British property found in the United States on land at the
commencement of hostilities with Great Britain cannot be condemned
as enemy's property without a legislative act authorizing its
confiscation.
The act of the legislature declaring war is not such an act.
Timber, floated into a salt water creek, where the tide ebbs and
flows, leaving the ends of the timber resting on the mud at low
water and prevented from floating away at high water by booms, is
to be considered as landed.
In this country, from the structure of our government,
proceedings to condemn the property of an enemy found within our
territory at the declaration of war can be sustained only upon the
principle that they are commenced in execution of some existing
law.
In England, all property captured belongs originally to the
Crown, and individuals can acquire a title thereto in no other
manner than by a grant from the Crown.
War gives to the sovereign full right to take the persons and
confiscate the property of the enemy wherever found: the mitigation
of the rigid rule, which the policy of modern times has introduced
into practice, although it may effect its exercise, cannot impair
the right itself, and when the sovereign authority shall choose to
bring it into operation, the Judicial Department must give effect
to its will. Until, however, that will is expressed by some
legislative act, no power of condemnation can exist in the
court.
Page 12 U. S. 111
In expounding the Constitution of the United States, a
construction ought not lightly to be admitted which would give to a
declaration of war an effect in this country it does not possess
anywhere else and which would fetter that exercise of entire
discretion respecting enemy property which may enable the
government to apply to the enemy the rule that he applies to
us.
The declaration of war has only the effect of placing the two
nations in a state of hostility, of giving those rights which war
confers, but not of operating by its own force any of those
results, such as a transfer of property, which are usually produced
by ulterior measures of the government.
The power of making "rules concerning captures on land and
water," which are superadded in the Constitution to that of
declaring war, is not to be confined to captures which are
extraterritorial, but extends to rules respecting enemy's property
found within the territory, and is an express grant to Congress of
the power of confiscating enemy property found within the territory
at the declaration of war as an independent, substantive power, not
included in that of declaring war.
When war breaks out, the question what shall be done with enemy
property in our country is a question of policy, and is proper for
the consideration of the Legislative Department, which can modify
it at will, not for the consideration of the Judicial Department,
which can pursue only the law as it is written.
The modern usage of nations is to abstain from confiscating the
debts due to an enemy, or his property found within the territory
at the breaking out of war. This usage does not constitute a rule
acting directly on the thing itself by its own force, but only
through the sovereign power. It is a rule which the sovereign
follows or abandons at his will, but unless it be abandoned, the
right to the debts and the property is only suspended during the
war, and revives with the return of peace.
This was an appeal from the sentence of the Circuit Court of
Massachusetts, which condemned 550 tons of pine timber, claimed by
Armitz Brown, the appellant.
Page 12 U. S. 121
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court as
follows:
The material facts in this case are these:
The
Emulous, owned by John Delano and others citizens
of the United States, was chartered to a company carrying on trade
in Great Britain, one of whom was an American citizen, for the
purpose of carrying a cargo from Savannah to Plymouth. After the
cargo was put on board, the vessel was stopped in part by the
embargo of 4 April, 1812. On the 25th of the same month, it was
agreed between the master of the ship and the agent of the shippers
that she should proceed with her cargo to New Bedford, where her
owners resided, and remain there without prejudice to the charter
party. In pursuance of this agreement, the
Emulous
proceeded to New Bedford, where she continued until after the
declaration of war. In October or November, the ship was unloaded
and the cargo, except the pine timber was landed. The pine timber
was floated up a salt water creek, where at low tide the ends of
the timber rested on the mud, where it was secured from floating
out with the tide by impediments fastened in the entrance of the
creek. On 7 November, 1812, the cargo was sold by the agent of the
owners, who is an American citizen, to the claimant, who is also an
American citizen. On 19 April, a libel was filed by the attorney
for the United States in the District Court of Massachusetts
against the said cargo as well on behalf of the United States of
America as for and in behalf of John Delano and of all other
persons concerned. It does not appear
Page 12 U. S. 122
that this seizure was made under any instructions from the
President of the United States, nor is there any evidence of its
having his sanction, unless the libels being filed and prosecuted
by the law officer who represents the government must imply that
sanction.
On the contrary, it is admitted that the seizure was made by an
individual, and the libel filed at his instance by the district
attorney who acted from his own impressions of what appertained to
his duty. The property was claimed by Armitz Brown under the
purchase made in the preceding November.
The district court dismissed the libel. The circuit court
reversed this sentence and condemned the pine timber as enemy
property forfeited to the United States. From the sentence of the
circuit court, the claimant appealed to this Court.
The material question made at bar is this: can the pine timber,
even admitting the property not to be changed by the sale in
November, be condemned as prize of war?
The cargo of the
Emulous having been legally acquired
and put on board the vessel, having been detained by an embargo not
intended to act on foreign property, the vessel having sailed
before the war from Savannah under a stipulation to re-land the
cargo in some port of the United States, the re-landing having been
made with respect to the residue of the cargo, and the pine timber
having been floated into shallow water, where it was secured and in
the custody of the owner of the ship, and American citizen, the
Court cannot perceive any solid distinction, so far as respects
confiscation, between this property and other British property
found on land at the commencement of hostilities. It will therefore
be considered as a question relating to such property generally,
and to be governed by the same rule.
Respecting the power of government no doubt is entertained. That
war gives to the sovereign full right to take the persons and
confiscate the property of the enemy wherever found is conceded.
The mitigations
Page 12 U. S. 123
of this rigid rule, which the humane and wise policy of modern
times has introduced into practice, will more or less affect the
exercise of this right, but cannot impair the right itself. That
remains undiminished, and when the sovereign authority shall chose
to bring it into operation, the Judicial Department must give
effect to its will. But until that will shall be expressed, no
power of condemnation can exist in the court.
The questions to be decided by the court are:
1st. May enemy's property, found on land at the commencement of
hostilities, be seized and condemned as a necessary consequence of
the declaration of war?
2d. Is there any legislative act which authorizes such seizure
and condemnation?
Since, in this country, from the structure of our government,
proceedings to condemn the property of an enemy found within our
territory at the declaration of war, can be sustained only upon the
principle that they are instituted in execution of some existing
law, we are led to ask
"Is the declaration of war such a law? Does that declaration, by
its own operation, so vest the property of the enemy in the
government as to support proceedings for its seizure and
confiscation, or does it vest only a right, the assertion of which
depends on the will of the sovereign power?"
The universal practice of forbearing to seize and confiscate
debts and credits, the principle universally received, that the
right to them revives on the restoration of peace, would seem to
prove that war is not an absolute confiscation of this property,
but simply confers the right of confiscation.
Between debts contracted under the faith of laws, and property
acquired in the course of trade, on the faith of the same laws,
reason draws no distinction, and although in practice vessels with
their cargoes, found in port at the declaration of war, may have
been seized, it is not believed that modern usage would sanction
the seizure of the goods of an enemy on land, which
Page 12 U. S. 124
were acquired in peace in the course of trade. Such a proceeding
is rare, and would be deemed a harsh exercise of the rights of war.
But although the practice in this respect may not be uniform, that
circumstance does not essentially affect the question. The inquiry
is whether such property vests in the sovereign by the mere
declaration of war, or remains subject to a right, of confiscation,
the exercise of which depends on the national will, and the rule
which applies to one case, so far as respects the operation of a
declaration of war on the thing itself, must apply to all others
over which war gives an equal right. The right of the sovereign to
confiscate debts being precisely the same with the right to
confiscate other property found in the country, the operation of a
declaration of war on debts and on other property found within the
country must be the same. What then is this operation?
Even Bynkershoek, who maintains the broad principle that in war
everything done against an enemy is lawful; that he may be
destroyed, though unarmed and defenseless; that fraud or even
poison may be employed against him; that a most unlimited right is
acquired to his person and property; admits that war does not
transfer to the sovereign a debt due to his enemy, and therefore,
if payment of such debt be not exacted, peace revives the former
right of the creditor, "because," he says, "the occupation which is
had by war consists more in fact than in law." He adds to his
observations on this subject
"let it not, however, be supposed that it is only true of
actions, that they are not condemned
ipso jure, for other
things also belonging to the enemy may be concealed and escape
condemnation."
