1. A seaman serving on a merchant vessel, owned and operated by
the United States in wartime and docked at a conquered port in the
war area, was injured while returning to the ship after overstaying
shore leave. He was treated in government hospitals until
discharged as completely disabled. There was no possibility of
further cure, although medical attention might be required from
time to time to relieve recurring conditions.
Held: the liability for maintenance and cure does not
extend beyond the time when the maximum cure possible has been
effected, and petitioner is not entitled to maintenance so long as
he is disabled or for life. Pp.
336 U. S.
512-519.
2. The ship's articles which petitioner signed provided for a
foreign voyage from the United States and return and for a term
"not exceeding" twelve months.
Held: he was entitled to wages only until the
completion of the voyage, and not for twelve months from the date
of signing. Pp.
336 U. S.
519-521.
167 F.2d 71 affirmed.
In a suit in admiralty by petitioner against the United States
and others, the District Court awarded petitioner less than the
amounts he had claimed for maintenance and cure and for wages. The
Court of Appeals affirmed. 167 F.2d 781. This Court granted
certiorari. 335 U.S. 869.
Affirmed, p.
336 U. S.
521.
Page 336 U. S. 512
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner, a seaman, brought suit in admiralty to recover
damages under the Jones Act, and maintenance, cure and wages under
maritime law. The issue of negligence was decided against him by
both courts below, and the claim is abandoned here. Petition for
certiorari to review other issues was granted. 335 U.S. 869.
I
. MAINTENANCE AND CURE
The facts which occasion maintenance and cure for this seaman
are not in dispute. The claimant, 22 years of age and in good
health, was a member of the Merchant Marine. He was in the service
of the S.S.
James E. Haviland, a merchant vessel owned and
operated by the United States as a cargo and troopship. On February
5, 1944, she was docked at Palermo, Sicily, and Farrell was granted
shore leave which required his return to the ship by 6 p.m. of the
same day. He overstayed his leave, and, about eight o'clock, began,
in rain and darkness, to make his way to the ship. He became lost
and was misdirected to the wrong gate, by which he entered the
shore-front area about a mile from where the ship lay moored. The
area generally was blacked out, but petitioner's companion, forty
or fifty feet away, saw him fall over a guard chain into a drydock
which was lighted sufficiently for night work then in progress.
Farrell was grievously injured.
He was treated without expense to himself in various government
hospitals until June 30, 1944, when he was
Page 336 U. S. 513
discharged at Norfolk, Virginia, as completely disabled. He is
totally and permanently blind, and suffers post-traumatic
convulsions which probably will become more frequent and are
without possibility of further cure. From time to time, he will
require some medical care to ease attacks of headaches and
epileptic convulsions. The court below concluded that the duty of a
shipowner to furnish maintenance and cure does not extend beyond
the time when the maximum cure possible has been effected.
Petitioner contends that he is entitled to maintenance as long as
he is disabled, which, in this case, is for life.
Admittedly there is no authority in any statute or American
admiralty decisions for the proposition that he is entitled to
maintenance for life. But an argument is based upon the ancient
authority of Cleirac,
Jugmens d'Oleron, Arts. 6 and 7, and
notes by Cleirac;
Consolato del Mare, cc. 182, 137; 2 Pard
Coll.Mar. 152; to which American authorities have paid considerable
respect.
See Story, Circuit Justice, in
Reed v.
Canfield, 20 Fed.Cas. No. 11,641, p. 429. A translation of the
note relied upon reads:
"If, in defending himself or fighting against an enemy or
corsairs, a mariner is maimed, or disabled to serve on board a ship
for the rest of his life, besides the charge of his cure, he shall
be maintained as long as he lives at the cost of the ship and
cargo.
Vide the Hanseatic Law, Art. 35."
Article 35 of the Laws of the Hanse Towns, referred to,
reads:
"Art. XXXV. The seamen are obliged to defend their ship against
rovers, on pain of losing their wages, and if they are wounded,
they shall be healed and cured at the general charge of the
concerned in
Page 336 U. S. 514
a common average. If anyone of them is maimed and disabled, he
shall be maintained as long as he lives by a like average."
We need not elaborate upon the meanings or weight to be given to
these medieval pronouncements of maritime law. As they show, they
were written when pirates were not operatic characters, but were
real-life perils of the sea. When they bore down on a ship, all was
lost unless the seaman would hazard life and limb in desperate
defense. If they saved the ship and cargo, it was something in the
nature of salvage, and, for their sacrifice in the effort, a
contribution on principles of average may have been justly due.
