The title is no part of a statute. Where a statute declares that
it shall apply to foreign vessels as well as vessels of the United
States, the fact that its title states that it relates to American
seamen cannot be used to set at naught the obvious meaning of the
statute itself.
Contracts for seamen's wages are exceptional in character, and
may be subjected to special restrictions, and whenever they relate
to commerce not
wholly within a state, legislation enforcing such restrictions
comes
Page 190 U. S. 170
within the domain of Congress under the commerce clause of the
Constitution, and such legislation is not contrary to the
Fourteenth or Thirteenth Amendment.
When Congress prescribes such restrictions, no one within the
jurisdiction of the United States can escape liability for a
violation thereof on a plea that he is a foreign citizen or an
officer of a foreign merchant vessel. The implied consent of this
government to leave jurisdiction over the internal affairs of
foreign merchant vessels in our harbors to the nations to which
such vessels belong respectively may be withdrawn, and it is within
the power of Congress to protect all sailors shipping within our
ports on vessels engaged in foreign or interstate commerce, whether
foreign or belonging to citizens of this country.
Under the Act of Congress of December 21, 1898, prohibiting the
payment of seamen's wages in advance, seamen shipped on a foreign
vessel from an American port to a foreign port and return to an
American port who have received a part of their wages in advance
may, after the completion of the voyage, recover by libel filed
against the vessel the full amount of their wages, including the
advance payments, although such payments are not due either under
the terms of the contract or under the law of the country to which
the vessel belongs.
On December 21, 1898, 30 Stat. 755, 763, Congress passed an act
entitled "An Act to Amend the Laws Relating to American Seamen, for
the Protection of Such Seamen, and to Promote Commerce." The
material portion thereof is found in section 24, which amends
section 10 of chapter 121 of the Laws of 1884 so as to read:
"SEC. 10. (
a) That it shall be, and is hereby, made
unlawful in any case to pay any seaman wages in advance of the time
when he has actually earned the same, or to pay such advance wages
to any other person. Any person paying such advance wages shall be
deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction, shall be
punished by a fine not less than four times the amount of the wages
so advanced, and may also be imprisoned for a period not exceeding
six months at the discretion of the court. The payment of such
advance wages shall in no case, excepting as herein provided,
absolve the vessel or the master or owner thereof from full payment
of wages after the same shall have been actually earned, and shall
be no defense to a libel, suit, or action for the recovery of such
wages. If any person shall demand or receive, either directly
Page 190 U. S. 171
or indirectly, from any seaman or other person seeking
employment as seaman, or from any person on his behalf, any
remuneration whatever for providing him with employment, he shall,
for every such offense, be liable to a penalty of not more than one
hundred dollars."
"(
f) That this section shall apply as well to foreign
vessels as to vessels of the United States, and any master, owner,
consignee, or agent of any foreign vessel who has violated its
provisions shall be liable to the same penalty that the master,
owner, or agent of a vessel of the United States would be for a
similar violation:
Provided that treaties in force between
the United States and foreign nations do not conflict."
The appellants were seamen on board the British bark
Eudora, and filed this libel for wages in the District
Court of the United States for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania. By an agreed statement of facts, it appears that, on
January 22, 1900, they shipped on board such bark to serve as
seamen for and during a voyage from Portland, Maine, to Rio and
other points, not to exceed twelve months, the final port of
discharge to be in the United States or Canada, with pay at the
rate of one shilling for forty-five days and twenty dollars per
month thereafter. At the time of shipment, twenty dollars was paid
on account of each of them, and with their consent, to the shipping
agent through whom they were employed. On the completion of the
voyage, they, having performed their duties as seamen, demanded
wages for the full term of service, ignoring the payment made at
their instance to the shipping agent. The advanced payment and
contract of shipment were not contrary to, or prohibited by, the
laws of Great Britain. It was contended, however, that they were
prohibited by the act of Congress above quoted, and that such act
was applicable. The district court entered a decree dismissing the
libel. 110 F. 430. On appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals for
the Third Circuit, that court certified the following questions to
this Court:
"First. Is the act of Congress of December 21, 1898, properly
applicable to the contract in this case?"
"Second. Under the agreed statement of facts above set
Page 190 U. S. 172
forth, upon a libel filed by said seamen, after the completion
of the voyage, against the British vessel, to recover wages which
were not due to them under the terms of their contract or under the
law of Great Britain, were the libellants entitled to a decree
against the vessel?"
