James v. Hagar

By the Court.

Daly, F. J.

The defendants are shipping masters, whose business it is to procure seamen for vessels. They procured Fogarty, the plaintiff’s assignor, to go in the schooner as cook, with the understanding that twenty-five dollars of his wages was to be paid in advance. Fogarty signed the shipping articles, and the .defendants paid him five dollars in cash and gave him an agreement in waiting by which they bound themselves to pay to him or to his order the remaining twenty dollars, provided he should proceed to sea, agreeable to the shipping articles,” which agreement Fogarty transferred tó the plaintiff. Though payable to order it was not in the nature of a promissory note or due bill, as the promise to pay was conditional and not absolute, depending upon an event which might never happen. The plaintiff, therefore, acquired no other or greater rights under it than Fogarty possessed, so that if Fogarty could not recover upon it, the plaintiff could not.

The vessel it would seem was bound to Fortress Monroe. She left the wharf at New York, Fogarty being then on hoard, to proceed on her voyage, but in going down the bay came in collision with another vessel, which*made it necessary for her to put back for repairs to Jersey City, and which involved a delay of several days before she could resume her voyage. During this detention Fogarty left; the vessel without the knowledge of the master or of the mate, and another cook had to be shipped in his placo. He testified that he had been taken sick, and that the vessel had not proper sleeping accommodation for him, -the substance of his testimony being that he *519had been prevented by illness from performing his contract, and if such were the case, he, of course, had no claim for compensation under it.

The defendants’ promise to pay depended upon the fulfilment of the condition expressed, and it was therefore incumbent upon the plaintiff to show that Fogarty did proceed to sea agreeable to the shipping articles. To do this it was necessary to show what was contained upon that subject in the shipping articles, either by the production of the articles or by the proof of their contents. At the time of the trial they were in the possession of the captain, who was at sea; but as both he and the mate had been examined as witnesses, de bene esse, it was in the plaintiff’s power to have produced this necessary evidence. This objection was taken by the defendants. They insisted that the complaint should be dismissed unless the plaintiff produced the shipping articles or gave some evidence of their contents, but the justice upon the facts above stated, gave judgment for the plaintiff.

In the absence of any evidence of what was contained in the shipping articles, the justice could not.find that Fogarty did proceed to sea agreeably to their provision, and if they contained what is usual in such instruments, it is manifest that he did not. The vessel, within the meaning of a contract of insurance, or agreements of a like character, was at sea when the collision occurred, having actually, commenced her voyage (The Union Insurance Co. v. Tysen, 3 Hill, 118) ; but a. mar-' iner in a vessel when she thus commences her voyage but who leaves her while she is temporarily stayed in the harbor by accidents, head winds or other causes before she reaches the main ocean, has not proceeded to sea in the sense in which that term is to he understood in such agreement, and it would he as absurd as it would be - unjust to say that Fogarty, who quitted the vessel in tho harbor, proceeded to sea in her because he was on board when she commenced her voyage.

The plaintiff testified that he understood that Fogarty proceeded to sea according to the custom of the port. He does not state wlmh the custom was, or from whom or from vh-E this understanding was derived. It was simply giving his understanding or conclusionwithout disclosing upon what it "was founded. The doA-ndanr, Hagar, on the contrary, testified *520that the custom of this port was to pay the money upon agreements of this hind as soon as the vessel proceeded to sea, that is, .as soon as the pilot leaves, if it is a seagoing vessel, and if a coasting vessel after she is out three days. This was clear and intelligible. It was a statement of what the custom was, which the other was not, and was.uncontradicted. It showed the existence of a custom which was in itself reasonable, in respect to which the parties may be presumed to have contracted, and should have been controlling.

The judgment should be reversed.