1. The provision of R.S., § 4578, for compensating vessel
owners who bring home destitute seamen, though in terms applicable
only where the transportation is by agreement with a consular
officer and under his certificate, applies, by long administrative
and legislative construction, to transportation from Alaska (where
there are no consular officers) upon agreements and certificates of
the local collector or deputy collector of customs. P.
290 U. S.
259.
2. Courts are slow to disturb the settled administrative
construction of a statute long and consistently adhered to,
especially where the declared will of the legislative body could
not be carried out without the construction adopted. P.
290 U. S.
262.
3. The administrative construction must be accepted in the
present case, since it has received congressional approval,
implicit in the annual appropriations over a period of thirty-five
years, the expenditure of which was effected by resort to the
administrative practice, and in amendments by Congress to the
statutes relating to transportation of destitute seamen without
modification of that practice. P.
290 U. S.
262.
4. Under the Acts of Congress, the duty of providing
transportation for shipwrecked mariners rests upon the Government;
it is not a duty incumbent upon the owner of the shipwrecked
vessel, and he is entitled to the statutory compensation for this
service. P.
290 U. S.
262.
5. The practice that aids as an administrative construction is
the practice of the department charged with carrying out the
statute, in this case the practice of the Department of Commerce.
P.
290 U. S. 264.
6. Rulings of the Comptroller General resting upon a proposition
plainly contrary to law and in conflict with the unambiguous
statute in question are without weight as administrative
constructions. P.
290 U. S. 264.
63 F.2d 398 reversed.
Page 290 U. S. 257
Certiorari to review the affirmance of a judgment dismissing a
suit against the United States under the Tucker Act. Opinion of the
District Court: 60 F.2d 135.
Page 290 U. S. 258
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this suit, brought under the Tucker Act, 24 Stat. 505, in the
District Court for Western Washington, petitioner sought
compensation at an agreed rate for the transportation of certain
destitute seamen from Ketchikan, Alaska, to Seattle, under the
provisions of § 4578, R.S., as amended, 46 U.S.C. § 679.
That section imposes on masters of United States vessels homeward
bound the duty, upon request of consular officers, to receive and
carry destitute seamen to the port of destination at such
compensation, not exceeding a specified amount, as may be agreed
upon by the master with a consular officer, and authorizes the
consular officer to issue certificates for such transportation,
"which certificates shall be assignable for collection." By §
4526, R.S., 17 Stat. 269, as amended December 21, 1898, 30 Stat.
755, 46 U.S.C. § 593, seamen, whose term of service is
terminated by loss or wreck of their vessel, are "destitute
seamen," and are required to be transported as provided in §
4578.
The demand in the present case was for compensation for the
transportation of the crew of the S.S.
Depere,
Page 290 U. S. 259
owned by petitioner, which had been wrecked on the Alaska coast,
and for that reason had been unable to complete her voyage. The
crew was received and carried to Seattle on petitioner's steamship
Yukon, on certificate of the Deputy Customs Collector of
Alaska that he had agreed with the master for their transportation
at a specified rate. The Comptroller General refused payment upon
the certificate on the sole ground that it was the duty of
petitioner to transport to the United States the crew of its own
wrecked vessel, and that the congressional appropriation for the
relief of American seamen was not available to compensate the owner
for performing that duty. Judgment of the District Court dismissing
the complaint, 60 F.2d 135, was affirmed by the Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit on the ground that the certificate of the
deputy collector authorizing the transportation did not satisfy the
requirement of the statute that the certificate should be that of a
consular officer. 63 F.2d 398. This Court granted certiorari.
The government, conceding that the statute, by long
administrative practice, has been construed as authorizing payment
for transportation of seamen from Alaska on the certificate of
deputy customs collectors, insists that it does not authorize
payment to the owner for the transportation of the crew of his own
wrecked vessel, and that such has been its administrative
construction.
1. If the statutory language is to be taken literally, the
certificate, which by R.S. § 4578 is authority for the
transportation and evidence of the right of the vessel to
compensation, must be that of a consular officer. Deputy collectors
of customs are not consular officers, and there are no consular
officers in Alaska. ,If the right to compensation is dependent upon
certification by a consular officer, the statutes providing for
transportation of destitute seamen can be given no effect in
Alaska. But the meaning of this provision must be ascertained by
reading
Page 290 U. S. 260
it with related statutes and in the light of a long and
consistent administrative practice.
