Willard v. Dorr

29 F. Cas. 1277, 3 Mason C.C. 161
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedMay 15, 1823
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 29 F. Cas. 1277 (Willard v. Dorr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willard v. Dorr, 29 F. Cas. 1277, 3 Mason C.C. 161 (circtdma 1823).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

It may be proper to state the leading facts of the case before I proceed to the consideration of the matters in controversy between the parties. The voyage originally undertaken by the ship Jenny, of which William Dorr was master, was a circuitous voyage from Boston to China, and back to the United States. The ship sailed from Boston on the voyage on the 5th of June, 1807. In the course of the voyage she stopped at Port Jackson, in the colony of New South Wales, and arrived at the Feegee Islands in the Pacific Ocean in May, 1808, and there disposed of the principal part of her cargo. aDd took on board a cargo of sandal wood; and sailed for China in September of the same year. Having sustained some injuries by tempestuous weather at a previous period, and the change of the monsoon approaching, it was judged proper before entering the Chinese seas, to stop for a supply of spars and other necessaries at the Island of Guam, one of the Ladrone Islands. Whilst lying there to refit, a quantity of beech de mer, beetle nuts, and deer horns were taken on board and added to the cargo. The ship sailed from Guam for China on the 10th of December, 1808, after a delay of about forty-five days, and was captured by a British cruiser on the 27th of the same month, and sent into Calcutta for adjudication. She arrived at Calcutta on the 4th of April, 1809; and after due proceedings had in the vi'ce admiralty court there, she was finally with her cargo condemned on the 9th of June of the same year. Captain Dorr was sent in with the ship, and attended personally to her concerns in court and out, until the condemnation, when the ship and cfirgo were sold; and his apprentice was retained for the ship’s service during the same period. An appeal was taken to the high court of admiralty, and Captain Dorr remained at Calcutta for the purpose of obtaining the necessary papers &c. until the 27th of December of the same year, and finally arrived at Boston on the 22d of March. 1809. Upon the hearing of the appeal, restitution of ship and cargo and freight were decreed by the high court of admiralty on the 16th of May, 1S11, and a small part of the proceeds were then received. But in consequence of the delay of bringing the residue of the proceeds into court, and the intervention of the war between Great Britain and the United States, all farther proceedings were suspended until after the peace of 1S15. In the spring of that year the proceeds were paid to the respondent’s agent in London, and were finally' received in America for the benefit of all concerned in November, 1S16. Captain Dorr left the United States for Maeoa in July. 1810. and never afterwards returned, having died at that place in May, 1S13.

[1278]*1278These facts are not controverted by the parties. The libel asserts a claim for wages for the master up to the time of the capture, or departure for Guam; aud for compensation to the master for services during the pendency of the proceedings, and until his arrival in the United States, as well as the expenses of his passage home. It also asserts a claim for wages for the apprentice up to the departure from Guam; and for his services afterwards on board the ship, until her condemnation. The answer of the respondents sets up a variety of defences, some of which go to the merits of the whole claim, and some only as set-offs to diminish the amount of compensation.

The first and most general in its nature is. that the demand is stale, and ought not (independent of any positive bar under any statute of limitations) to be entertained by the court, the lapse of time creating a presumption that it has been deemed settled by the parties, or that it has no foundation in justice or equity. I agree to the position, that courts of admiralty ought not to entertain suits for stale demands of wages. Although there is no prescribed limits beyond which, in the exercise of adrhiralty jurisdiction, the courts of the United States may not take cognizance of suits; yet it has been the constant habit of admiralty courts to refuse their aid in favor of old and dormant claims. Like courts of equity, they prescribe a rule to themselves, by analogy to those positively prescribed to courts of common law, beyond which, unless under special circumstances, constituting a just exception, they will not interpose. The repose of the commercial world requires this forbearance; for otherwise demands would perpetually spring up after the evidence to repel them was gone by the death, oc dispersion of witnesses, or by.the loss of important documents. So that lapse of time and acquiescence of parties constitute material ingredients in every claim, which is sought to be enforced through the instrumentality of tribunals of justice. Where there are no positive bars, presumptions are often indulged, which are equally fatal to a reeov-ery. More than twelve years elapsed between the end of this voyage and the commencement of the present suit: and if the case stood upon ordinary grounds, such a delay unexplained would be decisive against the libellants. It would affect the demand with the imputation of staleness, and authorize the court to dismiss the libel.

But the circumstances of the present case appear to me decisive against the defence of staleness. It is true, that the original voyage was commenced in 1S0T. and the progress and fulfilment of it were entirely interrupted by the capture in liecember, lsps. The claim for wages may in a sense be said to have been complete by the maritime law for a period up to the last port of trade and delivery, which I consider to have been the Island of Guam, and during half the time of the ship's delay there. The Two Catherines [Case No. 14,288]. If the conduct of the ship had been confined simply to the repairs and refreshments necessary for the prosecution of the voyage, there might have been some ground to have considered the Feegee Islands the last port of departure for the purposes of trade. But the purchase and taking on board of additional cargo at Guam, afford strong presumptions to my mind, that the stop there was not singly from necessity, but mixed with motives of interest subservient to the great objects of the voyage. But though the right to wages up to the last port of trade may be considered as earned under the rnari-time law; yet the right to those wages is acquired under a continuing contract for the whole voyage, and is not absolute until its regular termination. They may be forfeited for subsequent offences; and by the stipulations of our common shipping articles, are not payable until the voyage is ended. The contract then being for the whole voyage out and home, no presumption of satisfaction or extinguishment can ordinarily arise until after the termination of it by a return home. In the case before the court, a capture intervened, and produced, not an extinguishment, but a suspension of the contract. The seamen were, as has been repeatedly held by this court, bound to remain by the ship until condemnation took place, or a recovery became hopeless. The Saratoga [Id. 12.355]; Emerson v. Howland [Id. 4,441], If upon the proceedings at Calcutta the ship had been acquitted, the seamen would have been bound to have gone on and completed the voyage upon the peril of the forfeitures attached by the maritime law to their original contract. She was condemned and sold; and certainly after that time they were at full liberty to depart and seek a new employment. Still, however, the condemnation was not final upon their rights to wages earned subsequent to the departure from the Feegee Islands or from the Island of Guam.

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

Related

Ivani Contracting Corp. v. City of New York
103 F.3d 257 (Second Circuit, 1997)
Armour & Co. v. Fort Morgan Steamship Co.
270 U.S. 253 (Supreme Court, 1926)
A. O. Andersen & Co. v. Susquehanna S. S. Co.
275 F. 989 (E.D. Virginia, 1921)
France & Canada S. S. Corp. v. French Republic
270 F. 609 (S.D. New York, 1920)
Anderson v. Pacific Coast Co.
99 F. 109 (N.D. California, 1900)
Sharp v. The Journeyman
60 F. 295 (N.D. New York, 1894)
Gillingham v. Charleston Tow-Boat & Transp. Co.
40 F. 649 (D. South Carolina, 1889)
The Elvine
19 F. 528 (S.D. New York, 1884)
Jenkins v. Wheeler
4 Rob. 575 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1867)
Freeman v. Walker
6 Me. 68 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1829)
Arfridson v. Ladd
12 Mass. 173 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1815)
Oxnard v. Dean
10 Mass. 143 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1813)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 1277, 3 Mason C.C. 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willard-v-dorr-circtdma-1823.