The stipulation in a treaty "that free ships shall make free
goods" does not imply the converse proposition, that "enemy ships
shall make enemy goods."
The treaty with Spain does not contain, either expressly or by
implication, a stipulation that enemy ships shall make enemy
goods.
A neutral may lawfully employ an armed belligerent vessel to
transport his goods, and such goods do not lose their neutral
character by the armament, nor by the resistance made by such
vessel, provided the neutral do not aid in such armament or
resistance, although he charter the whole vessel and be on board at
the time of the resistance.
A merchant having a fixed residence and carrying on business at
the place of his birth does not acquire a foreign commercial
character by occasional visit to a foreign country.
The right of search grows out of and is auxiliary to the greater
right of capture.
The rule that the goods of an enemy found in the vessel of a
friend are prize of war and those of a friend found in the vessel
of an enemy are to be restored is a part of the law of nations, and
has been fully and unequivocally recognized by the United
States.
The principle of retaliation upon the subjects of a foreign
state for its unjust proceedings towards our citizens is a
political, not a judicial, measure. It is for the consideration of
the government, but it is not a rule of decision in courts of
justice.
This was an appeal by Manuel Pinto from the sentence of the
Circuit Court for the District of New York affirming
pro
forma the sentence of the district court which condemned that
part of the cargo which was claimed by him.
The facts of the case are thus stated by THE CHIEF JUSTICE in
delivering the opinion of the court
Page 13 U. S. 389
Manuel Pinto, a native of Buenos Ayres, being in London, on 26
August, 1813, entered into a contract with John Drinkald, owner of
the ship
Nereide, whereof William Bennet was master,
whereby the said Drinkald let to the said Pinto the said vessel to
freight for a voyage to Buenos Ayres and back again to London on
the conditions mentioned in the charter party. The owner covenanted
that the said vessel, being in all respects seaworthy, well manned,
victualed, equipped, provided, and furnished with all things
needful for such a vessel, should take on board a cargo to be
provided for her, that the master should sign the customary bills
of lading, and that the said ship being laden and dispatched,
should join and sail with the first convoy that should depart from
Great Britain for Buenos Ayres, that on his arrival, the master
should give notice thereof to the agents or assigns of the said
freighter and make delivery of the cargo according to bills of
lading; and that the said ship, being in all respects seaworthy,
manned, &c., as before mentioned, should take and receive on
board at Buenos Ayres all such lawful cargo as they should tender
for that purpose, for which the master should sign the customary
bills of lading, and the ship, being laden and dispatched, should
sail and make the best of her way back to London, and on her
arrival deliver her cargo according to the bills of lading. For
unloading the outward and taking in the homeward cargo the owner
agreed to allow 90 running days, and for unloading the return cargo
15 running days. The owner also agreed that the freighter and one
other person whom he might appoint should have their passage
without being chargeable therefor. In consideration of the
premises, the freighter agreed to send or cause to be sent
alongside of the ship such lawful goods as he might have to ship or
could procure from others and dispatch her therewith in time to
join and sail with the first convoy, and on her arrival at Buenos
Ayres to receive the cargo according to bills of lading, and
afterwards to send along side of the ship a return cargo and
dispatch her to London, and on her arrival receive the cargo
according to bills of lading, and to pay freight as follows,
viz., for the outward cargo �700, together with
five percent primage, to be paid on signing the bills of lading,
and for the homeward or return cargo at the rate mentioned in the
charter party. He was also to advance the master at
Page 13 U. S. 390
Buenos Ayres such money as might be necessary for disbursements
on the ship. It was provided that all the freight of the outward
cargo, except on the goods belonging to the freighter, which should
not exceed �400 should be received by the owner on the bills
of lading being signed, and in case of the loss of the ship, such
freight should be his property; but if she arrived safe back with a
full cargo, then the freighter should be credited for the excess of
the said freight over and above the sum of �700. A delay of
10 running days over and above the time stipulated is allowed the
freighter, he paying for such demurrage at the rate of �10,
10s per day.
Under this contract a cargo, belonging in part to the freighter,
in part to other inhabitants of Buenos Ayres and in part of British
subjects, was taken on board the
Nereide, and she sailed
under convoy sometime in November, 1813.
Her license or passport, dated 16 November, states her to mount
10 guns and to be manned by 16 men.
The letter of instructions from the owner to the master is dated
on 24 November, and contains this passage:
"Mr. Pinto is to advance you what money you require for ship's
use at River Plate, and you will consider yourself as under his
directions so far as the charter party requires."
On the voyage, the
Nereide was separated from her
convoy, and on 19 December, 1813, when in sight of Madeira, fell in
with, and after an action of about fifteen minutes, was captured by
the American privateer
The Governor Tompkins. She was
brought into the port of New York, where vessel and cargo were
libeled, and the vessel and that part of the cargo which belonged
to British subjects were condemned without a claim. That part of
the cargo which belonged to Spaniards was claimed by Manuel Pinto,
partly for himself and partners, residing in Buenos Ayres, and
partly for the other owners residing in the same place. On the
hearing, this part of the cargo was also condemned. An appeal was
taken to the circuit court, where the sentence
Page 13 U. S. 391
of the district court was affirmed
pro forma, and from
that sentence an appeal has been prayed to this Court.
Page 13 U. S. 412
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL, after stating the facts of the case,
delivered the opinion of the Court as follows:
Page 13 U. S. 413
In support of the sentence of condemnation in this case, the
captors contend
1. That the claimant, Manuel Pinto, has neither made sufficient
proof of his neutral character nor of his property in the goods he
claims.
2. That by the treaty between Spain and the United States, the
property of a Spanish subject in an enemy's vessel is prize of
war.
3. That on the principles of reciprocity this property should be
condemned.
4. That the conduct of Manuel Pinto and of the vessel has
impressed a hostile character on his property and on that of other
Spaniards laden on board of the
Nereide.
1. Manuel Pinto is admitted to be a native of Buenos Ayres and
to carry on trade at that place in connection with his father and
sister, who are his partners and who also reside at Buenos Ayres,
but it is contended that he has acquired a domicile in England, and
with that domicile the English commercial character.
Is the evidence in any degree doubtful on this point? Baltaza
Ximenes, Antonio Lynch, and Felix Lynch, three Spaniards returning
with Pinto in the
Nereide, all depose that Buenos Ayres is
the place of his nativity and of his permanent residence and that
he carries on trade at that place.
In his test affidavit, Manuel Pinto swears in the most explicit
terms to the fact that Buenos Ayres is and always has been the
place of his permanent residence, that he carries on business there
on account of himself, his father, and sister, and that he has been
absent for temporary purposes only. His voyage to London, where he
arrived in June, 1813, was for the purpose of purchasing a cargo
for his trade at Buenos Ayres and of establishing connections in
London for the purposes of his future trade at Buenos Ayres.
This plain and direct testimony is opposed:
Page 13 U. S. 414
1. By his examination
in preparatorio.
In his answer to the first interrogatory, he says that he was
born at Buenos Ayres, that for seven years last past, he has lived
and resided in England and Buenos Ayres, that he now lives at
Buenos Ayres, that he has generally lived there for thirty-five
years last past, and has been admitted a freeman of the new
government.
Whatever facility may be given to the acquisition of a
commercial domicile, it has never heretofore been contended that a
merchant having a fixed residence and carrying on business at the
place of his birth acquires a foreign commercial character by
occasional visits to a foreign country. Had the introduction of the
words "seven years last past" even not been fully accounted for by
reference to the interrogatory, those words could not have implied
such a residence as would give a domicile. But they are fully
accounted for.
In his answer to the 12th interrogatory, he repeats that he is a
Spanish American, now lives and carries on trade at Buenos Ayres,
and has generally resided there.
2. The second piece of testimony relied on by the counsel for
the captors is the charter party. That instrument states Manuel
Pinto to be of Buenos Ayres, now residing in London.
The charter party does not state him to have been formerly of
Buenos Ayres, but to be at its date of Buenos Ayres. Nothing can be
more obvious than that the expression, now residing in London,
could be intended to convey no other idea than that he was then
personally in London.
As little importance is attached to the covenant to receive the
return cargo at the wharf in London. The performance of this duty
by the consignee of the cargo as the agent of Pinto, would be a
complete execution of it.
Had the English character been friendly and the Spanish hostile,
it would have been a hardy attempt indeed in
Page 13 U. S. 415
Mr. Pinto to found on these circumstances a claim to a domicile
in England.
The question respecting ownership of the goods is not so
perfectly clear.
The evidence of actual ownership, so far as the claim asserts
property existing at the time in himself and partners, is involved
in no uncertainty. The test affidavit annexed to the claim is full,
explicit, and direct. It goes as far as a test affidavit can go in
establishing the right which the claim asserts. All the documentary
evidence relating to this subject corroborates this affidavit. The
charter party shows an expectation that, of a freight of
�700, the goods of Mr. Pinto would pay �400. The very
circumstance that he chartered the whole vessel furnishes strong
inducement to the opinion that a great part of her cargo would be
his own.
The witnesses examined
in preparatorio, so far as they
know anything on the subject, all depose to his interest. William
Puzey was clerk to Pinto, and he deposes to the interest of his
employer on the knowledge acquired in making out invoices and other
papers belonging to the cargo. His belief, too, is in some degree
founded on the character of Pinto in London, where he was spoken of
as a man of great respectability and property, and from the anxiety
he discovered for the safety of the property after the
Nereide was separated from her convoy.
The bills of lading for that part of the cargo which is claimed
by Pinto are filled up many of them with his name, some to order,
and the marginal letters in the manifest would also denote the
property to be his. Where he claims a part of a parcel of goods,
the invoice is sometimes to order, and the marginal letters would
indicate the goods to be the property of Pinto and some other
person.
This testimony proves very satisfactorily the interest of
Pinto's house in the property he claims. There is no
countertestimony in the cause except the belief expressed by Mr.
