Veino v. The American Schooner Blakely

4 D. Haw. 442
CourtDistrict Court, D. Hawaii
DecidedFebruary 25, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 4 D. Haw. 442 (Veino v. The American Schooner Blakely) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Veino v. The American Schooner Blakely, 4 D. Haw. 442 (D. Haw. 1914).

Opinion

Dole, J.

It has been satisfactorily shown in the trial of this case that on the 6th of March, 1911, libelant- shipped as first mate of the American schooner Blakely, at Port Blakely, in the State of Washington, for a voyage to the port of Tocopilla, in Chili, South America, and return to a port of discharge in Washington, Oregon, California, or British Columbia; that the said schooner arrived in Toco-pilla on the 23rd day of May, in the same year, and lay there until after July 3rd discharging her cargo; and that on the 3rd day of July the master paid off and discharged the libelant against his will and protest at the port of Tocopilla. The libelant alleges that such discharge was without cause and in violation of the shipping articles entered into between him and the libellee, and claims wages to the amount of $520, less the amount received at the end of the voyage, and $520 for his necessary expenses during his enforced detention at Tocopilla and Valparaiso in said Chili, where he went from Tocopilla, and passage money back to the port of discharge; and alleges that he faithfully and in a skillful manner attended to his duties as mate up to the time of his discharge.

The answer denies the faithful and skillful service by libelant and alleges that on numerous occasions he slept while on watch, encouraged and aroused a spirit of insubordination in the crew; that libelant at Tocopilla absented himself from the vessel without leave and in defiance of the orders of the master, with general allegations of neglect of duty and definitely charges him with injury to the gaff of the schooner through neglect and inattention 'to duty, and upon the master’s remonstrance, with having used violent language toward him and assaulted him, and that the libelant acquiesced in his discharge at Tocopilla.

[1] It is a noticeable feature of these proceedings that [444]*444none of the matters complained of in the defense as to neglect of duty, encouraging a spirit of insubordination among the crew, absence from the vessel without leave at Toco-pilla, and the use of violent language toward the master and committing an assault on him, on the part of the libel-ant, were entered in the official log of the vessel. The law requires that the master of any vessel making a voyage from a port in the United States to any foreign port shall have an official log-book and shall enter therein “every offense committed by any member of his crew for which it is intended to prosecute or to enforce a forfeiture; . . . a statement of the conduct, character and qualifications of each of his crew or a statement that he declines to give an opinion of such particulars, . . . and the name of every seaman or apprentice who ceases to be a member of the crew otherwise than by death, -with the place, time, manner and cause thereof.” Rev. Stat., sec. 4290. Section 4596 of the Revised Statutes states the following offenses among others and sets forth the punishment that may be inflicted for them respectively: “Continued wilful neglect of duty at sea; . . . and assaulting any master or mate.” Section 4597 of the Revised Statutes is as follows:

“Upon the commission of any of the offenses enumerated in the preceding section an entry thereof shall be made in the official log-book.on the day on which the offense was committed, and shall be signed by the master and by the mate or one of the crew; and the offender, if still in the vessel, shall, before her next arrival at any port, or, if she is at the time in port, before her departure therefrom, be furnished with a copy of such entry, and have the samé read over distinctly and audibly to him, and may thereupon make such a reply thereto as he thinks fit; and a statement that a copy of the entry has been so furnished, or the same has been so read over, together with his reply, if any, made by the offender, shall likewise be entered and signed in the same manner. [2] In any subsequent legal proceedings the entries hereinbefore required shall, if practicable, be produced or proved, and in default of such pro[445]*445duction or proof the court hearing the case may, at its discretion, refuse to receive evidence of the offense.”

When the charges in such matters are satisfactorily proved, it is undoubtedly the best practice to ignore the failure of the master to make the appropriate entries in his log-book and to proceed with the trial.

“Sections 4596 and 4597 show that the failure to enter facts in any log on which deduction of wages is claimed, does not absolutely prevent proof of those facts, but' gives the court a discretion to reject the evidence. No doubt the general purpose of these provisions of law is such as libel-ant’s counsel suggests, to prevent the oppression of seamen by trumped up unfounded claims of misconduct, and ordinarily, and if the facts are left in doubt, the failure to enter the facts in the log should defeat the attempted de-fence.” The T. F. Whiton, 23 Fed. Cas. 873, No. 13,849.

It is difficult from the evidence offered as to the complaints by the master against the libelant, to reach a conclusion. Under such a situation the law and the precedent cited abové would seem to apply, and they will be followed. The court will not further consider such evidence.

[3] The act of the master in dismissing the libelant in such an out-of-the-way port as Tocopilla, was a severe one, and could only be justified by convincing evidence, which does not appear. So far as one may judge from the evidence, the libelant was practically marooned there, the conditions being such that he, although making reasonable efforts to find a new position as mate on some vessel leaving there or Valparaiso, for the Pacific coast, was unable to do so before about the first of January, 1912, and was without funds for paying for a passage to the Pacific coast, except possibly at the time of his discharge at Tocopilla, ..at which time there does not appear to have been such opportunity, and even then insufficient for a first-class passage.

“Generally speaking, the causes which justify the master in discharging a seaman before the termination of the voy[446]*446age, and especially in a foreign port, are such as amount to a disqualification and show him to be unfit for the service he has engaged for, or unfit to be trusted in the vessel. They are — mutinous and rebellious conduct, persevered in, gross dishonesty, or embezzlement, or theft, or habitual drunkenness, or where the seaman is habitually a stirrer-up of quarrels, to the destruction of the order of the vessel and the discipline of the crew. . . . Ordinarily, the law will not justify the master in dismissing a seaman for a single offense, unless it be of a very high and aggravated character, implying a deep degree of moral turpitude, or a dangerous and ungovernable temper or disposition. It looks on occasional offenses, and outbreaks of passion, not so frequent as to become habits, with indulgence, and by maritime courts it is administered with lenity and a due regard to the character and habits of the subjects to whom it applies.” Smith v. Treat, 22 Fed. Cas. 687, 688, No. 13,117.

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Related

Smith v. Treat
22 F. Cas. 687 (D. Maine, 1845)
The T. F. Whiton
23 F. Cas. 873 (S.D. New York, 1879)

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Bluebook (online)
4 D. Haw. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veino-v-the-american-schooner-blakely-hid-1914.