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Applying the ordinary rules of construction, it does not seem to
us doubtful that the act of Congress, if within its power, is
applicable in this case. The act makes it unlawful to pay any
seaman wages in advance, makes such payment a misdemeanor, and in
terms provides that such payment shall not absolve the vessel or
its master or owner for full payment of wages after the same shall
have been actually earned. And further, it declares that the
section making these provisions shall apply as well to foreign
vessels as to vessels of the United States, provided that treaties
in force between the United States and foreign nations do not
conflict. It is true that the title of the act of 1898 is "An Act
to Amend the Laws Relating to American Seamen," but it has been
held that the title is no part of a statute, and cannot be used to
set at naught its obvious meaning. The extent to which it can be
used is thus stated by Chief Justice Marshall in
United
States v. Fisher, 2 Cranch 358,
6 U. S. 386:
"Neither party contends that the title of an act can control
plain words in the body of the statute, and neither denies that,
taken with other parts, it may assist in removing ambiguities.
Where the intent is plain, nothing is left to construction.
Page 190 U. S. 173
Where the mind labors to discover the design of the legislature,
it seizes everything from which aid can be derived, and, in such
case, the title claims a degree of notice and will have its due
share of consideration."
See also Yazoo Railroad v. Thomas, 132 U.
S. 174,
132 U. S. 188;
United States v. Oregon &c. Railroad, 164 U.
S. 526,
164 U. S. 541;
Price v. Forrest, 173 U. S. 410,
173 U. S. 427;
Endlich, Interpretation of Statutes, secs. 58, 59. When, as here,
the statute declares, in plain words, its intent in reference to a
prepayment of seamen's wages, and follows that declaration with a
further statement that the rule thus announced shall apply to
foreign vessels as well as to vessels of the United States, it
would do violence to language to say that it was not applicable to
a foreign vessel.
But the main contention is that the statute is beyond the power
of Congress to enact, especially as applicable to foreign vessels.
It is urged that it invades the liberty of contract which is
guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution,
and reference is made to
Allgeyer v. Louisiana,
165 U. S. 578,
165 U. S. 589,
in which we said:
"The liberty mentioned in that amendment means not only the
right of the citizen to be free from the mere physical restraint of
his person, as by incarceration, but the term is deemed to embrace
the right of the citizen to be free in the enjoyment of all his
faculties; to be free to use them in all lawful ways; to live and
work where he will; to earn his livelihood by any lawful calling;
to pursue any livelihood or avocation, and for that purpose, to
enter into all contracts which may be proper, necessary, and
essential to his carrying out to a successful conclusion the
purposes above mentioned."
Further, that even if the contract be one subject to restraint
under the police power, that power is vested in the states, and not
in the general government, and any restraint, if exercised at all,
can only be exercised by the state in which the contract is entered
into; that the only jurisdiction possessed by Congress in respect
to such matters is by virtue of its power to regulate commerce,
interstate and foreign; that the regulation of commerce does not
carry with it the power of controlling contracts
Page 190 U. S. 174
of employment by those engaged in such service, any more than it
includes the power to regulate contracts for service on interstate
railroads, or for the manufacture of goods which may be intended
for interstate or foreign commerce; and, finally, that the validity
of a contract is to be determined by the law of the place of
performance, and not by that of the place of the contract; that the
contract in this case was one entered into in the United States, to
be performed on board a British vessel, which is undoubtedly
British territory, and therefore its validity is to be determined
by British law, and that, as conceded in the question, sustains its
validity.
We are unable to yield our assent to this contention. That there
is, generally speaking, a liberty of contract which is protected by
the Fourteenth Amendment may be conceded; yet such liberty does not
extend to all contracts. As said in
Frisbie v. United
States, 157 U. S. 160,
157 U. S.
165:
"While it may be conceded that, generally speaking, among the
inalienable rights of the citizen is that of the liberty of
contract, yet such liberty is not absolute and universal. It is
within the undoubted power of government to restrain some
individuals from all contracts, as well as all individuals from
some contracts. It may deny to all the right to contract for the
purchase or sale of lottery tickets; to the minor, the right to
assume any obligations, except for the necessaries of existence; to
the common carrier, the power to make any contract releasing
himself from negligence, and, indeed, may restrain all engaged in
any employment from any contract in the course of that employment
which is against public policy. The possession of this power by
government in no manner conflicts with the proposition that,
generally speaking, every citizen has a right freely to contract
for the price of his labor, services, or property."
