Section 4 of the Seamen's Act of March 4, 1916, c. 153, 38 Stat.
1164, amending Rev.Stats. § 4530, provides that every seaman
on a vessel of the United States shall be entitled to receive on
demand from the master one-half of the wages which he shall then
have earned at every port where such vessel, after the voyage has
been commenced, shall load or deliver cargo before the voyage is
ended; that all stipulations in the contract to the contrary shall
be void; that such demand shall not be made before the expiration
of or oftener than 5 days; that the master's failure to comply
shall release the seaman from his contract and entitle him to full
payment of wages earned, and (by a proviso) that the section shall
apply to seamen on foreign vessels while in harbors of the United
States, and that the courts of the United States shall be open to
such seamen for its enforcement.
Held:
(1) The proviso makes it clear that the benefits of the section
are for foreign seamen on foreign vessels as well as American
seamen on such vessels, since otherwise the grant of access to
federal courts -- a right already enjoyed by American seamen --
would have been superfluous. P.
252 U. S. 353.
Sandberg v. McDonald, 248 U. S. 185,
distinguished.
(2) The title of the act does not justify a different
construction. P.
252 U. S.
354.
(3) The section is constitutional as applied to the case of a
foreign seaman who shipped abroad on a foreign vessel under a
contract withholding payment of wages until the end of the voyage
and where demand was made before that time, it being within the
authority of Congress thus to condition the right of foreign
vessels to enter and use the ports of the United States. P.
252 U. S. 355.
Patterson v. Bark Eudora, 190 U.
S. 169.
(4) The wages in respect of which demand may be made are not
limited to those earned in a port of the United States, nor does
the section intend that demand made in such a port shall be
deferred five days from the arrival of the vessel there. P.
252 U. S.
356.
256 F. 631 affirmed.
Page 252 U. S. 349
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 252 U. S. 351
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents questions arising under the Seamen's Act of
March 4, 1915, c. 153, 38 Stat. 1164. It appears that Dillon, the
respondent, was a British subject, and shipped at Liverpool on the
eighth of May, 1916, on a British vessel. The shipping articles
provided for a voyage of not exceeding three years, commencing at
Liverpool and ending at such port in the United Kingdom as might be
required by the master, the voyage including ports of the United
States. The wages which were fixed by the articles were made
payable at the end of the voyage. At
Page 252 U. S. 352
the time of the demand for one-half wages, and at the time of
the beginning of the action, the period of the voyage had not been
reached. The articles provided that no cash should be advanced
abroad or liberty granted other than at the pleasure of the master.
This, it is admitted, was a valid contract for the payment of wages
under the laws of Great Britain. The ship arrived at the Port of
Pensacola, Florida, on July 31, 1916, and while she was in that
port, Dillon, still in the employ of the ship, demanded from her
master one-half part of the wages theretofore earned, and payment
was refused. Dillon had received nothing for about two months, and
after the refusal of the master to comply with his demand for
one-half wages, he filed in the district court of the United States
a libel against the ship, claiming $125.00, the amount of wages
earned at the time of demand and refusal.
The district court found against Dillon upon the ground that his
demand was premature. The circuit court of appeals reversed this
decision, and held that Dillon was entitled to recover. 256 F. 631.
A writ of certiorari brings before us for review the decree of the
circuit court of appeals.
In
Sandberg v. McDonald, 248 U.
S. 185, and
Neilson v. Rhine Shipping Co.,
248 U. S. 205, we
had occasion to deal with § 11 of the Seamen's Act, and held
that it did not invalidate advancement of seamen's wages in foreign
countries when legal where made. The instant case requires us to
consider now § 4 of the same act. That section amends §
4530, U.S. Revised Statutes, and so far as pertinent provides:
"Section 4530. Every seaman on a vessel of the United States
shall be entitled to receive on demand from the master of the
vessel to which he belongs one-half part of the wages which he
shall have then earned at every port where such vessel, after the
voyage has been commenced, shall load or deliver cargo before the
voyage is ended, and all stipulations in the contract to the
contrary
Page 252 U. S. 353
shall be void:
Provided, such a demand shall not be
made before the expiration of, nor oftener than once in five days.
Any failure on the part of the master to comply with this demand
shall release the seaman from his contract, and he shall be
entitled to full payment of wages earned. . . .
And provided
further, that this section shall apply to seamen on foreign
vessels while in harbors of the United States, and the courts of
the United States shall be open to such seamen for its
enforcement."
This section has to do with the recovery of wages by seamen,
and, by its terms, gives to every seaman on a vessel of the United
States, the right to demand one-half the wages which he shall have
then earned at every port where such vessel, after the voyage has
been commenced, shall load or deliver cargo before the end of the
voyage, and stipulations in the contract to the contrary are
declared to be void. A failure of the master to comply with the
demand releases the seaman from his contract, and entitles him to
recover full payment of the wages, and the section is made
applicable to seamen on foreign vessels while in harbors of the
United States, and the courts of the United States are open to such
seamen for enforcement of the act.
This section is an amendment of § 4530 of the Revised
Statutes; it was intended to supplant that section, as amended by
the act of December 21, 1898, which provided:
"Every seaman on a vessel of the United States shall be entitled
to receive from the master of the vessel to which he belongs
one-half part of the wages which shall be due him at every port
where such vessel, after the voyage has been commenced, shall load
or deliver cargo before the voyage is ended unless the contrary be
expressly stipulated in the contract,"
etc.
