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86 FEDERALREPOR'i'ER. '
of the leglslature to provide a mode for its exercise. · · · The power of courts to establish a system of, procedure by means of which parties may s,eek the exercise of their jurisdiction, at least when a system has not been lished by legislative authority, is inherent." ,
And in the case of Riggs v. Johnson Co., 6 Wall. 166, it was held by the supreme court of the United States that a court which has jurisdiction to render a particular judgment has also atithority to issue the proper process for its enforcement; the court saying: "JurIsdiction Is defined to be the power to hear and determine the subjectmatter in controversy in the suit before the court, and the rule is unIversal that, if the power Is conferred to render the judgment or enter the decree, it also includes the power to Issue proper process to enforce such judgment or decree."
It is believed that the doctrine of the two cases just cited in relation to the inherent powers of courts in the exercise of their admitted jurisdiction is undisputed, and the principle is simply recognized and declared in section 716 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, which reads as follows: "The supreme court and the circult and district courts shall have power to issue writs of scire facias. They shall also have power to issue all writs not speeifically provided for by statute, which may be necessary for the exercise of their respective jurIsdiction, and agreeable to the usages and principles of law."
It was necessary in the pending case that jurisdiction over the defendant should be acquired, and, as congress has made no specific provision as to the manner in whiCh this should be done, the court had the right to resort to any appropriate method for that purpose. The course adopted by the court was to follow the practice prescribed by the Penal Code of this state, and there was served upon its president a summons, giving full information of the offense charged against the defendant corporation, and naming the day for the defendant to appear in court, and answer such charge. This is the usual mode in which notice is given to a corporation of the pendency of any action against it in a court, and it is certainly conformable to natural justice, as it affords to the defendant full opportunity to interpose any defense which it may desire to make. The defendant has thus been properly notified of the offense charged against it, and when and where it is required to appear and make its defense, and this is all that is required to give the court jurisdiction to proceed with the trial of the case. The motion of the defendant will be denied. '
UNITED STATES v. REED. (Circuit Court, S. D. New York. 1. ,
May 25, 1897.)
PROTECTION OF SEAMEN-UNSUITABLE FOOD-PENAI,Ty-EVIDENCE.
In order to justify a convIction under Rev. St. § 5347, Imposing a penalty upon the master or other officer ola vessel who withholds suitable food and nourishment' from the crew, each of the statutory, elements of lack of a suitable food supply, absence of JUStifiable cause, and the presence of malice, hatred or revenge, must be found beyond a reasonable doubt.
2.
SAME-SCURVY-EvIDENCE.
Where there 'Is evidence that every one of a crew was afflicted with scurvy, of which several died, and that the'brdinary cause of that dIsease is lack of
UNITED STATES V. REED.
309
a
snltable food,' the jury are justified, unle;:,s some other cause Is shown, In finding that there was such lack of suitable food. SAME-PHOVISIONING OF VESSEl,.
Every master, when sailing to or from a foreign port. is bound to see before be sets sail tbat bis vessel is properly provisioned, including a surplus to meet all reasonable ccntingencies of the seas, and if, in consequence of an omission to do so, there is a short allowance, the withholding of suitable food is not justifiable. If, during a voyage, a master meets with difficulty at sea, it before cbanging bis voyage for a mucb longer one, to exercise same care as when first setting sail, to see that be is properly for the change of course, and to provision his vessel by any methods the circumstances reasonably admit.
4.
SAME-CHANGE IN VOYAGE.
is his duty exactly the pr:Jvisioned practicable
G.
CRIMINAL LAW-MALICE DEFINED.
e.
Malice consists in one's willful doing of an act, or willful neglect of a known obligation, wbich be knows is liable to injure anotber, regardless of tbe consequences, and a malignant spirit or a specific intention to hurt a particular individual or crew is not an essential element.
PRO'rECTION OF SEAMEN-INSUFFICIENT FOOD-NEGLIGENCE.
Under section 5347, tbe captain is not to be condemned for any mere error of jUdgment, or for mere negligence, standing alone.