Puzey that for a part of the goods, Pinto was agent for the
government of Buenos Ayres. This
Page 13 U. S. 416
belief of Mr. Puzey is supposed to derive much weight from his
character as the clerk of Mr. Pinto. The importance of that
circumstance, however, is much diminished by the fact that he had
seen Pinto only a week before the sailing of the
Nereide,
and that he does not declare his belief to be founded on any papers
he had copied or seen, or on any communication made to him by his
employer. There are other and obvious grounds for his suspicion. A
part of the cargo consisted of arms and military accoutrements, and
it was not very surprising that Puzey should conjecture that they
were purchased for a government about to sustain itself by the
sword. But this suspicion is opposed by considerations of decisive
influence which have been stated at the bar. The demand for these
articles in Buenos Ayres by the government would furnish sufficient
motives to a merchant for making them a part of his cargo. In a
considerable part of this warlike apparatus British subjects were
jointly concerned. It is extremely improbable that, if acting for
his government, he would have associated its interests with those
of British merchants. Nor can a motive be assigned for claiming
those goods for himself instead of claiming them for his
government. They would not by such claim become his if restored. He
would still remain accountable to his government, and the truth
would have protected the property as effectually as a falsehood
should it remain undetected. By claiming these goods for himself
instead of his government, he would commit a perjury from which he
could derive no possible advantage and which would expose to
imminent hazard not only those goods but his whole interest in the
cargo. The Court therefore must consider this belief of Mr. Puzey
as a suspicion which a full knowledge of the facts ought entirely
to dissipate. If there was nothing in the cause but this suspicion
or this belief of Mr. Puzey, the Court would not attach any
importance to it. But Mr. Pinto himself has, in his examination
in preparatorio, been at least indiscreet in asserting
claims not to be sustained and in terms which do not exhibit the
real fact in its true shape. In his answer to the 12th
interrogatory, he says "And this deponent also has one-fourth
interest as owner of the following goods, &c.,
viz.,
15 bales of merchandise," &c. In his claim he thus states the
transaction under which his title to the one-fourth of these goods
accrued.
Page 13 U. S. 417
He had agreed with certain persons in England to select for them
a parcel of goods for the market of Buenos Ayres of which he was to
be the consignee and which he would sell on a commission of 10
percent on the amount of sales at Buenos Ayres. These goods were
selected, purchased, and consigned to Manuel Pinto. The bills of
lading were in his possession, and he considered his interest under
this contract as equal to one-fourth of the value of the goods,
"wherefore," he says,
"he did suppose that he was interested in the said goods and
merchandise for himself, his father, and sister, and well entitled,
as the owner thereof, or otherwise, to an equal fourth part of the
said goods, inasmuch as his commissions as aforesaid would have
been equal to such fourth."
It is impossible to justify this representation of the fact. The
reasoning might convince the witness, but the language he used was
undoubtedly calculated to mislead the court and to extricate
property to which the captors were clearly entitled, although the
witness might think otherwise. Such misrepresentations must be
frowned on in a prize court, and must involve a claim, otherwise
unexceptionable, in doubt and danger. A witness ought never to
swear to inferences without stating the train of reasoning by which
his mind has been conducted to them. Prize courts are necessarily
watchful over subjects of this kind, and demand the utmost fairness
in the conduct of claimants. Yet prize courts must distinguish
between misrepresentations which may be ascribed to error of
judgment and which are, as soon as possible, corrected by the party
who has made them and willful falsehoods which are detected by the
testimony of others or confessed by the party when detection
becomes inevitable. In the first case, there may be cause for a
critical and perhaps suspicious examination of the claim and of the
testimony by which it is supported; but it would be harsh indeed to
condemn neutral property, in a case in which it was clearly proved
to be neutral, for one false step, in some degree equivocal in its
character, which was so soon corrected by the party making it.
The case of Mr. Paul's printing press is still less dubious in
its appearance. It would require a very critical
Page 13 U. S. 418
investigation of the evidence to decide whether this press is
stated in his answer to the 12th interrogatory to be his property
or not. Four presses are said in that answer to belong to him, but
he also says in his answer to another interrogatory, perhaps the
26th, that Mr. Paul had one printing press on board. Whether there
were five presses in the cargo or only four has not been decided,
because the declaration made in his examination
in
preparatorio that one of the presses belonged to Mr. Paul
proves unequivocally that the mistake, if he made one, was not
fraudulent.
That he should state as his the property which belonged to a
house in Buenos Ayres, whose members all resided at the same place
and of which he was the acting and managing partner, was a
circumstance which could not appear important to himself and which
was of no importance in the cause. These trivial and accidental
inaccuracies are corrected in his claim and in his test affidavit.
The Court does not think them of sufficient importance to work a
confiscation of goods of the real neutrality of which no serious
doubt is entertained.
2. Does the treaty between Spain and the United States subject
the goods of either party, being neutral, to condemnation as enemy
property if found by the other in the vessel of an enemy? That
treaty stipulates that neutral bottoms shall make neutral goods,
but contains no stipulation that enemy bottoms shall communicate
the hostile character to the cargo. It is contended by the captors
that the two principles are so completely identified that the
stipulation of the one necessarily includes the other.
Let this proposition be examined.
The rule that the goods of an enemy found in the vessel of a
friend are prize of war and that the goods of a friend found in the
vessel of an enemy are to be restored is believed to be a part of
the original law of nations, as generally, perhaps universally,
acknowledged. Certainly it has been fully and unequivocally
recognized by the United States. This rule is founded on the simple
and intelligible principle that war gives a full right to capture
the goods of an enemy, but gives no right to
Page 13 U. S. 419
capture the goods of a friend. In the practical application of
this principle so as to form the rule, the propositions that the
neutral flag constitutes no protection to enemy property and that
the belligerent flag communicates no hostile character to neutral
property are necessarily admitted. The character of the property,
taken distinctly and separately from all other considerations,
depends in no degree upon the character of the vehicle in which it
is found.
Many nations have believed it to be their interest to vary this
simple and natural principle of public law. They have changed it by
convention between themselves as far as they have believed it to be
for their advantage to change it. But unless there be something in
the nature of the rule which renders its parts unsusceptible of
division, nations must be capable of dividing it by express
compact, and if they stipulate either that the neutral flag shall
cover enemy goods or that the enemy flag shall infect friendly
goods, there would in reason seem to be no necessity for implying a
distinct stipulation not expressed by the parties. Treaties are
formed upon deliberate reflection. Diplomatic men read the public
treaties made by other nations, and cannot be supposed either to
omit or insert an article common in public treaties without being
aware of the effect of such omission or insertion. Neither the one
nor the other is to be ascribed to inattention. And if an omitted
article be not necessarily implied in one which is inserted, the
subject to which that article would apply remains under the ancient
rule. That the stipulation of immunity to enemy goods in the
bottoms of one of the parties being neutral does not imply a
surrender of the goods of that party being neutral if found in the
vessel of an enemy is the proposition of the counsel for the
claimant, and he powerfully sustains that proposition by arguments
arising from the nature of the two stipulations. The agreement that
neutral bottoms shall make neutral goods is, he very justly
remarks, a concession made by the belligerent to the neutral. It
enlarges the sphere of neutral commerce and gives to the neutral
flag a capacity not given to it by the law of nations.
The stipulation which subjects neutral property found in the
bottom of an enemy to condemnation as prize of
Page 13 U. S. 420
war is a concession made by the neutral to the belligerent. It
narrows the sphere of neutral commerce and takes from the neutral a
privilege he possessed under the law of nations. The one may be and
often is exchanged for the other. But it may be the interest and
the will of both parties to stipulate the one without the other,
and if it be their interest or their will, what shall prevent its
accomplishment? A neutral may give some other compensation for the
privilege of transporting enemy goods in safety, or both parties
may find an interest in stipulating for this privilege, and neither
may be disposed to make to or require from the other the surrender
of any right as its consideration. What shall restrain independent
nations from making such a compact? And how is their intention to
be communicated to each other or to the world so properly as by the
compact itself?
If reason can furnish no evidence of the indissolubility of the
two maxims, the supporters of that proposition will certainly
derive no aid from the history of their progress from the first
attempts at their introduction to the present moment.
For a considerable length of time they were the companions of
each other -- not as one maxim consisting of a single indivisible
principle, but as two stipulations, the one in the view of the
parties forming a natural and obvious consideration for the other.
The celebrated compact termed the "armed neutrality" attempted to
effect by force a great revolution in the law of nations. The
attempt failed, but it made a deep and lasting impression on public
sentiment. The character of this effort has been accurately stated
by the counsel for the claimants. Its object was to enlarge, and
not in anything to diminish, the rights of neutrals. The great
powers, parties to this agreement, contended for the principle that
free ships should make free goods, but not for the converse maxim;
so far were they from supposing the one to follow as a corollary
from the other that the contrary opinion was openly and distinctly
avowed. The King of Prussia declared his expectation that in future
neutral bottoms would protect the goods of an enemy, and that
neutral goods would be safe in an enemy bottom. There is no reason
to believe that this opinion
Page 13 U. S. 421
was not common to those powers who acceded to the principles of
the armed neutrality.
From that epoch to the present, in the various treaties which
have been formed, some contain no article on the subject, and
consequently leave the ancient rule in full force. Some stipulate
that the character of the cargo shall depend upon the flag, some
that the neutral flag shall protect the goods of an enemy, some
that the goods of a neutral in the vessel of a friend shall be
prize of war, and some that the goods of an enemy in a neutral
bottom shall be safe, and that friendly goods in the bottom of an
enemy shall also be safe.
This review, which was taken with minute accuracy at the bar,
certainly demonstrates that in public opinion, no two principles
are more distinct and independent of each other than the two which
have been contended to be inseparable.
