Neapolidis v. Theofana Maritime Co.

63 S.E.2d 795, 192 Va. 90, 1951 Va. LEXIS 158
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 12, 1951
DocketRecord 3755
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 63 S.E.2d 795 (Neapolidis v. Theofana Maritime Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neapolidis v. Theofana Maritime Co., 63 S.E.2d 795, 192 Va. 90, 1951 Va. LEXIS 158 (Va. 1951).

Opinion

Eggleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

*94 Emmanouil Neapolidis, Alexandros Alexandris, Ioannis Liadis and Ioannis Yartholomeos, citizens of Greece, and serving as seamen on board the Greek Steamship MEANDROS, hereinafter referred to as the petitioners, filed their joint petition for attachment in the court below against The Theofana Maritime Company, Limited, and others, as owners and operators of the vessel, and against M. Houmis, its master, sometimes hereinafter referred to as the respondents, asserting a number of separate causes of action. Those with which we are concerned on this writ of error may be grouped thus:

Each of the petitioners claimed a balance due for earned wages, with liquidated damages for failure to pay promptly. Each sought damages for his alleged wrongful discharge.

Three of the petitioners, Alexandris, Liadis and Yartholomeos, sought damages for the alleged delay of the master in returning their seamen’s books to them, respectively, and for failing to note therein their discharge.

Two of the petitioners, Liadis and Neapolidis, sought damages because of the alleged failure and refusal of the master to furnish each prompt and adequate medical care for illness incurred while in the service of the vessel.

One of the petitioners, Yartholomeos, sought damages for alleged false imprisonment.

The owners and master of the vessel appeared generally and filed answers denying liability for each of the asserted claims. They also filed answers to certain interrogatories propounded by petitioners.

The testimony of the several petitioners was taken by deposition. Houmis, the master, and Alexandris on rebuttal, testified in open court before the trial judge. A jury was waived and all matters of law and fact, by consent, were submitted to the trial court which entered separate judgments in favor of each of the petitioners for these amounts with interest: Neapolidis, $200.60; Alexandris, $200.60; Liadis, $424.35; Yartholomeos, $184.

Asserting that the respective awards are inadequate and contrary to the law and the evidence, the several petitioners have sought and obtained a writ of error to the judgments below.

Since no point has been made, either in the court below or before us, as to the obvious misjoinder of the parties plaintiff and the causes of fiction, we shall treat the separate causes as having been properly consolidated and deal with them on the merits.

*95 The incidents with which we are concerned occurred during three voyages of the vessel.

In October, 1947, the vessel, under Captain Houmis, left Marseille on what is referred to in the record as “Voyage No. 1”, for a trip to Casablanca and thence to Mobile, where it arrived in November. At Mobile the members of the crew, including petitioners, were paid their earned wages from October 13 to November 12, less certain deductions to be dealt with later.

From Mobile the vessel sailed on “Voyage No. 2” to Belgium and thence to Baltimore. At the latter port the members of the crew were again paid their wages earned from the date of the last payment to December 27,1947, less certain deductions.

From Baltimore the vessel sailed on “Voyage No. 3” to Bahia Blanca, Argentina, thence to Genoa, and thence to Newport News, where it arrived on May 12, 1948. Here against the members of the crew were paid their earned wages to May 12, less certain deductions. Neapolidis was paid off and discharged on that day and sent to the United States Marine Hospital at Norfolk for treatment for a venereal disease.

Upon arrival of the ship at Newport News the United States immigration authorities boarded the vessel and interviewed the members of the crew. Not being satisfied that Vartholomeos was entitled to apply for temporary admission to this country as a bona fide alien seaman, these authorities, pursuant to the statute and regulations, gave the master and agents of the vessel a written order directing them to detain this seaman on board.

Despite this detention order, when the ship sailed on the night of May 20 Vartholomeos was not aboard, the vessel departed without him, and he was signed off as a member of the crew. The amount of his earned wages for the period from May 13 to 20th was left with the immigration authorities and was subsequently received by him.

Alexandris and Liadis likewise failed to join the vessel before it sailed and consequently they were signed off as members of the crew. Money to pay the earned wages of these two seamen for the period from May 13 to 20, was left with the ship’s agents at Newport News and was subsequently received by them. Shortly thereafter Liadis was sent to the United States Marine Hospital at Norfolk for an operation for hernia at the shipowners’ expense.

On May 20 the present action was instituted and the vessel *96 was permitted to sail apon the agreement of its local agents to post a bond in the sam of $4,000 to secare the payment of petitioners ’ claims.

Before the trial of the case below each of the petitioners had received the fall amoant of his earned wages. Bat each claimed that in addition thereto, parsaant to the terms of the “Collective Agreement” entered into between the representatives of the owners of the vessel and the Greek maritime anions, he was entitled to a “service bonas” ap to the time he left the vessel.

The master testified that he paid each of these men the bonas to December 1, 1947, after which, he said, the owners had advised him that the provision of the “Collective Agreement” for the payment of this item had been terminated.

While this contention of the master is sastained by the opinion of Jadge Bryan in Capt. K. Papazoglou (D. C., E. D. Va.), 1948 A. M. C. 1676, 1678, 1679 (affirmed on this point swb nomine, Korthinos v. Niarchos, C. C. A. 4, 175 F. (2d) 730), 1 in the case before as the lower coart held that each of the petitioners was entitled to receive this bonas. It is conceded in the briefs on both sides that the jadgments here ander review inclade the correct amoants dae the respective petitioners therefor.

Since the respondents have filed no cross-assignment of error to the finding of the lower coart with respect to the allowance of the service bonas item, the correctness of that holding is not before as.

The petitioners, however, assign error to the action of the lower coart in not allowing them liqaidated damages or doable pay ander 46 U. S. C. A., § 596, for the delay of the master and owners in paying this item.

This section provides that: “Every'master or owner who refases or neglects to make payment * * * without sufficient cause shall pay to the seaman a sam eqaal to two days’ pay for each and every day daring which payment is delayed. * * .” (Italics sapplied.)

The Federal coarts have aniformly held that this section, when read in connection with the sacceeding section (46 U. S. C.

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.E.2d 795, 192 Va. 90, 1951 Va. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neapolidis-v-theofana-maritime-co-va-1951.