1. R.S. § 4529, providing that the owner of any vessel
making coastwise voyages who refuses or neglects to pay a seaman's
wages in the manner therein prescribed "without sufficient cause,"
shall pay the seaman a sum equal to two days' pay for each day
during which payment is delayed, does not apply where delay in
payment is due to the insolvency of the owner and the arrest of the
vessel subject to accrued claims beyond its value. P.
281 U. S.
54.
2. Evidence in an admiralty suit
not reviewed when
sufficient to support the concurrent action of two courts below. P.
281 U. S. 57.
3. Seamen who appealed unsuccessfully to the circuit court of
appeals from a decree in admiralty properly denying their claims to
payment of double wages for waiting time from the proceeds of a
vessel
held entitled to two-thirds of the costs in that
court because payment of wages from such proceeds, adjudged in
their favor, was withheld through a suspension of the decree
pending the appeal, ordered by the district court at the instance
of their opponents, who took no cross-appeal. P.
281 U. S. 57.
31 F.2d 1010 modified and affirmed.
Certiorari, 280 U.S. 547, to review a decree of the circuit
court of appeals affirming a decree in admiralty.
Page 281 U. S. 53
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is here on writ of certiorari, granted October 28,
1929, to review a decree (31 F.2d 1010) of the Court of Appeals for
the Fourth Circuit which affirmed, without opinion, a decree of the
District Court of Eastern Virginia denying, also without opinion,
the claims of petitioners, who are seamen, for double wages for
"waiting time," under R.S. § 4529, Tit. 46, U.S.Code, §
596 (Act of July 20, 1790, c. 29, § 6, 1 Stat. 133; Act June
7, 1872, c. 322, § 35, 17 Stat. 269, as amended, Act December
21, 1898, c. 28, § 4, 30 Stat. 756; Act March 4, 1915, c. 153,
§ 3, 38 Stat. 1164).
The power boat
Dola Lawson, licensed for coastwise
trade, and Fergusson, her owner, were libeled for repairs and
materials supplied to the vessel. Intervening petitions were filed
setting up claims for wages and the statutory allowance for waiting
time in the case of the present petitioners, and for repairs,
materials, and supplies in the case of other libelants. The vessel
was sold by order of the court, and the proceeds, which are
insufficient to satisfy the claims allowed, were paid into the
registry of the court to the credit of the cause.
The employment of two of the petitioners was terminated by the
seizure of the vessel. That of the third, Rowe, was terminated by
mutual consent some six months before the seizure. There was
evidence from which the trial court might have concluded that he
consented to deferred payment of his wages because of the financial
necessities of the owner. It was admitted on the argument that the
owner, because of his insolvency, was unable to pay seamen's wages,
and that petitioners must look alone to the proceeds of the vessel
for the satisfaction of their
Page 281 U. S. 54
claims, admissions which find support in the confused, and in
many respects unsatisfactory, record.
The district court denied petitioners' claims for double wages
for waiting time, but decreed payment of the wages due, with
interest, as prior liens. Although the other lienors did not
appeal, the court, at their instance, but for reasons which do not
appear, suspended the decree pending the appeal, so that the wages
allowed could not be paid from the proceeds of the vessel. To the
amounts found due the petitioners, the court of appeals added
interest until payment.
Section 4529, so far as relevant, provides:
"The master or owner of any vessel making coasting voyages shall
pay to every seaman his wages within two days after the termination
of the agreement under which he was shipped, or at the time such
seaman is discharged, whichever first happens. . . . Every master
or owner who refuses or neglects to make payment in the manner
hereinbefore mentioned without sufficient cause shall pay to the
seaman a sum equal to two days' pay for each and every day during
which payment is delayed, . . . which sum shall be recoverable as
wages in any claim made before the court. . . ."
The claim for double wages which, when valid, is by the terms of
the statute "recoverable as wages," has been held to be embraced in
the seaman's lien for wages, with priority over other liens, and
governed by the procedure applicable to suits for the recovery of
seamen's wages.
The Trader, 17 F.2d
623;
Gerber v. Spencer, 278 F. 886;
The Nika,
287 F. 717;
The Great Canton, 299 F. 953;
The Fort
Gaines, 18 F.2d
413;
The St. Paul, 77 F. 998;
Buckley v. Oceanic
S.S. Co., 5 F.2d 545;
The Charles L. Baylis, 25 F.
862;
The Wexford, 3 F. 577;
Cox v. Lykes
Brothers, 237 N.Y. 376;
cf. The Morning
Star, 1 F.2d 410,
411.