This was an indictment, under Rev. St. § 5347, against Edward W. Reed, master of the American vessel T. F. Oakes, for withholding suitable food and nourishment from members of the crew. Wallace Macfarlane, U. S. Atty., Jason Hinman, Asst. U. S. Atty., and Max J. Kohler, Asst. U. S. Atty. Abram J. Rose and David McClure, for defendant. BROWN, District Judge. Gentlemen of the Jury: Most civili?Jed governments have found it necessary to pass statutes for the protection of seamen. As a class they have been found to be perso.ns who need special statutory protection. They are improvident for the most part and have very little learning. They go hither and thither over the world with little except the statutes and the kindness of their masters, when they do have kind masters, to give them their rights. Universally, the law has made the master a monarch upon the ship. His authority is absolute. That is a necessity of navigation. At times it has been found to lead to such lack of consideration on the part of masters, or of owners, that the seamen suffer in their just right to humane treatment. Therefore statutory enactments have been found necessary to protect them. Our own government has repeatedly passed statutes for this purpose from the time of its organization. 'l'he disease of scurvy was formerly much more prevalent than now. Latterly, as you know by this testimony, it is infrequent. The provisions of our own law were enacted the better to prevent that disease and dreadful scourge upon long voyages. The act (Rev. 8t. § 4511, and schedule following Rev. St. § 4612), which has been mentioned to you, was passed, I think, first in 1872. It provided for the kinds of food, and a certain variety of food, which should be furnished, and which it was believed, if furnished in sufficient quantities, would be a guaranty against this disorder. The fact that
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86 FEDERAL REPORTER.
in later years this disorder has been so infrequent is proof of the wisdom of the provision, and of the good resulting from the observ· ance of the law. Besides this statute there is a much older one (Rev. 8t. §5347), the on(;l under which this indictment is framed, which provided in 1835 that if the master, or any other officer of an American vessel, should through malice, hatred or revenge, and with· out justifiable cause, withhold from the crew suitable food and nourishment or inflict upon them cruel or unusual punishment, he should be subjected to a penalty. This indictment charges that the defendant did withhold suitable food and ncmrishment, maliciously and without justifiable cause. You are to determine this case upon the evidence before 'you, and upon no other considerations. The three main elements which enter into it and which you will be ,called upon to find, you will observe,are, first, whether there was a lack of suitable food supply; second, if you find that there was, then, whether this was withheld without justi. fiable cause; and finally, if sa, whether this was done from malice, hatred or revenge. There is no evidence here that there was any hatred or revenge on the part of this master towards any individual of the crew, or towards the whole of the crew, and ,the indictment does not so charge; but the indictment does charge that it was frOID malice, and tha,t is one of the necessary in(!'redients ,which you must find. In order to convict this defendant you have to find that each of these three elements existed in this case, and beyond a rea· sonable doubt. If you f,ind beyolld a r;easqnable doubt that there was a lack of proper food, that it was withheld from the creW without justifiable cause, and from malice, theJ;l it is your duty to find for the government, and to find the defendant guilty. Nor should you have any hesitation in rendering that, verdict,' providing you are satisfied bey'ond a reasonable doubt that'these facts are true; not only from a regard to the law itself, but certainly and surely from a regard for that protection to the lives and health of seamen, which the law was designed to secure, and which humanity itself demands. If there was unreasonable and unjustifiable treatment, a withholding of proper nourishment, without justifiable cause, and if this was done maliciously, by every consideration of-humanity and reason, you must say so by your verdict; but you should be satisfied of it beyond a rea· sonable doubt. That is a question for you to determine, honestly and truly, in view of this evidence. Now, as regards the lack of proper food, the conclusive evidence upon which the government relies is the result. They say to you that here is a most extraordinary result, a result vyhich caunot be accounted for in any other way; a disorder, a disease, produced by such, ,lack of food and by nothing else;, and they say that these four in death, and other cases of sickness of the seacases men, were all "cases of scurvy. I say four deaths. I do not say all the deaths were from this cause; because it is admitted that the death was from some other cause. Now, it is for you to of the say beyond a doubt, that there was a most unusual prevalence of scurvy among the seamen upon this ship. There is no medical testiniony opposed to that which the
UN1TED S'I.'ATES V. REED.
