Roberts v. Skolfield

20 F. Cas. 932, 3 Ware 184
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedSeptember 15, 1858
StatusPublished

This text of 20 F. Cas. 932 (Roberts v. Skolfield) 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
Roberts v. Skolfield, 20 F. Cas. 932, 3 Ware 184 (D. Me. 1858).

Opinion

WARE, District Judge.

This is a libel against J. L. Skolfield, master, and W. C. Fairfield, mate of the ship John W. Dim-mieh, jointly, in a cause of damage. The li-bellant shipped to Portland, Nov. 6, 1857, for a voyage to Mobile, thence to Europe, and back to the United States. After the ship arrived at Mobile, she remained there about four months, waiting for a cargo, and while lying in the bay, at the distance of several miles from the city, on the 12th of January the events happened which are the subject of this libel. In the morning of that day, Roberts was employed in calking the forecastle, Fairfield, the mate, being near him. Roberts asked the mate for a calking mallet. The mate told him to work w'ith a serving mallet, which he had in his hand; and Roberts replied that he could not work so well with that as with a calking mallet. More words, it seems, must have passed between them, for as Roberts got up, the mate struck him a pretty hard blow on his arm with the mallet which he had in his own hand. The noise attracted the attention of the master, who was on the after part of the deck, and he immediately came forward, with the master of another vessel in port, who happened to be on board. They both fell on Roberts, the mate standing by. The captain knocked him down with liis fist, and they both seized him by the hair or collar, as often as he attempted to rise, and threw him down again; and continued for some time striking and kicking him on his head, face and shoulders, as he lay or attempted to rise. The boy Lewis, who was at work near, and saw the whole affair, says that they booted him all around the forecastle. Smith, also, the boatswain, who was near and saw most of the affray, says that as often as Roberts attempted to get up, they seized him by the hair and pulled him down, and repeated their blows with their hands and feet. The boatswain also confirms the testimony of Lewis, that when they had done beating him, the captain, as he went aft, told the mate that if the men gave him more of their sauce, to take a handspike, and hit them on the head. This is also stated by some of the rest of the crew. The captain soon after left the ship, and Roberts, as he continued Ms work, notwithstanding the beating and booting, asked the boy Lewis to bring him some oakum. The mate told Lewis not to go, and to let Roberts get it himself. Roberts went, and as he was returning with it, the mate met him. and took from his pocket a slxmg-shot, and struck two blows with it in his face, and one on the back of his head. These blows were given with such violence that severe wounds were made on the face and back part of his head, from which blood flowed so freely as to run down on the deck, and make a considerable puddle. Lewis, who was near, thought there was nearly a quart. The description given by Smith, the boatswain, rather confirms that of the boy. Roberts wiped the blood from the deck with his shirt, which has been exhibited in court, and identified by the witnesses. It was saturated with blood, and shows that there could not have been much exaggeration by the witnesses. The blood continued for two days to ooze from the wound made on his nose. Roberts continued for several days to complain of pain in his head, and kept his head bound up with a handkerchief.

In a separate article the libel sets forth another tort committed by the master during the same voyage, in the port of Havre, in which the mate had no part. The counsel for the respondent objects to the union in the same libel of a joint action against two, with an allegation of a separate tort committed by one of the parties, and on this ground he moves that the libel be dismissed as multifarious. The like objection is made-to the third article of the libel for the second assault of the mate in Mobile, being after the captain had left the ship. The article for the tort in Havre does, in my opinion, render the libel open to the objection of multifariousness. But it does not follow that the libel must be dismissed. That article may be struck out by an amendment, and the libel-lant proceed in the suit for the joint wrong of the two. For the second assault at Mobile [933]*933by the mate, after what had taken place the same morning and but an hour before, my opinion is that the master cannot he exempted from the responsibility: He left orders, that if any further difficulty occurred, for the mate to put an end to it with a handspike. The mate, instead of using this instrument, took from his pocket a slung-shot. Either mode of punishment was illegal, and the mate might fairly infer that, by directing one the master authorized the other. If this assault with a slung-shot was unjustifiable, I think the master ought to be jointly responsible for it. Elwell v. Martin [Case No. 4, 425]; Pratt v. Thomas [Id. 11,377].

But another objection is made, which goes to the whole libel, and requires a more detailed and deliberate consideration. This is, that the subject matter of the libel is not within the admiralty jurisdiction. The assault at Mobile, it is said, was committed while the ship was lying within the body of a county, in the state of Alabama, and thus was without the jurisdiction of this court. The objection, put into a more general formula, is that the admiralty has no jurisdiction over a tort committed by one of the ship’s company against another on board the ship in matters relating to the police of the ship, and in the maintenance of discipline while the ship is lying in a port of the United States, within the body of a county. As a matter of fact it may be doubted whether the ship was within the limits of a count}1. But waiving this, and taking the objection in its most general form, it involves a question of great importance to the commerce of the country. The jurisdiction of the admiralty, in matters of tort, depends on the locality of the act, and the question, which this case raises is, whether the navigable waters in the ports and harbors of the United States are within the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction granted by the constitution. It may be admitted that the common-law courts of England would prohibit the high court of admiralty from taking cognizance of such a case. But the admiralty jurisdiction of this court is derived from our own constitution; and it appears to me to have been too long settled to be now broúght into doubt; that it is more extensive than that allowed by the court of king’s bench to the high court of admiralty in England, both in matters of contract and tort, where it is determined by the locality of the act. The judiciary act [1 Stat. 73] passed by the first congress that sat under the constitution assigned to the admiralty jurisdiction over all cases of seizures made under laws of impost and navigation on waters navigable from the sea by vessels of ten or more tons burthen, as well as upon the high seas, without regard to county lines. For it can hardly be necessary to remark, that such waters in harbors. creeks, and rivers, are by the common' law included within the bodies of counties. In the ease of The Vengeance, 3 Dali. [3 U. S.] 297, and in that of The Betsey and Charlotte, 4 Crunch [8 U. S.] 443, the constitutionality of this act was brought into controversy. The whole subject was exhausted by the elaborate argument of the claimant’s counsel in the latter case, and the court unanimously reaffirmed their former decision, and have since steadily adhered to it.

We have thus the decision of all the departments of the government, the legislative, executive, and judicial, that the admiralty jurisdiction does extend to waters navigable from the sea by vessels of ten or more tons burthen, and is not excluded by the fact that those waters are within the body of a county.

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Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 932, 3 Ware 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-skolfield-med-1858.