And that the contract of a sailor for his services is subject to
some restrictions was settled in
Robertson v. Baldwin,
165 U. S. 275, in
which sections 4598 and 4599, Rev.Stat., insofar as they require
seamen to carry out the contracts contained in their shipping
articles, were held not to be in conflict with the Thirteenth
Amendment, and in which a deprivation of personal
Page 190 U. S. 175
liberty not warranted in respect to other employees was
sustained as to sailors. We quote the following from the opinion
(p.
165 U. S.
282):
"From the earliest historical period, the contract of the sailor
has been treated as an exceptional one, and involving, to a certain
extent, the surrender of his personal liberty during the life of
the contract. Indeed, the business of navigation could scarcely be
carried on without some guaranty, beyond the ordinary civil
remedies upon contract, that the sailor will not desert the ship at
a critical moment, or leave her at some place where seamen are
impossible to be obtained -- as Molloy forcibly expresses it -- 'to
rot in her neglected brine.' Such desertion might involve a long
delay of the vessel while the master is seeking another crew, an
abandonment of the voyage, and, in some cases, the safety of the
ship itself. Hence, the laws of nearly all maritime nations have
made provision for securing the personal attendance of the crew on
board, and for their criminal punishment for desertion or absence
without leave during the life of the shipping articles."
If the necessities of the public justify the enforcement of a
sailor's contract by exceptional means, justice requires that the
rights of the sailor be in like manner protected. The story of the
wrongs done to sailors in the larger ports not merely of this
nation, but of the world, is an oft-told tale, and many have been
the efforts to protect them against such wrongs. One of the most
common means of doing these wrongs is the advancement of wages. Bad
men lure them into haunts of vice, advance a little money to
continue their dissipation, and, having thus acquired a partial
control and by liquor dulled their faculties, place them on board
the vessel just ready to sail and most ready to return the
advances. When once on shipboard and the ship at sea, the sailor is
powerless, and no relief is availing. It was in order to stop this
evil, to protect the sailor, and not to restrict him of his liberty
that this statute was passed. And while in some cases it may
operate harshly, no one can doubt that the best interests of seamen
as a class are preserved by such legislation.
Neither do we think there is in it any trespass on the
rights
Page 190 U. S. 176
of the states. No question is before us as to the applicability
of the statute to contracts of sailors for services wholly within
the state. We need not determine whether one who contracts to serve
on a steamboat between New York and Albany, or between any two
places within the limits of a state, can avail himself of the
privileges of this legislation, for the services contracted for in
this case were to be performed beyond the limits of any single
state and in an ocean voyage. Contracts with sailors for their
services are, as we have seen, exceptional in their character, and
may be subjected to special restrictions for the purpose of
securing the full and safe carrying on of commerce on the water.
Being so subject, whenever the contract is for employment in
commerce not wholly within the state, legislation enforcing such
restrictions comes within the domain of Congress, which is charged
with the duty of protecting foreign and interstate commerce.
Finally, while it has often been stated that the law of the
place of performance determines the validity of a contract,
London Assurance v. Companhia de Moagens do Barreiro,
167 U. S. 149,
167 U. S. 160,
yet that doctrine does not control this case. It may be remarked in
passing that it does not appear that the contract of shipment or
the advance payment were made on board the vessel. On the contrary,
the stipulated fact is that the "seamen were engaged in the
presence of the British vice consul at the port of New York." The
wrongful acts were therefore done on the territory and within the
jurisdiction of the United States. It is undoubtedly true that, for
some purposes, a foreign ship is to be treated as foreign
territory. As said by Mr. Justice Blackburn in
Queen v.
Anderson, L.R. 1 Crown Cases Reserved 161, "A ship which bears
a nation's flag is to be treated as a part of the territory of that
nation. A ship is a kind of floating island." Yet when a foreign
merchant vessel comes into our ports, like a foreign citizen coming
into our territory, it subjects itself to the jurisdiction of this
country. In
Schooner Exchange v.
McFadden, 7 Cranch 116,
11 U. S. 136,
11 U. S. 146,
this Court held that a public armed vessel in the service of a
sovereign at peace with the United States is not within the
ordinary jurisdiction of our tribunals while within a port of the
United
Page 190 U. S. 177
States. In the opinion by Chief Justice Marshall, it was said
that
"the jurisdiction of the nation within its own territory is
necessarily exclusive and absolute. It is susceptible of no
limitation not imposed by itself. Any restriction upon it deriving
validity from an external source would imply a diminution of its
sovereignty to the extent of the restriction, and an investment of
that sovereignty to the same extent in that power which could
impose such restriction. All exceptions, therefore, to the full and
complete power of a nation within its own territories must be
traced up to the consent of the nation itself. They can flow from
no other legitimate source. This consent may be either express or
implied. In the latter case, it is less determinate, exposed more
to the uncertainties of construction, but, if understood, not less
obligatory."