Vattel says that "the sovereign can neither detain the persons
nor the property of those subjects of the enemy who are within his
dominions at the time of the declaration."
It is true that this rule is, in terms, applied by Vattel to the
property of those only who are personally within the territory at
the commencement of hostilities; but it applies equally to things
in action and to things in possession, and if war did, of itself,
without any further exercise of the sovereign will, vest the
property of the
Page 12 U. S. 125
enemy in the sovereign, his presence could not exempt it from
this operation of war. Nor can a reason be perceived for
maintaining that the public faith is more entirely pledged for the
security of property trusted in the territory of the nation in time
of peace, if it be accompanied by its owner, than if it be confided
to the care of others.
Chitty, after stating the general right of seizure, says
"But in strict justice, that right can take effect only on those
possessions of a belligerent which have come to the hands of his
adversary after the declaration of hostilities."
The modern rule then would seem to be that tangible property
belonging to an enemy and found in the country at the commencement
of war ought not to be immediately confiscated, and in almost every
commercial treaty an article is inserted stipulating for the right
to withdraw such property.
This rule appears to be totally incompatible with the idea, that
war does of itself vest the property in the belligerent government.
It may be considered as the opinion of all who have written on the
jus belli, that war gives the right to confiscate, but
does not itself confiscate the property of the enemy, and their
rules go to the exercise of this right.
The Constitution of the United States was framed at a time when
this rule, introduced by commerce in favor of moderation and
humanity, was received throughout the civilized world. In
expounding that Constitution, a construction ought not lightly to
be admitted which would give to a declaration of war an effect in
this country it does not possess elsewhere and which would fetter
that exercise of entire discretion respecting enemy property, which
may enable the government to apply to the enemy the rule that he
applies to us.
If we look to the Constitution itself, we find this general
reasoning much strengthened by the words of that instrument.
That the declaration of war has only the effect of
Page 12 U. S. 126
placing the two nations in a state of hostility, of producing a
state of war, of giving those rights which war confers, but not of
operating, by its own force, any of those results, such as a
transfer of property, which are usually produced by ulterior
measures of government, is fairly deducible from the enumeration of
powers which accompanies that of declaring war. "Congress shall
have power" -- "to declare war, grant letters of marque and
reprisal, and make rules concerning captures on land and
water."
It would be restraining this clause within narrower limits than
the words themselves import to say that the power to make rules
concerning captures on land and water is to be confined to captures
which are exterritorial. If it extends to rules respecting enemy
property found within the territory, then we perceive an express
grant to Congress of the power in question as an independent
substantive power, not included in that of declaring war.
The acts of Congress furnish many instances of an opinion that
the declaration of war does not, of itself, authorize proceedings
against the persons or property of the enemy found, at the time,
within the territory.
War gives an equal right over persons and property, and if its
declaration is not considered as prescribing a law respecting the
person of an enemy found in our country, neither does it prescribe
a law for his property. The act concerning alien enemies, which
confers on the President very great discretionary powers respecting
their persons, affords a strong implication that he did not possess
those powers by virtue of the declaration of war.
The "act for the safekeeping and accommodation of prisoners of
war" is of the same character.
The act prohibiting trade with the enemy contains this
clause:
"And be it further enacted that the President of the United
States be and he is hereby authorized to give, at any time within
six months after the passage
Page 12 U. S. 127
of this act, passports for the safe transportation of any ship
or other property belonging to British subjects, and which is now
within the limits of the United States."
The phraseology of this law shows that the property of a British
subject was not considered by the legislature as being vested in
the United States by the declaration of war, and the authority
which the act confers on the President is manifestly considered as
one which he did not previously possess.
The proposition that a declaration of war does not in itself
enact a confiscation of the property of the enemy within the
territory of the belligerent, is believed to be entirely free from
doubt. Is there in the act of Congress by which war is declared
against Great Britain any expression which would indicate such an
intention?
That act, after placing the two nations in a state of war,
authorizes the President of the United States to use the whole land
and naval force of the United States to carry the war into effect,
and
"to issue to private armed vessels of the United States,
commissions or letters of marque and general reprisal against the
vessels, goods and effects of the government of the united kingdom
of Great Britain and Ireland, and the subjects thereof."
That reprisals may be made on enemy property found within the
United States at the declaration of war, if such be the will of the
nation, has been admitted, but it is not admitted that, in the
declaration of war, the nation has expressed its will to that
effect.
It cannot be necessary to employ argument in showing that when
the attorney for the United States institutes proceedings at law
for the confiscation of enemy property found on land, or floating
in one of our creeks, in the care and custody of one of our
citizens, he is not acting under the authority of letters of marque
and reprisal, still less under the authority of such letters is
sued to a private armed vessel.
Page 12 U. S. 128
The "act concerning letters of marque, prizes and prize goods,"
certainly contains nothing to authorize this seizure.
There being no other act of Congress which bears upon the
subject, it is considered as proved that the legislature has not
confiscated enemy property which was within the United States at
the declaration of war, and that this sentence of condemnation
cannot be sustained.
One view, however, has been taken of this subject which deserves
to be further considered.
It is urged that in executing the laws of war, the executive may
seize and the courts condemn all property which, according to the
modern law of nations, is subject to confiscation, although it
might require an act of the legislature to justify the condemnation
of that property which, according to modern usage, ought not to be
confiscated.
This argument must assume for its basis the position that modern
usage constitutes a rule which acts directly upon the thing itself
by its own force, and not through the sovereign power. This
position is not allowed. This usage is a guide which the sovereign
follows or abandons at his will. The rule, like other precepts of
morality, of humanity, and even of wisdom, is addressed to the
judgment of the sovereign, and although it cannot be disregarded by
him without obloquy, yet it may be disregarded.
The rule is in its nature flexible. It is subject to infinite
modification. It is not an immutable rule of law, but depends on
political considerations which may continually vary.
Commercial nations, in the situation of the United States, have
always a considerable quantity of property in the possession of
their neighbors. When war breaks out, the question, what shall be
done with enemy property in our country is a question rather of
policy than of law. The rule which we apply to the property of our
enemy will be applied by him to the property of
Page 12 U. S. 129
our citizens. Like all other questions of policy, it is proper
for the consideration of a department which can modify it at will,
not for the consideration of a department which can pursue only the
law as it is written. It is proper for the consideration of the
legislature, not of the executive or judiciary.
It appears to the Court that the power of confiscating enemy
property is in the legislature, and that the legislature has not
yet declared its will to confiscate property which was within our
territory at the declaration of war. The Court is therefore of
opinion that there is error in the sentence of condemnation
pronounced in the circuit court in this case, and doth direct that
the same be reversed and annulled, and that the sentence of the
district court be affirmed.
STORY, J.
In this case, I have the misfortune to differ in opinion from my
brethren, and as the grounds of the decree were fully stated in an
opinion delivered in the court below, I shall make no apology for
reading it in this place.
"This is a prize allegation filed by the district attorney, in
behalf of the United States, and of John Delano, against 550 tons
of pine timber, part of the cargo of the American ship
Emulous, which was seized as enemies' property, about 5
April, 1813, after the same had been discharged from said ship, and
while afloat in a creek or dock at New Bedford, where the tide ebbs
and flows."
"From the evidence in this case, it appears that the ship
Emulous is owned by the said John Delano, John Johnson,
Levi Jenny, and Joshua Delano of New Bedford, and citizens of the
United States. On 3 February, 1812, the owners, by their agents,
entered into a charter party with Elijah Brown as agent of Messrs.
