13. Mutiny.—
This term is most often used with reference to an offense committed on shipboard, although technically it is not peculiar to shipping, but may be committed by soldiers and servants. Mutiny on shipboard is defined as follows: "A revolt or mutiny consists in attempts to usurp the command from the master or to deprive him of it for any purpose by violence or in resisting him in the free and lawful exercise of his authority; the overthrowing of the legal authority of the master, with an intent to remove him against his will and the like." Mere refusal of duty or disobedience by a seaman while liable to punishment by the master is not mutiny, and the conduct may be very aggravating and contumacious without amounting to mutiny. The Stach Clark, 54 Fed. 533.