And again, after holding it
"to be a principle of public law that national ships of war,
entering the port of a friendly power, open for their reception,
are to be considered as exempted by the consent of that power from
its jurisdiction,"
he added:
"Without doubt, the sovereign of the place is capable of
destroying this implication. He may claim and exercise jurisdiction
either by employing force or by subjecting such vessels to the
ordinary tribunals."
Again, in
Wildenhus' Case, 120 U. S.
1, in which the jurisdiction of a state court over one
charged with murder committed on board a foreign merchant vessel in
a harbor of the state was sustained, it was said by Mr. Chief
Justice Waite (pp.
120 U. S.
11-12):
"It is part of the law of civilized nations that, when a
merchant vessel of one country enters the ports of another for the
purposes of trade, it subjects itself to the law of the place to
which it goes unless, by treaty or otherwise, the two countries
have come to some different understanding or agreement. . . . From
experience, however, it was found long ago that it would be
beneficial to commerce if the local government would abstain from
interfering with the internal discipline of the ship, and the
general regulation of the rights and duties of the officers and
crew towards the vessel or among themselves. And so, by comity, it
came to be generally understood among civilized nations
Page 190 U. S. 178
that all matters of discipline and all things done on board
which affected only the vessel or those belonging to her, and did
not involve the peace or dignity of the country, or the tranquility
of the port, should be left by the local government to be dealt
with by the authorities of the nation to which the vessel belonged,
as the laws of that nation or the interests of its commerce should
require. But if crimes are committed on board of a character to
disturb the peace and tranquillity of the country to which the
vessel has been brought, the offenders have never, by comity or
usage, been entitled to any exemption from the operation of the
local laws for their punishment if the local tribunals see fit to
assert their authority."
It follows from these decisions that it is within the power of
Congress to prescribe the penal provisions of section 10, and no
one within the jurisdiction of the United States can escape
liability for a violation of those provisions on the plea that he
is a foreign citizen or an officer of a foreign merchant vessel. It
also follows that it is a duty of the courts of the United States
to give full force and effect to such provisions. It is not
pretended that this government can control the action of foreign
tribunals. In any case presented to them, they will be guided by
their own views of the law and its scope and effect; but the courts
of the United States are bound to accept this legislation and
enforce it whenever its provisions are violated. The implied
consent of this government to leave jurisdiction over the internal
affairs of foreign merchant vessels in our harbors to the nations
to which those vessels belong may be withdrawn. Indeed, the implied
consent to permit them to enter our harbors may be withdrawn, and
if this implied consent may be wholly withdrawn, it may be extended
upon such terms and conditions as the government sees fit to
impose. And this legislation, as plainly as words can make it,
imposes these conditions upon the shipment of sailors in our
harbors, and declares that they are applicable to foreign as well
as to domestic vessels. Congress has thus prescribed conditions
which attend the entrance of foreign vessels into our ports, and
those conditions the courts are not at liberty to dispense with.
The interests of our own shipping require this. It is well said
by
Page 190 U. S. 179
counsel for the government in the brief which he was given leave
to file:
"Moreover, as ninety percent of all commerce in our ports is
conducted in foreign vessels, it must be obvious that their
exemption from these shipping laws will go far to embarrass
domestic vessels in obtaining their quota of seamen. To the average
sailor, it is a consideration while in port to have his wages in
part prepaid, and if, in a large port like New York, ninety percent
of the vessels are permitted to prepay such seamen as ship upon
them, and the other ten percent, being American vessels, cannot
thus prepay, it will be exceedingly difficult for American vessels
to obtain crews. This practical consideration presumably appealed
to Congress and fully justified the provision herein
contained."
We are of the opinion that it is within the power of Congress to
protect all sailors shipping in our ports on vessels engaged in
foreign or interstate commerce, whether they belong to citizens of
this country or of a foreign nation, and that our courts are bound
to enforce those provisions in respect to foreign, equally with
domestic, vessels.
The questions, therefore, certified by the court of appeals
will each be answered in the affirmative.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN concurred in the judgment.