Christopher Idle, Brother & Co. and James Brown, of London,
merchants, for said ship, to proceed from the port of Charleston,
South Carolina (where the ship then lay), to Savannah, in Georgia,
and there take on board a cargo of timber and staves at a
certain
Page 12 U. S. 130
freight stipulated in the charter party and proceed with the
same to Plymouth in England 'for orders to unload there or at any
other of his Majesty's dockyards in England.' The ship accordingly
proceeded to Savannah, took on board the agreed cargo, and was
there stopped by the embargo laid by Congress on 4 April, 1812. On
the 25th of the same April, it was agreed between Mr. E. Brown and
the master of the ship, that she should proceed with the cargo to
and lay at New Bedford, without prejudice to the charter party. The
ship accordingly proceeded for New Bedford, and arrived there in
the latter part of May, 1812, where, it seems, the cargo was
finally, but the particular time is not stated, unloaded by the
owners of the ship, the staves put into a warehouse, and the timber
into a salt water creek or dock, where it has ever since remained,
waterborne, under the custody of said John Delano, by whom the
subsequent seizure was made for his own benefit and the benefit of
the United States. On 7 November, 1812, Mr. Elijah Brown, as agent
for the British owners (one of whom, James Brown, is his brother)
sold the whole cargo to the present claimant, Mr. Armitz Brown (who
it should seem is also his brother) for $2,433.67, payable in nine
months, for which the claimant gave his note accordingly. The
master of the ship, Capt. Allen swears that, at the time of
entering into the charter party, Mr. Elijah Brown stated to him
that the British owners had contracted with the British government
to furnish a large quantity of timber to be delivered in some of
his Majesty's dockyards."
"Besides the claim of Mr. Brown, there is a claim interposed by
the owners of the ship
Emulous, praying for an allowance
to them of their expenses and charges in the premises."
"A preliminary exception has been taken to the libel for a
supposed incongruity in blending the rights of the United States
and of the informer in the manner of a
qui tam action at
the common law."
"I do not think this exception is entitled to much
consideration. It is, at most, but an irregularity which cannot
affect the nature of the proceedings, or oust the jurisdiction of
this Court. If the informer cannot legally"
Page 12 U. S. 131
take any interest, the United States have still a right, if
their title is otherwise well founded, to claim a condemnation. Nor
would a proceeding of this nature be deemed a fatal irregularity in
courts having jurisdiction of seizures, whose proceedings are
governed by much more rigid rules than those of the admiralty. It
is a principle clearly settled at the common law that any person
might seize uncustomed goods to the use of himself and the King,
and thereupon inform of the seizure; and if, in the Exchequer, the
informer be not entitled to any part, the whole shall, on such
information, be adjudged to the King. For this doctrine we have the
authority of Lord Hale. Harg. Law Tracts, p. 227. And the solemn
judgment of the court in
Roe v. Roe, Hardr. 185, and
Malden v. Bartlett, Parker, p. 105. The same rule most
undoubtedly exists in the prize court, and, as I apprehend, applies
with greater latitude. All property captured belongs originally to
the Crown, and individuals can acquire a title thereto in no other
manner than by grant from the Crown.
The Elsebe, 5 Rob.
173; 11 East 619;
The Maria Francoise. 6 Rob. 282. This,
however, does not preclude the right to seize; on the contrary, it
is an indisputable principle in the English prize courts that a
subject may seize hostile property for the use of the Crown
wherever it is found, and it rests in the discretion of the Crown
whether it will or will not ratify and consummate the seizure by
proceeding to condemnation.
"But to the prize court it is a matter of pure indifference
whether the seizure proceeded originally from the Crown, or has
been adopted by it, and whether the Crown would take
jure
coronae, by its transcendant prerogative, or
jure
admiralitatis, as a flower annexed by its grant to the office
of Lord high admiral. The cases of captures by noncommissioned
vessels, by commanders on foreign stations, anterior to war, by
private individuals in port or on the coasts, and by naval
commanders on shore on unauthorized expeditions, are all very
strong illustrations of the principle.
The Aquila, 1. Rob.
37;
The Twee Gesuster, 2 Rob. 284, note;
The
Rebeckah, 1 Rob. 227;
The Gertruyda, 2 Rob. 211;
The Melomane, 5 Rob. 41;
The Charlotte, 4 Rob.
282;
The Richmond, 5 Rob. 325;
Thorshaven, I Edw.
102; Hale in Harg. Law Tracts, ch. 28, p. 245. And in cases where
private captors seek condemnation to themselves, it is the settled
course of the court, on failure of their title, to decree
Page 12 U. S. 132
condemnation to the Crown or the admiralty, as the circumstances
require.
The Walsingham Packet, 2 Rob. 77;
The
Etrusco, 4. Rob. 262, note, and the cases cited
supra. Nor can I consider these principles of the British
courts a departure from the law of nations."
"The authority of Puffendorf and Vattel are introduced to show
that private subjects are not at liberty to seize the property of
enemies without the commission of the sovereign, and if they do,
they are considered as pirates. But when attentively considered, it
strikes me that, taking the full scope of these authors, they will
not be found to support so broad a position. Puff. B. 8, ch. 6,
§ 24; Vattel, B. 3, ch. 15, § 223, 224, 225, 226, 227.
Vattel himself admits (§ 234), that the declaration of war,
which enjoins the subjects at large to attach the enemy's subjects,
implies a general order; and that to commit hostilities on our
enemy without an order from our sovereign after the war, is not a
violation so much of the law of nations as of the public law
applicable to the sovereignty of our own nation (§ 225). And
he explicitly states (§ 226) that, by the law of nations, when
once two nations are engaged in war, all the subjects of the one
may commit hostilities against those of the other, and do them all
the mischief authorized by the state of war."
"All that he contends for is that though, by the declaration,
all the subjects in general are ordered to attack the enemy, yet
that by custom this is usually restrained to persons acting under
commission, and that the general order does not invite the subjects
to undertake any offensive expedition without a commission or
particular order (§ 227), and that if they do, they are not
usually treated by the enemy in a manner as favorable as other
prisoners of war, (§ 226). And Vattel (§ 227) explicitly
declares that the declaration of war authorizes, indeed, and even
obliges every subject of whatever rank to secure the persons and
things belonging to the enemy when they fall into his hands. And he
then goes on to state cases in which the authority of the sovereign
may be presumed (§ 228). The whole doctrine of Vattel, fairly
considered, amounts to no more than this that the subject is not
required, by the mere declaration of war, to originate predatory
expeditions against the enemy; that he is not authorized to wage
war contrary to the will of his own sovereign, and that, though the
ordinary declaration of war imports a general authority to attack
the enemy
Page 12 U. S. 133
and his property, yet custom has so far restrained its meaning,
that it is in general confined to persons acting under the
particular or constructive commission of the sovereign. If,
therefore, the subject do undertake a predatory expedition, it is
an infringement of the public law of his own country, whose
sovereignty he thus invades, but it is not a violation of the law
of nations of which the enemy has a right to complain. But if the
property of the enemy fall into the hands of a subject, he is bound
to secure it."
"For every purpose applicable to the present case, it does not
seem necessary to controvert these positions, and whatever may be
the correctness of the others, I am perfectly satisfied the
position is well founded, that no subject can legally commit
hostilities, or capture property of an enemy, when, either
expressly or constructively, the sovereign has prohibited it. But
suppose he does, I would ask if the sovereign may not ratify his
proceedings, and thus, by a retroactive operation, give validity to
them? Of this there seems to me no legal doubt. The subject seizes
at his peril, and the sovereign decides, in the last resort,
whether he will approve or disapprove of the act. Thorshaven, 1
Edw. 102. The authority of Puffendorf is still less in favor of the
position of the claimant's counsel. In the section cited (book 8,
ch. 6, sec. 21), Puffendorf considers the question to whom property
captured in war belongs -- a question also examined by Vattel in
the 229th section of the book and chapter above referred to. In the
course of that discussion, Puffendorf observes"
"that it may be very justly questioned, whether everything taken
in war, by private hostilities, and by the bravery of private
subjects that have no commission to warrant them, belongeth to them
that take it. For this is also a part of the war, to appoint what
persons are to act in a hostile manner against the enemy, and how
far, and in consequence no private person hath power to make
devastations in an enemy's country or to carry of spoil or plunder
without permission from his sovereign, and the sovereign is to
decide how for private men, when they are permitted, are to use
that liberty of plunder, and whether they are to be the sole
proprietors in the booty or only to share a part of it, so that all
a private adventurer in war can pretend to is no more than
Page 12 U. S. 134
what his sovereign will please to allow him; for to be a soldier
and to act offensively, a man must be commissioned by public
authority."
