A neutral cargo found on board an armed enemy's vessel is not
liable to, condemnation as prize of war.
A question of proprietary interest. Further proof ordered.
This ship, being a British armed vessel, was captured in the
year 1814, on a voyage from Bordeaux to
Page 16 U. S. 410
Pensacola, by the sloop of war
Wasp, and sent into
Savannah, in Georgia, where she was libeled and condemned in the
district court as prize of war. The cargo, which was claimed for M.
Foussat, a merchant domiciled at Bourdeaux, was also condemned. On
appeal to the circuit court as to the cargo further proof was
ordered, and restitution decreed to the claimant. The cause was
then brought by appeal to this Court.
The vessel was owned by Messrs. Barclay, Salkeld & Co. of
Liverpool, who were also owners of large cotton plantations near
Pensacola. She sailed from Liverpool on 14 August, 1814, for
Bordeaux, laden with a cargo, part of which, about equal in value
to the cargo subsequently taken in at Bordeaux, belonged to the
owners of the ship, and the documentary evidence showed that her
ultimate destination was Pensacola or the Havana. A few days after
the arrival of the vessel at Bordeaux she was chartered by the
claimant, who then had a vessel of his own lying unemployed in that
port, and the cargo claimed was put on board in September, 1814.
One Pritchard, who sailed in the vessel, was a British subject, and
according to some of the testimony acted as supercargo. At the time
of the capture, the master and Pritchard were taken out of the
vessel and carried on board the
Wasp, which ship has never
since been heard of, and is supposed to have been lost at sea. The
proceedings in the district court were extremely irregular; no
examinations of the prisoners on the standing interrogatories
having been taken, and witnesses having been examined in the first
instance,
Page 16 U. S. 411
who neither belonged to the captured nor the capturing vessel.
The further proof produced by the claimant in the court below
consisted of an affidavit of the claimant swearing to the property
in himself and a certificate of two royal notaries at Bordeaux that
the copy of a letter from the claimant to Vincent Ramez, the
consignee at Pensacola, dated 28 August, 1814, and stating the
object of the adventure was truly extracted from the claimant's
letter book.
Page 16 U. S. 415
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL, delivered the opinion of the
Court.
This vessel was captured on a voyage from Bordeaux to Pensacola
by the sloop of War
Wasp, and sent into Savanna in
Georgia, where she was libeled and condemned as prize of war. The
cargo was claimed for M. Foussat, a French merchant residing at
Bordeaux. In the district court, the cargo was condemned as enemy's
property, avowedly on the principle that this character was
imparted to it by the vessel in which it was found. On an appeal to
the circuit court, further proof was directed and this sentence was
reversed and restitution decreed to the claimant. From this decree
the captors appealed to this Court.
It has been contended that this cargo ought to be condemned as
enemy's property, because, 1st, it was found on board an armed
belligerent.
2d. It is, in truth, the property of British subjects.
On the first question, the case does not essentially differ from
that of the
Nereide. It is unnecessary to repeat the
reasoning on which that case was decided; the opinion then given by
the three judges is retained by them. The principle of the law of
nations that the goods of a friend are safe in the bottom of an
enemy may be and probably will be changed or so impaired as to
leave no object to which it is applicable, but so long as the
principle shall be acknowledged, this Court must reject
constructions which render it totally inoperative.
2d. Respecting the proprietary interest, much doubt is
entertained. In addition to the extraordinary fact of employing a
belligerent carrier while a neutral
Page 16 U. S. 416
vessel belonging to the alleged owner of the cargo lay in port,
there are circumstances in this case calculated to awaken suspicion
which the claimant ought to clear up so far as may be in his
power.
The return cargo of the
Atalanta was to be in cotton,
and Berkley, Salkeld & Co., the owners of the vessel, were also
owners of large cotton plantations, the produce of which might be
readily shipped from Pensacola. The papers show that the
Atalanta sailed from Liverpool, where her owners reside,
with a cargo for Bordeaux, a part of which, about equal in value to
the cargo taken in at Bordeaux, belonged to Berkley, Salkeld &
Co., and that her ultimate destination, at the time of sailing was
Pensacola or the Havana.
Within a day or two after her arrival at Bordeaux she was
chartered by the claimant for the voyage on which she as captured,
and the cargo he now claims was put on board. A Mr. Prichard sailed
in the vessel, who was a British subject and who has been
represented in some of the testimony as a supercargo.
