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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Lang v. St Enoch Shipping Co., Ltd [1907] ScotLR 59 (12 November 1907) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1907/45SLR0059.html Cite as: [1907] SLR 59, [1907] ScotLR 59 |
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Page: 59↓
[Sheriff Court at Glasgow.
A British seaman, who signed articles for an ordinary commercial voyage to any ports within specified geographical limits, held, in an action at his instance against the owners of the vessel, (1) justified in having refused to obey the master's order to proceed to a belligerent's port within the specified limits with a cargo contraband of war; (2) entitled to decree for ( a) a sum representing damages and maintenance, he having been wrongfully dismissed at a foreign port, imprisoned on a charge of insubordination preferred by the master, and left with no provision for his return to this country as required by section 186 of the Merchant Shipping Act 1894, ( b) the amount of his wages so far as unpaid down to the date of judgment, that being the date of “final settlement” within the meaning of section 134 ( c) of the Merchant Shipping Act 1894.
Caine v. Palace Shipping Company, Limited, [1907] A C 386, 44 S.L.R. 1008, followed.
The Merchant Shipping Act 1894 (57 and 58 Vict. cap. 60), enacts:—Section 134—“In
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the case of foreign-going ships (other than ships employed on voyages for which seamen by the terms of their agreement are wholly compensated by a share in the profits of the adventure), ( a) the owner or master of the ship shall pay to each seaman on account, at the time when he lawfully leaves the ship at the end of his engagement, two pounds or one-fourth of the balance of wages due to him, whichever is least, and shall pay him the remainder of his wages within two clear days (exclusive of any Sunday, fast day in Scotland, or Bank holiday) after he so leaves the ship. ( b) If the seaman consents, the final settlement of his wages may be left to a superintendent under regulations of the Board of Trade, and the receipt of the superintendent shall in that case operate as if it were a release given by the seaman in accordance with this Part of this Act. ( c) In the event of the seaman's wages or any part thereof not being paid or settled as in this section mentioned, then, unless the delay is due to the act or default of the seaman, or to any reasonable dispute as to liability, or to any other cause not being the wrongful act or default of the owner or master, the seaman's wages shall continue to run and be payable until the time of the final settlement thereof.” Section 186—“(1) In the following cases … ( b) Where the service of any seaman or apprentice belonging to any British ship terminates at any port out of Her Majesty's dominions, the master shall give to that seaman or apprentice a certificate of discharge in a form approved by the Board of Trade … (2) The master shall also, besides paying the wages to which the seaman or apprentice is entitled, either—( a) provide him with adequate employment on board some other British ship bound to the port in Her Majesty's dominions at which he was originally shipped, or to a port in the United Kingdom agreed to by the seaman; or ( b) furnish the means of sending him back to some such port; or ( c) provide him with a passage home; or ( d) deposit with the consular officer or merchants as aforesaid such a sum of money as is by the officer or merchants deemed sufficient to defray the expenses of his maintenance and passage home.… (4) If the master fails, without reasonable cause, to comply with any requirement of this section, the expenses of maintenance or passage home ( a) if defrayed by the seaman or apprentice shall be recoverable as wages due to him, and ( b) if defrayed by the consular officer or by any other person shall … be a charge upon the ship … and upon the owner … and may be recovered against the owner.…”
Robert Lang, fireman, Glasgow, raised an action in the Sheriff Court, Glasgow, against the Saint Enoch Shipping Company, Limited, Glasgow, in which he sued for ( first) the sum of £4 per month from 24th January 1905 till date of settlement, less £4, 12s. 5d. paid to account (representing “unpaid wages”); and ( second) the sum of £100 sterling (representing “maintenance and damages”).
The facts of the case appear from the opinions infra, and from the following finding of facts made by the Second Division upon consideration of a proof taken by the Sheriff-Substitute ( Boyd)—“Find in fact (1) That on 24th January 1905 the pursuer agreed to serve as a fireman on board the defenders' steamship ‘St Helena’ under articles which are admitted on record; (2) that the said steamship loaded at Cardiff a cargo of Welsh coal, and on 16th April 1905 she arrived at Gap Rock, the signal station for Hong Kong; (3) that the master there received orders to take the vessel to Nagasaki in Japan; (4) that the master in accordance with these orders altered the ship's course for Nagasaki and communicated the change to the crew; (5) that at this time a state of war existed between Russia and Japan, while towards them Great Britain maintained an attitude of neutrality; (6) that some time previously Russia had notified as contraband of war every kind of fuel, including coal; (7) that the pursuer along with the majority of the crew refused to go to Nagasaki with this cargo, and was entitled under the articles so to refuse; (8) that it is not proved that the pursuer and the rest of the crew refused to work the ship from Gap Rock or the vicinity thereof to Hong Kong; (9) that the defenders thereafter wrongously charged the pursuer and the rest of the crew before the police magistrate at Hong Kong with refusal of duty, and that the said magistrate convicted each of them of the said offence, and sentenced them to three weeks' imprisonment with hard labour; (10) that while they were still undergoing imprisonment the said ship was despatched from Hong Kong, and that, the defenders having made no provision for the passage home of the pursuer, in terms of the Merchant Shipping Act 1894, he was sent home as a distressed seaman.”
