Harden v. Gordon

11 F. Cas. 480, 2 Mason C.C. 541
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine
DecidedOctober 15, 1823
StatusPublished
Cited by176 cases

This text of 11 F. Cas. 480 (Harden v. Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harden v. Gordon, 11 F. Cas. 480, 2 Mason C.C. 541 (circtdme 1823).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

Several questions have been presented at the argument for the deliberation of the court. In the first place, whether the claim be within the cognizance-of a court of admiralty; so that, if it be well founded in fact, this court, sitting in admiralty, is rightfully entitled to enforce it. In the next place, supposing the court to pos[481]*481sess jurisdiction, whether by the general principles of maritime law, such a claim constitutes a rightful charge upon the ship, which the master and owner are compellable to defray. And lastly, if the maritime law creates such a charge, whether it has not been abolished by our own navigation laws, or in the present case displaced by the express stipulations and acts of the parties. ' I need scarcely say, that the masterly discussion at the bar has brought before the court all the principles and authorities, foreign as well as domestic, which bear on these interesting topics; and if the labour of arriving at a satisfactory result has not been materially diminished, it has been aided by whatever could adorn, or illustrate the matters in controversy.

Upon the first point, I do not profess to feel any real doubt. Supposing, that by the principles of law the seamen are entitled, in case of sickness, to be healed at the expense of the ship, I am of opinion, that the claim ■ for such expense may be enforced in the court of admiralty. It constitutes, in contemplation of law, a part of the contract for wages, and is a material ingredient in the compensation for the labour and services of the seamen. The admiralty has a rightful jurisdiction over the subject of compensation of seamen for maritime services, in whatever manner or form that compensation is to be paid, if it can be reduced to money. This jurisdiction does not arise from the mere toleration or connivance of the courts of common law, as is sometimes represented; and, if true, would be a stain and disgrace to these courts, as well as to the admiralty; but it is founded in its ancient and well established jurisprudence. There never was a pe riod, when it was not an essential attribute claimed and exercised by that venerable tribunal; and instead of troubling ourselves to find out the origin of this jurisdiction, it would be more useful to inquire, how, except by subtleties and fictions, the courts of common law became possessed of that ample jurisdiction, which they now exercise over maritime contracts, with so much honour to themselves, and with such solid advantages to the country. It is not, because the compensation is called wages in the shipping articles, that the admiralty enforces the obligation of payment. 11 is because the services are maritime; and whatever constitutes the compensation and is reducible to money, or admits of equitable adjustment in pecunia numerata is decreed ex aequo et bono, as the just remuneration of those services. It is upon this ground, that the compensation of fishermen comes within the reach of the admiralty jurisdiction, although they claim specific shares in the cargo; for their share of the proceeds of the voyage are considered as in the nature of wages. See The Frederick, 5 C. Rob! Adm. S. And congress, acting upon this just view of the subject, have accordingly given to this class of mariners the full benefit of the summary process of the admiralty. Act Cong. Feb. 10, 1792, c. 6, §§ 4, 5, LI Stat. 231]; Act June 19, 1813, c. 2, §§ 1, 2, [3 Stat. 2]. I am aware, that Lord Stowell has declined to take cognizance of suits for shares in whaling voyages (The Sydney Cove, 2 Dods. 11); but there is not the slightest reason to suppose, that that learned judge has so acted, except in deference to the imposing force of the prohibitions of the courts of common law. What those prohibitions are, we have all learned from .the reports; and one can scarcely read the case of Howe v. Nappier (4 Burrows, 1944; and see, also, Buggin v. Bennett, Id. 2035), where the doctrine was very ably discussed at the bar, without feeling a secret persuasion, that Lord Mansfield followed the current of prior authority, rather than the dictates of his own superior judgment. Unless my previous impressions mislead me, a lurking doubt pervades the whole structure of his opinion. The distinction between a special agreement and the ordinary agreement, as a foundation for jurisdiction in cases of seamen's wages, has always appeared to me (I hope it may be spoken without irreverence) to be little more than solemn trifling and evasion. After the most thorough examination of all the common law authorities on the subject o‘f admiralty jurisdiction, I feel myself constrained to say, that they stand upon no consistent or rational principle; and that jealousy, more than solid knowledge, seems to have urged to a disregard of the very learned and satisfactory expositions of the civilians. But this is not the place for a full discussion of this subject. It is sufficient to guard against the inference, that Lord Stowell has shown any approbation of the common law doctrines on this subject. His own decisions in other cases demonstrate, that he has never supposed the admiralty jurisdiction over mariners’ contracts to be confined to the entertainment of suits, in which the claim is for mere wages, earned as such upon the ordinary terms of hire under the customary shipping articles. He may, for. aught I know, feel his judicial conscience bound up by the controlling mandates of the superior courts of law. so as to exercise the admiralty jurisdiction only in vinculis; but I cannot persuade myself, that a mind so thoroughly imbued with the true spirit of maritime jurisprudence would, in the exercise of its own judgment, hesitate to support the consistent doctrines of his enlightened predecessors. Indeed in the very case of The Sydney Cove. 2 Dods. 11, he decreed wages for the outward voyage, although the wages accrued under a very special agreement, and the subsequent whaling voyage was incorporated into its terms, and was originally in the contemplation of the parties as a contingent enterprise. But whatever may be his opinion, until I am better informed by the highest tribunal, which I am bound to obey. I shall continue to seek for the true exposition of admiralty jurisdic[482]*482tion in the instructive labours of admiralty judges.

in the case of The Isabella, 2 C. Rob. Adm. 241, there was a claim by the chief mate for the value of the privilege of a slave, as well as for wages, on an African voyage. It was rejected, not, because it was not within the jurisdiction of the court, but because it was not proved to bo a part of the shipping articles, and rested in parol, and was thought to be inconsistent with the statutable regulations of this trade, which required the whole agreement to be in writing. This carries a pretty strong implication, that the court felt no difficulty in reaching the claim, if it had stood in the text of the contract. In The Madonna D’ldra, 1 Dods. 37, where a claim was made on behalf of Greek sailors for subsistence after their discharge from the ship, as well as for antecedent wages, the court did not hesitate to decree it. "It is," said the learned judge on that occasion, “wages paid in another form, it is part of the compensation for their labour; and according to the law of the country, to which these men belong, subsistence in the intermediate time must be presumed to form part of the contract for the payment of wages.” In what respect does subsistence in case of a discharge differ from additional subsistence in case of sickness'! To use the language of the court, it is but “wages in another form,” additional wages to meet additional expenses, and constituting, if tlie maritime law and usage uphold the claim, a part of the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. Cas. 480, 2 Mason C.C. 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harden-v-gordon-circtdme-1823.