"As to the point upon which Puffendorf here expresses his
doubts, I suppose that no person at this day entertains any doubts.
It is now clear, as I have already stated, that all captures in war
enure to the sovereign, and can become private property only by his
grant. But is there anything in Puffendorf to authorize the
doctrine, that the subject so seizing property of the enemy, is
guilty of a very enormous crime -- of the odious crime of piracy?
And is there, in this language, anything to show that the sovereign
may not adopt the acts of his subjects, in such a case, and give
them the effect of full and perfect ratification? It has not been
pretended, that I recollect, that Grotius supports the position
contended for. To me it seems pretty clear that his opinions lean
rather the other way --
viz., to support the
indiscriminate right of captors to all property captured by them.
Grotius, lib. 3, ch. 6, sec. 2, sec. 10, sec. 12. Bynkershoek has
not discussed the question in direct terms. In one place (Bynk.
Pub.Juris, ch. 3), he says that he is not guilty of any crime by
the laws of war who invades a hostile shore in hopes of getting
booty. It is true that in another place (
id. ch. 20), he
admits, in conformity to his doctrine elsewhere (
id. ch.
17), that if an uncommissioned cruiser should sail for the purpose
of making hostile captures, she might be dealt with as a pirate, if
she made any captures except in self-defense. But this he expressly
grounds upon the municipal edicts of his own country in relation to
captures made by its own subjects. And he says every declaration of
war not only permits but expressly orders all subjects to injure
the enemy by every possible means, not only to avert the danger of
capture, but to capture and strip the enemy of all his property.
And looking to the general scope of his observations (
id.,
ch. 3, 4 & ch. 16 & 17), I think it may not unfairly be
argued that, independent of particular edicts, the subjects of
hostile nations might lawfully seize each other's property wherever
found; at least he states nothing from which it can be inferred
that the sovereign might not avail himself of property captured
from the enemy by uncommissioned subjects. On
Page 12 U. S. 135
the whole, I hold that the true doctrine of the law of nations,
found in foreign jurists, is that private citizens cannot acquire
to themselves a title to hostile property, unless it is seized
under the commission of their sovereign, and that if they depredate
upon the enemy, they act upon their peril, and may be liable to
punishment, unless their acts are adopted by their sovereign. That
in modern times the mere declaration of war is not supposed to
clothe the citizens with authority to capture hostile property, but
that they may lawfully seize hostile property in their own defense,
and are bound to secure, for the use of the sovereign, all hostile
property which falls into their hands. If the principles of British
prize law go further, I am free to say that I consider them as the
law of this country."
"I have been led into this discussion of the doctrine of foreign
jurists, further than I originally intended, because the practice
of this Court in prize proceedings must, as I have already
intimated, be governed by the rules of admiralty law disclosed in
English reports, in preference to the mere
dicta of
elementary writers. I thought it my duty, however, to notice these
authorities, because they seem generally relied on by the
claimant's counsel. In my judgment, the libel is well and properly
brought -- at least for all the purposes of justice between the
parties before the court -- and I overrule the exception taken to
its sufficiency."
"Having disposed of this objection, I come now to consider the
objection made by the United States against the sufficiency of the
claim of Mr. Brown, and I am entirely satisfied that his claim must
be rejected. It is a well known rule of the prize court that the
onus probandi lies on the claimant; he must make out a
good and sufficient title before he can call upon the captors to
show any ground for the capture.
The Walsingham Packet, 2
Rob. 77. If, therefore, the claimant make no title, or trace it
only by illegal transactions, his claim must be rejected, and the
court left to dispose of the cause, as the other parties may
establish their rights. In the present case, Mr. Brown claims a
title by virtue of a contract and sale made by alien enemies since
the war. I say by alien enemies for it is of no importance what the
character of the agent is; the transaction
Page 12 U. S. 136
must have the same legal construction as though made by the
aliens themselves. Now admitting that this sale was not colorable,
but
bona fide, which, however, I am not at present
disposed to believe, still it was a contract made with enemies
pending a known war, and therefore invalid. No principle of
national or municipal law is better settled, than that all
contracts with an enemy, made during war, are utterly void. This
principle has grown hoary under the reverend respect of centuries,
19 Edw. IV, p, 6, cited Theol. Dig. lib. 1, ch. 6, sec. 21;
Ex
Parte Bonsmaker, 13 Ves.Jr. 71;
Briston v. Towers, 6
T.R. 45, and cannot now be shaken without uprooting the very
foundations of national law. Bynk., Quaest.Pub.Juris, ch. 3."
"I therefore altogether reject the claim interposed by Mr.
Brown. What, then, is to be done with the property? It is contended
on the part of the United States that it ought to be condemned to
the United States, with a recompense, in the nature of salvage, to
be awarded to Mr. Delano. On the part of the claimant's counsel
(who, under the circumstances, must be considered as arguing as
amicus curiae to inform the conscience of the court) it is
contended 1st, that this Court, as a court of prize, has no proper
jurisdiction over the cause; 2d, that if it have jurisdiction, it
cannot award condemnation to the United States, for several
reasons, 1st, because, by the law of nations, as now understood, no
government can lawfully confiscate the debts, credits, or visible
property of alien enemies, which have been contracted or come into
the country during peace; 2d, because, if the law of nations does
not, the common law does afford such immunity from confiscation to
property situated like the present; 3d, because if the right to
confiscate exist, it can be exercised only by a positive act of
Congress, who have not yet legislated to this extent; 4th, because,
if the last position be not fully accurate, yet at all events this
process, being a high prerogative power, ought not to be exercised,
except by express instructions from the President, which are not
shown in this case."
"Some of these questions are of vast importance and most
extensive operation, and I am exceedingly obliged to the gentlemen
who have argued them with so
Page 12 U. S. 137
much ability and learning, for the light which they have thrown
upon a path so intricate and obscure. I have given these questions
as much consideration as the state of my health and the brevity of
time would allow, and I shall now give them a distinct and separate
discussion, that I may at least disclose the sources of my errors,
if any, and enable those who unite higher powers of discernment
with more extensive knowledge, to give a more exact and just
opinion."
"And first, as to the jurisdiction of this Court in matters of
prize."
"This depends partly on the Prize Act of 26 June, 1812, ch. 107,
§ 6, and partly on the true extent and meaning of the
admiralty and maritime jurisdiction conferred on the courts of the
United States. The Act of 26 June, 1812, ch. 107, provides that in
all cases of captured vessels, goods and effects which shall be
brought within the jurisdiction of the United States, the district
court shall have exclusive original cognizance thereof, as in civil
causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction. The Act of 18 June,
1812, ch. 102, declaring war, authorizes the President to issue
letters of marque and reprisal to private armed ships against the
vessels, goods, and effects of the British government and its
subjects, and to use the whole land and naval force of the United
States to carry the war into effect. In neither of these acts is
there any limitation as to the places where captures may be made on
the land or on the seas, and of course it would seem that the right
of the courts to adjudicate respecting captures would be
coextensive with such captures, wherever made, unless the
jurisdiction conferred is manifestly confined by the former act to
captures made by private armed vessels. It is not, however,
necessary closely to sift this point, as it may now be considered
as settled law that the courts of the United States, under the
Judicial Act of 30 September, 1789, ch. 20, have, by the delegation
of all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, at
least as full jurisdiction of all causes of prize as the admiralty
in England.
Glass v. The Sloop Betsey, 3
Dall. 6;
Talbot v. Janson, 3 Dall.
133;
Penhallow v. Doane's
Administrators, 3 Dall. 54;
Jennings v.
Carson, 4 Cranch 2."
"Over what captures,
Page 12 U. S. 138
then, has the admiralty jurisdiction as a prize court? This is a
question of considerable intricacy, and has not as yet, to my
knowledge, been fully settled. It has been doubted whether the
admiralty has an inherent jurisdiction of prize, or obtains it by
virtue of the commission usually issued on the breaking out of war.
