Collapse to view only § 10903. Proceedings on examination of vessel
- § 10901. Application
- § 10902. Complaints of unfitness
- § 10903. Proceedings on examination of vessel
- § 10904. Refusal to proceed
- § 10905. Complaints in foreign ports
- § 10906. Discharge of crew for unsuitability
- § 10907. Permission to make complaint
- § 10908. Penalty for sending unseaworthy vessel to sea
This chapter applies to a vessel of the United States except a fishing or whaling vessel or a yacht.
After a judgment under section 10903 of this title that a vessel is fit to proceed on the intended voyage, or after the order of a judgment to make up deficiencies is complied with, if a seaman does not proceed on the voyage, the unpaid wages of the seaman are forfeited.
When a survey is made at a foreign port, the surveyors shall state in the report whether, in their opinion, the vessel had been sent to sea unsuitably provided in any important particular, by neglect or design or through mistake or accident. If by neglect or design, and the consular officer approves the finding, the officer shall discharge a seaman requesting discharge and shall require the master to pay one month’s wages to that seaman in addition to wages then due, or sufficient money for the return of the seaman to the nearest and most convenient port of the United States, whichever is the greater amount.
A person that knowingly sends or attempts to send, or that is a party to sending or attempting to send, a vessel of the United States to sea, in an unseaworthy state that is likely to endanger the life of an individual, shall be fined not more than $1,000, imprisoned for not more than 5 years, or both.