If a seizure by a collector for a violation of the revenue laws
of the United States be voluntarily abandoned and the property
restored before the libel or information be filed and allowed, the
district court has not jurisdiction of the cause.
Jurisdiction as to revenue forfeitures was intended by the Act
of 24 September, 1789, to be given to the court of the district not
where the offense was committed, but where the seizure was
made.
Appeal from the sentence of the Circuit Court for the District
of Connecticut, which reversed that of the district court and
restored the property to the claimant.
STORY, J. delivered the opinion of the Court as follows:
This is an information against twelve casks of merchandise, part
of the cargo of the brig
Ann, alleged to have been
imported or put on board with an intent to be imported contrary to
the Non-importation Act of 1 March, 1809, ch. 91, § 5.
It appears from the evidence that the
Ann sailed from
Liverpool for New York in July, 1812, having on board a cargo of
British merchandise. She was seized by a revenue cutter of the
United States on her passage toward New York, while in Long Island
Sound, about midway between Long Island and Falkland Island, and
carried into the port of New Haven about 7 October, 1812, and
immediately taken possession of by
Page 13 U. S. 290
the collector of that port as forfeited to the United States. On
the morning of 12 October, the collector gave written orders for
the release of the brig and cargo from the seizure in pursuance of
directions from the Secretary of the Treasury, returned the ship's
papers to the master, and gave permission for the brig to proceed
without delay to New York. Late in the afternoon of the same day,
the present information was allowed by the district judge, and on
the ensuing day the brig and cargo were duly taken into possession
by the marshal under the usual monition from the court. On the
trial in the district court, the property now in controversy was
condemned, and upon an appeal that decree was reversed in the
circuit court.
It has been argued that the decree of the circuit court ought to
be affirmed because, on the whole facts, the district court had no
jurisdiction over the cause, and this argument is maintained on two
grounds -- first that the original seizure was made within the
Judicial District of New York, and secondly that if the seizure was
originally made within the Judicial District of Connecticut, the
jurisdiction thereby acquired by the district court was, by the
subsequent abandonment of the seizure and want of possession,
completely ousted.
It is unnecessary to consider the first ground, because we are
of opinion that sufficient matter is not disclosed in the evidence
to enable the Court to decide whether the seizure was within the
District of New York or of Connecticut or upon waters common to
both.
The second ground deserves great consideration. By the Judicial
Act of 24 September, 1789, ch. 20, § 9, the district courts
are vested with
"exclusive original cognizance of all civil causes of admiralty
and maritime jurisdiction, including all seizures under laws of
impost, navigation, or trade of the United States where the
seizures are made on waters navigable from the sea by vessels of
ten or more tons burden within their respective districts, as well
as upon the high seas."
Whatever might have been the construction of the jurisdiction of
the district courts if the legislature had stopped at the word s
"admiralty and maritime jurisdiction," it seems manifest by the
subsequent clause that
Page 13 U. S. 291
the jurisdiction as to revenue forfeitures was intended to be
given to the court of the district not where the offense was
committed, but where the seizure was made. And this with good
reason. In order to institute and perfect proceedings
in
rem, it is necessary that the thing should be actually or
constructively within the reach of the court. It is actually within
its possession when it is submitted to the process of the court; it
is constructively so when, by a seizure, it is held to ascertain
and enforce a right of forfeiture which can alone be decided by a
judicial decree
in rem. If the place of committing the
offense had fixed the judicial forum where it was to be tried, the
law would have been in numerous cases evaded, for by a removal of
the thing from such place the court could have had no power to
enforce its decree. The legislature therefore wisely determined
that the place of seizure should decide as to the proper and
competent tribunal. It follows from this consideration that before
judicial cognizance can attach upon a forfeiture
in rem
under the statute, there must be a seizure, for until seizure, it
is impossible to ascertain what is the competent forum. And if so,
it must be a good subsisting seizure at the time when the libel or
information is filed and allowed. If a seizure be completely and
explicitly abandoned and the property restored by the voluntary act
of the party who has made the seizure, all rights under it are
gone. Although judicial jurisdiction once attached, it is divested
by the subsequent proceedings, and it can be revived only by a new
seizure. It is in this respect like a case of capture, which,
although well made, gives no authority to the prize court to
proceed to adjudication if it be voluntarily abandoned before
judicial proceedings are instituted. It is not meant to assert that
a tortious ouster of possession or fraudulent rescue for
relinquishment after seizure will divest the jurisdiction. The case
put (and it is precisely the present case) is a voluntary
abandonment and release of the property seized, the legal effect of
which must, as we think, be to purge away all the prior rights
acquired by the seizure.
On the whole it is the opinion of the majority of the Court that
the decree of the circuit court ought to be
Affirmed.