The Cornelia Amsden

6 F. Cas. 562, 5 Ben. 315
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 F. Cas. 562 (The Cornelia Amsden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Cornelia Amsden, 6 F. Cas. 562, 5 Ben. 315 (N.D.N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

HALL, District Judge.

This is a suit for seaman’s wages. The libellant, Arnold G. Harris, was shipped as first mate, for the season of navigation of 1S71, at the wages of ?C0 per month, on the 3d of April, 1871, at the city of Buffalo, N. Y.; and was discharged by the master of the Amsden on the 9th of May, at Erie, Pennsylvania. This suit was .brought to recover the balance alleged to be due him for two months’ wages up to the 3d June, 1871; and the libel alleges that the libellant was discharged without just cause.

The answer alleges, “that on or about the 7th day of May, 1871, and while said schooner was in the harbor of Toledo, and was about to leave said port of Toledo for the port of Erie, in the state of Pennsylvania, with a cargo of oats on board, the said libel-lant, being then on board in the capacity of first mate, then and there refused to perform service as first mate on board of said vessel, and then and there refused to obey the lawful command of the master of said schooner, and was then and there guilty of disobedient, mutinous and improper conduct on board of said schooner; that in consequence of such disobedient, mutinous and improper conduct on the part of said libellant, the master of said vessel was compelled to discharge said libellant from the service of said vessel, and did, for the reason aforesaid, on or about the 9th day of May, 1871, at the next port the said vessel reached after leaving Toledo aforesaid, to wit, at Erie aforesaid, discharge said libellant from the service of the vessel, and at the same time offered to pay him for all services he had, up to the time of such discharge, rendered on board of said vessel; and also offered to pay the fare of said libellant from Erie to Buffalo.” It. also alleges the libellant’s refusal- to accept what was so offered. The allegations of the answer are, perhaps, too general, indefinite and uncertain, to entitle the claimant to show the libellant’s disobedience and misconduct as a justification for his discharge— Macomber v. Thompson [Case No. 8,919]— but, as no objection to the answer was taken before or at the hearing, the question of the sufficiency of the answer will not be discussed, and the case will be considered upon its merits under the proofs of the respective parties.

The evidence shows that the libellant, a resident of Buffalo, after being thus hired for the season as first mate, faithfully served in that capacity until the 7th of May, 1871; that on Saturday, the 6th of May, while the vessel was lying at anchor in the harbor of Toledo, and about 5 o’clock in the morning, the libellant called the men and turned to and kept the crew at work until about 5 in the evening — the master being absent from the vessel much of the time during the day; that then a tug came alongside with orders from the master to get up anchor and lay the Amsden alongside an elevator; that they got alongside the elevator and made the vessel fast, but the elevator not being ready to receive the vessel’s cargo, the work on the vessel was resumed and continued until about 8 o’clock in the evening; that about 8 o’clock the elevator commenced receiving the vessel’s cargo of grain, and the libellant, as first mate, then went into the elevator and remained there, •tallying the grain, until half past 1 o’clock on Sunday morning, when the last of the cargo was delivered, — the libellant and tbe crew having been kept on duty until that time; that they then cleared up the decks of the vessel, hoisted in the boat, put the hatches down, and about 2 o’clock at night got the tow-line on board, ready for moving in the morning; that the libellant then told the crew they might turn in, and went to his berth; that the vessel was safely moored and was exposed to no danger where she lay; that the libellant had been asleep but a short time when the master of the tug rapped at the cabin door and woke him up; that he told the master of the tug to go-away and not trouble him until daylight; that the master of the tug said the day was breaking then, but went away; that the master of the Amsden soon after, and about 20 minutes to 4 o’clock, got up and told the libellant to call the men; that the libellant replied that he had worked them all night, and could not get up until daylight; that the master of the vessel again told the libellant he wanted him to get up and get the vessel under way, and the libellant again declined; that the master of the vessel soon after cast the lines off the dock, and the tug then straightened up on the tow-line, and started the vessel for Erie, when the libellant came out and resumed his duties, going into the forecastle and turning out such of the men as had not turned out on the call of the master; that he continued to do duty as first mate without any farther difference with the master, or any neglect of duty, until they reached Erie, — which they did about noon on Monday, — and there discharged the cargo, under the libellant’s supervision and direction. On Tuesday morning, after the cargo had been discharged, and while they were washing up the deck, the master of the Amsden told the libellant there were no freights for them at Sandusky, and the vessel would probably lay up; that he did not want him any longer because they coiild not agree, and that he would settle with the libellant there, at Erie; and he then [564]*564..discharged him from the vessel. After this .discharge the master of the Amsden offered to pay the libellant his wages up to the time of the discharge, if the libellant would sign a receipt in full, written by the master, which the libellant refused to do; and the master then declined to pay him. The libellant left the vessel, stating to the master where he could be found, and his willingness to go on board at any time. The vessel did not lay up, but continued her usual employment; and the libellant did not get other employment as mate, though he made some efforts for. that purpose. He, however, got other employment at different times, for very short periods and less pay. The master of the Amsden has since employed a first mate in the place of the libellant, at less than $50 per month. There is some evidence that there was a demand for first mates at Buffalo at prices varying from $40 to $60 per month, and it is believed the libellant might have obtained employment at the former wages.

There can be no doubt that there was a single act of disobedience of orders on the part of the libellant; but there is scarcely any doubt that the requirement of the master which led to such disobedience was unusual and apparently unreasonable, if not unjustifiable and oppressive. There is nothing in the case to show that any extraordinary emergency existed which would fully justify the master of the Amsden in requiring his mate, who had been kept constantly on duty from 5 o’clock on Saturday morning to nearly 2 o’clock on Sunday morning, to turn out at half past 3 o’clock on Sunday morning, and before he- had more than an hour and a half of rest, in order to take the vessel out of a port where she was safely moored. At most the offence was a very slight and venial one, —even if it be conceded that the master had a strict right to require his crew to take the vessel from port at that early hour of the Sabbath, — and no other act of disobedience or misconduct being imputed to the libellant, either in the pleadings or by proof, his discharge was clearly unlawful. See 1 Pars. Mar. Law, 461, note 3. and cases cited; Smith v. Treat [Case No. 13,117].

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Bluebook (online)
6 F. Cas. 562, 5 Ben. 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-cornelia-amsden-nynd-1871.