The Union v. Jansen

24 F. Cas. 544, 2 Paine 277

This text of 24 F. Cas. 544 (The Union v. Jansen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern 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 v. Jansen, 24 F. Cas. 544, 2 Paine 277 (circtsdny 1837).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Circuit Justice,

in reversing the foregoing decree, said: There is certainly, in this case, much conflicting and contradictory evidence upon many of the allegations brought under consideration by the libel and answer; and if it was material to the decision of the cause to decide upon all these matters, of fact, I should be much in doubt as to the conclusion which ought to be drawn upon many of them. But I think the decision of the case does not require a minute examination of all these questions, or a conclusion as to the truth of all the matrers brought in contestation. The result, in my judgment, must turn upon the question whether the libellants left the ship by permission, express or implied, from the officer on board who was authorized to give such permission, and the inquiry is reduced down to a strict question of right and duty.3 There is no question, from the whole of the evidence on both sides, that although the ship was hauled off into the stream, she lay there between two and three hours, at a distance not exceeding half a mile; and that there was ample time for the libellants to have got' on board and boats plenty at the dock to have taken them on board. If they left the vessel by permission of the proper officer, there was no violation of duty on their part if they did not wait an unreasonable time, and the captain ought to have seen to getting them on board. But if they absented themselves without permission, it was a violation of duty on their part, and they assumed upon themselves the hazard of getting on board.

1 do not think that the libellants are to be considered as deserters, according to the general principles of the maritime law. The evi-[546]*546(lence does not warrant the conclusion that they left the ship with the intention of abandoning her; they most likely intended to return. There was plausible ground for their barely going on shore to get their dinners, •as the cook and steward had deserted and no dinner prepared for them at the usual time on board; but they knew the ship was ready and on the eve of sailing, and the evidence is uncontradicted that she was obliged’ to leave the dock. She was ordered off by the dock master, and there can be no pretence that she hauled off with any view to prevent or embarrass the libellants in getting on board. Nor is there any reason to conclude that the captain wished to leave them. Their services were wanted on board, and no complaint whatever was made against them. They allege, in tlieir libel, that they had faithfully discharged their duty on the outward voyage, and up to the very day the vessel sailed; and this is fully admitted in the answer; and the trifling disparity between their wages, fifteen dollars a month, and that given to other seamen, twelve dollars and fifty cents, could not have furnished any inducement to the captain to leave tried men. who had proved good and faithful, for the hazard of untried men.

But although there was not a desertion within the general principles of the maritime law, there may be a forfeiture of wages created by statute. The 5th section of the act regulating seamen in the merchant service (Act 1790, c. 29, § 5) provides that, if any seaman, &e., shall absent himself from the shij) or vessel in which he shall have shipped without leave of the master or officer commanding on board, and the mate or other officer having charge of the log-book shall make an entry therein of the name of such seaman. Ac., on rhe day he shall so absent himself, and if such seaman, Ac.. shall return to his duty within forty-eight hours, such seaman. Ac., shall forfeit three days' pay for every day for which he shall só absent himself, to be deducted out of his wages. But if any seaman. Ac., shall absent himself for more than forty-eight hours at any one time, he shall forfeit all the wages due to him and all his goods and chattels on hoard, at the time of his desertion, Ac. This sect'on of the act applies to cases of un’awt'ul absence, or absence without leave, and is to be distinguished from desertion according to the general principles of the maritime law. and is to be considered a statutory provision for a particular case The entry of the absence without leave was duly made in the logbook, according to the requisitions of the act. This is the view of this statute, and the distinction between a desertion according to the general principles of the maritime law, and a statutory forfeiture of wages for absence without leave, taken by Jlr. Justice Story in the case of Cloutman v. Tunison [Case No. 2.907], and which 1 consider the correct view. And this brings me to what 1 consider the turning point in the cause. Did the libel-lants absent themselves from the vessel without leave? If they did, it was a violation of their duty, and the failure to return on board within forty-eight hours worked a forfeiture of their wages. ■ it is not a reasonable inference to be drawn from the evidence, that it was not in their power to get on board of the ship. They allege, in their libel, that the ship had left the pier when they returned, and was lying off and on some distance from the shore, but not so far distant but that they could, from the end of the pier, distinguish the persons on board, and made signals that they wished to get on board the ship; and, from the answer and proofs, it is clear that the ship was not to exceed half a mile from the pier, and lay there. between two and three hours, and a great number of small boats lying at the pier, and that they could have been put on board for about a shilling apiece. The allegation in the libel is, that they went on shore to get their dinner, with the permission of the first officer, the captain being on shore. Any permission given by Smith, the second mate, must be laid out of view, because, in the first place, he had no authority to give any such permission whi st the first mate was on board, and, secondly, proof of absence by permission of the second mate is not according to the allegation in the libel. Coffin was the first mate, and he swears that the libellants did not ask of him permission to go on shore, and that he did not give them any such permission, but, on the contrary, forbid them to go: that they were about twenty feet distant from him and heard him forbid them. Smith, the second mate, says that Jansen asked permission of him to go on shore, which he gave, instructing him to return as soon as possible; and that the two other men accompanied Jansen; and that he heard the chief mate give Jansen permission, and did not hear the pilot say anything on the subject. Here the first and second mate stand directly opposed to each other. The former swears that he gave no permission, and the latter swears that he heard him give permission; but. even according to Smith's evidence, permission was only given to Jansen. The evidence upon this point *s somewhat contradictory, but the weight of evidence is clearly that the libel-lants left the ship without permission of the first mate, he being the officer in command at the time, the captain not being on board. A brief reference to what the witnesses have said on this point will be sufficient to show where the weight of evidence lies; and, in the first place, what is the evidence that any permission was given by the first mate. Ri- • tan, one of the libellants, says that Jansen asked permission of the first and second mates, and that all three went publicly, so as to be seen by the mates, pilot and all others about there. In his examination before the commissioners the question is put to him: “Did you go on shore with the permission of [547]

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

Related

Ward v. Ames
9 Johns. 138 (New York Supreme Court, 1812)
Jennings v. Camp
13 Johns. 94 (New York Supreme Court, 1816)
Webb v. Duckingfield
13 Johns. 390 (New York Supreme Court, 1816)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 544, 2 Paine 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-union-v-jansen-circtsdny-1837.