This is a demurrer to a declaration in an action at law. The declaration alleges that the defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of the District of Columbia and maintaining a place of business at Boston; that on May 19, 1921, the plaintiff was employed by it as chief engineer of the steamer Pocahontas, and continued in such employment until her arrival at Gibraltar on or about September 20, 1921; that at said port the defendant “falsely and fraudulently charged the plaintiff with negligence and ineoinpeteney in the performance of his duty as chief engineer as aforesaid, and maliciously and without reasonable or probable cause filed with and presented to the American consul at said port of Gibraltar charges against the plaintiff, wherein the defendant by its servants and agents alleged and declared that the plaintiff had been guilty of negligence and ineompeteney- as aforesaid, and demanded and required that because thereof the plaintiff should be discharged and removed from the ship; that by reason of said fraudulent and malicious charges, made against the plaintiff as aforesaid, said American consul did cause the plaintiff to be discharged and removed from said ship; and that, but for such false, fraudulent, and malicious charges, said American consul would not have caused the plaintiff’s discharge and removal as aforesaid.”
Then follow allegations of consequential damage, relating to a hearing before the board of supervising inspectors, by which the plaintiff was put to loss and expense.
The declaration does not make it clear whether the plaintiff’s claim is for slander, for libel, or for something akin to malicious prosecution. These are quite different grounds of recovery. The declaration is, in my opinion, bad for indefiniteness and uncertainty. A defendant is entitled to be clearly informed of the general ground on which the claim against him is based, and it devolves upon the plaintiff to put his declaration in reasonably clear and precise form. If more than one ground is relied on, different counts should be inserted. This is sufficient to dispose of the present declaration. But, as the merits have been argued and very carefully considered, it will save the time both of the parties and of the court if I deal with them now.
Slander and libel are clearly barred by the Massachusetts statute of limitations (Gen. Laws Mass. c. 260, § 4), which provides that actions for slander shall be commenced only within two years after the cause of action accrues, and actions for libel only within one year thereafter. In transitory actions, the state statute of limitations controls in the United States courts, where Congress has not provided to the contrary. Michigan Insurance Bank v. Eldred, 130 U. S. 693, 9 S. Ct. 690, 32 L. Ed. 1080. And see American Express Company v. Rowe, 14 F.(2d) 269, C. C. A. 1st, opinion Aug. 17, 1926. Strictly speaking, the statute-of limitations is an affirmative defense, not open on demurrer. Miller v. Aldrich, 202 Mass. 109, 88 N. E. 441, 132 Am. St. Rep. 480. See, contra, Jones-Burget v. Borough of Dormont, 14 F.(2d) 954, C. C. A. 3d, Sept. 9, 1926. In order to avoid this technicality, it would be well for the parties to stipulate that questions arising under the statute may be decided on demurrer.
An action for malicious prosecution is *407not barred by the statute of limitations. It is on this or some analogous ground, as I construe the present declaration, that the plaintiff puts his case. The question presented is one of considerable difficulty. It is requisite to an aetion for malicious prosecution that a proceeding shall have been brought maliciously and without probable cause before a judicial tribunal having power to act on some phase of it, at least, and that the proceeding shall have been terminated in favor of the original defendant. See Castro v. De Uriarte (D. C.) 12 F. 250. There is no statute which expressly authorizes consuls to pass upon disputes of this character. Those under which the consul appears to have acted are R. S. § 4580, as amended (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1916, § 8371), which provides that, upon an application of a master or of a seaman, the consul may discharge the seaman, if it appears to him that the seaman has completed his shipping agreement, or is entitled to his discharge undér any act of Congress or according to the general principles or usages of maritime law, and R. S. § 4576, as amended (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1916, § 8367), which requires the master of a vessel returning from a foreign voyage to produce to the boarding officer on return to this country all persons listed in the crew, onto account for them, it being expressly provided that as to persons discharged in a foreign country the consent of consul to the discharge shall be certified. R. S. § 4576, originated in the act of 1803; it is referred to in ,its early form in U. S. v. Parsons, 1 Lowell, 107, Fed. Cas. No. 16,002 (1866).
By general maritime law and usage the seaman is bound to the vessel for the voyage for which he signs articles, and the vessel is bound to retain the seaman unless his own good (as in the case of his serious illness, where skilled medical attention is necessary for him), on the safety of the vessel (as where he is violently mutinous and likely to be a source of uncontrollable trouble and danger, if retained on board), justify putting him ashore in a foreign port. Capillo v. Bristol Packing Co. (D. C.) 112 F. 439; The Nimrod, Fed. Cas. No. 10, 267; Mattes v. Standard Transp. Co. (D. C.) 274 F. 1019. Incompetence to perform the duties of an important position in which he has shipped, and which for the safety of the vessel must be capably filled, would also justify his discharge abroad. These are questions for the master to decide; he is the one who makes the discharge. The consol does not “cause” a seaman to be discharged, as the declaration alleges, in a case like the present. It is evidently based upon a misunderstanding of the law. When a master discharges a seaman in a foreign port, in order to protect himself under R. S. § 4576, supra, he must secure the consent of the consul to his action. It has been held that the consul’s action is not binding on either party, and will not avail the master, where consent to the discharge was obtained by his own deceit or collusion. Mattes v. Standard Transp. Co., supra; Tingle v. Tucker, Fed. Cas. No. 14, 057. It has also been held that the consul’s action will be regarded as prima facie correct, and will be followed, unless there is persuasive evidence to the contrary. The T. F. Oakes (C. C.) 36 F. 442, 445; Latty v. Emergency Fleet Corporation (D. C.) 279 F. 752.1
The Pocahontas was on a foreign voyage, and the proceeding before the consul referred to in the declaration was apparently based on R. S. § 4576, being an application to him for Ms consent to the discharge of the plaintiff. I think it extremely doubtful whether it constituted a judicial proceeding of such character as to lay the necessary fornidation for an aetion of malieious prosecution. Moreover, the proceeding resulted adversely to the present plaintiff. He is seeking to recover here, not because an unjustifiable complaint was brought against him, but because the consul was misled, as the plaintiff alleges, into an erroneous decision against him. This is the basic difference between the present suit and an ordinary action for malicious prosecution. There are obvious objections to allowing a deféated defendant to bring an independent suit against Ms successful adversary, based upon the claim that the original aetion was wrongly decided. Moreover, the present plaintiff’s rights rest upon the shipping articles. He still has those rights. If he was wrongfully discharged, he can sue and recover whatever damages he sustained. In my opinion, the declaration states no cause of aetion for malicious prosecution.
The entry will be, “Demurrer sustained,” and the plaintiff, if so advised, may move to amend, so as to present properly the different causes of aetion now erroneously combined in one count.
For discussions of the consul’s power and duty, see 16 Ops. Attys. Gen. 268; The Annie (D. O.) 133 F. 325; The Donna Lane (D. C.) 299 F. 977; 22 Ops. Attys. Gen. 212.