Since 1972 the statutes of the United States have made provision
for the return of destitute seamen to this country upon suitable
action taken by consular officers of the United States. [
Footnote 1] And, since 1803, the
government has undertaken to compensate for their transportation.
[
Footnote 2] Beginning in 1896,
Congress has made provision for the relief of American seamen
shipwrecked in Alaska in annual appropriation bills for the
maintenance of the diplomatic and consular service. The
appropriation bill for that year, 29 Stat. 186, and every later one
has extended the benefits of the appropriation for the relief of
American seamen in foreign countries to "American seamen
shipwrecked in Alaska." [
Footnote
3] The appropriation for 1922 and 1923, c. 204, 42 Stat. 599,
603; c. 21, 42 Stat. 1068, 1072, contained the proviso, not
appearing in previous acts, that no part of the appropriation
should be available for payment for transportation in excess of a
specified rate agreed upon by a consular officer and the master of
the vessel. The proviso did not appear in subsequent appropriation
acts, but, by Act of January 3, 1923, 43 Stat. 1072, it was
transferred to its proper place in the shipping laws, where it now
appears in § 680 of Title 46 of the United States Code. The
Act of 1929, 45 Stat. 1028, 1098, applicable when the seamen in the
present case were transported, appropriated $70,000
"for relief,
Page 290 U. S. 261
protection, and burial of American seamen in foreign countries,
in the Panama Canal Zone, and in the Philippine Islands, and
shipwrecked American seamen in the Territory of Alaska, in the
Hawaiian Islands, in Porto Rico, and in the Virgin Islands."
By the amendment of R.S. § 4526 of December 21, 1898, 30
Stat. 755, 46 U.S.C. § 593, it was provided that, where the
service of a seaman terminates by reason of the loss or wreck of
the vessel,
"he shall not be entitled to wages for any period beyond such
termination of the service, and shall be considered as a destitute
seaman, and shall be treated and transported to port of
shipment,"
as provided in R.S. § 4578. No exception is made in the
case of transportation of seamen from Alaska or other dependencies
of the United States.
Thus, from 1896 to the present time, there has been a definite
obligation on the part of the government to provide transportation
for shipwrecked seamen without reference to the place where
shipwrecked, and funds have been annually appropriated for the
purpose of carrying out that obligation in the case of seamen
shipwrecked in Alaska. As appears from the findings of the trial
court, not challenged here, the appropriations have been expended
for the transportation of shipwrecked seamen from Alaska, in
conformity to a practice established and consistently followed at
least since 1900. Certificates for the transportation of
shipwrecked seamen have been regularly signed and issued by the
collector of customs or the deputy collector in Alaska upon forms
provided by the Bureau of Navigation of the Department of Commerce.
That bureau, which has a general superintendence over merchant
seamen of the United States, 46 U.S.C. §§ 1 and 2, has
regularly supplied its customs officials and its agents in Alaska
with these forms, with instructions that they were to be used in
arranging transportation of shipwrecked seamen to the United
States, as provided by the sections of the statute to which
reference has been made. The stipulated
Page 290 U. S. 262
amounts due for the transportation, as certified, have been
regularly paid without objection upon presentation of the
certificate to the disbursing officer of the United States.
Courts are slow to disturb the settled administrative
construction of a statute long and consistently adhered to.
Brown v. United States, 113 U. S. 568,
113 U. S. 571;
United States v. Philbrick, 120 U. S.
52,
120 U. S. 59;
United States v. G. Falk & Bro., 204 U.
S. 143,
204 U. S. 151.
This is especially the case where, as here, the declared will of
the legislative body could not be carried out without the
construction adopted. That construction must be accepted and
applied by the courts when, as in the present case, it has received
congressional approval, implicit in the annual appropriations over
a period of thirty-five years, the expenditure of which was
effected by resort to the administrative practice, and in
amendments by Congress to the statutes relating to transportation
of destitute seamen without modification of that practice.
United States v. G. Falk & Bro., supra; compare United
States v. Missouri Pacific R. Co., 278 U.
S. 269.
2. The rejection of petitioner's claim by the Comptroller
General rests upon the supposed duty of the owner to transport to
the home port the seamen of its own wrecked vessel. [
Footnote 4] Diligent search by counsel of the
ancient learning of the admiralty has failed to disclose the
existence of any such duty. At most, in the absence of statutory
command or of stipulations in the shipping articles providing
otherwise, the rights of the seamen after shipwreck, preventing the
completion of the voyage, appear to have been limited to wages
payable from freight earned on the voyage or to
Page 290 U. S. 263
wages or salvage from the vessel they have helped to save.
