1. Under the requirement of the Seamen's Act of March 4, 1915,
that
"the sailors shall, while at sea, be divided into at least two,
and the firemen, oilers and water tenders into at least three,
watches, which shall be kept on duty successively for the
performance of ordinary work incident to the sailing and management
of the vessel,"
all the sailors must be divided into watches as nearly equal to
each other numerically as the whole number of sailors will permit.
P.
269 U. S.
367.
2. The purpose of this provision, as shown by the Act and its
history, is to promote safety at sea, rather than to regulate the
working conditions of the men.
Id.
3. The phrase "divided into watches" is to be given the meaning
it had acquired in the language and usages of the nautical trade,
connoting a division of the crew as nearly equal as possible. P.
269 U. S.
370.
1 F.2d 923 reversed.
Certiorari to a decree of the circuit court of appeals which
affirmed a decree of the district court dismissing a libel for
seamen's wages.
Page 269 U. S. 365
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioners, libelants below, quit the service of the steamship
company and sought to recover their earned wages on the ground of a
violation of § 2 of the Seaman's Act of March 4, 1915, c. 153,
38 Stat. 1164 copied in the margin.
*
Omitting the various provisions with which we
Page 269 U. S. 366
are not here concerned, the pertinent requirement of that
section is that:
"the sailors shall, while at sea, be divided into at least two,
and the firemen, oilers, and water tenders into at least three,
watches, which shall be kept on duty successively for the
performance of ordinary work incident to the sailing and management
of the vessel."
For a failure on the part of the master to comply with this,
among other, provisions of the section, the seamen are entitled to
a discharge and to receive the wages earned. The failure complained
of was that the sailors were not divided into watches of equal or
approximately equal numbers, as, it was insisted, the statute
contemplated.
The company was the owner the steamship
Lewis
Luckenbach, a vessel of 14,400 tons burden, upon which
libelants were hired as sailors for a voyage from New York to
Pacific ports and return to some port north of Cape Hatteras on the
Atlantic. Altogether, there was thirteen sailors on board, three of
whom, including libelants, were assigned as quartermasters. On the
voyage and while at sea, these sailors were not equally divided
into watches. Three watches were on duty, each consisting of one
quartermaster and one able seaman, the remaining seven sailors
being kept at day work only. The district court dismissed the
libel, and this was affirmed by the circuit court of appeals. 1
F.2d 923. Both courts were of opinion that the primary object of
the statutory provision was to fix hours of service so as to
prevent overwork, not to prescribe the number of seamen on each
watch. The district court thought that this conception of the law
was borne out by the consideration that, if one-half or one-third
of the crew must be assigned to duty at night, a majority of them
would have little or nothing to do. The circuit court of appeals
seemed to think that the purpose of Congress to provide for the
safety of the ship was satisfied rather in the selection of
qualified quartermasters and men for the lookout than in equality
of the watches. With these views we are unable to agree.
Page 269 U. S. 367
The general purpose of the Seamen's Act is not only to safeguard
the welfare of the seamen as workmen, but, as set forth in the
title, also "to promote safety at sea." The Act as a whole shows
very clearly that, while hours of work and proper periods of rest
were regarded as considerations of primary concern while the vessel
is in a safe harbor, these considerations must yield, as they have
always yielded, to the paramount necessity of safety while the ship
is at sea, and, as indicating that the provision under review was
not intended primarily as a regulation of working hours, it is
significant that it does not apply to the entire crew, but requires
a division into watches only of the sailors and the firemen,
oilers, and water tenders. It is natural to suppose that, if the
purpose of Congress was chiefly to regulate hours of work,
something would have been said about the service, while at sea, of
those employed in the steward's department as well. And not only is
the division confined to those of the crew engaged in the mechanics
of conducting the ship on her voyage, but the imperative
requirement is that the watches into which they are divided "shall
be kept on duty successively" -- that is to say, by turns, so that
one watch must come on as another goes off. The evident purpose was
to compel a division of the men for duty on deck and in the
fireroom, and continuity of service, to the end that in those
departments the ship should at all times be actively manned with
equal efficiency.