Page 281 U. S. 55
With these rulings as a premise, petitioners argue that the
statutory allowance is compensatory; that it accrues upon mere
delay in payment of wages, and may be recovered by including it in
petitioners' liens for wages, which have priority over the liens of
materialmen, notwithstanding the general rule that events
subsequent to the seizure do not give rise to liens against a
vessel
in custodia legis. See The Young America,
30 F. 789, 790;
The Nisseqogue, 280 F. 174, 181;
The
Grapeshot, 22 F. 123.
Cf. New York Dock Co. v. The
Poznan, 274 U. S. 117.
But the increased payment for waiting time is not denominated
wages by the statute, and the direction that it shall be recovered
as wages does not purport to affect the condition prerequisite to
its accrual that refusal or neglect to pay shall be without
sufficient cause. The phrase "without sufficient cause" must be
taken to embrace something more than valid defenses to the claim
for wages. Otherwise, it would have added nothing to the statute.
In determining what other causes are sufficient, the phrase is to
be interpreted in the light of the evident purpose of the section
to secure prompt payment of seamen's wages (H.R.Rep. 1657,
Committee on the Merchant Marine and Fisheries, 55th Cong., 2d
Sess.), and thus to protect them from the harsh consequences of
arbitrary and unscrupulous action of their employers, to which, as
a class, they are peculiarly exposed.
The words "refuses or neglects to make payment . . . without
sufficient cause" connote either conduct which is in some sense
arbitrary or willful, or at least a failure not attributable to
impossibility of payment. We think the use of this language
indicates a purpose to protect seamen from delayed payments of
wages by the imposition of a liability which is not exclusively
compensatory,
Page 281 U. S. 56
but designed to prevent, by its coercive effect, arbitrary
refusals to pay wages, and to induce prompt payment when payment is
possible. Hence, we conclude that the liability is not imposed
regardless of the fault of the master or owner, or his retention of
any interest in the vessel from which payment could be made. It can
afford no such protection, and exert no effective coercive force,
where delay in payment, as here, is due to the insolvency of the
owner and the arrest of the vessel, subject to accrued claims
beyond its value. Together, these obstacles to payment of wages
must be taken to be a sufficient cause to relieve from the
statutory liability.
The Trader, supra; Feldman v. American
Palestine Line, Inc., 25 F.2d 1002.
Cf. Gerber v. Spencer,
supra. Otherwise, it would not be imposed on the owner
directly or through his interest in the ship, but only upon the
lienors, who are neither within the letter nor the spirit of the
statute.
That the liability is not incurred where the refusal to pay is
in some reasonable degree morally justified, or where the demand
for wages cannot be satisfied either by the owner or his interest
in the ship, has been the conclusion reached with practical
unanimity by the lower federal courts.
The Wenonah, Fed.
Cas No. 17,412;
The General McPherson, 100 F. 860;
The
Alice B. Phillips, 106 F. 956;
The George W. Wells,
118 F. 761;
The Express, 129 F. 655;
The St. Paul,
supra; The Sadie C. Sumner, 142 F. 611;
The Amazon,
144 F. 153;
The Sentinel, 152 F. 564;
Pacific Mail
S.S. Co. v. Schmidt, 214 F. 513, 520;
The Moshulu,
276 F. 35;
The Acropolis, 8 F.2d 110;
Villigas v.
United States, 8 F.2d 300;
The Trader, supra; Feldman v.
American Palestine Line, Inc., supra. Cf. The City of
Montgomery, 210 F. 673, 675;
Burns v. Fred L. Davis
Co., 271 F. 439;
Gerber v. Spencer, supra; The Lake
Galewood, 21 F.2d 987.
Page 281 U. S. 57
The evidence affecting the claim of Rowe is not reviewed, since,
as already indicated, there is evidence which, in the light of the
statute as now interpreted, supports the concurrent action of the
two courts below.
It is unnecessary to pass upon the contention, apparently first
made here, that § 4529 does not apply to fishing vessels
(
see notes to § 596, 46 U.S.C.), and that the
Dola Lawson, although licensed for the coastwise trade,
must be deemed excluded from the operation of the Act because of
her use as a fishing vessel.
In view of the unwarranted retention of the amount awarded to
petitioners, as wages, by that part of the decree of the district
court from which no appeal was taken, the costs in the court of
appeals will be divided two-thirds to appellants and on-third to
appellees, and the decree below, as so modified, will be
Affirmed.