311
government has introduced from the hospital, that of the persons who received the men and examined them, who saw the disorder of the men, and who say their disorder was scurVY,and who say that the symptoms of the four seamen who died, were the symptoms of that disease also. It is contended that everyone of the seamen, every man on the ship who did not eat in the· cabin, had scurvy. Those cases that were milder were like the last witness, Heag-an, who says that he did not have swelling of the gums; that he had no trouble with the mouth, but that the trouble began with his feet. That is the same way in which the other seamen said their trouble began. His case seems to have been quite light ; he procured some asparagus water, and about that time, or soon after, the Kasbeck was hailed and furnished the ship with provisions. Now, the government relies upon this remarkable fact, that out of a dozen or more seamen, everyone who was in the foreca.stle, and even those two that were aft but not in the cabin, had very marked symptoms of scurvy, or the beginnings of it. If you are satisfied from the evidence that this is true, and there seems to be little to contradict it, you will find that there was some adequate cause; and unless you can find in the evidence some other cause for the prevalance of the disorder, you would naturally attribute it to the cause that has been assigned, and which has been proved to be the ordinary cause of that disorder, namely, the lack of a proper variety of food, and particularly of vegetable food. If JOu find that that was the fact, and that here was scurvy produced bJ a lack of vegetable food, your next inquirJ will be whether the vegetable food was withheld without justifiable cause. What is justifiable cause? It might be from some unexpected contingencJ, or situation that deprives the master, or the owner, or the officer who may be in command, of the power to supply the necessary food. If a vessel sails on her vOJage, well provisioned, with all that is required, and by stress of weather she is detained long beJond the usual.passage, and there are no ports where any food can be procured, so that the allowance must be shortened in order to enable the vessel to reach a port, it is very plain that the shortening of the allowance is necessarJ, and the crew are therefore put on what is termed a short allowance, that is, shorter than is prescribed. That is a justifiable cause. Under those circumstances, the necessary food may be lessened, and there is no criminality in that, because it is justifiable. But every master when sailing to or from a foreign port is bound to see before he sets sail that his vessel is properly provisioned for the intended vOJage. By "properly provisioned" is not meant a bare sufficiency for a quick passage. He is bound to make reasonable provision for what is liable to happen upon the seas, though it be unexpected. He is bound to provide for such storms, such delays, such calms as often happen, which may prolong a voyage. Those are among the ordinary contingencies of the sea. The captain is bound to provide a reasonable surplus, a reasonable margin for all known contingencies of the sea; and if he sails without doing so, and in consequence of not having made such provision there is a short allowance, the withholding is not justifiable, because he ought to
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'\lave seen that the vessel was supplied. wtthproper provisions. This is a sufficient illustration, I think, to distinguish between what may be called a justifiable cause, and one that is not justifiable. The third element is that of malice. By "malice" is not neceElsarily meant in the law a malignant spirit, a malignant intention to produce a particular evil. If a man intentionally does a wrongful act, an act which he knows is likely to injure another, that in law is malice; it is the willful purpose, the willful doing of an act which he knows is liable to injure another, regardless ..of the consequences. That is malice, although the man may not have had a specific intention to hurt a particular individual, or crew. So, ita man willfully neglects a known obligation, with the same reckless disregard of the consequences, that is malicious conduct in the sense of the law. Now, your inquiry on that branch of the case will be whether, if youfi.nd that there was a lack of food, there was any sufficient cause for it, and whether the master did here deliberately and willfully neglect his duty, knowing what was likely to happen and the probable consequences. "What was the duty of the master of this ship in regard to provisions? It was, first, to obey the statute. He was bound, first, to have such articles on board as the statute required and a sufficiency of them for the voyage, or those substitutes which the statute provides. He was bound to provision the ship, as I said before, sufficiently, with a reasonable margin that would satisfy the judgment of any reasonable man who knew the contingencies, or the liabilities of delay, in the course of a long sea voyage. In the next place, if a master meets with difficulty, with trouble at sea, if he is blown out of his course, as was testified to in this case, it is his duty before changing his route for a very much longer one, to exercise exactly the same care to see that he is properly provisioned for the new voyage, as for the former route; and to provision his vessel by any practical methods that the circumstances reasonably admit. He is not bound to do an unreasonable thing; he is bound to do whatever is reasonable, in view of the evil consequences that may arise by reason of any neglect of duty. He has no right to jeopardize the health or lives of his crew by saying, "I .will take the risk of so and so," and not provide properly and reasonably for the voyage. 'l'herefore I say in regard to the provisioning of this vessel, if soon after the beginning of her voyage from Hong Kong, by reason ot storms in the China Sea it became a subject for the master to determin(;. whether he should change his course or not, it was evidently his duty to consider the question of the provisions of the ship, just as much as it was his duty to consider that question at Hong Kong before he left port; and so at future stages of the voyage, it was just as much his obligation to look out for the proper provisioning of the crew and to take such measures as he reasonably could to procure a sufficiency if he found that he was short, or was likely to be short. The master in this case was a man of experience. He cannot plead that he did not know what effect was likely to be produced by a shortness of provisions. The very nature oUhe duty to supply food for a long voyage, requires a master of any knowledge or experience to make proper provision at the start and at subsequent stages of the voyage, as opportunity arises,
UNITED STA'l'ES V. REED.
