The Union

24 F. Cas. 537, 1836 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 17, 1836
StatusPublished

This text of 24 F. Cas. 537 (The Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.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 Union, 24 F. Cas. 537, 1836 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2 (S.D.N.Y. 1836).

Opinion

BETTS, District Judge.

The purport of the pleadings between the parties, is. on the part of tlié libellants, to claim wages for the entire voyage stipulated in the articles, and also the value of their wearing apparel carried off in the ship, and not restored to them, on the ground that performance of the contract by 'them was prevented by the fault of the master; and, on the part of the claimants, to bar both demands, because the libellants had deserted the ship and had thus forfeited their wages and their clothing left on board. The controversy in the cause turns upon this defence; for it is not disputed that the libellants performed their duty during the voyage out, and were left in Liverpool by the departure of the ship.

There is a conflict in the testimony as to the manner in which the libellants were separated from the ship. It is a question to be decided by the evidence, whether the forfeiture demanded can be maintained either upon the general principles of the maritime law, or under the special provisions of the act of congress of July 20, 1790 (1 Stat. 131). The allegations in the answer, although not technically adapted to either branch of the defence, are substantially sufficient to put those points in issue, and to authorize a decree for the claimants, if they have sustained the defence by proof, and if the law entitles them to a judgment of forfeiture. The efforts of the defence have been mainly addressed to the point, that the libellants wilfully deserted the ship, and the testimony is to be first applied to that branch of the case.

Desertion is,,by the law maritime, an unlawful and wilful abandonment of a vessel, during her voyage, by her crew, without an intention of returning to their duty. It is not a mere unauthorized absence from the ship without leave. Molloy, bk. 2, c. 3. pp. 248, 249; Abb. Shipp. (Ed. 1829) 134, 135; [540]*5403 Kent, Comm. 198. The one is an act of deep turpitude and disloyalty, evincing premeditation and criminality of purpose; the other often springs out of the improvidence and thoughtlessness which are incident to the habits and character of sailors. I have examined carefully the evidence produced by the claimants to establish the first charge, and no part of it, in my opinion, fixes upon the libellants an intention to abandon the ship. If the libellants went away from the ship without the permission of the officer in command, their going on shore at the time was disorderly and culpable. But the claimants show by their own proofs, that the libellants left the ship for an innocent object, and returned so soon to the place where they left her, and made such urgent exertions to get on board again as to demonstrate that they had no design to abandon her. This strips their act of the essential . ingredient of a desertion under the maritime law. That is a high crime in all maritime codes. 1 Valin, Comm, sur I’Ord. de la Mar. bk. 2, tit. 7, art. 3, p. 534. Some of the early laws ■ placed the desertion of a sailor from the merchant service, particularly if accompanied with a larceny, in the same rank with desertion from a ship of war, and subjected the offender to the punishment of death. Laws of Wis-buy, art. 61. By other laws, he was. for mere desertion, branded or imprisoned as a felon. Laws of the Hanse Towns, art. 43, cited in Malynes’ Lex Mercatoria, App. 20. And, in the more humane usages and legislation of later times, desertion is punished by imprisonment of the deserter or confiscation of his wages and effects, or by both. Abb. Shipp. (Ed. 1829) p. 134. And, in England, the punishment is prescribed by act of parliament (Act 2 Geo. II. c. 30, §§ 3. 4; Act 31 Geo. III. c. 39, §§ 3, 4). In my opinion, the evidence disproves the charge that the libellants were guilty of desertion, as that offence is defined and punished under the maritime law.

If, then, the claimants show legal cause in bar of the action, and for the forfeiture of the demands sued by the libellants, it is under the other branch of the defence — that their absence constituted the offence called "desertion,” in the act of congress of duly 20, 1790 (1 Stat. 131), aud made punishable as such. Under the maritime law, the courts exercised a discretion, in punishing mal-feasances on the part of seamen, in derogation of their duty to the ship and of the authority of the master, but not amounting to wilful desertion, by a subtraction of wages, or by personal fine or imprisonment. Laws of Oleron.- art. 20; Laws of Wisbuy, art. 17; Laws of the Hanse Towns, art. 40. The British parliament, to guard against severe punishments disproportioned to the offence. limited, by statute, the kind and degree of punishment which might be inflicted on mariners for leaving a vessel on a coasting voyage or in a'home port, without permission of the officer in command. Molloy, bk. 2, c. 3, p. 249; Act 31 Geo. III. c. 39. The act of congress adopts, in almost the same words, the description of the offence of absence from the ship without leave of the officers, vhich is found in the English statute. But, creating a new method of proof, it declares an absence, so proved, to be a “desertion,” carrying with it a forfeiture of the wages and effects of the seaman, and thereby raises what is a minor offence under the maritime law and the English statute to one of high magnitude under our statute, and makes no discrimination between absences at home, absences in coasting voyages and absences in foreign voyages. This court has always regarded our statute as not only determining the punishment which alone can be applied to this offence, but as intended to define “desertion,” and to appoint the method by which that crime must be proved, before the serious consequences denounced against seamen can be incurred. It has, accordingly, been held, that every absence of a seaman from his ship, which is set up as a forfeiture of wages, must be proved in the manner directed by the statute, whether the leaving the ship was with the intention to desert or not. This principle is involved in the cases of The Cadmus [Case No. 2,280]; The Martha [Id. 9,144]; The Elizabeth Frith [Id. 4,361]; and several others. The doctrine deduced from that view of the law was, that acts of negligence or malfeasance in a crew, in respect to their remaining with the ship, could no longer be visited with a forfeiture of wages and effects, upon the common principles of the maritime law, nor unless the proof was made out in the way prescribed by the statute. As a necessary corollary from that doctrine, it was held to be indispensable to a conviction, to produce every particular of the proofs demanded by the act. It was also held, that the record in the log-book must declare the beginning and continuance of the absence, must be entered the day the seaman left the ship, and must assert that his absence was without the leave of the officer in command. A case decided by the circuit court for the First circuit has since been made public, which gives a different construction to the statute, and holds, in effect, that a new offense has been created and superadded by it to those existing under the law maritime, and that seamen remain liable, as before, to a confiscation of their wages, for abandoning their vessel with intent not to return to her, and may be convicted of that offence upon oral evidence alone. Cloutman v. Tunison [Id. 2,907]. This decision is high authority, and might have controlled the opinion of this court, if known to it at the time of the former adjudications; but I am not so convinced of the justness of the interpretation put by it upon the statute, as to retract the [541]*541previous views of this court and adopt that opinion in their place. I think that the ease of Cloutman v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 537, 1836 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-union-nysd-1836.