Hutson v. Jordan

12 F. Cas. 1089
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJune 15, 1837
StatusPublished

This text of 12 F. Cas. 1089 (Hutson v. Jordan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutson v. Jordan, 12 F. Cas. 1089 (D. Me. 1837).

Opinion

WARE, District Judge.

This is a libel for a marine trespass. The libel alleges a joint assault by the master and the mate. The assault is admitted by the mate in his answer, and is fully proved by the witnesses, though not with all the aggravating circumstances stated in the libel. It was not only severe, but at the particular time when it took place, it was without provocation, and is clearly a case for damages.

The case of the master requires more consideration. Hutson, in his libel, states that while the mate was pursuing him on the deck, and flogging him with a cow-skin, he fled to the companion-way and called on the master, who was in the cabin, to protect him; that the master, instead of interposing for his protection, ordered the mate to take him forward and flog him. If the facts were proved as alleged, I should feel no difficulty, on the supposition that there was no justifiable cause for punishment, in holding the master jointly responsible for the assault. The law vests in the master the whole authority for the government of the crew, and for the maintenance of discipline on board the vessel. • The inferior officers are subject to his control, and bound as well as the men to execute his orders, and if any inflict punishment by his command, the act is considered as his. But the master is bound also to protect his men against, the oppression and cruelty of his subordinate officers, and if he permits them to be abused, without interposing for their protection, the just inference is, that he authorizes the act of his subordinates, and he becomes legally a party to it. But the allegation, in the material part of it, is directly contradicted by the master in his answer. He denies that' he had any knowledge of the assault of the mate, until it was ended. He says, that “hearing a sudden noise on deck, he went to the companion-way, where he saw Hutson with the mate having hold of him. He asked what was the matter, and the mate replied, that Hutson had been striking the second mate, and that he had been taking him to do for it; that he then told Osgood (the mate) to take the man forward and set him at work, and that if he ever lifted his hand against an officer again, to let him know it, and he would correct him.” The cook, who was the only witness to this part of the affair, gives a different account from that of either the libellant or the master. He says, that when Hutson called on the master, though he called with a very loud voice, he gave no answer and took no notice of it, and that the assault was still continued by the mate. If the witness is to be credited, even without referring to the master’s answer, it can hardly be doubted, but that he must have heard repeated and loud calls upon him, and there can be as little [1090]*1090doubt, but that it was his duty to interpose and arrest the violence of the mate. But the statement of the witness, and that of the master, as to the material point, are in direct contradiction. Which is to be believed?

This presents a question of great importance in practice, namely, how far the answer is evidence. The libel is sworn to, and it calls for the answer of the respondent on oath. It is stated in a recent and valuable work on the' practice of the admiralty, that when the libellant calls for' the answer of the respondent on oath, the answer has the same effect as evidence, with an answer in chancery; and is to be received as true, so far as it is responsive to the bill, unless contradicted by two witnesses,' or • one witness with strong corroborating circumstances. Dunl. Adm. Prac. p. 122. It is admitted, that the rule in chancery is as it is stated. It is there understood to be a positive rule binding on the court. A decree cannot be made against the positive denial in the answer of any matter charged in the bill, unless it is overborne by two witnesses, or one witness whose testimony is corroborated by circumstances proved by other evidence. Hughes v. Blake, 6 Wheat. [19 U. S.) 453; Mortimer v. Orchard, 2 Ves. Jr. 243; Biddulph v. St. John, 2 Schoales & L. 532.

But has this principle been adopted, as a rule of jurisprudence, by courts of admiralty? Two eases only are referred to in support of it, that of Teasdale v. The Rambler [Case No. 13,815], and U. S. v. The Matilda [Id. 15,741]. The latter case was before Chief Justice Marshall, in the circuit court, and it is to be remembered was not on the instance side of the court, but was a case of prize. The practice of the prize court is-different from that of the admiralty, acting as an instance court, in the exercise of its ordinary jurisdiction. And again, the doctrine is not stated directly by the chief justice, but is merely an inference from what he does say. It was argued by counsel, that the answer in that case should be received as evidence, like an answer in chancery. The report, which is very brief, then goes on to say, that the “chief justice admitted the rule in chancery, as to the negative matter in the answer, but not in a case where it asserts a right af-lirmatively, in opposition to the complainant’s demand; but he took this distinction between the case in chancery and in admiralty; in the former, the complainant calls upon the defendant to purge his conscience and disclose facts; by this appeal to his conscience, the complainant makes the answer evidence; in the latter no such demand or appeal is made.” U. S. v. The Matilda [supra]. It is a matter of inference only from this case, if the answer is- called for on oath, that it is evidence to the same extent as an answer in chancery. Judge Bee does, indeed, state the principle more explicitly. He says, that “the actor in civil law courts, and the complainant in chancery, is entitled to call for the oath of • the defendant, because it is otherwise difficult to get at the knowledge of the facts. To counteract this oath there must be two witnesses.” If it is intended to be said, that the Roman law gives this effect to the answer of the party, it- is a mistake into which the learned judge was led for the moment, probably, by confounding the decisory oath with an answer to interrogatories; for it is certain that the Roman law does not give this effect to such answers.

Now, if there was any such established rule of jurisprudence in the admiralty, it is to say the least, surprising, that it should be nowhere met with, or explicitly declared, and laid down, as a known rule of decision, as it is found in almost every volume of equity reports; that no instance in point should have occurred in all our admiralty courts, where it was the very turning point of the cause, as it frequently is in equity; that the only evidence, that can be found existing of so important a rule of jurisprudence, and one .of which the application must be of such frequent occurrence, is two obiter dicta, where it is just mentioned, and that in connection with the familiar and well-known rule in chancery. Nor is it a legitimate inference, that, because a certain effect is given to an answer in chancery, the same must be allowed to an answer in admiralty. Not to insist on the fact, that the course of proceeding in the two courts is different in many respects, it is more material to be remarked, that their rules and principles of- practice are derived from different sources; those in equity being derived from the canon law, through the English ecclesiastical courts, modified, it is true, from time to time, by the court itself, while the general rules of practice in admiralty come to us directly from the Roman law’. 4 Bl. Comm. 446; 2 Browne. Civ. Law, p. 348.

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12 F. Cas. 1089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutson-v-jordan-med-1837.