Does the United States understand this subject differently from
other nations? It is certainly not from our treaties that this
opinion can be sustained. The United States has in some treaties
stipulated for both principles, in some for one of them only, in
some that neutral bottoms shall make neutral goods and that
friendly goods shall be safe in the bottom of an enemy. It is
therefore clearly understood in the United States, so far as an
opinion can be formed on its treaties, that the one principle is
totally independent of the other. It has stipulated expressly for
their separation, and it has sometimes stipulated for the one
without the other.
But in a correspondence between the Secretary of State of the
United States and the minister of the French Republic in 1793,
Prussia is enumerated among those nations with which the United
States had made a treaty adopting the entire principle that the
character of the cargo should be determined by the character of the
flag.
Not being in possession of this correspondence, the Court is
unable to examine the construction it has received. It has not
deferred this opinion on that account, because the point in
controversy at that time was the obligation imposed on the United
States to protect belligerent
Page 13 U. S. 422
property in its vessels, not the liability of their property to
capture if found in the vessel of a belligerent. To this point the
whole attention of the writer was directed, and it is not wonderful
that in mentioning incidentally the treaty with Prussia which
contains the principle that free bottoms make free goods, it should
have escaped his recollection that it did not contain the converse
of the maxim. On the talents and virtues which adorned the cabinet
of that day, on the patient fortitude with which it resisted the
intemperate violence with which it was assailed, on the firmness
with which it maintained those principles which its sense of duty
prescribed, on the wisdom of the rules it adopted, no panegyric has
been pronounced at the bar in which the best judgment of this Court
does not concur. But this respectful deference may well comport
with the opinion that an argument incidentally brought forward by
way of illustration is not such full authority as a decision
directly on the point might have been.
3. The third point made by the captors is that whatever
construction might be put on our treaty with Spain, considered as
an independent measure, the ordinances of that government would
subject American property under similar circumstances to
confiscation, and therefore the property claimed by Spanish
subjects in this case ought to be condemned as prize of war.
The ordinances themselves have not been produced, nor has the
Court received such information respecting them as would enable it
to decide certainly either on their permanent existence or on their
application to the United States. But be this as it may, the Court
is decidedly of opinion that reciprocating to the subjects of a
nation or retaliating on them its unjust proceedings towards our
citizens is a political, not a legal, measure. It is for the
consideration of the government, not of its courts. The degree and
the kind of retaliation depend entirely on considerations foreign
to this tribunal. It may be the policy of the nation to avenge its
wrongs in a manner having no affinity to the injury sustained, or
it may be its policy to recede from its full rights and not to
avenge them at all. It is not for its courts to interfere with the
proceedings of the nation and to thwart its views. It is not for us
to depart from the beaten track
Page 13 U. S. 423
prescribed for us, and to tread the devious and intricate path
of politics. Even in the case of salvage, a case peculiarly within
the discretion of courts because no fixed rule is prescribed by the
law of nations, Congress has not left it to this department to say
whether the rule of foreign nations shall be applied to them, but
has by law applied that rule. If it be the will of the government
to apply to Spain any rule respecting captures which Spain is
supposed to apply to us, the government will manifest that will by
passing an act for the purpose. Till such an act be passed, the
Court is bound by the law of nations which is a part of the law of
the land.
Thus far, the opinion of the Court has been formed without much
difficulty. Although the principles asserted by the counsel have
been sustained on both sides with great strength of argument, they
have been found on examination to be simple and clear in
themselves. Stripped of the imposing garb in which they have been
presented to the Court, they have no intrinsic intricacy which
should perplex the understanding.
The remaining point is of a different character. Belligerent
rights and neutral privileges are set in array against each other.
Their respective pretensions, if not actually intermixed, come into
close contact, and the line of partition is not so distinctly
marked as to be clearly discernible. It is impossible to declare in
favor of either without hearing from the other objections which it
is difficult to answer and arguments which it is not easy to
refute. The Court has given to this subject a patient
investigation, and has endeavored to avail itself of all the aid
which has been furnished by the bar. The result, if not completely
satisfactory even to ourselves, is one from which it is believed we
should not depart were further time allowed for deliberation.
4. Has the conduct of Manuel Pinto and of the
Nereide
been such as to impress the hostile character on that part of the
cargo which was in fact neutral?
In considering this question, the Court has examined separately
the parts which compose it.
The vessel was armed, was the property of an enemy,
Page 13 U. S. 424
and made resistance. How do these facts affect the claim?
Had the vessel been armed by Pinto, that fact would certainly
have constituted an important feature in the case. But the Court
can perceive no reason for believing she was armed by him. He
chartered, it is true, the whole vessel, and that he might as
rightfully do as contract for her partially; but there is no reason
to believe that he was instrumental in arming her. The owner
stipulates that the
Nereide, "well manned, victualed,
equipped, provided and furnished with all things needful for such a
vessel," shall be ready to take on board a cargo to be provided for
her. The
Nereide, then, was to be put by the owner in the
condition in which she was to sail. In equipping her, whether with
or without arms, Mr. Pinto was not concerned. It appears to have
been entirely and exclusively the act of the belligerent owner.
Whether the resistance which was actually made is in any degree
imputable to Mr. Pinto is a question of still more importance.
It has been argued that he had the whole ship, and that
therefore the resistance was his resistance.
The whole evidence upon this point is to be found in the charter
party, in the letter of instructions to the master, and in the
answer of Pinto to one of the interrogatories
in
preparatorio.
The charter party evinces throughout that the ship remained
under the entire direction of the owner, and that Pinto in no
degree participated in the command of her. The owner appoints the
master and stipulates for every act to be performed by the ship
from the date of the charter party to the termination of the
voyage. In no one respect except in lading the vessel was Pinto to
have any direction of her.
The letter of instructions to the master contains full
directions for the regulation of his conduct, without any other
reference to Mr. Pinto than has been already stated. That reference
shows a positive limitation of
Page 13 U. S. 425
his power by the terms of the charter party. Consequently he had
no share in the government of the ship.
But Pinto says in his answer to the 6th interrogatory that "he
had control of the said ship and cargo."
Nothing can be more obvious than that Pinto could understand
himself as saying no more than that he had the control of the ship
and cargo so far as respected her lading. A part of the cargo did
not belong to him and was not consigned to him. His control over
the ship began and ended with putting the cargo on board. He does
not appear ever to have exercised any authority in the management
of the ship. So far from exercising any during the battle, he went
into the cabin, where he remained till the conflict was over. It
is, then, most apparent that when Pinto said he had the control of
the ship and cargo, he used those terms in a limited sense. He used
them in reference to the power of lading her given him by the
charter party.
If in this the Court be correct, this cause is to be governed by
the principles which would apply to it had the
Nereide
been a general ship.
The next point to be considered is the right of a neutral to
place his goods on board an armed belligerent merchantman.
That a neutral may lawfully put his goods on board a belligerent
ship for conveyance on the ocean is universally recognized as the
original rule of the law of nations. It is, as has already been
stated, founded on the plain and simple principle that the property
of a friend remains his property wherever it may be found. "Since
it is not," says Vattel,
"the place where a thing is which determines the nature of that
thing, but the character of the person to whom it belongs, things
belonging to neutral persons which happen to be in an enemy's
country, or on board an enemy's ships, are to be distinguished from
those which belong to the enemy."
Bynkershoek lays down the same principles in terms equally
explicit, and in terms entitled to the more consideration because
he enters into the inquiry whether a
Page 13 U. S. 426
knowledge of the hostile character of the vessel can effect the
owner of the goods.
The same principle is laid down by other writers on the same
subject, and is believed to be contradicted by none. It is true
there were some old ordinances of France declaring that a hostile
vessel or cargo should expose both to condemnation. But these
ordinances have never constituted a rule of public law.
It is deemed of much importance that the rule is universally
laid down in terms which comprehend an armed as well as an unarmed
vessel, and that armed vessels have never been excepted from it.
Bynkershoek, in discussing a question suggesting an exception with
his mind directed to hostilities, does not hint that this privilege
is confined to unarmed merchantmen.
In point of fact it is believed that a belligerent merchant
vessel rarely sails unarmed, so that this exception from the rule
would be greater than the rule itself. At all events, the number of
those who are armed and who sail under convoy is too great not to
have attracted the attention of writers on public law, and this
exception to their broad general rule, if it existed, would
certainly be found in some of their works. It would be strange if a
rule laid down with a view to war in such broad terms as to have
universal application should be so construed as to exclude from its
operation almost every case for which it purports to provide, and
yet that not a
dictum should be found in the books
pointing to such construction.
The antiquity of the rule is certainly not unworthy of
consideration. It is to be traced back to the time when almost
every merchantman was in a condition for self-defense, and the
implements of war were so light and so cheap that scarcely any
would sail without them.
A belligerent has a perfect right to arm in his own defense, and
a neutral has a perfect right to transport his goods in a
belligerent vessel. These rights do not interfere with each other.
The neutral has no control over the belligerent right to arm --
ought he to be accountable for the exercise of it?
Page 13 U. S. 427
By placing neutral property in a belligerent ship, that
property, according to the positive rules of law, does not cease to
be neutral. Why should it be changed by the exercise of a
belligerent right, universally acknowledged and in common use when
the rule was laid down, and over which the neutral had no
control?
The belligerent answers that by arming, his rights are impaired.
By placing his goods under the guns of an enemy, the neutral has
taken part with the enemy and assumed the hostile character.
Previous to that examination which the Court has been able to
make of the reasoning by which this proposition is sustained, one
remark will be made which applies to a great part of it. The
argument which, taken in its fair sense, would prove that it is
unlawful to deposit goods for transportation in the vessel of an
enemy generally, however imposing its form, must be unsound,
because it is in contradiction to acknowledged law.
It is said that by depositing goods on board an armed
belligerent, the right of search may be impaired, perhaps
defeated.
What is this right of search? Is it a substantive and
independent right wantonly, and in the pride of power, to vex and
harass neutral commerce because there is a capacity to do so? or to
indulge the idle and mischievous curiosity of looking into neutral
trade? or the assumption of a right to control it? If it be such a
substantive and independent right, it would be better that cargoes
should be inspected in port before the sailing of the vessel, or
that belligerent licenses should be procured. But this is not its
character.