Perhaps more than humanitarian considerations, inducement to stand
by the ship generated the doctrine that saving the ship and her
cargo from pirates entitles the seaman to lifelong maintenance if
he is disabled in the struggle.
But, construe the old-time law with what liberality we will, it
cannot be made to cover the facts of this case. This ship was not
beset, but was snug at berth in a harbor that had capitulated to
the United States and her allied forces six months before. No sea
rovers, pirates or corsairs appeared to have menaced her. It is
true that the ship was engaged in warlike operations, and was a
legitimate target for enemy aircraft or naval vessels, which made
her service a war risk, but, at that time and place, no enemy
attack was in progress or imminent. Even if we pass all this and
assume the ship always to have been in potential danger and in need
of defense, this seaman, at the time of his injury, had taken leave
of her, and he is in no position to claim that he was a sacrifice
to her salvation. Far from helping to man the ship at the moment,
he was unable to find her; he was lost ashore, and not able
adequately to take care of himself. However patriotic his motive in
enlisting in the service, and
Page 336 U. S. 515
however ready he may have been to risk himself for his country,
we can find no rational basis for awarding lifetime maintenance
against the ship on the theory that he was wounded or maimed while
defending her against enemies.
It is claimed, however, even if the basis for a lifetime award
does not exist, that he is entitled to maintenance and cure beyond
the period allowed by the courts below. This is based largely upon
statements in the opinion of the Court in
Calmar Steamship
Corp. v. Taylor, 303 U. S. 525.
There, the question, as stated by the Court, was whether the duty
of a shipowner to provide maintenance and cure for a seaman falling
ill of an incurable disease while in its employ extends to the
payment of a lump sum award sufficient to defray the cost of
maintenance and cure for the remainder of his life. The Court laid
aside cases where incapacity is caused by the employment, and
said,
"We can find no basis for saying that, if the disease proves to
be incurable, the duty extends beyond a fair time after the voyage
in which to effect such improvement in the seaman's condition as
reasonably may be expected to result from nursing, care, and
medical treatment. This would satisfy such demands of policy as
underlie the imposition of the obligation. Beyond this, we think
there is no duty, at least where the illness is not caused by the
seaman's service."
It is claimed that, when the Court reserved or disclaimed any
judgment as to cases where the incapacity is caused "by the
employment" or "by the seaman's service," it recognized or created
such cases as a separate class for a different measure of
maintenance and cure. We think no such distinction exists, or was
premised in the
Calmar case. In
Aguilar v. Standard
Oil Co., 318 U. S. 724, the
Court pointed out that, logically and historically, the duty of
maintenance and cure derives from
Page 336 U. S. 516
a seaman's dependence on his ship, not from his individual
deserts, and arises from his disability, not from anyone's fault.
We there refused to look to the personal nature of the seaman's
activity at the moment of injury to determine his right to award.
Aside from gross misconduct or insubordination, what the seaman is
doing and why the how he sustains injury does not affect his right
to maintenance and cure, however decisive it may be as to claims
for indemnity or for damages for negligence. He must, of course at
the time be "in the service of the ship," by which is meant that he
must be generally answerable to its call to duty, rather than
actually in performance of routine tasks or specific orders.
It has been the merit of the seaman's right to maintenance and
cure that it is so inclusive as to be relatively simple, and can be
understood and administered without technical considerations. It
has few exceptions or conditions to stir contentions, cause delays,
and invite litigation. The seaman could forfeit the right only by
conduct whose wrongful quality even simple men of the calling would
recognize -- insubordination, disobedience to orders, and gross
misconduct. On the other hand, the Master knew he must maintain and
care for even the erring and careless seaman, much as a parent
would a child. For any purpose to introduce a graduation of rights
and duties based on some relative proximity of the activity at time
of injury to the "employment" or the "service of the ship" would
alter the basis, and be out of harmony with the spirit and
function, of the doctrine, and would open the door to the
litigiousness which has made the landman's remedy so often a
promise to the ear to be broken to the hope.
