The Merchant Marine Act of June 5, 1920, which is printed in full in the Appendix, § 30, Subsection M, expressly confers a lien for wages of stevedores, "when employed directly by the owner, operator, master, ship's husband, or agent of the vessel", and makes no distinction between the home port and any other.

In the Ole Olson, 20 Fed. 384, a schooner was libeled for seamen's wages and two men intervened and sought to recover who had been employed as stone-pickers by the master, who was also managing owner, to gather stone on the shores of Lake Michigan and assist in loading the stone on board as cargo to be carried to Chicago. While engaged in this service they lived and slept on the vessel as she lay off shore and when the weather was such that stone could not be gathered, the schooner would run into port and on such occasions these men would lend a hand in hoisting sail. They did not accompany the vessel on her voyages as she had a full crew without them. The only question was whether they rendered maritime services and were therefore entitled to the seaman's lien for wages. The Court held that they were not, distinguishing the Ole Olson from the case of the Ocean Spray, 4 Sawy. 105, and several others. In the case of the Spray the libellants were shipped as sealers and were hired to take seal for the vessel at a stipulated sum per month. Their contract also bound them "lend a hand on board whither they were wanted." On the voyage they helped make and reef sail, heave the anchor and clear decks, but did not stand watch. They also procured driftwood and water for the use of the vessel. They thus aided in the navigation and preservation of the vessel and were colaborers in the leading purpose of the voyage. "Upon the principle applicable to surgeons, stewards, cooks and cabin boys (all of whom are entitled to the lien) they were to be considered as mariners." They were accordingly entitled to their maritime lien on the vessel.

13. Shipping Articles.—

The law provides (U. S. Comp. St. § 8300-8314) that the master of every vessel bound from a port in the United States to any foreign port overseas, or vice versa, shall make an agreement, in writing or in print, with each of the crew, containing particulars of the nature and duration of the voyage; the number and description of the crew; the time at which each is to be on board; the capacity in which each is to serve; the amount of wages which each is to receive; the scale of provisions which are to be furnished to each; any regulations as to conduct on board, fines, short allowances and other lawful punishments which may be agreed to; and any stipulations as to advances and allotments of wages, or other matters not contrary to law.

Sections 8287-8297 provide for the appointment of shipping-commissioners in such ports of entry and ports of ocean navigation as require them; where no commissioners are appointed, the collector of customs or his deputy may so act; the duties of such commissioners are to afford facilities for engaging seamen by keeping a register of their names and characters; to superintend their engagements and discharge according to law; to provide means for securing their presence on shipboard according to their engagements; to facilitate the making of apprenticeships to sea service and to perform such other duties relating to merchant seamen and merchant ships as may be required by law. Section 4554 amended by the Act of August 19, 1890, provides that the commissioners shall arbitrate disputes between owners or masters and the crew on mutual application.

Shipping articles should be in the printed form required by the statute and in common use; they should be signed by each seaman in the presence of a shipping commissioner, in duplicate, and one part retained by him; they should be acknowledged and certified under the commissioner's seal, to the effect that each understands what he has subscribed and, while sober, and not in a state of intoxication, acknowledges it as his free and voluntary act; the other duplicate should be delivered to the master and seamen subsequently engaging on the voyage should place their signatures thereon. The ship and also its officers are liable to penalties for shipping seamen without articles, but the requirement is excepted in the case of vessels engaged in the coasting trade and on the Great Lakes. When seamen are shipped in foreign ports where there is a consular officer of the United States or commercial agent, the master must obtain his sanction to the engagement, in substantially the same manner as in the case of a shipping commissioner at home. A copy of the articles, with the signatures omitted, must be posted on the vessel so as to be accessible to the crew, under penalty of one hundred dollars.

Shipping articles for vessels in the coasting trade, in less detailed forms, are required by § 8311 and the master is made liable to a penalty of twenty dollars and the highest rate of wages for every seaman or apprentice carried without such an agreement. All shipments of seamen contrary to law are declared void; any seaman so shipped may leave the service at any time and recover either the highest rate of wages of the port from which he shipped or the sum agreed to be paid him when he went on board.

14. Wages and Effects.—

Sections 8315-8337a of the Compiled Statutes of 1916 and the Merchant Marine Act of 1920 (see Appendix) codify the law in these respects. The right to wages and provisions commences when the sailor begins work or at the time specified in the shipping-articles, whichever happens first; the right is in no way dependent on the earning of freight; where the term of the hiring is cut short by loss or wreck of the vessel, the sailor is entitled to his wages up to that time but no longer; he is to be ranked as a destitute seaman and given transportation to the port of shipment according to law; in case of improper discharge before the commencement of the voyage or before one month's wages are earned, the sailor may have a sum equal in amount to one month's wages as extra compensation over what he may have earned; the right to wages is suspended during the time a seaman unlawfully refuses to work; on coasting voyages, wages must be paid within two days after the termination of the articles or upon discharge, whichever first happens; on foreign voyages, or between Atlantic and Pacific ports, within twenty-four hours after the cargo has been discharged, or within four days after the sailor has been laid off, whichever happens first; and in all cases he may have at least one-third of the balance due him when he is discharged. Every master and owner who neglects to pay the sailor as required by law, without sufficient cause, must pay him double wages for every day during which payment is delayed beyond the periods mentioned.

Every sailor on an American vessel is entitled to receive from the master, at every port where the vessel loads or delivers cargo during the voyage, one-half his wages then earned; the demand, however, may not be made oftener than once in five days. Failure to so pay wages releases the seaman from his contract and foreign sailors in harbors of the United States may have the benefits of this provision.