There are undoubtedly, circumstances to diminish the suspicion
which must be excited by those that have been mentioned. The
proceedings have been very irregular; no examinations
in
preparatorio have beer taken. The captain, and probably the
mate with the alleged supercargo, were carried on board the
Wasp and have perished at sea, and Mr. Foussat, whose
character is unexceptionable, has sworn positively to his interest.
Yet, this interest can be and therefore ought to be proved by other
testimony, and
Page 16 U. S. 417
it is in the power of Mr. Foussat to explain circumstances,
which, as they now appear, cannot be disregarded. The Court
therefore requires further proof, which Mr. Foussat is allowed to
produce, to the following points:
1st. To his proprietary interest in the cargo. To show how and
when it was purchased.
2d. To produce his correspondence with Barclay, Salkeld &
Co., if any, respecting this voyage.
3d. To explain the circumstances relative to the original
destination to Pensacola, when the
Atalanta sailed from
Liverpool.
4th. To explain the character of Mr. Pritchard, and his
situation on board the
Atalanta.
5th. To establish the genuineness of the letter of 28 August,
and say by what vessel it was sent.
6th. To show to whom that part of the cargo of the
Atalanta on the voyage from Liverpool to Bordeaux, which
belonged to Barclay, Salkeld & Co., was consigned and how it
was disposed of.
7th. To produce copies of the letters of Barclay, Salkeld &
Co. relative to this transaction or account for their
nonproduction.
MR. JUSTICE JOHNSON.
When this cause was considered in the court below, I entertained
great doubts on the subject of the proprietary interest. But those
doubts have here been satisfactorily cleared up. I am now satisfied
that no inference unfavorable to the claim can fairly be drawn from
the circumstance of this
Page 16 U. S. 418
cargo's being laden on board an armed belligerent. If it had
been intended to throw a veil of neutrality over hostile property,
it is more probable that a neutral carrier would have been used
than a belligerent, and as to the dangers supposed to have been
unnecessarily incurred of being captured and turned away from the
destined market, it is more than probable that a chance of being
captured and carried into an American port, so far from being
prejudicial to the adventure, would have enhanced its profits. The
claimant, then, if conscious of his innocence, had no evil to
apprehend from capture; on the contrary, as the cargo was
calculated for an American market, it might in case of capture have
reached its destination directly, whereas if it had arrived at
Pensacola, its route would have been more circuitous. With regard
to the fact that the voyage in its inception was destined to
Pensacola, that I think also satisfactorily explained. It was in
strict pursuance of her original destination; on her arrival at
Bordeaux, she was put up for Pensacola and chartered by this
claimant for the voyage. The instructions to the captain show that
it was not fixed whether on her return voyage she should be laden
on owners' account or not, and it probably depended upon the
contingency of her being taken up at Bordeaux for a return freight.
As to the facts that Pritchard, the supercargo to Bordeaux,
continued in that capacity on the voyage to Pensacola, that Ramez,
the consignee, was the agent of the ship-owner, and that the
present cargo was purchased with the freight and cargo to Bordeaux,
I am now satisfied that they are unsupported by the
Page 16 U. S. 419
evidence. That Pritchard should continue to be designated by the
appellation of supercargo among the crew was to be expected from
his having been known among them by that epithet on the voyage to
Bordeaux, and that Ramez, who had been recommended to Salkeld
Barclay & Co. for his integrity by their agent, should be by
them, or by some other, recommended to the patronage of Foussat was
perfectly consistent with ordinary mercantile intercourse, and in
the total absence of proof that the freight or proceeds of the
outward cargo of the ship ever came to the hands of Foussat, there
is no sufficient reason for conjecturing that the cargo laden on
board for Pensacola was purchased with those funds.
I am therefore of opinion that the proprietary interest is
sufficiently established. But as the proprietary interest is
altogether immaterial if lading a neutral cargo on board an armed
belligerent is
per se a ground of condemnation, it becomes
necessary to consider that question.
It has long been with me a rule of judicial proceeding never,
where I am free to act, to decide more in any case than what the
case itself necessarily requires, and so far only, in my view, can
a case be considered as authority. Accordingly, when the case of
the
Nereide was before this Court, I declined expressing
my opinion upon the general question because the cargo, considered
as Spanish property, was exposed to capture by the Carthagenian and
other privateers and considered as belonging to a revolted colony,
was liable to Spanish capture. The neutral shipper therefore could
not be charged with
Page 16 U. S. 420
evading our belligerent rights or putting off his neutral
character when placing himself under the protection of an armed
belligerent when sailing, as that shipper was, between Scylla and
Charybdis, he might accept of the aid or protection of one
belligerent without giving just cause of offense to another.