Belligerents have a full and perfect right to capture enemy
goods and articles going to their enemy which are contraband of
war. To the exercise of that right the right of search is
essential. It is a means justified by the end. It has been truly
denominated a right growing out of and ancillary to the greater
right of capture. Where this greater right may be legally
exercised
Page 13 U. S. 428
without search, the right of search can never arise or come into
question.
But it is said that the exercise of this right may be prevented
by the inability of the party claiming it to capture the
belligerent carrier of neutral property.
And what injury results from this circumstance? If the property
be neutral, what mischief is done by its escaping a search? In so
doing there is no sin, even as against the belligerent, if it can
be effected by lawful means. The neutral cannot justify the use of
force or fraud, but if by means lawful in themselves he can escape
this vexatious procedure, he may certainly employ them.
To the argument that by placing his goods in the vessel of an
armed enemy he connects himself with that enemy and assumes the
hostile character it is answered that no such connection
exists.
The object of the neutral is the transportation of his goods.
His connection with the vessel which transports them is the same
whether that vessel be armed or unarmed. The act of arming is not
his -- it is the act of a party who has a right so to do. He
meddles not with the armament nor with the war. Whether his goods
were on board or not, the vessel would be armed and would sail. His
goods do not contribute to the armament further than the freight he
pays and freight he would pay were the vessel unarmed.
It is difficult to perceive in this argument anything which does
not also apply to an unarmed vessel. In both instances it is the
right and the duty of the carrier to avoid capture and to prevent a
search. There is no difference except in the degree of capacity to
carry this duty into effect. The argument would operate against the
rule which permits the neutral merchant to employ a belligerent
vessel without imparting to his goods the belligerent
character.
The argument respecting resistance stands on the same ground
with that which respects arming. Both are lawful. Neither of them
is chargeable to the goods
Page 13 U. S. 429
or their owner, where he has taken no part in it. They are
incidents to the character of the vessel, and may always occur
where the carrier is belligerent.
It is remarkable that no express authority on either side of
this question car be found in the books. A few scanty materials,
made up of inferences from cases depending on other principles,
have been gleaned from the books and employed by both parties. They
are certainly not decisive for or against either.
The celebrated case of the Swedish convoy has been pressed into
the service. But that case decided no more than this -- that a
neutral may arm, but cannot by force resist a search. The reasoning
of the judge on that occasion would seem to indicate that the
resistance condemned the cargo, because it was unlawful. It has
been inferred on the one side that the goods would be infected by
the resistance of the ship, and on the other that a resistance
which is lawful, and is not produced by the goods, will not change
their character.
The case of the
Catharine Elizabeth approaches more
nearly to that of the
Nereide, because in that case as in
this there were neutral goods and a belligerent vessel. It was
certainly a case not of resistance, but of an attempt by a part of
the crew to seize the capturing vessel. Between such an attempt and
an attempt to take the same vessel previous to capture there does
not seem to be a total dissimilitude. But it is the reasoning of
the judge, and not his decision, of which the claimants would avail
themselves. He distinguishes between the effect which the
employment of force by a belligerent owner or by a neutral owner
would have on neutral goods. The first is lawful, the last
unlawful. The belligerent owner violates no duty. He is held by
force, and may escape if he can. From the marginal note, it appears
that the reporter understood this case to decide in principle that
resistance by a belligerent vessel would not confiscate the cargo.
It is only in a case without express authority that such materials
can be relied on.
If the neutral character of the goods is forfeited by the
resistance of the belligerent vessel, why is not the neutral
character of the passengers forfeited by the same
Page 13 U. S. 430
cause? The master and crew are prisoners of war; why are not
those passengers who did not engage in the conflict also prisoners?
That they are not would seem to the Court to afford a strong
argument in favor of the goods. The law would operate in the same
manner on both.
It cannot escape observation that in argument the neutral
freighter has been continually represented as arming the
Nereide and impelling her to hostility. He is represented
as drawing forth and guiding her warlike energies. The Court does
not so understand the case. The
Nereide was armed,
governed, and conducted by belligerents. With her force or her
conduct the neutral shippers had no concern. They deposited their
goods on board the vessel and stipulated for their direct
transportation to Buenos Ayres. It is true that on her passage she
had a right to defend herself, did defend herself, and might have
captured an assailing vessel; but to search for the enemy would
have been a violation of the charter party and of her duty.
With a pencil dipped in the most vivid colors and guided by the
hand of a master, a splendid portrait has been drawn exhibiting
this vessel and her freighter as forming a single figure, composed
of the most discordant materials, of peace and war. So exquisite
was the skill of the artist, so dazzling the garb in which the
figure was presented, that it required the exercise of that cold
investigating faculty which ought always to belong to those who sit
on this bench to discover its only imperfection: its want of
resemblance.
The
Nereide has not that centaur-like appearance which
has been ascribed to her. She does not rove over the ocean hurling
the thunders of war while sheltered by the olive branch of peace.
She is not composed in part of the neutral character of Mr. Pinto
and in part of the hostile character of her owner. She is an open
and declared belligerent, claiming all the rights, and subject to
all the dangers of the belligerent character. She conveys neutral
property which does not engage in her warlike equipments or in any
employment she may make of them, which is put on board solely for
the purpose of transportation and which encounters the hazard
incident
Page 13 U. S. 431
to its situation -- the hazard of being taken into port and
obliged to seek another conveyance should its carrier be
captured.
In this it is the opinion of the majority of the Court there is
nothing unlawful. The characters of the vessel and cargo remain as
distinct in this as in any other case. The sentence, therefore, of
the circuit court must be
Reversed and the property claimed by Manuel Pinto for
himself and his partners, and for those other Spaniards for whom he
has claimed, be restored, and the libel as to that property be
dismissed.
JOHNSON, J.
Circumstances known to this Court have imposed upon me in a
great measure the responsibility of this decision. I approach the
case with all the hesitation which respect for the opinion of
others and a conviction of the novelty and importance of some of
the questions are calculated to inspire. The same respect imposes
upon me an obligation briefly to state the course of reasoning by
which I am led to my conclusion.
On the minor points I feel no difficulty. There is nothing to
support the charge of English domiciliation, the charges of
prevarication are satisfactorily explained, and on the question of
national character we must yet a while reluctantly yield to the
acknowledgement that Buenos Ayres is not free.
On the construction of the Spanish treaty I feel as little
hesitation. That a stipulation calculated solely to produce an
extension of neutral rights should involve in itself a restriction
of neutral rights; that a mutual and gratuitous concession of a
belligerent right should draw after it a necessary relinquishment
of a neutral right, which has never yielded but to express and
(generally) extorted stipulation are conclusions wholly
irreconcilable to any principle of logical deduction.
Nor does the argument rounded on reciprocity stand on any better
ground. There is a principle of reciprocity known to courts
administering international law, but I trust it is a reciprocity of
benevolence, and that the angry passions which produce revenge and
retaliation will never exert their influence on the administration
of
Page 13 U. S. 432
justice. Dismal would be the state of the world and melancholy
the office of a judge if all the evils which the perfidy and
injustice of power inflict on individual man were to be reflected
from the tribunals which profess peace and goodwill to all mankind.
Nor is it easy to see how this principle of reciprocity, on the
broad scale by which it has been protracted in this case, can be
reconciled to the distribution of power made in our Constitution
among the three great departments of government. To the legislative
power alone it must belong to determine when the violence of other
nations is to be met by violence. To the judiciary, to administer
law and justice as it is, not as it is made to be by the folly or
caprice of other nations.
The last question in the case is the only one on which I feel
the slightest difficulty.
The general rule, the incontestable principle is that a neutral
has a right to employ a belligerent carrier. He exposes himself
thereby to capture and detention, but not to condemnation.
To support the condemnation in this case, it is necessary to
establish an exception to this rule, and it is important to lay
down the exceptions contended for with truth and precision.
In the first place, it is contended that a neutral has not a
right to transport his goods on board of an armed belligerent.
Secondly, that if this right be conceded, Pinto in this case has
carried the exercise of it beyond the duties of fair neutrality
1. By laying the vessel under the obligation of a contract to
sail with convoy;
2. By chartering an entire armed vessel of the enemy, and thus
expediting an armed hostile force;
3. By taking in enemy goods on freight, and thereby laying
himself under an implied contract that the armament of the vessel
should be used in its defense;
Page 13 U. S. 433
4. It was also contended that he had in fact armed the vessel
after chartering her and increased her force by admitting
passengers;
5. That the correspondence found on board shows that the
armament was immediately directed against capture by Americans.
On the first and principal ground much may be said, but nothing
added to the ingenious discussion which it has received from
counsel.
The question is why may not a neutral transport his goods on
board an armed belligerent? No writer on the law of nations has
suggested this restriction on his rights, and it can only be
sustained on the ground of its obstructing the exercise of some
belligerent right. What belligerent right does it interfere with?
Not the right of search, for that has relation to the converse
case; it is a right resulting from the right of capturing enemy's
goods in a neutral bottom. It must be then the right which every
nation asserts of being the sole arbiter of its own conduct towards
other nations and deciding for itself whether property claimed as
neutral be owned as claimed. The question is thus fairly stated
between the neutral and belligerent. On the one hand, the neutral
claims the right of transporting his goods in the hostile bottom.
On the other, the belligerent objects to his doing it under such
circumstances as to impair his right of judging, between himself
and the neutral, on the neutrality of his property and conduct. The
evidence of authority, the practice of the world, and the reason
and nature of things must decide between them.
All these are, in my opinion, in favor of the neutral claim.
Every writer on international law acknowledges the right of the
neutral to transport his goods in a hostile bottom. No writer has
restricted the exercise of that right to unarmed ships.