Nor is it at all clear to us what this particular litigant could
gain from introduction of the distinction for which contention is
made. If we should concede that larger
Page 336 U. S. 517
measure of maintenance is due those whose injury is caused by
the nature of their employment, it would seem far-fetched to hold
it applicable here. Claimant was disobedient to his orders, and,
for his personal purposes, overstayed his shore leave. His fall
into a drydock that was sufficiently lighted for workmen to be
carrying on repairs to a ship therein was due to no negligence but
his own. These matters have not been invoked to forfeit or reduce
his usual seaman's right, but it is difficult to see how such
circumstances would warrant enlargement of it. We hold that he is
entitled to the usual measure of maintenance and cure at the ship's
expense, no less and no more, and turn to ascertainment of its
bounds.
The law of the sea is, in a peculiar sense, an international
law, but application of its specific rules depends upon acceptance
by the United States. The problem of the sick or injured seaman has
concerned every maritime country, and, in 1936, the General
Conference of the International Labor Organization at Geneva
submitted a draft convention to the United States and other states.
It was ratified by the Senate and was proclaimed by the President
as effective for the United States on October 29, 1939. 54 Stat.
1693. Article 4, paragraph 1 thereof provides:
"The shipowner shall be liable to defray the expense of medical
care and maintenance until the sick or injured person has been
cured, or until the sickness or incapacity has been declared of a
permanent character."
While enactment of this general rule by Congress would seem
controlling, it is not amiss to point out that the limitation thus
imposed was in accordance with the understanding of those familiar
with the laws of the sea and sympathetic with the seaman's
problems.
The Department of Labor issued a summary of the Convention
containing the following on this subject:
"The shipowner is required to furnish medical care and
Page 336 U. S. 518
maintenance, including board and lodging, until the disabled
person has been cured or the disability has been declared
permanent."
Robinson, Admiralty, p. 300.
Representatives of the organized seamen have recognized and
advised Congress of this traditional limitation on maintenance and
cure. When Congress has had under consideration substitution of a
system of workmen's compensation on the principles of the
Longshoremen's and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act, 44 Stat. 1424,
as amended, 33 U.S.C. §§ 901-950, organized seamen, as we
have heretofore noted, have steadfastly opposed the change.
Hust v. Moore-McCormack Lines, 328 U.
S. 707,
328 U. S. 715.
In doing so, the legal representative of one maritime union advised
the Committee on Merchant Marine of the House of Representatives
that maintenance extended during
"(a) the period that a seaman receives treatment at a hospital,
either as an inpatient or an outpatient, and (b) during a period of
convalescence, and until the maximum cure is obtained. [
Footnote 1]"
Another representative, after defining it to include
hospitalization, said, "[i]n addition, a seaman is entitled to
recover maintenance while outside of the hospital until his
physical condition becomes fixed." [
Footnote 2]
That the duty of the ship to maintain and care for the seaman
after the end of the voyage only until he was so far cured as
possible seems to have seen the doctrine of the American admiralty
courts prior to the adoption of the Convention by Congress,
[
Footnote 3] despite occasional
ambiguity of language or reservation as to possible
Page 336 U. S. 519
situations not before the court. It has been the rule of
admiralty courts since the Convention. [
Footnote 4]
Maintenance and cure is not the only recourse of the injured
seaman. In an appropriate case, he may obtain indemnity or
compensation for injury due to negligence or unseaworthiness, and
may recover, by trial before court and jury, damages for partial or
total disability. But maintenance and cure is more certain, if more
limited in its benefits. It does not hold a ship to permanent
liability for a pension; neither does it give a lump sum payment to
offset disability based on some conception of expectancy of life.
Indeed, the custom of providing maintenance and cure in kind and
concurrently with its need has had the advantage of removing its
benefits from danger of being wasted by the proverbial improvidence
of its beneficiaries. The Government does not contend that, if
Farrell receives future treatment of a curative nature, he may not
recover in a new proceeding the amount expended for such treatment
and for maintenance while receiving it.
The need of this seaman for permanent help is great, and his
plight most unfortunate. But, as the evidence has afforded no basis
for supplying that need by finding negligence, neither does the
case afford a basis for distortion of the doctrine of maintenance
and cure. This seaman was in the service of the United States, and
extraordinary measures of relief, while not impossible, are not
properly addressed to the courts.
