Feol v. The Salomoni

29 F. 534, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 213
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Georgia
DecidedDecember 7, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 29 F. 534 (Feol v. The Salomoni) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feol v. The Salomoni, 29 F. 534, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 213 (S.D. Ga. 1886).

Opinion

Speer, J.

This is a rule sought against the clerk of. this court by Henry McAlpin, as proctor for Frank Feol. It appears, from the petition filed, and the answer of the clerk thereto, that Feol was a seaman on the Italian bark Salomoni. On the fifteenth day of September last he made an affidavit before McNaughton, a justice of the peace, alleging an assault upon him, made by Francisco Grasso, the master of the bark, while she was lying at the wharf in the harbor of Savannah. The affidavit was intended to be in accordance with sections 4546 and 4547 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, to compel the payment of the ivages due affiant, and to obtain his discharge. It does not appear, from these sections, that they embraced the subject of the discharge of the seaman, but they relate simply to his claim for wages. A summons was issued by the justice, directed to the master and owner of the vessel, commanding them to appear before him to show cause why process of attachment should not issue. A copy of the summons was served personally on the master of the bark by tíre constable of Justice McNaugi-iton’s court, but the master treated the summons and the justice’s court [535]*535with groat indifference, and, indeed, refused altogether to appear. Whereupon the justice issued his certificate to the clerk of the district court, in accordance with section 4547, Rev. St.

THE CERTIFICATE.
" Savannah, Chatham, Co., Georgia.
“Office of MoíTatjghton, Justice of the Peace,
“September 17, 1886.
“The master against whom the within summons issued neglects to appear, and I certify to the clerk of the district court of the United States for the Eastern division of the Southern district of Georgia that there is sufficient cause of complaint whereon to found admiralty process against said vessel.
“In witness whereof I have hereunto sot my official signature and seal of office this seventeenth day of September, A. D. 1886.
[Seal.] “McNaughton, N. P. & Ex. O. J. P., C. Co., Ga.”

On the eighteenth day of September, the seaman also filed his libel in tills court, and prayed process for the recovery of his wages. He made no claim lor compensation for the assault, nor did he ask to be discharged. The clerk declined to issue process, either on the certificate of the magistrate or upon the libel. The reason bo assigns for this refusal was his knowledge of the want of jurisdiction by this court of a difference of this character, between the master and seaman of an. Italian vessel, both Italian subjects. Ho answers that ho was aware that, under the treaty between the United States and Italy, this jurisdiction had been surrendered by the government of this country.

The art icio of the consular compact ratified between the United States and Italy oil the eighteenth of September, 1878, is as follows:

“Art. 11. Gonsuls general, consuls, vice-consuls, and consular agents shall have exclusive charge of the internal order on board of the merchant vessels of their nation, and shall alone take cognizance of questions, of whatever kind, that may arise, both at sea and in port, between the captain, officers, and seamen, without exception, and especially of those relating towages, and the fulfillment of agreements reciprocally made. The courts, or federal, state, or municipal authorities in the United States, and the tribunals or authorities in Italy, shall not, under any pretext, interfere in such questions; but they shall lend aid to consular officers, when the latter shall request it, in order to find out, arrest, and imprison any person belonging to the crew, whom they may think proper to place in custody. These persons shall bo arrested at the sole demand of tlio consular officers, made in writing to the courts, or federal, state, or municipal authorities in the United Slates, or to the, competent court or authority in Italy,—such demands being supported by an official extract from the register of the vessel, and from the crew-list; and they shall be detained during the stay of the vessel in port, at the disposal of the'consular officers. They shall bo released at the written request of the said officer, and the expenses of the arrest and detention shall be paid by the consular officer.”

A protest, signed by the master and the Italian consul at the port of Savannah, was tendered to the clerk, and his attention was therein called to the provisions of the consular compact, and it was therein insisted that he should issue no process in the premises. The master also staled that he appeared before Justice McNauguton, and called bis attention to [536]*536the consular compact between the government of the United States and the kingdom of Italy. The great names appended thereto, viz., Baron Alberto Blanc and William Maxwell Evarts, had no terrors for his honor Justice McNatjghton. He discredited the treaty, and refused to attach any importance to it. But the clerk, regarded it as controlling him iri his action, and declined to issue the admiralty process of the court. For this refusal it was sought to make him liable.

If the clerk had issued the process sought by the seaman upon the libel filed in this court, he could not, in the opinion of the court, have been regarded as a trespasser. It is true that he is merely a ministerial officer, but there is a standing admiralty rule of this court, having the effect of an order of direction to the clerk, to-wit:

“Admiralty rule No. 1. * * * In all suits in rem or in personam, attachment or warrant of arrest and monition may issue, without a judge’s order, immediately upon the filing of the libel, and the usual stipulation for costs in the clerk’s office, except in suits in personam requiring bail, where the claim of the libelant amounts to more than five hundred dollars, upon an ascertained demand appearing upon the face of the libel, or is for uncertain or unliquidated damages. In such excepted cases, a judge’s order authorizing bail process, and fixing the amount of bail, will be required.”

So far as the proceeding under the libel is concerned, the clerk would have been protected by this rule had he issued process. So far as the certificate of the justice of the peace is concerned, the action of the clerk was entirely justifiable. The order directed to an officer of this court from an inferior j udicature must depend for its validity, upon the power of the court issuing it. The justice of the peace, in the presence of the treaty stipulations, had no power to interfere in this difference between the Italian master and seaman of an Italian vessel. • The treaty was paramount law, and should have been respected by him. His sole power, under the statute, related to the wages of the seaman, and that, by the treaty, is clearly remitted to the Italian consul. It was to avoid interference of precisely this character, with the navigators of both nations, that the compact between the kingdom of Italy and the United States was made.

The court has no disposition to lessen the importance of the functions attaching to the office of justice of the peace. They are stated with some elaboration of detail in the case of Bendheim v. Baldwin, 73 Ga. 594, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F. 534, 1886 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feol-v-the-salomoni-gasd-1886.