81a
to make reasonable efforts to supply any deficiency which he may find to exist. Now, that is a question which you must decide wholly. I cannot help you there. It is contended on behalf of the government that when this change was made, the change from the route by way of the Cape of Good Hope to a voyage around Cape Horn, that lengthened the voyage in a very substantial degree. The captain himself said that it was 5,000 miles more. One of the seamen, I think, put it about 7,000 miles more. On running over the map, or the chart, I find by a little computation, in a very rapid estimate, that those figures are probably not far out of the way. You have the means before you in the chart itself, if you choose to examine it, and you can say pretty nearly what the true difference in the distances is. So far as I have been able to estimate, r do not perceive that the captain's estimate is by any means too small. It is a very substantial lengthening of the voyage by taking the route around Cape Horn, whether it was six or seven thousand miles further from Hong Kong. Was that a reasonable thing for him to do? Was he provisioned for a voyage some five or six thousand miles more than he had set out for; and when he passed Honolulu, Buenos Ayres and Rio without seeking food, was that a reasonable thing to do? Now, the question before you is not simply and nakedly whether it was reasonable and proper; but whether, along with the captain's omission to call at any of those places, taking the other circumstances into account, there was in your judgment such willfulness in omitting to call there, as makes it something more than a mere error of judQ"ment, or mere negligence. r have been requested to charge you, and do charge you, that the captain is not to be oondemned for any mere error of judgment. He is not to be condemned either for mere negligence, if it was nothing more than that. He is to be condemned, if you find the other ele· ments to exist, for the additional element of malice in connection with them, in the sense in which r have described it, not as a malignant in· tention to do a particular harm to anybody, but in the sense of a will· ful disregard of what he knew to be his duty. That is all. If you find that he willfully disregarded an obligation which he knew and understood, knowing his act was liable to produce injury to the crew, that is malice in the sense of the law. If you find that the circumstances when he turned to go around Cape Horn, were such and were known to him to be such, that he could not go around Cape Horn and reach New York without other nrovisions, and that he willfully omitted to go back to Hong Kong, or willfully omitted to go into Honolulu, or Buenos Ayres, or Rio, because he preferred to take the consequences of keeping right on till he reached New York, that constitutes malice. It is for you to say upon all these circumstances, upon the condition of the men, upon the applications that the men swore they made to him to be put unon the government 'allowance, and what you find upon the evidence must have been the condition of the captain,-whether his conduct in these particulars was a deliberate and willful violation and known disregard of the rights of seamen as to provisions for which the statute provides, or whether there was no such willful element in the case, as I have described.