Every civilized nation (with the exception of Spain) has
unequivocally acknowledged the existence of this right unless it be
relinquished by express stipulation,
Page 13 U. S. 434
and even with regard to Spain the evidence is wholly
unsatisfactory to prove that she maintains a different doctrine. My
present belief is that she does not, but, admit that she does and
surely the practice of one nation, and that one not the most
enlightened or commercial, ought not to be permitted to control the
law of the world.
And what is the decision of reason on the merits of these
conflicting pretensions?
Her first and favorite answer would be that were the scales
equally suspended between the parties, the decision ought to be
given in favor of humanity.
Already is the aspect of the world sufficiently darkened by the
horrors of war. It is time to listen to the desponding claims of
man engaged in the peaceful pursuits of life.
But there are considerations in favor of the neutral to which
the heart need not assent -- they are addressed to the judgment
alone.
Admit the claim of the belligerent and you fritter away the
right of the neutral until it is attenuated to a vision.
Admit the claim of the neutral and it is attended with a very
immaterial change in the rights and interests of the
belligerent.
Where are we to draw the line? If a vessel is not to be armed,
what is to amount to an exceptionable armament? It extends to an
absolute and total privation of the right of arming a hostile ship.
Resistance and even capture is lawful to any belligerent that is
attacked.
On the other hand, what injury is done to the belligerent by
recognizing the right of the neutral? The cargo of a belligerent
neither adds to nor diminishes his right to resist. If empty, he
must be subdued before he can be possessed, and if laden, the right
or faculty of resistance is in no wise increased. It is inherent in
her national character, and can be exercised by strict right
without any reference to the cargo that she contains.
Page 13 U. S. 435
Suppose the case of a vessel and cargo wholly neutral; even she
possesses a natural right to resist seizure, but her resistance
must be effectual, or international law pronounces her forfeited.
What injury results to the belligerent cruiser? If the cargo be
really neutral, the exercise of his right of judging becomes
immaterial, and if it be contraband or otherwise subject to
condemnation, what reason in nature can be assigned why the neutral
owner should not throw himself upon the fortune of war and rely
upon the protection of your enemy? You treat him as an enemy, if
captured, and why should not he regard you as an enemy and provide
for his defense against you? I can very well conceive that a case
may occur in which it may become the policy of this country to
throw down the gauntlet to the world and assert a different
principle. But the policy of these states is submitted to the
wisdom of the legislature, and I shall feel myself bound by other
reasons until the constitutional power shall decide what
modifications it will prescribe to the exercise of any acknowledged
neutral right.
The second ground of exception resolves itself into several
points, and presents to my mind the greatest difficulties in the
case.
1. There is a stipulation contained in the charter party that
the vessel shall sail with convoy.
2. Pinto chartered the whole vessel.
3. He took in sub-affreightment of hostile goods.
4. It is contended he had contributed to the arming and manning
of the vessel after chartering her.
5. And that her equipment was pointedly against American
capture.
With regard to the two latter points, I am of opinion that the
evidence does not prove that Pinto contributed to the armament of
the vessel, and if she was armed by the owners, that it was against
American capture is immaterial. As to the passengers, Pinto had no
control over the reception of them into the vessel. He had
Page 13 U. S. 436
taken the hold and two births in the cabin; as to the residue,
it remained subject to the disposal of the captain or owner.
With regard to the three other points, after the best
consideration that I have been able to give the subject, I satisfy
my mind by two considerations.
1. I will not now give an opinion upon the abstract case of an
individual neutral to all the world. It is known that Pinto was
liable to capture both by the French and Carthagenians. This
justified him in placing himself under British protection, and if,
in the exercise of this unquestionable right, he has incidentally
impaired the exercise of our right of seizure for adjudication, we
have nothing to complain of. The case occurs daily, and nothing but
candor and fairness can be exacted of a neutral under such
circumstances.
2. There appears to prevail much misconception with regard to
the control acquired by Pinto in this vessel under the charter
party. His contract gave him the occupation of the hold of the
vessel and two births in the cabin, but went no further. Over the
conduct of the master and crew in navigating or defending the
vessel it communicated to him no power. It is true that by the
conduct of the master and the fate of the vessel, he might be
incidentally affected as a sub-freighter, and so far he had an
interest in her defense; still, however, it is reducible to the
general interest which he had in the performance of the voyage, and
it does not appear that he ever acted under an idea of being
authorized to control the conduct of the captain or took any part
in the conflict which preceded the capture.
I am of opinion that the judgment should be reversed and the
property restored.
STORY, J.
My opinion will be confined to the point first argued, because
it definitively disposes of the cause against the claim of Mr.
Pinto.
The facts material to this point are that Mr. Pinto chartered
the
Nereide, an uncommissioned armed ship belonging to
British subjects, for a voyage from London
Page 13 U. S. 437
to Buenos Ayres and back to London at a stipulated freight. The
ship was to be navigated during the voyage at the expense of the
general owner, who expressly covenanted in the charter party with
Mr. Pinto that she should sail on the voyage under British convoy.
Mr. Pinto, having thus hired the whole ship, took on board sundry
shipments, partly on his own or Spanish account and partly on
account of British merchants from whom he was to receive, in lieu
of freight, a portion of the profits and commissions. The
Nereide sailed with her cargo under British convoy and
with instructions from the owner to the master to govern himself in
relation to the objects of the charter party according to the
direction of Mr. Pinto, who accompanied the ship in the voyage.
During the passage to Buenos Ayres, the
Nereide was
accidentally separated from the convoy, and, while endeavoring to
regain it, was, after a vigorous but unsuccessful resistance,
captured by the privateer
Governor Tompkins and brought
into New York for adjudication.
It is explicitly asserted in the testimony that Mr. Pinto took
no part in the resistance at the time of the capture.
The question is whether, upon these facts, Mr. Pinto, assuming
him to be a neutral, has so incorporated himself with the enemy
interests as to forfeit that protection which the neutral character
would otherwise afford him.
The general doctrine, though formerly subject to many learned
doubts, is now incontrovertibly established that neutral goods may
be lawfully put on board of an enemy ship without being prize of
war. As this doctrine is asserted in the most broad and unqualified
manner in publicists, it is thence attempted to be inferred by the
counsel for the claimant that no distinction can exist whether the
ship be armed or unarmed or be captured with or without resistance;
arguments of this sort are liable to many objections and are in
general wholly unsatisfactory. Elementary writers rarely explain
the principles of public law with the minute distinctions which
legal precision requires. Many of the most important doctrines of
the prize courts will not be found to be treated of or even glanced
at in the elaborate treatises of Grotius or Puffendorf or Vattel. A
striking illustration is their total silence as to the illegality
and penal
Page 13 U. S. 438
consequences of a trade with the public enemy. Even Bynkershoek,
who writes professedly on prize law, is deficient in many important
doctrines which every day regulate the decrees of prize tribunals.
And the complexity of modern commerce has added incalculably to the
number as well as the intricacy of questions of national law. In
what publicist are to be found the doctrines as to the illegality
of carrying enemy dispatches and of engaging in the coasting,
fishing, or other privileged trade of the enemy? Where are
transfers
in transitu pronounced to be illegal? Where are
accurately and systematically stated all the circumstances which
impress upon the neutral a general, or a limited, hostile
character, either by reason of his domicile, his territorial
possessions, or his connection in a house of trade in the enemy
country? The search would be nearly in vain in the celebrated
jurists whose authority has been quoted to silence the present
inquiry. Yet the argument would be no less forcible that these
doctrines have not a legal existence because not found in
systematic treatises on the law of nations, than that which has
been so earnestly pressed upon us by the counsel for the claimants.
The assumed inference is then utterly inadmissible. The question
before the Court must be settled upon other grounds -- upon a just
application of the principles which regulate neutral, as well as
belligerent, rights and duties. Let us then proceed to consider
them.
It is a clear maxim of national law that a neutral is bound to a
perfect impartiality as to all the belligerents. If he incorporate
himself into the measures or policy of either, if he become
auxiliary to the enterprises or acts of either, he forfeits his
neutral character -- nor is this all. In relation to his commerce,
he is bound to submit to the belligerent right of search, and he
cannot lawfully adopt any measures whose direct object is to
withdraw that commerce from the most liberal and accurate search
without the application on the part of the belligerent of superior
force. If he resist this exercise of lawful right, or if, with a
view to resist it, he take the protection of an armed neutral
convoy, he is treated as an enemy and his property is confiscated.
Nor is it at all material whether the resistance be direct or
constructive. The resistance of the convoy is the resistance of all
the ships associated under the common protection, without any
Page 13 U. S. 439
distinction whether the convoy belong to the same or to a
foreign neutral sovereign -- for upon the principles of natural
justice, a neutral is justly chargeable with the acts of the party
which he voluntarily adopts or of which he seeks the shelter and
protection.
Quam sentit commodum sentire debet et onus --
these principles are recognized in the memorable cases of the
Maria, 1, Rob. 340, and the
Elsebe, 5, Rob. 173,
and can never be shaken without delivering over to endless
controversy and conflict the maritime rights of the world.
It has however been supposed by the counsel of the claimants
that a distinction exists between taking the protection of a
neutral and of a belligerent convoy. That in the former case all
armament for resistance is unlawful, but in the latter case it is
not only lawful but in the highest degree commendable. That
although an unlawful act, as resistance by a neutral convoy, may
justly affect the whole associated ships, yet it is otherwise of a
lawful act, as resistance of a belligerent ship, for no forfeiture
can reasonably grow out of such an act which is strictly
justifiable.
