The George Burnham

10 F. Cas. 209, 1 Hask. 381
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJanuary 15, 1872
StatusPublished

This text of 10 F. Cas. 209 (The George Burnham) 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 George Burnham, 10 F. Cas. 209, 1 Hask. 381 (D. Me. 1872).

Opinion

FOX, District Judge.

This libel is promoted by three of the crew. They shipped on board the brig on the 12th of December, for a voyage from this port to Cuba and back to her port of discharge. The shipping articles provided that no advances should be made abroad to the crew, and that thej- were prohibited from wearing sheath knives. The court cannot but commend the insertion of this latter clause in the articles, and the attempt to bring home to the crew positive knowledge of the prohibition of then' use of so dangerous an instrument, thereby giving effect to the provisions of the act of congress of July 27,18GG, by which the wearing of sheath knives by seamen in the merchant service is prohibited, and the master or officer in command is required to inform every person offering himself' to ship of the provisions of the act, and to require his compliance with the law, under a penalty of fifty dollars for each omission. The crew came on board between two and three o'clock of the afternoon of the 27th, having been ordered to be there immediately after dinner. The brig was then at Merchant’s wharf. The libellants assisted in loosing the sails and endeavoring to get the vessel under way, but she touched on the banks, and the sails were furled and all hands were allowed to go on shore till about eleven o’clock at night. They then returned, but could not succeed in hauling the brig out of the dock, as she was still aground. The crew again left and returned the next morning, at which time the master discharged the libellants, and refused to allow them to go in the brig, although they all expressed their desire to complete the voyage. At that time the master informed them that he had learned they were quarrelsome fellows, who would make trouble on board, and that they were not provided with proper clothing and bedding necessary for the voyage. This libel against the vessel was commenced the next day, demanding full wages for the entire voyage and also damages for the breach of contract.

Upon the matter of damages, the court at the hearing intimated that as the discharge if wrongful was at the home port, before the voyage had actually commenced, the libel-lants would not be entitled to demand full wages for the entire voyage, but would only be entitled to an indemnity in a reasonable sum for the services actually rendered, and compensation for any special damage, if any had been sustained; and such Judge Story, in Ex parte Giddings [Case No. 5,404], declares to be the settled rule in England, distinguishing between the case where the voyage is broken up, and the crew wrongfully dismissed before the voyage is begun, and the case where they are dismissed wrongfully after the voyage is begun, in which latter case only, are they by the law of England entitled to wages for the whole voyage.

By Ord. de la Mar. bk. 3, tit. 4, art. 3 (1 Valin, G8G), it was provided that “if the voyage was broken up by the owners, master or merchants before the departure of the ship, the seamen hired by the voyage, by the run, shall be paid for the time by them spent in equipping the ship, and one-fourth part of the amount they would receive if the voyage had been completed; and those hired by the monlh shall be paid proportionately, according to the ordinary length of the voyage.” Article 10 (1 Valin, 705), compelled the master, if he discharged a seaman without good cause before the voyage was begun, to pay him one-third of his wages, and the whole if discharged in the course of the voyage together with' the expense of his return; and these amounts the owners were not required to refund to the master.

Definite proportions of the entire wages to be earned were allowed to the crew in case of wrongful dismissal before the voyage was begun, by various ancient ordinances and rules of the sea, biit none of these have ever received the sanction or approval of courts of [210]*210admiralty in England or this country, so far as the court is advised; but it has been deemed more just and equitable in each case to award to the seamen a full and complete indemnity for the breach of contract.

When the libellants came on board the brig on the 27th, they brought with them a straw bed and one blanket, which were claimed by 'Collins as his property; neither of the other libellants had bed or bedding of any kind. A German boy, who had shipped as an ordinary seaman, came with them, and he was equally destitute. An old man. Hawkins, accompanied them, who had not shipped as one of the crew, but had been rejected by the master on account of his age. An attempt was made by the runners of the boarding house to substitute him in place of one of the crew who had shipped and absconded. Hawkins was provided with a bed, bedding, chest and clothing suitable for the voyage; neither of the libellants had any chest, and whatever clothing they possessed was stowed in their bags, each having one. On inquiry of them, as witnesses, as to their clothing, they stated they had enough, but it was impossible to obtain from either of them a full and accurate description of it; each claimed he had a pair of mittens, but whether of cotton or wool they could not tell. When interrogated as to their socks, each asserted he had some, but could not say whether they were thick or thin, or of what material, and were uncertain as to the number of pairs. • Some of them had no heavy frocks, but they stated had instead woolen shirts. Their clothing was left on board the brig and was afterwards overhauled and examined by the master in the presence of police officers and others, and he describes it generally as nothing but a lot of old rags. The master having at the time assigned as a reason for not allowing these men to complete the voyage their want of clothing, bedding, &c., and having discharged them from the vessel, was he justified in so doing?

It will not probably be contended by any one, that in the month of December for such a voyage, a master is obliged to receive his crew, if they should come on board either half naked, or clothed in their summer raiment without other outfits; and if this is conceded, the case at once resolves itself into the question, were these men suitably equipped for the voyage, prepared to perform their part of the contract?

There is no direct evidence before the court to show whether the George Burnham was provided with any heating apparatus in her forecastle, but it is understood by the court, that in vessels of her description, bound on such a voyage, it is not customary to furnish them with anything of the kind, though sometimes heat is received from the cook’s galley, by an aperture in the partition separating the two compartments; and the court is of the opinion, that as the case is presented, the libellants were not suitably provided and in a proper condition to discharge the duties of seamen on the contemplated voyage. They were to leave this port in the latter part of December, and by the terms of the shipping articles were to return in this brig to her port of discharge, which would probably bring them upon the coast in February, the coldest, most severe and inclement month in the year; and it must be remembered, that their contract expressly stipulated that they were not to receive any advance abroad. It was their duty therefore before sailing, to provide themselves with a suitable outfit, such as would be reasonably fit and proper for them, to protect them from cold and exposure as far forth as was practicable for men called upon to perform the duties of seamen on board such a vessel on such a voyage.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 209, 1 Hask. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-george-burnham-med-1872.