II
. WAGES
The two courts below have held the petitioner entitled to wages
until the completion of the voyage at the port
Page 336 U. S. 520
of New York on March 28, 1944. The petitioner contends that he
has a right to wages for twelve months from December 16, 1943, the
date he joined the vessel. The articles of the Haviland, signed by
petitioner, were on a printed form which left a vacant space
subject to the following footnote:
"Here, the nature of the voyage is to be described and the
places named at which the ship is to touch; or if that cannot be
done, the general nature and probable length of the voyage is to be
stated, and the port or country at which the voyage is to
terminate."
The Haviland's articles, for security reasons during the war,
did not describe the voyage in such terms, but provided,
"from the port of Philadelphia, to a point in the Atlantic Ocean
to the eastward of Philadelphia and thence to such ports and places
in any part of the world as the Master may direct or as may be
ordered or directed by the United States Government or any
department, commission or agency thereof . . . and back to a final
port of discharge in the United States, for a term of time not
exceeding 12 (twelve) calendar months."
It is not questioned that the general custom in ships, other
than the coastwise trade, is to sign on for a voyage, rather than
for a fixed period. But it is contended that the last clause of
this contract obligated the petitioner to serve for twelve calendar
months, irrespective of the termination of the voyage, and
therefore gave him the right to wages for a similar period. The
contract is not an uncommon form, and complied with war-time
requirements as to voyage contracts. [
Footnote 5] We think, in the light of the custom of the
industry and the condition of the times, there is nothing ambiguous
about it, and that it obligated the petitioner only for the voyage
on which the ship was engaged when he signed on, and that, when it
terminated at a port of
Page 336 U. S. 521
discharge in the United States, he could not have been required
to reembark for a second voyage. The twelve-month period appears as
a limitation upon the duration of the voyage, and not as a stated
period of employment. We think the court below made no error in
determining the wages.
For the reasons set forth, the judgment is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Hearings before the House Committee on Merchant Marine and
Fisheries, 76th Cong., 1st Sess., on H.R.6726 and H.R.6881, p.
83.
[
Footnote 2]
Id., p. 131.
[
Footnote 3]
See, for example, The Wensleydale, 41 F. 829;
The
Bouker No. 2, 241 F. 831;
Skolar v. Lehigh Valley R.
Co., 60 F.2d 893;
The Point Fermin, 70 F.2d 602.
[
Footnote 4]
See, for example, Lindgren v. Shephard S.S. Co., 108
F.2d 806;
The Josephine & Mary, 120 F.2d 459;
Luksich v. Misetich, 140 F.2d 812.
[
Footnote 5]
7 Fed.Reg. 2477.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom MR. JUSTICE BLACK, MR. JUSTICE
MURPHY and MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE concur, dissenting.
I.
Wages. -- The articles bound Farrell to a voyage on
the vessel which was en route to
"a point in the Atlantic Ocean to the Eastward of Philadelphia
and thence to such ports and places in any part of the world as the
Master may direct or as may be ordered or directed by the United
States Government or any department, commission or agency thereof .
. . and back to a final port of discharge in the United States, for
a term of time not exceeding 12 (twelve) calendar months."
If this were a coastwise voyage, there would be little question
that Farrell could recover his wages for the entire twelve-month
period.
See Enochasson v. Freeport Sulphur
Co., 7 F.2d 674,
675;
Jones v. Waterman S.S. Corp., 155 F.2d 992, 996. I
agree with Judge Kirkpatrick that the principle of those cases is
likewise applicable to foreign voyages.
Shields v. United
States, 73 F. Supp.
862, 866. Any difference is not apparent. In each, the seaman
binds himself for the period. The obligation to pay wages should be
coterminous with that responsibility.
Enochasson v. Freeport
Sulphur Co., supra. The number of voyages made is therefore
immaterial. It is the extent of the voyage that could be demanded
that is controlling.
Page 336 U. S. 522
II.
Maintenance and Cure. --
Calmar S.S. Corp. v.
Taylor, 303 U. S. 525,
involved maintenance and cure [
Footnote
2/1] for an incurable disease which manifested itself during
the seaman's employment but was not caused by it. The Court held
that the shipowner's liability ended when the seaman was cured as
far as possible, reserving the question whether a different rule
would apply if the incapacity arose from the employment. 303 U.S.
at
303 U. S. 530.
The question reserved is now presented, for an injury received on
returning to a ship from shore leave is plainly incurred in the
service.
Aguilar v. Standard Oil Co., 318 U.
S. 724;
Reed v. Canfield, Fed.Cas. No. 11,641.
