The Sonderborg.

47 F.2d 723
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 12, 1931
Docket3063
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 47 F.2d 723 (The Sonderborg.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Sonderborg., 47 F.2d 723 (4th Cir. 1931).

Opinion

47 F.2d 723 (1931)

THE SONDERBORG.
ATKIES, DAMPSKIBSSELSKABET DONNEBROG et al.
v.
MIKKELSEN et al.

No. 3063.

Circuit Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.

February 12, 1931.

*724 Leon T. Seawell, of Norfolk, Va. (Hughes, Little & Seawell, of Norfolk, Va., on the brief), for appellants and cross-appellees.

Jacob Louis Morewitz and Morewitz & Morewitz, all of Newport News, Va., for appellees and cross-appellants.

Before PARKER and NORTHCOTT, Circuit Judges, and COLEMAN, District Judge.

NORTHCOTT, Circuit Judge.

The facts of this case were clearly stated by the judge below in his opinion as follows:

"This is a proceeding by seven foreign seamen against the Danish steamship Sonderborg, claiming wages and penalties, and, as to one of their number, reimbursement for expenses incurred by him in attempting to be cured of syphilis. * * *

"The Sonderborg is a Danish ship. The libelants are foreign seamen, two of whom are from Denmark, one from Holland, one from Germany, one from Sweden, and two from Norway. They were properly signed on board at New Orleans, July, 1929, the articles providing for a voyage, `New Orleans via ports to West Indies and further and return to U. S. A. Final discharging port in U. S. A.' The ship went to the West Indies where she loaded cargo, and thence to Canadian ports, where she discharged. No dispute or misunderstanding of any nature occurred between libelants and the ship up to the time of arrival at Halifax, August, 1929. There, it appears, some doubt arose as to the destination thence of the ship. No orders had been received, and it was believed by the master and by the seamen that she might be sent to some European port. Libelants, or some of them, interviewed the master, but he was as much in the dark as they, and could give no information. They then appealed to the Danish consul with a view to obtaining their discharge at Halifax, or some other Canadian port, and were informed that under the Danish law they were not entitled to demand a discharge, nor a change in the articles, but that their duty was to continue by the ship. The master in turn assured them, or some of them, that if the ship went to Europe, and they were there discharged, their expenses, etc., back to the United States would be paid. This assurance was unsatisfactory for the reason, frankly explained by them, that they were unwilling to be discharged in any European port, since, in that instance, they could not return to the United States except under the quota law, or by getting berths on a vessel on the basis of the European wage standard; whereas, if they returned to the United States on the Sonderborg, they could remain in the United States as seamen, and continue to ship on foreign round-trip voyages on the American pay standard. They thereupon sent protests to the Danish consul general at Montreal, who, in all respects, sustained the position of the local consul, whereupon they returned aboard ship, refused to work, and notified the master that they would not further carry out the articles. The master thereupon had them arrested, and placed in jail, charged with mutiny. The Halifax court dismissed the charge of mutiny, but held libelants on the master's statement that he would charge them with desertion, but before this charge could be formally made, the ship was *725 ordered to return to the United States, and the master having communicated this fact to libelants, all hands agreed to return to the ship, resume work, and this was done, and, on September 9, the ship arrived at Norfolk, where, by reason of failure to have aboard a consular stamped crew list, some negotiations with Washington were necessary before the American immigration officials would permit the men to land; but on the 11th, permission was received, and the men were discharged, and the wages due them, as calculated by the master, delivered to the Danish consul at Newport News for delivery to them when they should demand payment."

As originally brought, the libel claimed damages for false arrest and imprisonment at Halifax, but this claim was dismissed without prejudice prior to the trial.

It is contended on behalf of the appellants that, since this is a controversy with respect to wages between a foreign master and ship on the one hand and foreign seamen on the other, this court should not take jurisdiction. The circumstances under which a federal court will take jurisdiction were discussed in The Roxen (D. C.) 7 F.(2d) 739 [affirmed by this court, Elman v. Moller, 11 F.(2d) 55], where it was held that jurisdiction should always be taken in any case in which the refusal would result in a denial of justice. On this point, as we see it, the judge below in assuming jurisdiction correctly said:

"In this case, as has been pointed out, libelants were signed on in an American port for return, upon the expiration of the voyage, to an American port. They intended and intend to remain in the United States as long as they are undisturbed by the immigration authorities, and this, of course, depends upon their compliance with the acts of Congress with relation to foreign seamen. Not only, therefore, would their contract entitle them to a discharge in the United States, but this in fact occurred. To hold, therefore, that their only remedy was by appeal to the courts of Denmark would be a clear denial of justice."

It appears from the record that, at the time of the signing on of the seamen, certain payments were made by the master of the ship for clothing and board, which, it is contended, was in violation of section 599, title 46 USCA.

With respect to the main question as to whether or not the master was justified in holding out certain sums from the wages of the seamen, at the time of their discharge, we agree with the reasoning of the judge below, who said:

"The motion to decline jurisdiction should again be denied, and this brings me to the crux of the case, namely, whether the action of the master of the ship, at the time of their discharge, in deducting from their wages approximately forty dollars each, to cover expenses incurred by him on account of their refusal to work at Halifax, was permissible. It does not appear quite clearly how this sum, aggregating $280, was spent. Presumably, however, it was in connection with the arrest of the men, and the detention of the ship at Halifax. There is some testimony on behalf of libelants that the master, when the arrangement was made with the seamen to return to the ship, agreed that there would be no deduction on this account. However this may be, there is a total absence of any evidence, or indeed any claim, that the men agreed to reimburse the master on account of this, or any other expense, and it is equally true, though the master claims that he received permission from the consul to omit the same, that no proper record of this charge, either in the aggregate or individually, was entered in the ship's log, or that a hearing was had on account of same, or that any of the libelants, except Nielsen, were apprised of the purpose of the master to deduct this sum from their then earned wages.

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Bluebook (online)
47 F.2d 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-sonderborg-ca4-1931.