Finch v. Breiland

48 F.2d 366, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1683
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedDecember 13, 1930
DocketNo. 11084
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 F.2d 366 (Finch v. Breiland) 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
Finch v. Breiland, 48 F.2d 366, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1683 (E.D.N.Y. 1930).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

This suit is brought by a member of the crew of the steamship Tashmoo against her and her cargo for a salvage award.

I find the facts as follows:

At all the times hereinafter mentioned the steamship Tashmoo was a vessel of the United States, of approximately 324 feet long, 46 feet beam, and 25 feet in depth, built in the year Í919, and of the value of $65,000.

At all the times hereinafter mentioned the said vessel, including her deck cargo, was laden with approximately 1,000,000 feet of lumber, six hundred tons of copper or copper ore, oriental rugs, fruit, and other general cargo, the value of all of which was $459,-393.

On or about the 24th day of April, 1928, at San Francisco, Cal., the libelant joined the said steamship Tashmoo as an assistant steward, and signed shipping articles to serve thereon in such capacity at wages of 30 cents a month, until the said steamship .arrived at the city of New York, N. Y.

The said shipping articles contained, among others, the following provision: “And the said crew agree to conduct themselves in an orderly, faithful, honest, and sober manner, and to be at all times diligent in their respective duties, and to be obedient to the lawful commands of the said master, or of any person who shall lawfully succeed him, and of their superior officers, in everything relating to the vessel, and the stores and cargo thereof, whether on board, in boats, or on shore; and in consideration of such service to be duly performed the said master hereby agrees to pay to the said crew, as wages, the sums against their names respectively expressed, and to supply them with provisions according to the foregoing scale.”

After the steamship Tashmoo left San Francisco, Cal., en route for her voyage for the city of New York, N. Y., her engines became disabled, and the said vessel became subject to the effect of the wind and the tide and the elements, when approximately in the Gulf of Tehauntepee, off the West.Coast of Mexico. The weather was rough, and the said vessel was off her course and was being carried offshore and out of the normal passage of vessels, and was in great danger.

The Tashmoo carried only eleven passengers and, as the total number of persons on board was less than fifty, it is conceded that the vessel was not required by law to carry either a licensed wireless operator or wireless apparatus.

The said vessel did not have among the members of her crew a wireless or radio operator to send or receive messages, nor wa§ there any one on board of the said vessel, with the exception of the libelant, who was capable of so doing.

The said vessel was equipped with a radio apparatus which was not properly connected up, and which in its then condition could not be used for communication, or for the sending of distress signals.

In view of the condition and position of the vessel, it was necessary to send distress signals.

On a previous trip some one had tried to use the radio set, but they had set the equipment on fire and burned the radio shack.

One of the passengers, who had worked on the radio on the previous morning, stated to libelant that he had received quite a jolt.

At the direction of the master of the Tashmoo, the libelant left his duties as pantryman and set about connecting up the wireless apparatus.

No wiring diagram or blueprint of the radio set could be found on the vessel.

The libelant at some risk and danger to himself, and after working for two days and nights, except for a short period of time taken for sleep, connected up the radio on board the steamship Tashmoo, as a result of which, with slight help from a passenger named Shirley, sent the message whieh was received by the oil tanker Hadnot.

Had the message not been received by the Hadnot, she would not have sighted the Tashmoo, or in any event would not have seen her signals.

Some few minutes after receiving the signal the Hadnot sighted and took in tow the Tashmoo, and continued with her in tow until on or about May 10, 1928, when the Hadnot, with the Tashmoo in tow, arrived safely at Salina Cruz, in the province of Oax, republic of Mexico. *

The libelant did not continue on the voyage to New York, 'but at his request was granted a discharge by the commissioner at Balboa, and came to New York.

On the facts as found, the situation of the ship, cargo,- passengers, and crew was a most dangerous one, and the services rendered by the libélant were of value, and he incurred considerable personal risk in per[368]*368forming the same, hut the vessel was towed into port by the steamship Hadnot, and, if an award could be made to the libelant, it certainly would not be for any such sum as $15,000, the amount of the stipulation for value.

I do not minimize the value of the services rendered by the libelant, nor the risks he ran, hut this is not an appeal for a gratuity nor for generosity, but an attempt to obtain that which libelant claims under the law, and my determination of this issue must be based on the law.

The libelant signed shipping articles and was a seaman and member-of the crew of the steamship Tashmoo. regardless of the rating to which he was assigned. The Buena Ventura (D. C.) 243 F. 797, 799; The Georgiana (C. C. A.) 245 P. 321, 325.

Libelant was a workaway; that is, an extra man who was employed on the vessel as an accommodation to himself.

Libelant had tried to find a position on a vessel as he desired to reach New York, but no such position was available, and, in order to enable him to reach New York, he was shipped as a workaway, and assigned by the master to duty, as an assistant steward, and received in return for his services 30 cents a month, his subsistence, and his transportation to New York.

The advocates for libelant contend that, because of the small salary paid and the conditions of libelant’s employment, he may be considered for the purpose of a salvage award as a passenger, but such contention cannot be sustained; on the contrary he was a seaman, and libelant’s advocate, speaking of the libel-ant, on the trial of this suit said: “His status was fixed by the ship’s paper which is binding on everybody.”

The fact that libelant was assigned to duty as an assistant steward did not prevent the master from requiring obedience by the libelant to any lawful command.

The libelant was aboard the vessel, which he contends was in great danger as well as the li-sfes of those on board, and I agree that the situation was dangerous, and therefore whatever efforts were put forth by the libelant were for his own personal benefit and to relieve him from danger as well as to save the ship and cargo and the lives of others, and whatever services he did perform were not voluntary services, but services which he as a seaman was ordered to perform by the master of the vessel, in an emergency, when the performance of such services was of necessity required.

Furthermore, the .appliances used by libelant were all found aboard the Tashmoo, and her voyage was not ended by her being wrecked, nor was she abandoned, nor the duty of the libelant to the ship terminated before he performed the services for which he now claims a salvage award.

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Related

The Tashmoo
48 F.2d 366 (E.D. New York, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
48 F.2d 366, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finch-v-breiland-nyed-1930.