The Crusader

6 F. Cas. 926, 1 Ware 448, 1837 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedNovember 14, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 6 F. Cas. 926 (The Crusader) 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
The Crusader, 6 F. Cas. 926, 1 Ware 448, 1837 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12 (D. Me. 1837).

Opinion

WARE, District Judge.

A preliminary •question is raised by the pleadings in this •case, and has been insisted upon at the argument, which goes to the jurisdiction of the court. It is admitted that Sweetsir, the libel-lant, was engaged and went in the vessel as mate, but it is contended that the contract which intervened between the parties was not a contract of hiring, but a contract of partnership, by which he and the master were to be equally interested in the profits and losses of the adventure. The agreement set forth in the answer was that Sweetsir •should perform the duties of mate, and that; “they should share the profits of the voyages 1 •as they should chance to be; that no fixed ■ •rate of wages was agreed upon; but that the expense of sailing the vessel being first paid cut of the three fifths of the gross amount of the receipts, the balance was to be divided equally between them.” If the respondent had intended to rely on the incompetence of the court to take cognizance of the matter, lie should in correct pleading have specially •excepted to the jurisdiction, and concluded with a prayer that the libel might be dismissed for this cause. This would have put the question of jurisdiction directly in issue. The rules of the admiralty do not demand all the technical formalities and exactness in pleading that are required by the common law, but the grounds of defence should be presented in the answer by clear and distinct averments, and when the respondent proposes to insist on several distinct and independent grounds of defence, they should not be embraced in a continuous statement or narrative, but each should be presented in a distinct and separate article. If, however, there be a defect in the pleadings, it is not too late to cure it by an amendment, provided the case made out in the proof sustains the objectipn.

. If the contract between the parties were in truth a contract of partnership, it is not easily to be perceived how it can be brought within the cognizance of the admiralty. For though the admiralty has a general jurisdiction over maritime contracts and matters done on the seas, it does not follow that it has jurisdiction over all contracts leading to maritime adventures, and to employment on the high seas. If two persons engage as partners in maritime commerce, the contracts which they make with others for marine service, and other contracts in which the consideration is essentially maritime, as contracts of affreightment, or contracts with materialmen for the supplies or repair of the vessel, fail within the jurisdiction of the admiralty. But the contract of partnership between themselves, though it may exclusively have for its object maritime commerce, belongs ordinarily at least to another forum.

There is indeed a class of cases bearing an analogy to what this is contended to be, over which the admiralty holds an undisputed jurisdiction. I allude to fulling voyages in which it is common for the fishermen to be engaged for a share of the proceeds of the voyage, instead of wages at a fixed rate. Act Cong. June 19, 1813, c. 2, § 2 [3 Stat. 2]. This kind of engagement, does, indeed, constitute a species of imperfect partnership. 1 Valin, Comm. 670; Abb. Shipp. 442. The men become directly interested in the fruits of the adventure, and depend for their remuneration on its success. But the fishermen are not, in such cases considered as partners with the owner in the proper sense of the word. The shares for which they contract are in the nature of wages, and an action of assumpsit lies at common law, or a libel may be brought in the admiralty for their share of the proceeds or profits of the adventure to be ascertained by a final settlement of the voyage. Wilkinson v. Frasier, 4 Esp. 182; Macomber v. Thompson [Case No. 8,919]; The Frederick, 5 C. Rob. Adm. 8.

Supposing, however, the question of jurisdiction to be put directly in issue by proper averments, how far will the proof sustain [928]*928the answer? The only evidence in the case relating to this point is derived from certain acknowledgments said to have been made by Sweetsir. Taking them in their utmost extent they amount to nothing more than that he engaged for a share of the profits. What that share was the evidence does not disclose. An agreement by seamen to receive as a compensation for their services a share of the freight or the profits of a voyage does not constitute them partners with the owners. An agreement between parties to share in certain proportions the profits of an adventure or enterprise, or of a particular kind of business, does not in the common transactions of business necessarily make them partners in relation to each other, not even under circumstances which may render them liable as such to third persons. Rice v. Austin, 17 Mass. 197; Waugh v. Carver, 2 H. Bl. 235; Colly. Partn. p. 44. A man may agree for a certain proportion of the profits as a compensation for his personal services, or in lieu of commissions or brokerage, without subjecting himself to the responsibility of a partner. Id. pp. 14, 15; 3 Kent, Comm. 25. The master, according to the statement in his answer in this case, took the vessel on an agreement to divide with the owners the gross earnings of the vessel in certain proportions. But this participation in the fruits of the voyage does not make them partners with him. The settled construction of such a contract is, that a share of the earnings is allowed as the hire of the vessel, in lieu of a fixed and certain sum as charter. Thompson v. Snow. 4 Greenl. 264.

If an agreement to receive as a compensation a share of the profits does not in the transaction of ordinary business necessarily create a partnership, there is less reason for allowing it to have, as a matter of necessity, that effect in contracts for maritime service, in which from the fact that in all times agreements of this kind have been more common and familiar, a partnership would be less easily presumed. The custom in the cod and whale fisheries to engage the fishermen for a share of the fruits of the voyage has been already mentioned. It is not unusual to engage seamen in freighting and trading voyages for a share of the freight, or profit. Such contracts are not only known with us, but are common in other maritime countries. The ordinance of the marine of Louis XIV. enumerates four modes in which mariners are engaged, that is, for wages by the month, or for the voyage; for a share of the freight, or profits. Liv. 3, tit. 4, art. 1. Yalin in his Commentary, says, that in all times the engagement for a part of the freight has been customary (volume 1, p. 670); and it still continues to be a usual mode of hiring seamen in that country for coasting voyages (2 Boul. P. Dr. Mar. p. 170). In all maritime countries it is the ordinary mode in which seamen are engaged for cruising in privateers, and from very early times, it appears from the old maritime ordinances that the engagement of marinera for a share of the freight was one-of the most common forms of seamen's contracts. Jus Navale Rhodiorum, par. 2, cc. 1, 8, Edit. Pardessus; Jugemens d’Oleron, art. 16, and Cleirac on art. 8, note 31; Laws of Wisbuy, art. 30; Roccus, note 43. But it was never doubted that the contracts of seamen in all these cases were properly contracts of hiring and not of partnership. The share which they receive of the fruits of' the adventure, to be ascertained at its final settlement, is in the nature of wages.

The naked fact alone, therefore, that the libellant engaged not for a fixed and certain rate of wages, but for a share of the profits, unconnected with other circumstances and without proof of what that share was to be, raises but a very slight presumption of' a partnership between him and the captain.

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Bluebook (online)
6 F. Cas. 926, 1 Ware 448, 1837 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-crusader-med-1837.