That the exercise of the jurisdiction is of very high antiquity and
beyond the time of memory seems to be incontestable. It is found
recognized in various articles of the black book of the admiralty,
in public treaties and proclamations of a very early date, and in
the most venerable relics of ancient jurisprudence.
See
Robb. Coll.Marit., Intro., pp. 6-7;
id., Instructions, 3
H. VIII, p. 10, art. 18, &c.;
id., p. 12, note letter;
Edw. III, A.D. 1343; Treaty Henry VII and Charles VIII, A.D. 1497;
Rob.. Coll.Marit. 83 and 98, art. 8; Bob. Coll.Marit., p. 189,
note; Roughton, art. 19, 20, &c.,
passim. In
Lindo
v. Rodney, Doug. 613, note. Lord Mansfield, in discussing the
subject, admits the immemorial antiquity of the prize jurisdiction
of the admiralty, but leaves it uncertain whether it was coeval
with the instance jurisdiction, and whether it is constituted by
special commission, or only called into exercise thereby. After the
doubts of so eminent a judge, it would not become me to express a
decided opinion. But taking the fact that, in the earliest times,
the jurisdiction is found in the possession of the admiralty,
independent of any known special commission; that in other
countries, and especially in France, upon whose ancient prize
ordinances the administration of prize law seems, in a great
measure, to have been modeled,
vide Ordin. of France, A.D.
1400, Rob. Coll. Marit. 75; Ordin. of France, A.D. 1584;
id., p. 105; Treaty Henry VII and Charles VIII;
id., p. 83, and Rob. note;
id., p. 105. The
jurisdiction has uniformly belonged to the admiralty; there seems
very strong reason to presume that it always constituted an
ordinary and not an extraordinary branch of the admiralty powers,
and so I apprehend it was considered by the Supreme Court of the
United States in
Glass v. The Betsey, 3 Dall.
6."
"However this question may be as to the right of the admiralty
to take cognizance of mere captures made on the land exclusively by
land forces, as to which I give no opinion, it is very clear that
its jurisdiction is not
Page 12 U. S. 139
confined to mere captures at sea. The prize jurisdiction does
not depend upon locality, but upon the subject matter. The words of
the prize commission contain authority to proceed upon all and all
manner of captures, seizures, prizes and reprisals of all ships and
goods that are and shall be taken. The admiralty therefore not only
takes cognizance of all captures made at sea, in creeks, havens,
and rivers, but also of all captures made on land, where the same
have been made by a naval force, or by cooperation with a naval
force. This exercise of jurisdiction is settled by the most solemn
adjudications.
Key & Hubbard v. Pearse, cited in
Le Caux v. Eden, Doug. 606;
Lindo v. Rodney,
Doug. 613, note; the capture of the
Cape of Good Hope, 2
Rob. 274;
The Stella del Norte, 5 Rob. 349'
The Island
of Trinidad, 5 Rob. 92; Thorshaven, 1 Edw. 102;
The
Capture of Chrinsurah, 1 Deten. 179;
The Rebeckah, 1
Rob. 227;
The Gertruyda, 2 Rob. 211;
The Maria
Francoise, 6 Rob. 282."
"Such, then, being the acknowledged extent of the prize
jurisdiction of the admiralty, it is, at least in as ample an
extent, conferred on the courts of the United States. For the
determination, therefore, of the case before the Court, it is not
necessary to claim a more ample jurisdiction; for the capture or
seizure, though made in port, was made while the property was
waterborne. Had it been landed and remained on land, it would have
deserved consideration whether it could have been proceeded against
as prize, under the admiralty jurisdiction, or whether, if liable
to seizure and condemnation in our courts, the remedy ought not to
have been pursued by a process applicable to municipal
confiscations. On these points I give no opinion.
See the
case of
The Oester Eems, cited in
The Two
Friends, 1 Rob. 284, note; Hale de Portubus Maris, &c., in
Harg. Law Tracts, ch. 28, 245, &c., Parker 267."
"Having disposed of the question as to the jurisdiction of this
Court, I come to one of a more general nature,
viz.,
whether, by the modern law of nations, the sovereign has a right to
confiscate the debts due to his enemy, or the goods of his enemy
found within his territory at the commencement of the war. I might
spare myself the consideration of the question as to debts, but, as
it
Page 12 U. S. 140
has been ably argued, I will submit some views respecting it,
because they will illustrate and confirm the doctrine applicable to
goods. It seems conceded, and indeed is quite too clear for
argument, that in former times, the right to confiscate debts was
admitted as a doctrine of national law. It had the countenance of
the civil law. Dig. lib. 41. tit. 1;
id., lib. 49, tit.
15; of Grotius, De
jure belli et pacis, lib. 3, ch. 2,
§ 2, ch. 6, § 2 ch. 7, § 3 and 4, ch. 13, § 1,
2; of Puffendorf, De jure Nat. et Nat., lib. 8 ch. 6, § 23,
and lastly of Bynkershoek, Quoest. Pub.Juris, lib. 1, ch. 7, who is
himself of the highest authority, and pronounces his opinion in the
most explicit manner."
"Down to the year 1737, it may be considered as the opinion of
jurists that the right was unquestionable. It is, then, incumbent
on those who assume a different doctrine to prove that, since that
period, it has by the general consent of nations become
incorporated into the code of public law. I take upon me to say
that no jurist of reputation can be found who has denied the right
of confiscation of enemies debts. Vattel has been supposed to be
the most favorable to the new doctrine. He certainly does not deny
the right to confiscate, and if he may be thought to hesitate in
admitting it, nothing more can be gathered from it than that he
considers that, in the present times, a relaxation of the rigor of
the law has been in practice among the sovereigns of Europe.
Vattel, lib. 3, ch. 5, § 77. Surely a relaxation of the law in
practice cannot be admitted to constitute an abolition in
principle, when the principle is asserted, as late as 1737, by
Bynkershoek, and the relaxation shown by Vattel in 1775."
"In another place, however, Vattel, speaking on the subject of
reprisals, admits the right to seize the property of the nation or
its subjects by way of reprisal, and, if war ensues, to confiscate
the property so seized. The only exception he makes is of property
which has been deposited in the hands of the nation, and entrusted
to the public faith, as is the case of property in the public
funds. Vattel, lib. 2, ch. 18, § 342, 343, 344. The very
exception evinces pretty strongly the opinion of Vattel as to the
general rule. Of the character of Vattel as a jurist, I shall not
undertake to express an opinion. That he has great merit is
conceded, though a learned civilian, Sir James MacIntosh, informs
us that he has fallen into great mistakes in important 'practical
discussions of public law.'
Page 12 U. S. 141
Discourse on the law of nations, 32, note. But if he is singly
to be opposed to the weight of Grotius and Puffendorf, and, above
all, Bynkershock, it will be difficult for him to sustain so
unequal a contest. I have been pressed with the opinion of a very
distinguished writer of our own country on this subject. Camillus,
No. 18 to 23, on the British treaty of 1794. I admit in the fullest
manner the great merit of the argument which he has adduced against
the confiscation of private debts due to enemy subjects. Looking to
the measure not as of strict right, but as of sound policy and
national honor, I have no hesitation to say that the argument is
unanswerable. He proves incontrovertibly what the highest interest
of nations dictates with a view to permanent policy. But I have not
been able to perceive the proofs by which he overthrows the ancient
principle. In respect to the opinion of Grotius, quoted by him in
No. 20, as indicating a doubt by Grotius of his own principles, I
cannot help thinking that the learned writer has himself fallen
into a mistake. Grotius, in the place referred to, lib. 3, ch. 20,
§ 16, is not adverting to the right of confiscation, but
merely to the general results of a treaty of peace. He says (§
15) that after a peace, no action lies for damages done in the war,
but (§ 16) that debts due before the war are not, by the mere
operations of the war, released, but remain suspended during the
war, and the right to recover them revives at the peace. It is
impossible to doubt the meaning of Grotius when the preceding and
succeeding sections are taken in connection. Grotius, therefore, is
not inconsistent with himself, nor is 'Bynkershoek more
inconsistent,' for the latter explicitly avows the same doctrine,
but considers it inapplicable to debts confiscated during the war;
for these are completely extinguished. Bynk., Quaest.Pub.Juris, ch.
