The Ester

190 F. 216, 1911 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. South Carolina
DecidedJuly 31, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 190 F. 216 (The Ester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Ester, 190 F. 216, 1911 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155 (southcarolinaed 1911).

Opinion

SMITH, District Judge.

This is a libel in rem against a foreign steamship, brought to recover unpaid wages to the amount of $174.55, and in addition thereto damages for personal injury to the amount of $5,000. The respondents, the owners of the ship, have intervened herein, appearing especially to raise the question of jurisdiction, and have filed a sworn petition, accompanied by affidavits and certificates, and have further filed exceptions to the libel, claiming' that the matters therein stated are not within the jurisdiction of this court. Upon the libel and this petition, with the accompanying affidavits and certificates and these exceptions and the answer to the petition, a motion has been made to dismiss the cause for lack of jurisdiction, and the case has been heard upon this motion. The facts appear to be as follows: The steamship Ester is a Swedish steamship, sailing under the flag of the Kingdom of Sweden, and is owned by a corporation or company styled the Angfartygsaktiebolagat Karin, which is, and all the members of which are, citizens of the Kingdom of Sweden. This Swedish steamship, whilst lying in the port of Nordenham, in the German Empire, and destined on a voyage to Charleston, S. C., and thence to some further ports as might be deemed expedient, until it should arrive at some port in the Kingdom of Sweden, enrolled the libelant, Osterkamp. Osterkamp, it appears, signed the articles of the ship in due form and went on the ship and served in pursuance thereof. At the time of signing these articles, he was. a citizen of the German Empire and under the age of 21 years, and therefore a minor by the laws of the state of South Carolina. The-vessel arrived at the port of Charleston, and whilst in that port, lying at her dock at one of the wharves in that port, the libelant, while in performance of his duties on the ship, fell through an open coal chute into a coal bunker, severely injuring himself thereby, in consequence of which he was sent by the master of the ship to a hospital in the city of Charleston. While he was confined in the hospital, the vessel departed from the port of Charleston, leaving the libelant in the hospital, and after visiting various ports in [219]*219the United States, returned fo the port of Charleston, where she was at the time she was libeled herein. It appears that there is no Swedish consul or vice consul or consular agent or office within the port of Charleston or the territorial jurisdiction of the district of South Carolina, and the relations between the vessel and Osterkamp have been severed.

The petition of the shipowners sets up that, the vessel being a Swedish vessel, and owned by Swedish citizens, the libelant, when he became enrolled as a seaman on that vessel, became for the time being, so long as his term of service lasted, a citizen, and subject of the Kingdom of Sweden, and that, this matter being a question of difference between the master of a Swedish vessel and a citizen and subject of that Kingdom as a seaman on that vessel, under the treaty stipulations between the United States and the Kingdom of Sweden, this court has no jurisdiction, and that, even if it had jurisdiction, as a matter of comity it will not exercise that jurisdiction where the Swedish consul protests against the exercise by the court of any jurisdiction in this case. The petition further alleges that there is a certain declaration between the government of the King of Sweden and the government of the Emperor of Germany concerning assistance to destitute seamen, which provides that whenever a seaman belonging to one of the contracting parties, after having served on board the vessel of the other contracting party, is left behind in a third state or its colonies, and the said seaman is in a condition of distress, then the government on board of whose vessel the seaman has served is bound to support him until he again enters into a ship’s service or finds other employment or until he arrives in his native country, or dies. The consul for Sweden in New York certifies to the court that the matter of the adjustment of this controversy and the performance of these treaty provisions between Germany and Sweden is in course of correspondence between the consuls of those countries, and that it is the desire of the consulate that the provisions of this declaration should be availed of and that the seaman Osterkamp be returned to Germany according to the requirements of the declaration. In addition to that, there is presented, to the court a letter from the Swedish minister at Washington, asking that the request of the consul for Sweden in New York be granted.

[1] On the other hand, the German consul residing in the city of Charleston, state of South Carolina, denies that the matter of adjustment of this controversy and of the treaty provisions between Germany and Sweden is in correspondence between the consuls of the respective countries, and requests this court to take and hold jurisdiction of the cause and administer such justice and relief as Osterkamp may be entitled to upon his claim. This application of the German consul may be disregarded. When Osterkamp was duly enrolled as a seaman on a Swedish vessel, and signed the articles of employment on that vessel, he became for the time being, for all purposes of consideration by the tribunals of this country in his relations to the ship, a citizen of the Kingdom of Sweden. Ross v. McIntyre, 140 U. S. 453, 11 Sup. Ct. 897, 35 L. Ed. 581; The Marie (D. C.) 49 Fed. 288.

The case presented, therefore, is the case of a controversy based [220]*220upon a claim of a citizen of the Kingdom of Sweden for damages received by him on a ship belonging to the Kingdom of Sweden, whilst in the performance of his duties as a seaman duly enrolled on that ship, and caused by the negligence of the master of that ship, also a citizen of Sweden. The libel states that the injuries were caused by the carelessness and negligence of the master of the vessel, in that li-belant was required and directed in pursuance of the commands of the master to pass through a dark and narrow passageway between the decks of the vessel, in the discharge of his duty, in which passageway was situated the coal chute down which libelant fell, which coal chute should have been closed, but was carelessly and negligently left open and unguarded and unlit by the master. Has this court jurisdiction of such controversy? And, if so, is that jurisdiction imperative or discretionary? And, if the latter, do the circumstances of this case call for its exercise?

, The general rule of international law is stated in the Digest of the International Law of the United States, edited by Francis Wharton, and published by the government (volume 1, p. 130), to be that:

“So far as regards acts done at sea before tier arrival in port, and acts done on board in port by members of tlie crew to one another, and so far as regards the general regulation of the right's and duties of those belonging on. board, the vessel is exempt from local jurisdiction; but if the acts done on board affect the peace of the country in whose ports she lies, or the persons, or property of its subjects, to that' extent that state has jurisdiction.”

This rule as so stated, however, has been modified by the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States.

In Ex parte Newman, 14 Wall. 150, 20 L. Ed.

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Bluebook (online)
190 F. 216, 1911 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-ester-southcarolinaed-1911.