On 9th June 1906 the Sheriff-Substitute assoilzied the defenders, holding it as proved in fact that the master had withdrawn his illegal order to proceed to Nagasaki, and had issued a legal order to proceed to Hong Kong, which the crew had refused to obey.
On 22nd November the Sheriff ( Guthrie) recalled the Sheriff-Substitute's interlocutor on the ground that it had not been proved that the master had ever withdrawn his illegal order and substituted in its place a legal order which the crew were bound to obey. He decerned against the defenders for (1) the sum of £6, 8s., being the unpaid balance of the pursuer's wages up to his arrival in Hong Kong; (2) the sum of £40 under the head of maintenance and damages.
The defenders appealed to the Court of Session, and argued—The Sheriff-Substitute was right and the Sheriff wrong. The real question at issue in the case was purely a question of fact, viz., what was the order which the pursuer had ultimately refused to obey? Admittedly he was justified in refusing to obey the order to proceed to Nagasaki— Caine v. Palace Shipping Company, Limited
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(1907), A.C. 386, 44 S.L.R. 1008. But it was clearly proved that the master had withdrawn that order and issued in its place a perfectly legal order, with which the pursuer had refused to comply. It was for disobedience to this last order that he had been dismissed and imprisoned, and therefore no wages or damages were due, he being a mutineer. But in no event could the pursuer be awarded wages down to the date of judgment in this appeal. For, on the assumption that section 134 of the Merchant Shipping Act 1894 applied, and that the case was ruled by Caine, the date of the Sheriff's judgment was the latest date possible, that corresponding to the date of the judgment of the Court of Appeal, which was the date adopted by the House of Lords in Caine. Section 134, however, did not apply, as there was here a “reasonable dispute as to liability.” Sections 134 and 186 of the Act when read together showed that a seaman could not get both damages and continuing wages. In any view, in assessing the amount of damages, the wages the pursuer had earned since the date of his discharge should be deducted. Argued for the respondent—The Sheriff was right except as regarded the date down to which wages were due, which ought to be the date of judgment in this appeal. The evidence showed that the illegal order had never been superseded. The case was accordingly indistinguishable from Caine, where section 134 and the other sections of the Act had been carefully considered, and all the pursuer's arguments considered and rejected. The reason for limiting the decree for wages in that case to the date of the judgment of the Court of Appeal was the fact that there had been a payment into Court of their amount as at that date. The defenders had not proved that the pursuer had earned any wages since his discharge; that disposed of the last point.
The conviction in Hong Kong was plainly
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In these circumstances the pursuer sues for wages in so far as not paid down to the date of final settlement, and for damages. The damages found are not impugned, but the Sheriff has not given wages down to the date of settlement. In that I think the Sheriff has erred. I am clearly of that opinion on section 134 ( c) of the Merchant Shipping Act, the wages under that clause running to the date of final settlement, there being no ground for attributing the delay in the settlement to the pursuer or anyone else than the master or owners.
The view I take in this case is strongly confirmed by the case of Caine v. The Palace Shipping Company recently decided in the House of Lords.
Accordingly, my view is that the pursuer is entitled to the damages as found in the Court below, and to his wages as far as not already paid down to the date of settlement.
Lord Stormonth Darling—In my opinion this case is indistinguishable in point of principle from the case of Palace Shipping Company, Limited v. Caine and Others, decided by the House of Lords on July 29th last. If so we are bound to follow that case.