The section, of which the statute now under consideration is an
amendment, expressly excepted from the right to recover one-half of
the wages those cases in which the
Page 252 U. S. 354
contract otherwise provided. In the amended section, all such
contract provisions are expressly rendered void, and the right to
recover is given the seamen notwithstanding contractual obligations
to the contrary. The language applies to all seamen on vessels of
the United States, and the second proviso of the section as it now
reads, makes it applicable to seamen on foreign vessels while in
harbors of the United States. The proviso does not stop there, for
it contains the express provision that the courts of the United
States shall be open to seamen on foreign vessels for its
enforcement. The latter provision is of the utmost importance in
determining the proper construction of this section of the act. It
manifests the purpose of Congress to give the benefit of the act to
seamen on foreign vessels, and to open the doors of the federal
courts to foreign seamen. No such provision was necessary as to
American seamen, for they had the right independently of this
statute to seek redress in the courts of the United States, and if
it were the intention of Congress to limit the provision of the act
to American seamen, this feature would have been wholly
superfluous.
It is said that it is the purpose to limit the benefit of the
act to American seamen, notwithstanding this provision giving
access to seamen on foreign vessels to the courts of the United
States, because of the title of the act in which its purpose is
expressed "to promote the welfare of American seamen in the
merchant marine of the United States." But the title is more than
this, and not only declares the purposes to promote the welfare of
American seamen, but further to abolish arrest and imprisonment as
a penalty for desertion and to secure the abrogation of treaty
provisions in relation thereto, and to promote safety at sea. But
the title of an act cannot limit the plain meaning of its text,
although it may be looked to to aid in construction in cases of
doubt.
Cornell v. Coyne, 192 U. S. 418,
192 U. S. 530,
and cases cited. Apart from the text, which we think plain, it is
by
Page 252 U. S. 355
no means clear that, if the act were given a construction to
limit its application to American seamen only, the purposes of
Congress would be subserved, for such limited construction would
have a tendency to prevent the employment of American seamen and to
promote the engagement of those who were not entitled to sue for
one-half wages under the provisions of the law. But, taking the
provisions of the act as the same are written, we think it plain
that it manifests the purpose of Congress to place American and
foreign seamen on an equality of right insofar as the privileges of
this section are concerned, with equal opportunity to resort to the
courts of the United States for the enforcement of the act. Before
the amendment, as we have already pointed out, the right to recover
one-half the wages could not be enforced in face of a contractual
obligation to the contrary. Congress, for reasons which it deemed
sufficient, amended the act so as to permit the recovery upon the
conditions named in the statute. In the case of
Sandberg v.
McDonald, 248 U.S.,
supra, we found no purpose
manifested by Congress in § 11 to interfere with wages
advanced in foreign ports under contracts legal where made. That
§ dealt with advancements, and contained no provision such as
we find in § 4. Under § 4, all contracts are avoided
which run counter to the purposes of the statute. Whether
consideration for contractual rights under engagements legally made
in foreign countries would suggest a different course is not our
province to inquire. It is sufficient to say that Congress has
otherwise declared by the positive terms of this enactment, and if
it had authority to do so, the law is enforceable in the
courts.
We come, then, to consider the contention that this construction
renders the statute unconstitutional as being destructive of
contract rights. But we think this contention must be decided
adversely to the petitioner upon the authority of previous cases in
this Court. The matter was
Page 252 U. S. 356
fully considered in
Patterson v. Bark Eudora,
190 U. S. 169, in
which the previous decisions of this Court were reviewed, and the
conclusion reached that the jurisdiction of this government over
foreign merchant vessels in or ports was such as to give authority
to Congress to make provisions of the character now under
consideration; that it was for this government to determine upon
what terms and conditions vessels of other countries might be
permitted to enter our harbors, and to impose conditions upon the
shipment of sailors in our own ports, and make them applicable to
foreign as well as domestic vessels. Upon the authority of that
case and others cited in the opinion therein, we have no doubt as
to the authority of Congress to pass a statute of this sort
applicable to foreign vessels in our ports and controlling the
employment and payment of seamen as a condition of the right of
such foreign vessels to enter and use the ports of the United
States.
But it is insisted that Dillon's action was premature, as he
made a demand upon the master within less than five days after the
vessel arrived in an American port. This contention was sustained
in the district court, but it was ruled otherwise in the court of
appeals. Turning to the language of the act, it enacts in substance
that the demand shall not be made before the expiration of five
days, nor oftener than once in five days. Subject to such
limitation, such demand may be made in the port where the vessel
stops to load or deliver cargo. It is true that the act is made to
apply to seamen on foreign vessels while in United States ports,
but this is far from requiring that the wages shall be earned in
such ports, or that the vessels shall be in such ports five days
before demand for one-half the wages earned is made. It is the
wages of the voyage for which provision is made, with the
limitation of the right to demand one-half of the amount earned not
oftener than once in five days. The section permits no
Page 252 U. S. 357
demand until five days after the voyage has begun, and then
provides that it may be made at every port where the vessel stops
to load or deliver cargo, subject to the five-day limitation. If
the vessel must be five days in port before demand can be made, it
would defeat the purpose of the law as to vessels not remaining
that long in port, and would run counter to the manifest purpose of
Congress to prevent a seaman from being without means while in a
port of the United States.
We agree with the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Fifth Circuit,
whose judgment we are now reviewing, that the demand was not
premature. It is true that the Circuit Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit held in the case of
The Italier, 257 F.
712, that demand, made before the vessel had been in port for five
days, was premature; this was upon the theory that the law was not
in force until the vessel had arrived in a port of the United
States. But the limitation upon demand has no reference to the
length of stay in the domestic port. The right to recover wages is
controlled by the provisions of the statute, and includes wages
earned from the beginning of the voyage. It is the right to demand
and recover such wages with the limitation of the intervals of
demand as laid down in the statute which is given to the seaman
while the ship is in a harbor of the United States.
We find no error in the decree of the circuit court of appeals,
and the same is
Affirmed.