The fallacy of the argument consists in assuming the very ground
in controversy and in confounding things in their own nature
entirely distinct. An act perfectly lawful in a belligerent may be
flagrantly wrongful in a neutral. A belligerent may lawfully resist
search; a neutral is bound to submit to it. A belligerent may carry
on his commerce by force; a neutral cannot. A belligerent may
capture the property of his enemy on the ocean; a neutral has no
authority whatever to make captures. The same act, therefore, that
with reference to the rights and duties of the one may be tortious
may, with reference to the rights and duties of the other, be
perfectly justifiable. The act, then, as to its character is to be
judged of not merely by that of the parties through whose immediate
instrumentality it is done, but also by the character of those who,
having cooperated in, assented to, or sought protection from it,
would yet withdraw themselves from the penalties of the act. It is
analogous to the case at common law where an act justifiable in one
party does not, from that fact alone, shelter his coadjutor. They
must stand or fall upon
Page 13 U. S. 440
their own merits. It would be strange indeed if, because a
belligerent may kill his enemy, a neutral may aid in the act, or
because a belligerent may resist search, a neutral may cooperate to
make it effectual. It is therefore an assumption utterly
inadmissible that a neutral can avail himself of the lawful act of
an enemy to protect himself in an evasion of a clear belligerent
right.
And what reason can there be for the distinction contended for?
Why is the resistance of the convoy deemed the resistance of the
whole neutral associated ships, let them belong to whom they may?
It is not that there is a direct and immediate cooperation in the
resistance, because the case supposes the contrary. It is not that
the resistance of the convoy of the sovereign is deemed an act to
which all his own subjects consent, because the ships of foreign
subjects would then be exempted. It is because there is a
constructive resistance resulting in law from the common
association and voluntary protection against search under a full
knowledge of the intentions of the convoy? Then the principle
applies as well to a belligerent as to a neutral convoy? For it is
manifest that the belligerent will at all events resist search, and
it is quite as manifest that the neutral seeks belligerent
protection with an intent to evade it. Is it that an evasion of
search, by the employment, protection, or terror of force is
inconsistent with neutral duties? Then
a fortiori the
principle applies to a case of belligerent convoy, for the
resistance must be presumed to be more obstinate and the search
more perilous.
There can be but little doubt that it is upon the latter
principles that the penalty of confiscation is applied to neutrals.
The law proceeds yet further and deems the sailing under convoy as
an act
per se inconsistent with neutrality, as a
premeditated attempt to oppose, if practicable, the right of
search, and therefore attributes to such preliminary act the full
effect of actual resistance. In this respect it applies a rule
analogous to that in cases of blockade, where the act of sailing
with an intent to break a blockade is deemed a sufficient breach to
authorize confiscation. And Sir W. Scott manifestly recognizes the
correctness of this doctrine in the
Maria,
Page 13 U. S. 441
although the circumstances of that case did not require its
rigorous application.
Indeed, in relation to a neutral convoy, the evidence of an
intent to resist, as well as of constructive resistance, is far
more equivocal than in case of a belligerent convoy. In the latter
case it is necessarily known to the convoyed ships that the
belligerent is bound to resist and will resist until overcome by
superior force. It is impossible, therefore, to join such convoy
without an intention to receive the protection of belligerent force
in such manner and under such circumstances as the belligerent may
choose to apply it. It is an adoption of his acts and an assistance
of his interests during the assumed voyage. To render the convoy an
effectual protection, it is necessary to interchange signals and
instructions, to communicate information, and to watch the approach
of every enemy. The neutral solicitously aids and cooperates in all
these important transactions, and thus far manifestly sides with
the belligerent and performs, as to him, a meritorious service -- a
service as little reconcilable with neutral duties as the agency of
a spy or the fraud of a bearer of hostile dispatches. In respect to
a neutral convoy, the inference of constructive cooperation and
hostility is far less certain and direct. To condemn in such case
is pushing the doctrine to a great extent, since it is acting upon
the presumption, which is not permitted to be contradicted, that
all the convoyed ships distinctly understood and adopted the
objects of the convoy and intimately blended their own interests
with hostile resistance.
There is not, then, the slightest reason for the favorable
distinction as to the belligerent convoy assumed by counsel. On the
contrary, every presumption of hostility is in such case more
violent, and every suspicion of unneutral conduct more inflamed.
And so in the argument of the
Maria, 1 Rob. 346, it was
conceded by the counsel for the claimants and recognized by the
court. It was there said by counsel that it seemed admitted by the
court on a former day that there was a just distinction to be made
between the two cases of convoy,
viz., between the convoy
of an enemy's force and a neutral convoy; that the former
(
i.e. enemy convoy) would stamp a primary character of
hostility on all ships
Page 13 U. S. 442
sailing under its protection, and it would rest on the parties
to take themselves out of the presumption raised against them, but
that even in that case it would be nothing more than a presumption,
which had been determined by a late case before the Lords, the
Sampson, an asserted American ship sailing with French
cruisers at the time they engaged some English ships, and
communicating with the French ships by signal for battle. That in
that case, although there had been a condemnation in the court
below, the Lords sent it to further proof to ascertain whether
there had been an actual resistance. Sir Wm. Scott emphatically
observed
"I do not admit the authority of that case to the extent to
which you push it. That question is still reserved, although the
Lords might wish to know as much of the facts as possible."
It is clear from this language that the learned judge did not
admit that the party could be legally permitted to contradict the
presumption of hostility attached to the sailing under an enemy
convoy. On the contrary, he seemed to consider that the primary
character of hostility, which, it was conceded on all sides, was
stamped upon such conduct, could not be permitted to be rebutted,
but was conclusive upon the party. The case of the
Sampson
was originally heard before the court of vice admiralty, and the
decree of condemnation was never disapproved of, if not ultimately
affirmed, by the Lords of Appeal. I have been assured by very
respectable authority that no proof of actual resistance ever was
or could have been made on the final hearing. The case therefore
affords a strong inference of the law as understood and
administered in the prize courts of Great Britain.
And it may be added in corroboration that in
Smart v.
Wolff, 3 T.R. 323, 332, Sir W. Scott (then Advocate General)
asserted, without hesitation, that if the neutral refused search or
sailed under convoy of the enemy's ships of war or conveyed
intelligence to the enemy, they are waivers of the rights of
neutrality. The very circumstance of his putting these three cases
in connection to illustrate his general argument affords the most
cogent proof that he considered himself as stating a doctrine
equally clear and well established as to all of them.
Page 13 U. S. 443
And this doctrine seems conformable to the sense of other
European sovereigns. In the recent cases of the American ships
captured while under British convoy by the Danes, the right of
condemnation was not only asserted and enforced by the highest
tribunal of prize, but expressly affirmed by the Danish sovereign
after an earnest appeal made by the government of the United
States. On that occasion the Danish minister pressed the
argument
"that he who causes himself to be protected by that act
(
i.e. enemy convoy) ranges himself on the side of the
protector, and thus puts himself in opposition to the enemy of the
protector, and evidently renounces the advantages attached to the
character of a friend to him against whom he seeks the protection.
If Denmark should abandon this principle, the navigators of all
nations would find their account in carrying on the commerce of
Great Britain, under the protection of English ships of war without
any risk,"
and he further declared "that none of the powers in Europe has
called in question the justice of this principle." State Papers
1811, p. 527.
It cannot be denied that our own government has acquiesced in
the truth and correctness of this statement. And if to the general
silence of the other European sovereigns we add the positive
examples of Great Britain and Denmark (the latter of which has not
of late years been deficient in zeal for neutral rights), it seems
difficult to avoid the conclusion that the doctrine is as well
founded in national law as it seems to me to be in justice and
sound policy.
Another argument which has been urged in favor of the assumed
distinction ought not, however, to be omitted. It is that a party,
neutral as to one power, may be
Page 13 U. S. 444
an enemy as to another power, and he may lawfully place himself
under belligerent convoy to escape from his own enemy. In such a
predicament, it is therefore always open to the neutral to explain
his conduct in taking convoy, and to show by proofs his innocent
intentions as to all friendly belligerents. In my judgment, this
supposed state of things would not remove a single difficulty.
It is not in relation to enemies that the question as to taking
convoy can ever arise. It has reference only to the rights of
friendly belligerents, and these rights remain precisely the same
whatever may be the peculiar situation of the neutral as to third
parties. Was it ever heard of that a neutral might lawfully resist
the right of search of one power because he was at war with
another? And is not the evasion of this right just as injurious
whether the neutral be at peace with all the world or with a part
only?
There would be extreme difficulty in establishing by any
disinterested testimony the fact of any such special intentions as
the argument supposes. Independent of this difficulty, it would in
effect be an attempt to repel by positive testimony a conclusive
inference of law flowing from the very act of taking convoy. The
belligerent convoy is bound to resist all visitations by enemy
ships, whether neutral to the convoyed ships or not. This
obligation is distinctly known to the party taking its protection.
If, therefore, he choose to continue under the convoy, he shows an
intention to avail himself of its protection under all the chances
and hazards of war. The abandonment of such intention cannot be
otherwise evidenced than by the overt act of quitting convoy. And
it is impossible to conceive that the mere secret wishes or private
declarations of a party could prevail over his own deliberate act
of continuing under convoy unless courts of prize would surrender
themselves to the most stale excuses and imbecile artifices. It
would be in vain to administer justice in such courts if mere
statements of intention would outweigh the legal effects of the
acts of the parties. Besides, the injury to the friendly
belligerent is equally great whatever might be the special objects
of the neutral. The right of search is effectually prevented by the
presence of superior
Page 13 U. S. 445
force, or exercised only after the perils and injuries of
victorious warfare. And it is this very evasion of the right of
search that constitutes the ground of condemnation in ordinary
cases. The neutral in effect declares that he will not submit to
search until the enemy convoy is conquered, and then only because
he cannot avoid it. The special intention of the neutral then could
not, if proved, upon principle prevail, and it has not a shadow of
authority to sustain it. The argument upon this point was urged in
the
Maria and Elsebe, and was instantly repelled by the
court.