There, as here, the question arose out of the war between Russia and Japan, and out of a demand by the master that the crew (including in this case the pursuer, who was a fireman and therefore a “seaman” in the sense of the Merchant Shipping Act 1894) should go with the cargo of coal, which had been declared contraband of war by both belligerents, to a port in Japan. The information as to the destination of the ship was communicated to the crew for the first time in this case when the ship reached Gap Rock, the signal-station for Hong Kong, while in the House of Lords' case the information was given at Hong Kong itself. But it is not contended that this trifling variation in the facts makes any distinction in principle. The only difference which the defenders represent as material is that the refusal of the pursuer and the rest of the crew to obey a lawful order applied, as they say, to an order to take the vessel to Hong Kong, and had nothing to do with the orders to go to Nagasaki in Japan. But this, though quite distinctly averred by the defenders on record (Ans. 10) is not borne out by the proof. The master nowhere says that he ever asked the pursuer and the others to take the vessel to Hong Kong. On the contrary, he says that after he had twice asked the men, first collectively and then individually, to “continue on the voyage,” the course being at that time set for Nagasaki in accordance with orders which had been received at the signal-station, and they had twice refused in the face of his remonstrances, he had a conference with the chief officer and the chief engineer as to the possibility of continuing the voyage, and it was then for the first time decided to go into Hong Kong with the aid of the officers and engineers, the course being changed for Hong Kong in consequence of this decision. The Sheriff-Substitute discusses the precise sequence of events and prefers the evidence of the officers examined to that of the men, but the Sheriff, on the other hand, accepts the evidence of the men, which is to the effect that they were in the act of going forward in response to the master's command delivered by the third officer, when he held up his hand on the bridge and “said he wanted nothing more to do with us.” Though personally I am disposed to agree with the Sheriff, I do not think that it is necessary to decide absolutely between these two slightly different versions of what occurred, seeing that there is no attempt on the part of the defenders to prove that any order or even suggestion was ever made to the pursuer and the others, that whether they were willing to go to Nagasaki or not, they were at least bound to work the vessel into Hong Kong. The most that is attempted on the part of the defenders by way of suggestion is to say that the men must have seen that the ship was turned towards Hong Kong, and might then have offered to do their duty. But if the men were right in their refusal to carry contraband of war to a port of one of the belligerents, their legal position could not be reversed or affected so long as this order was never withdrawn or a new order substituted. And that this was the truth of the case sufficiently appears, I think, from the log-book of the ship on the two critical days. After the entry about the refusal of the crew “to do any more work or continue the voyage” ( i.e., to Nagasaki) there is an entry—“In consequence of the above refusal we were compelled to abandon the voyage and take the ship into Hong Kong”—and then there is a description of the several duties undertaken by the officers. That again is followed by an entry made next day, and signed not only by the master and the chief officer but also by the chief engineer, in the following terms:—“The foregoing entry has been read over to the members of the crew interested, who replied as follows, that they refused to go to Nagasaki as ordered, but they professed their willingness to take the ship into Hong Kong.” I regard this statement not only as a de recenti record made by the officers of the ship of the true position of the contending parties but it squares with all that followed. Acting on his erroneous views of the crew's rights, the master had the men put on shore, tried before the police magistrate of Hong Kong, and sentenced to three weeks' hard labour for refusal of duty. After three days of the sentence had
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The pursuer is satisfied with this latter award as covering maintenance and every other claim except money wages. But I am of opinion that we must follow the rule applied by the House of Lords with regard to wages; and to that extent we must recal the Sheriff's interlocutor. In other words we must hold that the master acted wrongfully in procuring the imprisonment of the pursuer on an unlawful ground, and in bringing his engagement to an end without making any provision for his passage home, in terms of section 186 of the Merchant Shipping Act 1894. In these circumstances it follows that the matter is regulated by section 134 ( c) of that Act, which declares that the seaman's wages shall continue to run and be payable until the time of the final settlement thereof. There has been no final settlement thereof down to the present time, and the delay is not due to any cause other than the wrongful act or default of the owner or master. We must therefore give decree for the pursuer's wages at the admitted rate of £4 per month down to the date of our judgment hereon, under deduction of the sum of £4, 12s. 5d. admitted to have been received by him in Cond. 11, but without any reference to the sum of £6, 8s. alleged to have been paid by the defenders to the superintendent of shipping in Hong Kong as the balance of wages due to the pursuer, and quoad ultra we must affirm the Sheriff's award of damages (including maintenance) with which the pursuer declares he is satisfied.
This does not mean that we dissent from the main findings of the Sheriff. On the contrary we agree with them; but it is necessary formally to recal his interlocutor and to vary his findings in order to bring his judgment into harmony with a later decision of the House of Lords.
The Court pronounced this interlocutor—
“Recal the interlocutor of the Sheriff of Lanark dated 22nd November 1906, as also the interlocutor of the Sheriff-Substitute dated 9th June 1906: Find in fact. … ( ut supra): Find in law that in these circumstances the defenders are liable to the pursuer in damages; and also that under and by virtue of section 134 ( c) of the said Merchant Shipping Act the pursuer's wages continue to run, and are payable, until the time of the final settlement thereof: Therefore assess the damages at £40(including maintenance); find the pursuer entitled to wages at the admitted rate of £4 per month from 24th January 1905 until the date hereof, under deduction of the sum of £4, 12s. 5d. received by him to account (£134, 9s., less said £4, 12s. 5d.); and accordingly decern against the defenders to make payment to the pursuer of the said sums of £40 and £129, 16s. 7d., being together the sum of £169, 16s. 7d., with interest thereon at the rate of 5 per centum per annum from the date hereof until payment,” &c.
Counsel for the Pursuer (Respondent)— Kennedy, K.C.— M. P. Fraser. Agent— D. Hill Murray, S.S.C.
Counsel for the Defenders (Appellants)— Hunter, K.C.— Spens. Agent— Campbell Faill, S.S.C.