McCarty v. Steam-Propeller City of New Bedford

4 F. 818, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 219
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 30, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 4 F. 818 (McCarty v. Steam-Propeller City of New Bedford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCarty v. Steam-Propeller City of New Bedford, 4 F. 818, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 219 (S.D.N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Benedict, D. J.

This is a proceeding in rem, instituted by Daniel McCarty and Owen Hare, to enforce against the steam-propeller City of New Bedford a lien for their wages, earned in the navigation of that vessel in the coastwise trade of the United States, to-wit, in coastwise trade between the city of Fall Biver, in the state of Massachusetts, and the city of New York, by way of Narraganset bay, the Atlantic ocean, Long Island sound, the East river, and the waters of New York harbor.

The libel was filed in the southern district of New York on the twentieth day of February, 1880. The Old Colony Steamboat Company intervened as claimants of the vessel, asserting that at the time of the filing of the libel the vessel was owned by them; and on March the 17th filed an answer to the libel, setting up in bar of the action that, on the twenty-fourth day of January, 1880, and the seventh day of February, 1880, the moneys in their hands then due the libellant Hare, and which had been earned by him in the navigation of the said steam-propeller, were in the city of Fall River attached by a constable of said city, by virtue of a writ issued out of the second [819]*819district court of the county of Bristol and state of Massachusetts, in an action commenced in said court, and then pond-ing between George S. Eddy, as plaintiff, and said Hare as defendant.

In regard to the demand of the libellant McCarty similar matter is plead in bar, save only that in the suit against McCarty the attachment was served on the twenty-seventh day of February, and subsequent to the commencement of this proceeding.

Thereafter, and on the eighteenth day of May, the claimants filed a supplemental answer, wherein it was further averred that, upon the return of the said writ of attachment in the suit of Eddy against Hare, the plaintiff filed his declaration that the defendant owed him $50; that the Old Colony Steam-boat Company appeared in said suit as garnishee, and on the sixteenth day of February, 1880, filed their answer, claiming, as matter of law, that the wages of said Hare in their hands were exempt from attachment, and subsequently their additional answer, alleging the commencement of this proceeding by the libellant; that said Hare did not appear in said suit, and on the twelfth day of May it was adjudged by the said second district court that the said Eddy recover against the said Hare the sum of $50, and the Old Colony Steam-boat Company were charged on their answer with the payment to said Eddy of the amount earned by him from the company; that the said judgment still remains in full force and effect, and the said company has been and is thereby directed to pay to said Eddy, on account of the amount found due to him from said Hare, the entire amount of the wages which are claimed by him in this suit.

To this answer the libellants have excepted, upon the ground that the matters above stated are no bar to the present proceeding.

In regard to the wages of the libellant McCarty, the exception has been submitted to, the attachment having been served subsequent to the filing of the libel. In regard to the wages of the libellant Hare, the answer is insisted upon, and the court is now called on to determine its sufficiency.

[820]*820The principal question thus j>resented is whether the wages earned by a seaman in the coastwise trade of the United States are subject to garnishment at the instance of a creditor of the seaman in an action at law brought in a state court. This question appears to have received little or no attention in the courts of this country, but is one deserving a careful examination. In most maritime countries such a question could not be deemed an open one. As early as the Consolato it was declared that against the wages of the seaman no creditor of the ship, nor any other person, can say anything or do anything; for the seamen must have their wages at the place where the master has promised to pay them. Consolato del Mare, c. 95; 2 Pard. Lois Maritime, 131. It was not to be expected that, in a compilation of such antiquity as the Consolato, the modern proceeding by garnishment would be mentioned in terms. But the language employed is broad enough to cover such a proceeding, and the principle declared is plainly inconsistent with the right of a creditor to divert the seaman’s wages into his own pocket by means of the process of garnishment.

The principle declared in the Consolato, and thus made part of the law of the maritime world as then understood, appears to have taken the form of an authoritative order in France in the year 1748, (Caumont, Diet. Droit Mar. title “G-ens de Mer, ” § 8, No. 19,) from which time to the present, as it is believed, the law of that great commercial nation has declared seaman’s wages to be exempt from attachment at the suit of his creditor, except for debts of a certain character, and then only by virtue of express permission granted by official authority. The importance attached to this exemption in France is seen by its careful preservation during more than 100 years. In that country it is not even permitted to attach the wages of a seaman when deposited by him in a savings bank.

To the same effect has been the law of England, at least from the year 1728 up to the present time. The act of George II. c. 36, declares that the “payment of wages shall be good, valid in law, notwithstanding any action, bill of sale, attachment, or encumbrance whatsoever.” While the act 17-18 [821]*821Yiotoria, c. 104, § 238, provides that “no wages due or accruing to any seaman or apprentice shall be subject-to attachment or arrestment from any court, and every payment of wages to a seaman or apprentice shall be valid in law, notwithstanding any previous sale or assignment of such wages, or any attachment, encumbrance, or arrestment thereon.” I have not been able to find, either in the reports or the debates in parliament, any occasion calculated to give rise to this provision of the act of George II. at the time of its enactment. There seems to have been no present necessity for such a provision; and this circumstance, coupled with the provision quoted from the Consolato, leads me to believe that the provision in the statute of George II. was simply declarative of the then existing law of England. I am confirmed in this belief by my inability to find any reported case where the courts of England have been called on to construe or give effect to the provision referred to. It seems highly probable that the courts would have been resorted to for the purpose of ascertaining the scope and effect of these provisions if they had been new.

It is doubtless, therefore, correct to say that, by the law of England, as well before as since the statute of George II., seamen’s wages are exempt from attachment. If the ans wer in this case is good, therefore, the law of the United States upon this subject must he at variance with the law of England, France, and probably of most other maritime nations. I have been unable to discover any good ground' for supposing that any such variance exists. Indeed, the statute of the United States, passed June 7,1872, renders it impossible to contend for any such variance, unless it'be in regard to a part of the coastwise trade. The provision of the act of June 7,1872, (now section 4536,Rev.St.,) is as follows: “No wages due or accruing to any seamanor apprentice shall be subject to attachment or arrest from any court.” This provision, of course, ends all controversy if it is applicable to the present case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 F. 818, 1880 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarty-v-steam-propeller-city-of-new-bedford-nysd-1880.