7."
"It is supposed by the same learned writer that the principle of
confiscating debts had been abandoned for more than a century. That
the practice was intermitted is certainly no very clear proof of an
abandonment of the principle. Motives of policy and the general
interests of commerce may combine to induce a nation not to enforce
its strict rights, but it ought not therefore to be construed to
release them. It may, however, be well doubted if the practice is
quite so uniform as it is supposed.
Page 12 U. S. 142
The case of the Silesia loan, which exercised the highest
talents of the English nation, is an instance to the contrary,
almost within half a century (in 1752). In the very elaborate
discussions of national law to which that case gave birth, there is
not the slightest intimation that the law of nations prohibited a
sovereign from confiscating debts due to his enemies, even where
the debts were due from the nation, though there is a very able
statement of its injustice in that particular case, and the English
memorial admits that when sovereigns or states borrow money from
foreigners, it is very commonly expressed in the contract that it
should not be seized as reprisals or in case of war."
"Now it strikes me that this very circumstance shows in a strong
light the general opinion as to the ordinary right of confiscation.
The stipulations of particular treaties of the United States have
been cited in corroboration of their general doctrine by the
claimant's counsel. These treaties certainly show the opinion of
the government as to the impolicy of enforcing the right of
confiscation against debts and actions.
See treaty with
Great Britain, 1794, art. 10 -- with France 1778, art. 20 -- with
Holland, 8 October, 1782, art. 18 -- with Prussia, 11 July, 1799,
art. 23 -- with Morocco, 1787, art. 24. But I cannot admit them to
be evidence for the purpose for which they have been introduced. It
may be argued with quite as much if not greater force that these
stipulations imply an acknowledgement of the general right of
confiscation, and provide for a liberal relaxation between the
parties. I hold with Bynkershoek (Quaest. Pub.Jur. ch. 7) that
where such treaties exist, they must be observed; where there are
none, the general right prevails. It has been further supposed,
that the common law of England is against the right of confiscating
debts; and the declaration of Magna Charta, ch. 30, has been cited
to show the liberal views of the British Constitution. This
declaration, so far as is necessary to the present purpose, is as
follows:"
"If they [
i.e. foreign merchants] be of a land making
war against us, and be found in our realm at the beginning of the
war, they shall be attached without harm of body or goods
(rerum) until it be known unto us, or our Chief Justice,
how our merchants be entreated, then in the land making war against
us, and if our merchants be well entreated there, theirs shall be
likewise with us."
"I
Page 12 U. S. 143
quote the translation of Lord Coke, 2 Just. 27. This would
certainly seem to be a very liberal provision, and if its true
construction applied to all property and persons, as well
transiently in the country as domiciled and fixed there, it would
certainly be entitled to all the encomiums which it has received.
Montesq. Spirit of Laws, lib. 20, ch. 14. How far it is now
considered as binding, in relation to vessels and goods found
within the realm at the commencement of the war, I shall hereafter
consider. It will be observed, however, that this article of Magna
Charta does not protect the debts or property of foreigners who are
without the realm: it is confined to foreigners within the realm
upon the public faith on the breaking out of the war. Now it seems
to be the established rule of the common law that all choses in
action, belonging to an enemy, are forfeitable to the Crown, and
that the Crown is at liberty at any time during the war to
institute a process, and thereby appropriate them to itself. This
was the doctrine of the yearbooks, and stands confirmed by the
solemn decision of the Exchequer, in
Attorney General v.
Weeden, Parker 267. Maynard's Edw. 2, cited
ibid. It
is a prerogative of the Crown which, I admit, has been very rarely
enforced;
see Lord Alvanley's observations in
Furtado
v. Rodgers, 3, Bos. & Pul. 191, but its existence cannot
admit of a legal doubt. On a review of authorities, I am entirely
satisfied that, by the rigor of the law of nations and of the
common law, the sovereign of a nation may lawfully confiscate the
debts of his enemy, during war, or by way of reprisal, and I will
add that I think this opinion fully confirmed by the judgment of
the Supreme Court in
Ware v. Hylton, 3 Dall. 199,
where the doctrine was explicitly asserted by some of the judges,
reluctantly admitted by others and denied by none."
"In respect to the goods of an enemy found within the dominions
of a belligerent power, the right of confiscation is most amply
admitted by Grotius, and Puffendorf, and Bynkershoek, and
Burlamaqui, and Rutherforth and Vattel.
See Grotius, and
Puffendorf, and Bynkershoek
ubi supra, and Bynk.,
Qu.Pub.Jur. c. 4, and 6. 2 Burlam 209, sec. 12, p. 219, sec. 2, p.
221, sec. 11; Ruth. lib. 2, c. 9, pp. 558 to 573. Such also is the
rule of the common law. Hale in Harg. Law Tracts, 245, c. 18.
Vattel has indeed contended (and
Page 12 U. S. 144
in this he is followed by Azuni, Part. 2, ch. 4, art. 2, sec. 7)
that the sovereign declaring war can neither detain the persons nor
the property of those subjects of the enemy who are within his
dominions at the time of the declaration, because they came into
the country upon the public faith. This exception (which, in terms,
is confined to the property of persons who are within the country)
seems highly reasonable in itself, and is an extension of the rule
in Magna Charta. But even limited as it is, it does not seem
followed in practice, and Bynkershoek is an authority the other
way. Bynk. Quaest.Pub.Jur., c. 2, pp. 3, 7. In England, the
provision in Magna Charta seems in practice to have been confined
to foreign merchants domiciled there, and not extended to others
who came to ports of the realm for occasional trade. Indeed, from
the language of some authorities, it would seem that the clause was
inserted not so much to benefit foreign merchants as to provide a
remedy for their own subjects in cases of hostile injuries in
foreign countries.
See the opinion of Ch. J. Lee in
Key v. Pearse, cited Doug. 606, 607. However this may be,
it is very certain that Great Britain has uniformly seized as prize
all vessels and cargoes of her enemies found afloat in her ports at
the commencement of war. Nay, she has proceeded yet further and, in
contemplation of hostilities, laid embargoes on foreign vessels and
cargoes, that she might at all events secure the prey. It cannot be
necessary for me to quote authorities on this point. In the
articles respecting the
droits of admiralty in 1665, there
is a very formal recognition of the rights of the Crown to all
vessels and cargoes seized before hostilities.
The
Rebeckah, 1 Rob. 227, and
id., p. 230, note (a). This
exercise of hostile right of the
summum jus is so far,
indeed, from being obsolete that it is in constant operation, and
in the present hostilities has been applied to the property of the
citizens of the United States. Of a similar character is the
detention of American seamen found in her service at the
commencement of the war as prisoners of war -- a practice which
violates the spirit, though not the letter, of Magna Charta, and
certainly can in equity and good faith find few advocates. Of the
right of Great Britain thus to seize vessels and cargoes found in
her ports on the breaking out of war I do not find any denial in
authorities which are
Page 12 U. S. 145
entitled to much weight, and I therefore consider the rule of
the law of nations to be that every such exercise of authority is
lawful and rests in the sound discretion of the sovereign of the
nation."