Justice Story was of the view that the ship remained liable until
the cure was completed.
Reed v. Canfield, supra. That was
in 1832. Intervening decisions in the lower courts qualified that
view. It was held that the right to maintenance and cure extended
to a reasonable time beyond the end of the voyage. [
Footnote 2/2] The problem of what was a reasonable
time remained. The test adopted by the Court is that it extends
through the period when the maximum cure within the reach of
medical science has been achieved.
But that test is not sufficiently discriminating.
Even though a maximum cure has been effected, two entirely
different states of being may result when the injured man is left
totally disabled.
(1) He may be totally disabled, but no longer in need of medical
aid to care for the condition created by the injury nor without
means of providing maintenance. That is not the present case, at
least so far as medical care is concerned. And we need not
determine what rights to maintenance and cure one so situated
has.
Page 336 U. S. 523
(2) One injured in the service of a ship may not only be
permanently disabled after reaching the point of maximum cure. He
may also be in need of future medical aid to sustain that condition
and be without means of maintenance. These needs may extend to end
of life. That is the present case, at least so far as medical care
is concerned. [
Footnote 2/3] In
this situation, payments to give continuing needed care of wounds
have been allowed, even though a maximum cure has been effected.
The Josephine & Mary, 120 F.2d 459, 462, 464.
Cf.
Saunders v. Luckenbach Co., 262 F. 845, 847.
In the present case, an award for maintenance and cure to cover
a six-month period after discharge from the hospital was allowed.
Nevertheless, even though Farrell's expenses of care may be
continuing, the district court judge refused any further award. I
do not believe that these future expenses should be any less a
charge on the ship than past expenses. To conclude, as the Court
now does, that they are not is to ignore in part the salutary
policy supporting the doctrine of maintenance and cure.
Maintenance and cure is an ancient doctrine. It reflects in part
the concern which the state has had from an early date in a poor
and improvident class of workers.
See Mr. Justice Story in
Harden v. Gordon, Fed.Cas. No.6,047. It also recognizes
the imperative necessity of the nation to maintain in peace and war
a merchant marine.
Page 336 U. S. 524
If men are to go down to the sea in ships and face the perils of
the ocean, those who employ them must be solicitous of their
welfare. Maintenance and cure is an inducement on the part of
masters and owners to be solicitous of the health, safety, and
welfare of seamen while they are in the service. It gives a decree
of security though injury or sickness be incurred. It gives service
in the merchant marine a dignity equal to the important function it
performs. It reflects "the great public policy of preserving this
important class of citizens for the commercial service and maritime
time defence of the nation."
Id. at p. 483.
Accordingly, the injuries of seamen arising out of the service
were made a charge against the enterprise to the extent at least of
maintenance and cure. Their maintenance and cure were indeed part
of the cost of the business. It is nonetheless a legitimate cost
though the expense continues beyond the time when a maximum cure
has been effected. [
Footnote
2/4]
[
Footnote 2/1]
Maintenance includes food and lodging, and cure means care.
The Bouker No. 2, 241 F. 831, 835.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The Bouker No. 2, supra; The Mars, 149 F. 729;
The
Eastern Dawn, 25 F.2d 322;
The Troy, 121 F. 901;
Geistlinger v. International Mercantile Marine Co., 295 F.
176.
[
Footnote 2/3]
The District Court said:
"He will continue to have these spells and to have pain in the
area of the fracture. He will need treatment and medical care from
time to time, and probably some care for the rest of his life. He
was always a healthy individual before his accident, and never
showed any signs of epilepsy before then. The medical testimony
also shows that his condition of blindness is permanent, that, in
all likelihood, his convulsive attacks will continue and possibly
become more frequent and without any possibility of a further cure.
The attacks and headaches mentioned will require some care from
time to time whenever they persist."
[
Footnote 2/4]
The Shipowners' Liability Convention of 1936, 54 Stat. 1693,
does not require a contrary result. Article 4, cl. 1, provides:
"The shipowner shall be liable to defray the expense of medical
care and maintenance until the sick or injured person has been
cured, or until the sickness or incapacity has been declared of a
permanent character."
But Art. 12 contains a power to depart from that standard in
this type of case. It provides:
"Nothing in this Convention shall affect any law, award, custom
or agreement between shipowners and seamen which ensures more
favorable conditions than those provided by this Convention."