On the whole, on this point my judgment is that the act of
sailing under belligerent or neutral convoy is of itself a
violation of neutrality, and the ship and cargo, if caught
in
delicto, are justly confiscable, and further that if
resistance be necessary, as in my opinion it is not, to perfect the
offense, still that the resistance of the convoy is to all purposes
the resistance of the associated fleet. It might with as much
propriety be maintained that neutral goods, guarded by a hostile
army in their passage through a country or voluntarily lodged in a
hostile fortress for the avowed purpose of evading the municipal
rights and regulations of that country, should not in case of
capture be lawful plunder (a pretension never yet asserted), as
that neutral property on the ocean should enjoy the double
protection of war and peace.
If these principles be correct, it remains to be considered how
far the conduct of Mr. Pinto brings him within the range of their
influence. It is clear that in the original concoction of the
voyage it was his intention to avail himself of British convoy. The
covenant in the charter party demonstrates this intention; a
covenant that, from its terms, being made by the ship owner, must
have been inserted for the benefit and at the instance of the
charterer. Under the faith of this stipulation, Mr. Pinto put his
own property on board and received shipments from persons of an
acknowledged hostile character. The ship sailed on the voyage under
British convoy, with Mr. Pinto on board, and though captured after
a separation from the convoy, she was in the very attempt to rejoin
it. There is no pretense, therefore, of an abandonment of the
convoy, and the
Page 13 U. S. 446
corpus delicti, the character of hostility, impressed
by the sailing under convoy, if any attached, remained
notwithstanding the separation. It is like the sailing for a
blockaded port, where the offense continues, although at the moment
of capture the ship be, by stress of weather, driven in a direction
from the port of destination, for the hostile intention still
remains unchanged.
And here, to avoid the effect of the general doctrine, we are
met with another distinction founded upon the supposed difference
between a belligerent and a neutral merchant ship as to the taking
of convoy. It is argued that the belligerent ship has an undoubted
right to take the protection of the convoy of the nation to which
she belongs, and that this extends a perfect and lawful immunity to
the neutral cargo on board.
It is certainly incumbent on the counsel for the claimant to
support this exception to the general rule by precedent or analogy.
Nothing has been offered which, in my judgment, affords it the
slightest support. It is not true that a neutral can shelter his
property from confiscation behind an act lawful in a belligerent.
The law imputes to the neutral the consequences of the act if he
might have foreseen and guarded against it or if he voluntarily
adopts it. Was it ever supposed that a neutral cargo was protected
from seizure by going in a belligerent ship to a blockaded port? or
that contraband goods, belonging to a neutral, were exempted from
confiscation because on board of such a ship bound on a voyage
lawful to the belligerent, but not to the neutral? Yet the
pretensions in these cases seem scarcely more extravagant than that
now urged. Why should a neutral be permitted to do that indirectly
which he is prohibited from doing directly? Why should he aid the
enemy by giving extraordinary freight for belligerent ships sailing
under belligerent convoy with the avowed purpose of escaping from
search, and often with the concealed intention of aiding
belligerent commerce, and yet claim the benefits of the most
impartial conduct? Until some more solid ground can be laid for the
distinction than the ingenuity of counsel has yet suggested, it
would seem fit to declare
ita lex non scripta est.
But even if the distinction existed, it could not apply
Page 13 U. S. 447
to the case at bar. This is a case where the claimant becomes
the charterer of the whole vessel for the voyage and stipulates for
the express benefit of convoy. The ship, though navigated by a
belligerent master and crew, was necessarily under the control and
management of the charterer. He was the real effective
dux
negotii. Whatever may be the technical doctrine of the common
or prize law as to the general property in the ship, the charterer
was, to all purposes important in this inquiry, the owner for the
voyage, and the master his agent. Can there be a doubt that, as to
the shipments of the enemy freighters, Mr. Pinto was responsible
for the acts of the master? Was he not materially interested in the
safety and protection of these shipments in respect to freight,
commissions, and profits? If they had been lost by capture, from
the negligence of Mr. Pinto or of the master when by ordinary
diligence and resistance the loss might have been avoided, would
not Mr. Pinto have been responsible? How then it can be
consistently held that the ship was not essentially governed and
managed by Mr. Pinto, and all her conduct incorporated with his
interests, I profess to be unable to comprehend. For what purpose
should be insist on a covenant for convoy if he never meant to
derive aid and protection from it to the whole cargo on board and
to range himself and his interests on the side of resistance? His
private conduct at the time of the capture, when resistance was
almost hopeless, affords no evidence to repel the irresistible
presumptions from his deliberate acts.
And here again it has been argued that Mr. Pinto had no hostile
intentions against the United States, but that the taking of convoy
was simply to resist the French and Carthagenians, who are the
enemies of his own country. If such special intention could in
point of law uphold his claim which, for the reasons already
stated, I am entirely satisfied it could not, yet there is not, in
the present case, within my recollection, any proof of such special
intention. It rests upon the mere suggestions of counsel. How,
indeed, could Mr. Pinto show that he meant to yield his property to
the search of the cruisers of the United States when the deliberate
act of assuming British convoy precluded the possibility of its
exercise unless acquired by victory after resistance?
Page 13 U. S. 448
If this view of the case be correct, it must be pronounced that
Mr. Pinto, by voluntarily sailing under convoy, forfeited his
neutrality and bound his property to an indissolubly hostile
character.
This, however, is not the only ground upon which the claim of
Mr. Pinto ought to be repudiated. There was not merely the
illegality of sailing under enemy convoy up to the very eve of
capture, but the fact of actual resistance of the chartered ship
and submission to search only in consequence of superior force.
An attempt, however, is made to extract the case at bar from the
penalty of confiscation attached to resistance of search upon the
ground that Mr. Pinto took no part in this resistance. It is
asserted that a shipper in a general ship is not affected by the
act of the enemy master; that the charterer of the whole ship is
entitled to as favorable a consideration; and that there is no
difference in point of law whether the ship have or have not a
commission or be, or be not armed. It will be necessary to give to
these positions a full examination.
In the first place, it is to be considered whether a neutral
shipper has a right to put his property on board of an armed
belligerent ship without violating his neutral duties. If the
doctrine already advanced on the subject of convoy be correct, it
is incontestable that he has no such right. If he cannot take
belligerent convoy,
a fortiori he cannot put his property
on board of such convoy, or, what is equivalent, on board of an
armed and commissioned ship of the belligerent. What would be the
consequences if neutrals might lawfully carry on all their commerce
in the frigates and ships of war of another belligerent sovereign?
That there would be a perfect identity of interests and of objects,
of assistance and of immunity, between the parties. The most gross
frauds and hostile enterprises would be carried on under neutral
disguises, and the right of search would become as utterly
insignificant in practice as if it were extinguished by the common
consent of nations. The extravagant premiums and freights which
neutrals could well afford to pay for this extraordinary protection
would enable the belligerent to keep up armaments of
incalculable
Page 13 U. S. 449
size, to the dismay and ruin of inferior maritime powers. Such
false and hollow neutrality would be infinitely more injurious than
the most active warfare. It would strip from the conqueror all the
fruits of victory, and lay them at the feet of those whose singular
merit would consist in evading his rights, if not in collusively
aiding his enemy. It is not therefore to be admitted that a neutral
may lawfully place his goods under armed protection, on board of an
enemy ship. Nor can it be at all material whether such armed ship
be commissioned or not; that is an affair exclusively between a
sovereign and his own subjects, but is utterly unimportant to the
neutral. For whether the armament be employed for offense, or for
defense, in respect to third parties, the peril and the obstruction
to the right of search are equally complete. Nor is it true, as has
been asserted in argument, that a noncommissioned armed ship has no
right to capture an enemy ship except in her own defense. The act
of capture without such pretext, so far from being piracy, would be
strictly justifiable upon the law of nations, however it might
stand upon the municipal law of the country of the capturing ship.
Vattel has been quoted to the contrary, but on a careful
examination it will be found that his text does not warrant the
doctrine.
I have had occasion to consider this point in another cause in
this Court, and to the opinion then delivered I refer for a more
full discussion of it. If the subject capture without a commission,
he can acquire no property to himself in the prize, and if the act
be contrary to the regulations of his own sovereign, he may be
liable to municipal penalties for his conduct. But as to the enemy,
he violates no rights by the capture. Such, on an accurate
consideration, will be found to be the doctrine of Puffendorf and
Grotius and Bynkershoek, and they stand confirmed by a memorable
decision of the Lords of Appeal in 1759. 2 Brown's Civil &
Adm.App. 524; Grotius, lib. 3, ch. 6, s. 8, 9, 10, and Barbeyrac's
note on s. 8; Puffendorf, lib. 8, ch. 6, s. 21, &c.; Bynk. 2,
P.J. ch. 3, 4, 16, 17; 2 Woodes.Lect. 432; Consol.del.Mare ch.
287-288; 4 Inst. 152, 154; Zouch Adm. 101; Casaregis Disc. 24 n.
24; Com.Dig. Admiralty E.; Buls. c. 27.
Admitting, however (what to me seems utterly inadmissible),
Page 13 U. S. 450
that a neutral may lawfully ship his goods on board the armed
ship of an enemy, it will be of little avail unless he is exempted
from the consequences of all the acts of such enemy. If the
shipment be innocent, it will be of little avail in this case, if
the resistance of the enemy master will compromit the neutral
character of the cargo. To the establishment, therefore, of such an
exemption, the exertions of counsel have been strenuously directed.
It has been inferred from the silence of elementary writers, from
the authority of analogous cases, and from the positive
declarations of the court, in the
Catherina Elizabeth, 5
Rob. 206.
The argument drawn from the silence of jurists has been already
sufficiently answered. It remains to consider that which is urged
upon the footing of authority. The reasoning from supposed
analogous cases is quite as unsatisfactory. It is not true as to
neutrals that the act of the master never binds the owner of the
cargo unless the master is proved to be the actual agent of the
owner. The act of the master may be and very often is conclusive
upon the cargo, although no general agency is established. Suppose
he violate a blockade, suppress and fraudulently destroy the ship's
papers, or mix up under the same cover enemy interests, will not
the cargo share the fate of the ship? The cases cited are mere
exceptions to the general rule. They in general turn upon a settled
distinction that the act of the master shall not bind the cargo
where the act under the circumstances could not have been within
the scope or contemplation of the shipper at the time of shipment,
or where his ignorance of the voyage and of the intended acts of
the master is placed beyond the possibility of doubt.