"The next question is whether Congress (for with it rests the
sovereignty of the nation as to the right of making war and
declaring its limits and effects) has authorized the seizure of
enemies' property afloat in our ports. The act of 18 June, 1812,
ch. 102, is in very general terms, declaring war against Great
Britain and authorizing the President to employ the public forces
to carry it into effect. Independent of such express authority, I
think that, as the executive of the nation, he must, as an incident
of the office, have a right to employ all the usual and customary
means acknowledged in war to carry it into effect. And there being
no limitation in the act, it seems to follow that the executive may
authorize the capture of all enemies' property wherever by the law
of nations it may be lawfully seized. In cases where no grant is
made by Congress, all such captures, made under the authority of
the executive, must enure to the use of the government. That the
executive is not restrained from authorizing captures on land is
clear from the provisions of the act. He may employ and actually
has employed the land forces for that purpose, and no one has
doubted the legality of the conduct. That captures may be made
within our own ports by commissioned ships seems a natural result
of the language -- of the generality of expression in relation to
the authority to grant letters of marque and reprisal to private
armed vessels, which the act does not confine to captures on the
high seas, and is supported by the known usage of Great Britain in
similar cases. It would be strange indeed if the executive could
not authorize or ratify a capture in our own ports unless by
granting a commission to a public or private ship. I am not bold
enough to interpose a limitation where Congress has not chosen to
make one, and I hold that, by the act declaring war, the executive
may authorize all captures which, by the modern law of nations, are
permitted and approved. It will be at once perceived that in this
doctrine I do not mean to include the right to confiscate debts due
to enemy subjects. This, though a strictly
Page 12 U. S. 146
national right, is so justly deemed odious in modern times and
is so generally discountenanced that nothing but an express act of
Congress would satisfy my mind that it ought to be included among
the fair objects of warfare -- more especially as our own
government has declared it unjust and impolitic. But if Congress
should enact such a law, however much I might regret it, I am not
aware that foreign nations with whom we have no treaty to the
contrary could, on the footing of the rigid law of nations,
complain, though they might deem it a violation of the modern
policy."
"On the whole, I am satisfied that Congress has authorized a
seizure and condemnation of enemy property found in our ports under
the circumstances of the present case. And the executive may
lawfully authorize proceedings to enforce the confiscation of the
same property before the proper tribunals of the United States. The
district attorney is for this purpose the proper agent of the
executive and of the United States. From the character and duties
of his station he is bound to guard the rights of the United States
and to secure their interests. Whenever he choses to institute
proceedings on behalf of the United States, it is presumed by
courts of law that he has the sanction of the proper authorities,
and that presumption will avail until the executive or the
legislature disavow the proceedings and sanction a restoration of
the property."
"I have taken up more time than I originally intended in
discussing the various subjects submitted in the argument. An
apology will be found in their extraordinary importance. If I shall
have successfully shown that the principles of prize law, as
admitted in England and in the United States, have the sanction of
the principles of public law and public jurists, I shall not regret
the labor that has been employed, although in this particular case
I may pronounce an erroneous sentence."
"I reverse the decree of the district court and condemn the 550
tons of timber to the United States, subject however to the right
of the owners of the
Emulous to a reimbursement of their
actual charges and expenses for the custody of the property, which
I shall reserve for further consideration, and I shall order the
said
Page 12 U. S. 147
property to be sold, and the proceeds brought into court to
abide the further order of the court."
Such is the opinion which I had the honor to pronounce in the
circuit court, and upon the most mature reflection, I adhere to it.
The argument in this Court, urged on behalf of the claimant, has
put in controversy the same points which were urged before me. But
as the opinion of this Court admits many of the principles for
which I contended, I shall confine my additional remarks to such as
have been overruled by my brethren.
It seems to have been taken for granted in the argument of
counsel that the opinion held in the circuit court proceeded in
some degree upon a supposition that a declaration of war operates
per se an actual confiscation of enemy's property found
within our territory. To me this is a perfectly novel doctrine. It
was not argued on either side in the circuit court and certainly
never received the slightest countenance from the court. I
disclaim, therefore, any intention to support a doctrine which I
always supposed to be wholly untenable. I go yet further and admit
that a declaration of war does not, of itself, import a
confiscation of enemies' property within or without the country, on
the land or on the high seas. The title of the enemy is not by war
divested, but remains in
proprio vigore until a hostile
seizure and possession has impaired his title. All that I contend
for is that a declaration of war gives a right to confiscate
enemies' property and enables the power to whom the execution of
the laws and the prosecution of the war are confided to enforce
that right. If, indeed, there be a limit imposed as to the extent
to which hostilities may be carried by the executive, I admit that
the executive cannot lawfully transcend that limit; but if no such
limit exist, the war may be carried on according to the principles
of the modern law of nations, and enforced when and where and on
what property the executive chooses.
In no act whatsoever that I recollect has Congress declared the
confiscation of enemies' property. It has authorized the President
to grant letters of marque and general reprisal, which he may
revoke and annul
Page 12 U. S. 148
at his pleasure, and even as to captures actually made under
such commissions, no absolute title by confiscation vests in the
captors until a sentence of condemnation. If, therefore, British
property had come into our ports since the war and the President
had declined to issue letters of marque and reprisal, there is no
act of Congress which in terms declares it confiscated and subjects
it to condemnation. If, nevertheless, it be confiscable, the right
of confiscation results not from the express provisions of any
statute, but from the very state of war which subjects the hostile
property to the disposal of the government. But until the title
should be divested by some overt act of the government and some
judicial sentence, the property would unquestionably remain in the
British owners, and if a peace should intervene, it would be
completely beyond the reach of subsequent condemnation.
There is, then, no distinction recognized by any act of Congress
between enemies' property which was within our ports at the
commencement of war and enemies' property found elsewhere. Neither
is declared
ipso facto confiscated, and each, as I
contend, is merely confiscable.
I will now consider what in point of law is the operation of the
acts of Congress made in relation to the present war.
The Act of 18 June, 1812, ch. 102, declares war to exist between
Great Britain and the United States, and authorizes the President
of the United States to use the land and naval force of the United
States to carry the same into effect, and further authorizes him to
issue letters of marque, &c., to private armed vessels against
the vessels, goods, and effects of the government of Great Britain
and the subjects thereof.
The Prize Act of 26 June, 1812, ch. 107, confers the power on
the President to issue instructions to private armed vessels for
the regulation of their conduct. The Act of 6 July, 1812, ch. 128,
authorizes the President to make regulations, &c., for the
support and exchange of prisoners of war. The Act of 6 July, 1812,
ch. 129, respecting trade with the enemy, authorizes the
President
Page 12 U. S. 149
to grant passports for the property of British subjects within
the limits of the United States during the space of six months, and
protects certain British packets, &c., with dispatches from
capture. The Act of 3 March, 1813, ch. 203, vests in the President
the power of retaliation for any violation of the rules and usages
of civilized warfare by Great Britain.
These are all the acts which confer powers or make provisions
touching the management of the war. In no one of them is there the
slightest limitation upon the executive powers growing out of a
state of war, and they exist, therefore, in their full and perfect
vigor. By the Constitution, the executive is charged with the
faithful execution of the laws, and the language of the act
declaring war authorizes him to carry it into effect. In what
manner and to what extent shall be carry it into effect? What are
the legitimate objects of the warfare which he is to wage? There is
no act of the legislature defining the powers, objects, or mode of
warfare; by what rule, then, must he be governed? I think the only
rational answer is by the law of nations as applied to a state of
war. Whatever act is legitimate, whatever act is approved by the
law, or hostilities among civilized nations, such he may, in his
discretion, adopt and exercise, for with him the sovereignty of the
nation rests as to the execution of the laws. If any of such acts
are disapproved by the legislature, it is in their power to narrow
and limit the extent to which the rights of war shall be exercised;
but until such limit is assigned, the executive must have all the
right of modern warfare vested in him, to be exercised in his sound
discretion, or he can have none. Upon what principle, I would ask,
can he have an implied authority to adopt one and not another? The
best manner of annoying, injuring, and pressing the enemy must,
from the nature of things, vary under different circumstances, and
the executive is responsible to the nation for the faithful
discharge of his duty under all the changes of hostilities.
But it is said that a declaration of war does not, of itself,
import a right to confiscate enemies' property found within the
country at the commencement of war. I cannot admit this position in
the extent in which it is
Page 12 U. S. 150
laid down. Nothing, in my judgment, is more clear from authority
than the right to seize hostile property afloat in our ports at the
commencement of war. It is the settled practice of nations and the
modern rule of Great Britain herself, applied (as appears from the
affidavits in this very cause) to American property in the present
war -- applied also to property not merely on board of ships, but
to spars floating alongside of them -- I forbear, however, to press
this point, because my opinion in the court below contains a full
discussion of it.