It probably is true, as said below, that to construe the statute
as compelling numerical equality of the watches will result, so far
as the sailors are concerned, in the performance of less work on
deck at night. And it may be noted in that connection that, in the
hearings before the House committee having charge of the bill, it
was objected on behalf of the shipowners, obviously, as the context
shows, upon the theory that such equality was in fact contemplated
by the provision that, "on cargo steamers, it would
Page 269 U. S. 368
be an injustice to keep a lot of men on watch all night, and
have nothing for them to do." House Hearings on S. 136, Vol. 104,
pt. 2, p. 5, Feb. 24, 1914. But the provision, fundamentally, is a
measure of precaution against those perilous and often unexpected
emergencies of the sea when only immediate and wakeful readiness
for action may avert disaster or determine the issue between life
and death; its effect as a regulator of working conditions is a
matter of subordinate intent. A consideration of other safety
provisions of the Act will help to make this clear.
Among them, the Act (§ 13, p. 1169) provides that not less
than 75 percentum of the crew in each department shall be able to
understand any order given by the officers of such vessel, and that
a certain percentage of her deck crew shall be of a rating not less
than able seaman, meaning, except on the Great Lakes, a seaman, 19
years of age or upwards who has had at least 3 years' service on
deck at sea or on the Great Lakes. It also contains elaborate
provisions (§ 14, pp. 1170-1184) for the equipment of
ocean-going vessels with life-saving appliances, and, among other
things, requires (p. 1180) that:
"At no moment of its voyage may any ocean cargo steam vessel of
the United States have on board a total number of persons greater
than that for whom accommodation is provided in the lifeboats on
board."
None of these provisions is of much, if any, concern except as a
precaution against the unusual crises of the sea.
As a ship pursues her way in security, perhaps for many years,
these requirements for safety appliances and for able seamen may
seem overexacting, and the language test, as well as a division of
the watches into equal numbers, needlessly burdensome. But it is
apparent from the hearings and debates that Congress looked forward
to the possibility of other disasters like those of the
Page 269 U. S. 369
Titanic and the
Volturno (the facts of which
had been subjected to inquiry by its committees), where, in the
one, the lack of lifeboats probably caused the loss of many lives,
although in a quite sea, and where, in the other, lifeboats lowered
in a great storm were engulfed, it was thought by some, from the
absence of the skill of able seamen in launching them, or, like
that of the
City of Rio de Janeiro (
In re Pacific Mail
S.S. Co., 130 F. 76), which sank with many of its lifeboats
unlaunched because the crew of Chinese sailors were unable to
understand the language in which the orders of their officers were
given. The following from the opinion in that case (pp. 82, 83) is
peculiarly apposite:
"It is, as was said by Judge Hawley in
Re Meyer, 74 F.
885,"
"the duty of the owners of a steamer carrying goods and
passengers not only to provide a seaworthy vessel, but they must
also provide the vessel with a crew adequate in number and
competent for their duty with reference to all the exigencies of
the intended route;"
"not merely competent for the ordinary duties of an uneventful
voyage, but for any exigency that is likely to happen. . . . The
case shows that the
City of Rio de Janeiro left the port
of Honolulu on the voyage under consideration with a crew of 84
Chinamen, officered by white men. The officers could not speak the
language of the Chinese, and but two of the latter -- the boatswain
and chief fireman -- could understand that of the officers.
Consequently, the orders of the officers had to be communicated
either through the boatswain or chief fireman, or by signs and
signals. So far as appears, that seems to have worked well enough
on the voyage in question, until the ship came to grief and there
arose the necessity for quick and energetic action in the darkness.
In that emergency, the crew was wholly inefficient and incompetent,
as the sad results proved. The boats were in separate places on the
ship. The sailors could not understand
Page 269 U. S. 370
the language in which the orders of the officers in command of
the respective boats had to be given. It was too dark for them to
see signs (if signs could have been intelligibly given), and only
one of the two Chinese who spoke English appears to have known
anything about the lowering of a boat, and there had been no drill
of the crew in the matter of lowering them. Under such
circumstances, it is not surprising that but three of the boats
were lowered, one of which was successfully launched by the efforts
of Officer Coghlan and the ship's carpenter, another of which was
swamped by one of the Chinese crew letting the after fall down with
a run, and the third of which was lowered so slowly that it was
swamped as the ship went down. We have no hesitation in holding
that the ship was insufficiently manned, for the reason that the
sailors were unable to understand and execute the orders made
imperative by the exigency that unhappily arose, and resulted so
disastrously to life, as well as to property."
See also R.S. § 4463, amended by Act May 11, 1918,
c. 72, § 1, 40 Stat. 548;
Flint & P.M. R. Co. v.
