Court Opinion

ID: 8628405
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 19:33:42.17934+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:55:41.289634
License: Public Domain

A licensed pilot, when on board a sea-going steamer, to take her out of this harbor, and go the voyage, remaining with her for the purpose of bringing her into port, for a compensation in gross of $80, is not liable to do ship’s duty, except when in charge of her officially as pilot. Any command or request in respect to his services on board may be communicated to him through the mate or other subalterns of the ship, and need not be delivered him personally by the master; and accordingly a request to him, through the chief mate or carpenter, to stand a night watch, in a ease of urgency, affords him no grounds for complaint or reproach to the master. If he goes on the quarter deck to make complaint therefor to the captain, and is ordered off the deck by the captain, he is bound to obey the order, and must take his place in such part of the ship as the master shall direct. The authority of the master in respect to the discipline and rules of the ship are the same over such pilot as over any other person on board. If he refuses to leave the quarter deck, or neglects to db so on the express order of the master, the latter is justified in applying so much force as may be necessary to compel obedience, but no more. .The result of the conflicting evidence on this point shows that the master emplojed more violence than was necessary in removing the pilot from the quarter deck; and he is therefore guilty of a trespass. This violence consisted only in pushing the pilot forward, (in doing which both tripped, and the pilot fell on the deck, and the master partly so); and being accompanied with no other force or injury, the damages should be scarcely more than nominal. Decreed $10 damages for the trespass.
Held, that the master was not justified in thereupon ordering the pilot ashore, and leaving him at Chagres, and that he is entitled to recover his full agreed wages, and also the expenses to which he was necessarily subjected whilst at Chagres, and in returning home. Ordered, a reference to ascertain those expenses, and that a decree for the amount, with costs, be entered in his favor against the defendant.