It is also said that a declaration of war does not carry with it
the right to confiscate property found in our country at the
commencement of war, because the Constitution itself, in giving
Congress the power "to declare war, grant letters of marque and
reprisal, and make rules concerning captures on land and water,"
has clearly evinced that the power to declare war did not,
ex
vi terminorum, include a right to capture property everywhere,
and that the power to make rules concerning captures on land and
water may well be considered as a substantive power as to captures
of property within our own territory. In my judgment, if this
argument prove anything, it proves too much. If the power to make
rules respecting captures, &c., be a substantive power, it is
equally applicable to all captures, wherever made, on land or on
water. The terms of the grant import no limitation as to place, and
I am not aware how we can place around them a narrower limit than
the terms import. Upon the same construction, the power to grant
letters of marque and reprisal is a substantive power, and a
declaration of war could not of itself authorize any seizure
whatsoever of hostile property unless this power was called into
exercise. I cannot, therefore, yield assent to this argument. The
power to declare war, in my opinion, includes all the powers
incident to war and necessary to carry it into effect. If the
Constitution had been silent as to letters of marque and captures,
it would not have narrowed the authority of Congress. The authority
to grant letters of marque and reprisal and to regulate captures
are ordinary and necessary incidents to the power of declaring war.
It would be utterly ineffectual without them. The expression,
therefore, of that which is implied in the very nature of the grant
cannot weaken the
Page 12 U. S. 151
force of the grant itself. The words are merely explanatory, and
introduced
ex abundanti cautela. It might be as well
contended that the power "to provide and maintain a navy" did not
include the power to regulate and govern it, because there is in
the Constitution an express provision to this effect. And yet I
suppose that no person would doubt that Congress, independent of
such express provision, would have the power to regulate and govern
the navy, and if it should authorize the executive "to provide and
maintain a navy," it seems to me as clear that he must have the
incidental power to make rules for its government. In truth, it is
by no means infrequent in the Constitution to add clauses of a
special nature to general powers which embrace them and to provide
affirmatively for certain powers without meaning thereby to
negative the existence of powers of a more general nature. The
power to provide "for the common defense and general welfare" could
hardly be doubted to include the power "to borrow money;" the power
"to coin money," to include the power "to regulate the value
thereof;" and the power "to raise and support armies," to include
the power "to make rules for the government and regulation"
thereof. On the other hand, the affirmative power "to define and
punish piracies and felonies committed on the high seas" has never
been supposed to negative the right to punish other offenses on the
high seas, and Congress has actually legislated to a more enlarged
extent. I cannot, therefore, persuade myself that the argument
against the doctrine for which I contend is at all affected by any
provision in the Constitution.
The opinion of my brethren seems to admit that the effect of
hostilities is to confer all the rights which war confers, and it
seems tacitly to concede that by virtue of the declaration of war,
the executive would have a right to seize enemies' property which
should actually come within our territory during the war. Certainly
no such power is given directly by any statute. And if the argument
be correct that the power to make captures on land or water must be
expressly called into exercise by Congress before the executive
can, even after war, enforce a capture and condemnation, it will be
very difficult to support the concession. Suppose a
Page 12 U. S. 152
British ship of war or merchant ship should now come within our
ports, there is no statute declaring such ship actually
confiscated. There is no express authority either for the navy or
army to make a capture of her, and although the executive might
authorize a private armed ship so to do, yet it would depend
altogether on the will of the owners of the ship whether they would
so do or not. Can it be possible that the executive has not the
power to authorize such seizure? And if he may authorize a seizure
by the army or navy, why not by private individuals if they will
volunteer for the purpose?
The act declaring was has authorized the executive to employ the
land and naval force of the United States, to carry it into effect.
When and where shall he carry it into effect? Congress has not
declared that any captures shall be made on land, and if this be a
substantive power, nor included in a declaration of war, how can
the executive make captures on land, when Congress has not
expressed its will to this effect? The power to employ the army and
navy might well be exercised in preventing invasion and in the
common defense without unnecessarily including a right to capture,
if the right to capture be not an incident of war; and upon what
ground, then, can the executive plan and execute foreign
expeditions or foreign captures? Upon what ground can he authorize
a Canadian campaign, or seize a British fort or territory and
occupy it by right of capture and conquest I am utterly at a loss
to perceive, unless it be that the power to carry the war into
effect gives every incidental power which the law of nations
authorizes and approves in a state of war. I am at a loss to
perceive how the power exists to seize and capture enemy's property
which was without our territory at the commencement of the war, and
not the power to seize that which was within our territory at the
same period. Neither is expressly given nor denied (except as to
private armed ships), and how can either be assumed except as an
incident of war, acknowledged upon national and public principles?
It may be suggested that the executive, "as commander in chief of
the army and navy," has the power to make foreign conquests. But
this is utterly inadmissible if the right to authorize captures
resides as a substantive power in Congress
Page 12 U. S. 153
and does not follow as an incident of a declaration of war, and
certainly the rights of the "commander in chief" must be restrained
to such acts as are allowed by the laws. Besides, the same
difficulty meets us here as in the former case; if his powers as
commander in chief authorize him to make captures without the
territory, why not within the territory?
The acts respecting alien enemies and prisoners of war have been
supposed, even in a state of actual war, to confer new powers on
the executive. I cannot accede to the inference in the extent to
which it is claimed. In general, these acts may be deemed mere
regulations of war, limiting and directing the discretion of the
executive, and it cannot be doubted that Congress had a perfect
right to prescribe such regulations. To regulate the exercise of
the rights of war as to enemies does not, however, imply that such
rights have not an independent existence. Besides, it is clear that
the act respecting alien enemies applies only to aliens resident
within the country, and not to the property of aliens, who are not
so resident. I might answer in the same manner the argument drawn
from the Act of 6 July, 1812, ch. 129, § 4, and the Act of 3
March 1813, ch. 203. But even admitting that these acts did confer
some new powers, still, as these powers do not respect the present
case, I cannot consider them as affording even a legislative
implication against the existence of the powers for which I
contend.
It has been supposed that my opinion assumes for its basis the
position that modern usage constitutes a rule which acts directly
on the thing itself by its own force, and not through the sovereign
power. Certainly I do not admit this supposition to be correct. My
argument proceeds upon the ground that when the legislative
authority, to whom the right to declare war is confided, has
declared war in its most unlimited manner, the executive authority,
to whom the execution of the war is confided, is bound to carry it
into effect. He has a discretion vested in him as to the manner and
extent, but he cannot lawfully transcend the rules of warfare
established among civilized nations. He cannot lawfully exercise
powers or authorize proceedings which the civilized world
repudiates and disclaims. The sovereignty
Page 12 U. S. 154
as to declaring war and limiting its effects rests with the
legislature. The sovereignty as to its execution rests with the
President. If the legislature does not limit the nature of the war,
all the regulations and rights of general war attach upon it. I do
not, therefore, contend that modern usage of nations constitutes a
rule acting on enemies' property, so as to produce confiscation of
itself, and not through the sovereign power. On the contrary, I
consider enemies' property in no case whatsoever confiscated by the
mere declaration of war; it is only liable to be confiscated at the
discretion of the sovereign power having the conduct and execution
of the war. The modern usage of nations is resorted to merely as a
limitation of this discretion, not as conferring the authority to
exercise it. The sovereignty to execute it is supposed already to
exist in the President, by the very terms of the Constitution, and
I would again ask if this general power to confiscate enemies'
property does not exist in the executive, to be exercised in his
discretion, how is it possible that he can have authority to seize
and confiscate any enemies' property coming into the country since
the war, or found in the enemies' territory? Yet I understood the
opinion of my brethren to proceed upon the tacit acknowledgement
that the executive may seize and confiscate such property under the
circumstances which I have stated.
On the whole, I am still of opinion that the judgment of the
circuit court was correct, and ought to be affirmed.
It is due, however, to myself to state that at the trial in the
circuit court it was agreed that the timber had always been afloat
on tidewaters, and the affidavit by which it is proved to have
rested on land at low tide was not taken until after the hearing
and decision of the cause.
In the opinion which I have expressed I am authorized to state
that I have the concurrence of one of my brethren.