Judges: Bigelow
Filed Date: 11/15/1861
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
We are of opinion that the defendants have no reason to complain of the instructions under which this case was submitted to the jury. It is not an action in which the plaintiff seeks to recover the wages which would have been due
Some confusion may exist in the adjudged cases as to the nature of the remedy to be adopted by a seaman injured by a wrongful discharge in a foreign port, in violation of the contract under which he shipped. This arises from the fact that in
The only other question arising on this part of the case is, whether the instructions were erroneous as to the damages 1o which the plaintiff was entitled. It certainly would have been more regular to tell the jury to give the plaintiff a full indemnity for the loss and injury which he had sustained in consequence Of the breach of the contract. But the omission of this statement of the general rule does not appear to have worked any harm to the defendants. It was certainly the duty of the court to enumerate,-for the guidance of the jury, the elements of the damages to which the plaintiff was entitled under the general rule, and if these were correctly stated, there is nothing to show that the amount of the verdict is too large. Upon the facts stated in the bill of exceptions and comprehended in the instructions given to the jury, we are of opinion that the jury were properly directed as to the sum which ought to be allowed to the plaintiff. In the absence of controlling evidence, the wages which’ the defendants agreed to pay the plaintiff were the best evidence of the value of his time and services which had been lost to him in consequence of the wrongful act of the master. The defendants cannot complain that he was allowed to recover the sum which he would have earned, if he had not been prevented by the breach of the contract caused by their agent. Nor was it erroneous to allow the plaintiff to recover for his time beyond the period when the voyage terminated. The contract of the defendants was to bring the plaintiff back to the home port. This they faded to do. To give him a full indemnity, he is entitled to recover until he has had reasonable time and opportunity to return home, although he may receive
The ruling as to the right of the plaintiff to recover for the medical and other expenses incurred in consequence of the injury received by him while in the service of the ship was in conformity with the well settled rule of the maritime law. He was entitled to be cured at the expense of the owners. This was an essential incident of the contract, annexed to it by law, and for a failure to fulfil it the defendants are liable in this action. Abbott on Shipping, 260, notes. Harden v. Gordon, 2 Mason, 541. Brig George, 1 Sumner, 151.
Exceptions overruled.