[
Footnote 5] It is unnecessary
for us to consider to what extent these rights have survived the
statutes regulating the duties of the owner toward the seamen or
what bearing they may have on the duty of the owner to transport
the seamen. For there is no finding and no evidence in the present
case that the wrecked vessel had earned freight on her voyage or
had been salvaged either with or without the aid of her seamen.
Under those statutes, we think it plain that no duty is imposed on
the owner to provide transportation for seamen of his own wrecked
vessel, and that the statutory undertaking of the government is not
upon condition that destitute seamen shall be transported upon
vessels other than those of the owner of the wrecked vessel.
There are numerous instances in which the statutes of the United
States specifically impose on the master the duty to provide seamen
with transportation if he does not secure employment for them on
another vessel. [
Footnote 6]
But there is no statute imposing any duty on the vessel or owner to
provide transportation for seamen who may be shipwrecked or who are
discharged because incapacitated for further service.
See
R.S. § 4581, 46 U.S.C. § 683.
Page 290 U. S. 264
The statutes terminate seamen's right to wages with the
termination of their service by the shipwreck, and without
qualification impose on the government the obligation to transport
them. It cannot be supposed that the performance of this
obligation, which, since the early days of the government, has been
treated by Congress as a public duty, was intended to be
conditional upon the ability of seamen, left destitute in a distant
land, to induce the ship owner to transport them in performance of
a supposed duty which the statute neither imposes nor mentions.
The Department of Commerce, not the Comptroller General, is
charged with the administration of the statute, 4 Comptroller
General Rep. 252, 253, and its administrative practice should be
followed if thought to be controlling. But, in any case, there is
no ambiguity or uncertainty in the statute with respect to the
point urged by the government, and, in carrying it out as written,
there is no administrative difficulty which would call for
construction. The rulings of the Comptroller General rest upon a
proposition so plainly contrary to law and so plainly in conflict
with the statute as to leave them without weight as administrative
constructions of it.
United States v. Missouri Pacific Railroad
Co., supra.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Act of April 14, 1792, c. 24, 1 Stat. 254, 256.
[
Footnote 2]
Act of February 28, 1803, U.S. Statutes at Large, Vol. 2, 204.
The substance of these statutes was carried forward as R.S.
§§ 4577, 4578, 4579. Section 4578 was amended by § 9
of the Act of June 26, 1884, c. 121, 23 Stat. 53, 55; as amended,
they became §§ 678, 679, and 681 of Title 46, U.S.C..
[
Footnote 3]
Before 1896, the provision in the appropriation bill was stated
to be for the relief and protection of American seamen in foreign
countries, Acts of 1892 and 1893, 27 Stat. 233, 506; Acts of 1894
and 1895, 28 Stat. 150, 824.
[
Footnote 4]
Similar rulings appear to have been made in the following cases:
3 Comptroller General (1924) 575; 4
id. (1924) 118, 252,
483, 542;
id., (1925) 632; 5
id. (1926) 623; 6
id. (1927) 723; 8
id. (1928) 211.
[
Footnote 5]
See The Dawn, 7 Fed.Cas., No. 3,666;
The
Massasoit, 16 Fed.Cas., No. 9,260;
Brown v. Chandler,
4 Fed.Cas., No. 1,998;
The Lady Durham, 3 Hag.Adm.196;
Molloy, De Jure Maritimo et Navali, 1744, 249; Abbott, Laws of
Shipping, Am. Ed. by Justice Story, 1854, 780.
But see The
Elizabeth, 2 Dods. 403, 412.
[
Footnote 6]
The following instances may be noted: where a seaman leaves a
vessel because she was previously sent to sea in an unseaworthy
state by neglect or design of the owner, R.S. § 4561, 46
U.S.C. § 658; where a seaman is discharged because his vessel
is sold abroad, R.S. § 4582, 46 U.S.C. § 684; where a
seaman leaves the vessel because the voyage is continued contrary
to agreement, or because the vessel is badly provisioned or
unseaworthy, or because he had been subjected to cruel treatment,
R.S. § 4583, 46 U.S.C. § 685;
see also R.S.
§ 4522, 46 U.S.C. § 703.