, Ur. Rose:, I desire to call 'YOu!!" :honor'i3.atten,ti6n to the fact that your honor has not charged the requests submitted by us. There are a, ;number of them there. The Oourt: Some of them I have declined, yes. I do not think I need to charge all of them. 1 ha:ve already said to the jury that under the law in this court the wife is not a competent witness in such a case as this. I will say to you, gentlemen, that the fact that she does not testify raises no presumption one way or the other; you siinply disregard it as wholly out of the case. Of course, you will judge of the captain's conduct not from what appears after the event, but according to the circumstances at the time. I do not see anything else. Mr. Rose: There is one request with reference to the schedule. The Oourt: I am asked to charge you that the captain was not obliged by statute or by law to furnish any vegetable food except peas, rice and barley. Those I believe are the three articles that are mentioned in the statute. They may be substituted for potatoes. I am further asked to charge you that the fact that the captain has no pecuniary interest in decreasing the quantity of food is to be taken in consideration by the jury. That may be taken by you in consideration in your deliberations. ' Mr. Rose: ' I wish to except to that portion of your honor's charge speaking of the scurvy, unless you :find other causes for it yon will naturally attribute the lack of sufficient food as the cause. The Court: The stenographer may note what yon say. Mr. Rose: I except to your honor's refusal to charge as requested, a separate exception to each refusal. ,The Oourt: Yes. Mr. Rose: I thinkyour honorhtts unintentionally omitted to state that the burden is 'upon. the government, that there is a presumption of innocence on the part of the defendant which has to be overcome, and that the defendant is entitled to every reasonable doubt. The Oourt: I stated that at the ontset, I believe, two or three times. Mr. Rose: The list of the provisions on board at the time the vessel left Hong Kong although offered in evidence was not read this morning. I think the jury should take that with them. 'Defendant's Requests to Oharge. Defendant is not chargeable for bad judgment. Charged. If he honestly took the course he did, and believed it to be for the best interest of the ship and her crew to come by the way of the Horn, and to cut down the allowance of food, he cannot be convicted of the charges in the indictment. Denied. If jury :find defendant acted without malice. Charged. He is to be judged not by what may appear now to be wrong, but by the situatiGIlM it was then pret'ltnted to him. Oharged.
CAMPBELL PRINTING-PRESS'" MFG. CO. V. DUPLEX PHINTING-PRESS CO.
315
There is no proof that when he left Hong Kong he had not suffi· cient provisions for the usual voyage on which he was bound. Denied. He had the right to change from his course, by the way of the Cape of Good Hope, to by the way of the Horn. Denied. Malice means intentional wrongdoing, from hatred, revenge or a desire to injure. Denied. If defendant deprived the crew of food from good motives, with desire to husband his resources, the verdict must be, not guilty. Denied. Malice must be found by the jury on the part of the captain against the whole crew or the verdict must be, not guilty. Denied. 'fhe first mate is part of the crew. Denied. The captain was Dot obliged by statute or by law to furnish any vegetable food except peas, rice and barley. . Charged. The fact that the captain has no pecuniary interest in decreasing the quantity of food is to be taken into consideration by the jury. Charged.· The defendant was acquitted.
CAMPBELL PRINTING-PRESS & MANUFACTURING CO. v. DUPLEX PRINTING-PRESS CO.
rcircult Court, E. D. Michigan. 1. PATENTS-SPECIFICATIONS.
January 17, 1898.)
Where the specifications describe the machine with particularity and detail. and the file wrapper, specification, and drawings contain no suggestion of any alternative arrangement of parts, and a studied repetition, to avoid conflict with prior constructions, of the phrases "substantially as described," etc., is appended to each claim, the patent is limited to the precise construction shown. 2. SAME-PRINTING PRESSES-INFlUNGEMENT.
Where the horizontal stationary type beds of defendant's machine would not work in complainant's machine, nor the vertical type beds of the latter work in the machine of the former, without reconstruction, such interchangeability or noninterchangeabillty is an important test in determining the question of infringement.
11.
SAME-EQUIVAI,ENTS.
Complainant having made the position of his (ype beds and other arrangements relative to the web-feeding mechanism, and impression cylinders an essential feature of his press, he must be restricted to that construction, unless defendant's horizontal type beds or some other part of his machine are mere eqUivalents, substituted in an arrangement of parts in other respects a duplication. He cannot have the benefit of the doctrine of equivalents if either more or less than his combination is essentiai to the operation of defendant's machine.