s articles, deposited with the collector of the port of New7 York, at the time of the departure i of the steamer, as required by law7, are pro- j duced, and the voyage therein contained ! corresponds with the voyage set forth in the answer. But the evidence makes it entirely clear, that no such ship’s articles were ever signed by the crew, and that the articles deposited wdtli the collector w7ere simply fabricated, for the purpose of a formal compliance with the statute.

The crew7 signed some document, but it is not produced. It is hardly possible that the agreement with the men could have been for a definite voyage from New York to Port au Prince, there to end, in all contingencies, as claimed in the answer. The expectation was, that the vessel would, upon her arrival, be transferred to the Haytian government, but it was not certainly known that she would be accepted, and if not accepted, the service of the crew would be of absolute necessity to the defendant to bring her home, or navigate her to some other market. For that reason, an agreement with the crew, which -would deprive him of the right to their further service, in case the vessel was not sold, would not have been safe, and it would require strong proof to convince me that it was made.

Neither am I satisfied, that the agreement set forth in the libel is correct. But I take no time to determine what was the actual contract made with the men, not deeming that material to the disposition of this case; for I am of the opinion that the act of 1803, is applicable in a proper case, whatever may have been the agreement with the men at the time of their shipment. I am not aware of any express decision, that the act of 1803, is applicable to a case where the discharge of the seamen takes place at the termination of the voyage agreed on. See, however, Wells v. Meldrun [supra]; The Dawn [Case No. 3,665]. But I do not doubt that the act may properly be held applicable in such a case. No reason suggests itself for exempting such a case from the effects of the statute. The terms of the act are general and applicable to all discharges of American seamen in a foreign port It is expressly applicable to a discharge by consent and nowhere requires that such consent should be first given at the foreign port. A discharge according to the agreement in the articles is as much a discharge by consent as any discharge can be. The object of the act is to compel provision for the return to their homes of American seamen left in foreign ports. The same necessity exists for its application, when the voyage agreed on ends, by its terms, in the foreign port, as when the voyage is there ended by consent, there given.

The subsequent modification of some features of the act also indicates an intention, that the statute should be applicable in such a case. Thus, the 9th section of the act of July 20, 1840 [5 Stat. 395], expressly provides for exacting the three months’ pay, where the contract is fulfilled; while the 15th section of the act of March 1, 1855 [10 Stat. 624], when creating exceptions, omits to except the case of a voyage, terminated by the terms of the articles; and, although it permits the consul to forbear to require payment of the three months’ extra wages, when the master and seamen jointly apply for a discharge without such payment, still it forbids such action, unless under circumstances which will secure the United States from all liability to expense on account of the mariner. If it should be said, that this construction of the act would make it exceedingly onerous in all cases of short voyages, terminating in foreign ports, the answer appears to be that the act is intended to be onerous, and to exclude [146]*146tlie possibility of an American seaman being left without money in a foreign port, liable to be a charge upon the United States, except in cases where the consul shall be sat-islied that no injustice will be done, and no expense entailed upon the United States. Furthermore, the 1st section of the act of 1803, requires of the master of any vessel, bound on a foreign voyage, before he can obtain a clearance, a bond, conditioned that ho shall return to the United States all the seamen upon his articles, except such as shall have died, or absconded, or been discharged in a foreign port with the consent of the consul signified in writing — and such a bond given for the return of these libellants is in evidence here. For these reasons my opinion is, that neither the agreement set up in the libel, nor that in the answer contain any features which prevent the libellants from recovering the extra wages, if the other facts of the case are sufficient to bring it within the purview of the act.

The statute compels the payment of three months’ wages, in two contingencies — when the ship shall be sold in a foreign country, and her* company discharged; or, when a seaman shall, with his own consent, be discharged in a foreign country. Subsequent statutes modify these contingencies in the event of certain action by the consul, but such modifications do not affect the present case, inasmuch as it is conceded, that the consul took no action in regard to the these men.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 144, 5 Ben. 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dustin-v-murray-nyed-1871.