See The
Adams, 5 Rob. 256. The very case of resistance is a strong
illustration of the principle. The resistance of the neutral master
has been deliberately held to be conclusive on the neutral cargo.
The Elzebe, 5 Rob. 173;
The Catherina Elizabeth,
5 Rob. 206. What reason can there be for a different rule in
respect to a belligerent master?
It must be admitted that the language of the court in the case
of the
Catherina Elizabeth would at first view seem to
support the position of the claimant's counsel. On a close
examination, however, it will not be found to
Page 13 U. S. 451
assert so broad a doctrine. The case was of a rescue attempted
by an enemy master having on board a neutral cargo, and this rescue
attempted not of the captured, but of the capturing, ship. It was
argued that this resistance of the master exposed the whole cargo
entrusted to his management to confiscation. The court held that no
such penalty was incurred. That the resistance could only be the
hostile act of a hostile person who was a prisoner of war and who,
unless under parole, had a perfect right to emancipate himself by
seizing his own vessel. That the case of a neutral master differed
from that of an enemy master. No duty was violated by such an act
on the part of the latter;
lupum auribus teneo, and if he
could withdraw himself he had a right so to do. And that a material
fact in the case was that the master did not attempt to withdraw
his property, but to rescue the ship of the captor and not his own
vessel. Such was the decision of the court, upon which several
observations arise. In the first place, the resistance was not made
previous to the capture, and therefore whatever may be the extent
of the language, it must be restrained to the circumstances of the
case in judgment; otherwise it would be extrajudicial. In the next
place, it would be impossible to conceive how the fact as to what
vessel was seized could be material if the argument of the present
claimant be correct, for in all events the resistance as to the
cargo would be without any legal effects. In the last place, it is
clear that the case is put by the court upon the ground that the
master at the time of the act had been dispossessed of his vessel
by capture, and was a prisoner of war. He was therefore no longer
acting as master of the ship and had no further management of her.
His rights and duties as master had entirely ceased by the capture,
and there could be no pretense to affect the ship or cargo with his
subsequent acts any more than with the acts of any other stranger.
The case would have been entirely different with a neutral master,
whose relation to his ship continues notwithstanding a capture and
carrying in for adjudication. The case therefore admits of sound
distinctions from that at bar, and cannot be admitted to govern
it.
There is another text, not cited in the argument, which may be
thought to favor the doctrine of the claimant's counsel. It is the
only passage bearing on the subject in
Page 13 U. S. 452
controversy which has fallen under my notice in any elementary
work. Casaregis, in his commercial discourses, Disc. 24, n. 22, has
the following remarks:
"
Verum tamen notandum est quod si navis inimica onerata
mercibus mercatorum amicorum aggressa fuerit alteram inimicam et
mercatores aut domini mercium operam ac industriam dedissent pro ea
aggredienda tunc merces dominorum cadunt etiam sub proeda, si navis
predicta onerata mercibus fuerit depraedata, &c., et
regulariter bona eorum qui auxilium inimices nostris praestant vel
confederati cum iis sunt, praedari possunt."
It is obvious that Casaregis is here considering the case of an
attack of an enemy merchant ship, laden with a neutral cargo, upon
the ship of its enemy in which the former is unsuccessful and is
captured. Under such circumstances he holds that if the neutral
shippers, or the persons having the management of the cargo
(domini mercium) have aided in the attack, the cargo is
forfeited upon the ground that all who assist or confederate with
an enemy are liable to be plundered by the law of war. He does not
touch the case where an enemy merchant ship simply makes resistance
in her own defense, or resists the right of search, nor how far the
master of such ship is the
dominus mercium, or can by his
own acts bind the cargo. Much less has he discussed the question as
to what acts amount to an incorporation into the objects and
interests of the enemy, so as to affix a hostile character. It does
not seem to me that his text can be an authority beyond the terms
in which it is expressed. It pronounces affirmatively that a
cooperation in an attack will induce confiscation of the cargo
(which cannot be doubted), but it does not pronounce negatively
that the resistance of an enemy master will not draw after it the
same penalty. And if it were otherwise, it would deserve
consideration whether the opinion of a mere elementary writer,
respectable as he may be, delivered at a time when the prize law
was not as well settled as it has been in the present age, should
be permitted to regulate the maritime rights of belligerent
nations.
The argument, then, on the footing of authority, fails, for none
is produced which directly points at circumstances like those in
the case at bar. And upon principle it seems quite as difficult to
support it. I am unable
Page 13 U. S. 453
to perceive any solid foundation on which to rest a distinction
between the resistance of a neutral and of an enemy master. The
injury to the belligerent is in both cases equally great, for it
equally withdraws the neutral property from the right of search
unless acquired by superior force. And until it is established that
an enemy protection legally suspends the right of search, it cannot
be that resistance to such right should not be equally penal in
each party. I have therefore no difficulty in holding that the
resistance of the ship is in all cases the resistance of the cargo,
and that it makes no difference whether she be armed or unarmed,
commissioned or uncommissioned. He who puts his property on the
issue of battle must stand or fall by the event of the contest. The
law of neutrality is silent when arms are appealed to in order to
decide rights, and the captor is entitled to the whole prize won by
his gallantry and valor. This opinion is not the mere inference,
strong as it seems to me to be, of general reasoning. It is
fortified by the consideration that in the earliest rudiments of
prize law, in the great maritime countries of Great Britain and
France, confiscation is applied by way of penalty for resistance of
search to all vessels, without any discrimination of the national
character of the vessels or cargoes. The black book of the
admiralty expressly articulates that any vessel making resistance
may be attacked and seized as enemies, and this rule is enforced in
the memorable prize instructions of Henry VIII, Clerk's Praxis 164,
Rob. Collect.Marit. 10 and note, and p. 118. The ordinance of
France of 1584 is equally broad, and declares all such vessels good
prize, and this has ever since remained a settled rule in the prize
code of that nation.
Valin informs us that it is also the rule of Spain, and that in
France it is applied as well to French vessels and cargoes as to
those of neutrals and allies, Coll.Marit 118; Valin, Traits des
Prizes, ch. 5, § 8, p. 80. There is not to be found in the
maritime code of any nation or in any commentary thereon the least
glimmering of authority that distinguishes, in cases of resistance,
the fate of the cargo from that of the ship. If such a distinction
could have been sustained, it is almost incredible that not a
single ray of light should have beamed upon it during the long
lapse of ages in which maritime warfare
Page 13 U. S. 454
has engaged the world. And if any argument is to be drawn from
the silence of authority, I know not under what circumstances it
can be more forcibly applied than against the exception now
contended for.
But even if it were conceded that a neutral shipper in a general
ship might be protected, the concession would not assist the
present claimant. His interests were so completely mixed up and
combined with the interests of the enemy, the master was so
entirely his agent under the charter party, that it is
impracticable to extract the case from the rule that stamps Mr.
Pinto with a hostile character. The whole commercial enterprise was
radically tainted with a hostile leaven. In its very essence it was
a fraud upon belligerent rights. If for a moment it could be
admitted that a neutral might lawfully ship goods in an armed ship
of an enemy, or might charter such a ship and navigate her with a
neutral crew, these admissions would fall far short of succoring
the claimant. He must successfully contend for broader doctrines --
for doctrines which, in my humble judgment, are of infinitely more
dangerous tendency than any which Schlegel and Hubner, the
champions of neutrality, have yet advanced into the field of
maritime controversy. I cannot bring my mind to believe that a
neutral can charter an armed enemy ship, and victual and man her
with an enemy crew (for though furnished directly by the owner,
they are in effect paid and supported by the charterer), with the
avowed knowledge and necessary intent that she should resist every
enemy; that he can take on board hostile shipments on freight,
commissions and profits; that he can stipulate expressly for the
benefit and use of enemy convoy and navigate during the voyage
under its guns and protection; that he can be the entire projector
and conductor of the voyage, and cooperate in all the plans of the
owner to render resistance to search secure and effectual, and that
yet, notwithstanding all this conduct, by the law of nations he may
shelter his property from confiscation and claim the privileges of
an inoffensive neutral. On the contrary it seems to me that such
conduct is utterly irreconcilable with the good faith of a friend
and unites all the qualities of the most odious hostility. It wears
the habiliments of neutrality only when the sword and the armor of
an enemy become
Page 13 U. S. 455
useless for defense. If it be, as it undoubtedly is, a violation
of neutrality to engage in the transport service of the enemy or to
carry his dispatches even on a neutral voyage, how much more so
must it be to enlist all our own interests in his service and hire
his arms and his crew in order to prevent the exercise of those
rights which, as neutrals, we are bound to submit to? The doctrine
is founded in most perfect justice, that those who adhere to an
enemy connection shall share the fate of the enemy.
On the whole, in every view which I have been able to take of
this subject, I am satisfied that the claim of Mr. Pinto must be
rejected and that his property is good prize to the captors. And in
this opinion I am authorized to state that I have the concurrence
of one of my brethren. It is matter of regret that in this
conclusion I have the misfortune to differ from a majority of the
Court, for whose superior learning and ability I entertain the most
entire respect. But I hold it an indispensable duty not to
surrender my own judgment because a great weight of opinion in
against me -- a weight which no one can feel more sensibly than
myself. Had this been an ordinary case, I should have contented
myself with silence; but believing that no more important or
interesting question ever came before a prize tribunal, and that
the national rights suspended on it are of infinite moment to the
maritime world, I have thought it not unfit to pronounce my own
opinion, diffident indeed of its fullness and accuracy of
illustration but entirely satisfied of the rectitude of its
principles.