Marine Ins. Co., 71 F. 210, 219;
Northern Commercial Co v.
Lindblom, 162 F. 250, 254.
It is not unreasonable to conclude that Congress determined that
each of the watches, like the crew as a whole, should be "adequate
in number," competent and in a state of readiness "for any exigency
that is likely to happen" -- such as a collision, the striking of
the ship upon a reef of rocks or an iceberg, the sudden breaking
out of fire, and other happenings of like disastrous tendency --
and, to this end, meant to provide for successive and continuous
watches to be constituted in numbers as nearly equal as the sum of
the whole number would permit.
In this conclusion we are fortified by the consideration that
the legislation deals with seamen and the merchant marine and,
consequently, the phrase "divided into . . . watches" is to be
given the meaning which it had acquired in the language and usages
of the trade to which the Act relates, in accordance with the rule
stated in
Unwin v.
Page 269 U. S. 371
Hanson, [1891] L.R. 2 Q.B. 115, 119;
"If the Act is one passed with reference to a particular trade,
business, or transaction, and words are used which everybody
conversant with that trade, business, or transaction, knows and
understands to have a particular meaning in it, then the words are
to be construed as having that particular meaning, though it may
differ from the common or ordinary meaning of the words."
In the understanding of the sailor, a division into "watches,"
as applied to the personnel of the ship, connotes a division as
nearly equal as possible.
"At sea, a ship's crew is commonly divided into two watches: the
master, second mate, fourth mate (if any), with one-half of the
seamen and boys, forming the so-called 'starboard watch;' after
four hours, these are relieved by the chief mate and the third
officer (if any) and the other half of the men, who form the 'port
watch.'"
Paasch, Marine Encyclopedia, 300, 301. R. H. Dana, Jr., in his
"Dictionary of Sea Terms," p. 129, defines the term "watch" as:
"Also, a certain portion of a ship's company appointed to stand
a given length of time. In the merchant service, all hands are
divided into two watches, larboard and starboard, with a mate to
command each."
And, at page 133, he says:
"The men are divided as equally as possible with reference to
their qualities as able seamen, ordinary seamen, or boys (as all
green hands are called, whatever their age may be), but, if the
number is unequal, the larboard watch had the odd one, since the
chief mate does not go aloft and do other duty in his watch, as the
second mate does in his."
The point is emphasized by the use of the distinctive terms
"anchor watch" and "sea watch," the former meaning the lookout
intrusted to one or two men when the vessel is at anchor, and the
latter being used "when one-half of a ship's crew is on duty"
at sea. Paasch, 301.
It is true that this meaning had its origin in the customs of
the sea before the advent of steam, but there is nothing
Page 269 U. S. 372
to show that it has now a different meaning, and, with nothing
in the context and no evidential circumstances to suggest the
contrary, we fairly may assume that the use of the technical terms
of the trade to which the statute relates imports their technical
meaning.
Decree reversed.
*
"Sec. 2. That in all merchant vessels of the United States of
more than one hundred tons gross, excepting those navigating
rivers, harbors, bays, or sounds exclusively, the sailors shall,
while at sea, be divided into at least two, and the firemen,
oilers, and water tenders into at least three, watches, which shall
be kept on duty successively for the performance of ordinary work
incident to the sailing and management of the vessel. The seamen
shall not be shipped to work alternately in the fireroom and on
deck, nor shall those shipped for deck duty be required to work in
the fireroom, or vice versa, but these provisions shall not limit
either the authority of the master or other officer or the
obedience of the seamen when, in the judgment of the master or
other officer, the whole or any part of the crew are needed for the
maneuvering of the vessel or the performance of work necessary for
the safety of the vessel or her cargo, or for the saving of life
aboard other vessels in jeopardy, or when in port or at sea from
requiring the whole or any part of the crew to participate in the
performance of fire, lifeboat, and other drills. While such vessel
is in a safe harbor, no seaman shall be required to do any
unnecessary work on Sundays or the following named days: New Year's
Day, the Fourth of July, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas
Day, but this shall not prevent the dispatch of a vessel on regular
schedule or when ready to proceed on her voyage. And at all times
while such vessel is in a safe harbor, nine hours, inclusive of the
anchor watch, shall constitute a day's work. Whenever the master of
any vessel shall fail to comply with this section, the seamen shall
be entitled to discharge from such vessel and to receive the wages
earned. But this section shall not apply to fishing or whaling
vessels or yachts."