But a case now occurs of a vessel at peace with all the world,
and to give an order for further proof without admitting the rule
that lading a neutral cargo on board an armed belligerent is not
per se a cause of forfeiture appears to me nugatory.
It is true this is not a case of a commissioned or cruising
vessel, and I have no objection to reserving the question on such a
case until it shall occur if it can be done consistently with the
principles upon which I found my opinion; but in my view, there is
no medium, and no necessity for a belligerent to insist on any
exception in his favor. On the contrary, I consider all the evils
as visionary that are dwelt upon as the result of thus extending
this right in favor of neutrals. No nation can be powerful on the
ocean that does not possess an extensive commerce, and if her armed
ships are to be converted into carriers (almost, I would say, an
absurd supposition), her own commerce would have the preference, so
that the injury could never be of any real extent. But should it be
otherwise, what state of things ought one belligerent more devoutly
to desire than that the whole military marine of her enemy should
be so employed and bound down to designated voyages from which they
were not at liberty to deviate? It would be curious to see a
government thus involving
Page 16 U. S. 421
itself with merchant shippers in questions of affreightment,
assurance, deviation, average, and so forth; the possibility may be
imagined, but the reality will never exist.
The general rule in this case, it will be observed, is
controverted by no one; nor is it denied that it is incumbent on
the captor to maintain the exception contended for. It is for him
to prove that the acknowledged right of the neutral to employ a
belligerent carrier does not include the right of employing an
armed belligerent carrier.
In order to support this proposition, arguments are usually
adduced from the silence of writers upon the subject, from
decisions in analogous cases, and from its general inconsistency
with the belligerent right of search or adjudication.
If it be asked why have writers, and particularly the champions
of neutral rights, been silent on this subject, I think the answer
obvious. Practically it is of very little general importance either
to neutrals or belligerents, and those who are more disposed to
favor belligerent claims would naturally avoid a doctrine which
they could not maintain, whilst all who wrote for the benefit of
those who are to read would avoid swelling their volumes with
unnecessary discussions or raising phantoms for the amusement of
laying them. The silence of the world upon the subject is, to my
mind, a sufficient evidence that public sentiment is against it. It
is impossible, but that in the course of the long and active naval
wars of the last two centuries, cases must have occurred in which
it became necessary to consider this
Page 16 U. S. 422
question, and though it had escaped the notice of jurists, it
must have been elicited by the avarice of captors, the ingenuity of
proctors, or the learned researches of courts of prize. Yet we find
not one case on record of a condemnation as prize of war on the
ground of argument, nor a
dictum in any of the books that
suggests such an exception. But the rule itself is laid down
everywhere, and in my view, laying down the rule without the
exception is in effect a negative to the exception.
But it is not true that this subject has altogether escaped the
notice of writers on the law of prize. There is on record one
opinion on this subject, and that of great antiquity and
respectability, and which may have given the tone to public
opinion, and thus account for the silence of subsequent writers. I
allude to the
dictum, extracted from Casaregis, in which
the author asserts
"that if a vessel laden with neutral merchandise attack another
vessel and be captured, her cargo shall not be made prize unless
the owner of the goods or his supercargo engages in the
conflict."
Now if an actual attack shall not subject to forfeiture, much
less shall arming for defense, and it is fairly inferrable from the
passage that the author had in his view the case of an armed
belligerent carrier, or he would not have represented her as the
attacking vessel.
But it is contended that decisions have taken place in the
courts of other states in analogous cases which cannot be
reconciled with the principle on which the claimant rests his
defense. On this subject I will make one general remark I
acknowledge
Page 16 U. S. 423
no decision as authority in this Court but the decisions of the
Court as far as necessary to the case decided, and the decisions of
the state courts as far as they go to fix the landmarks of
property, and, generally, the
lea loci of the respective
states. All other decisions I will respect for as much as they are
worth in principle.
The decisions relied on in this part of the argument are those
by which neutral vessels under neutral convoy were condemned for
the unneutral act of the convoying vessel and those in which
neutral vessels have been condemned for placing themselves under
protection of a hostile convoy. With regard to the first class of
cases, it is very well known that they originated in the capture of
the Swedish convoy at a time when Great Britain had resolved to
throw down the glove to all the world on the principle of the
northern confederacy. It was therefore a measure essentially
hostile. But independently of this there are several considerations
which present an obvious distinction between both classes of cases
and this under consideration. A convoy is an association for a
hostile object. In undertaking it, a nation spreads over the
merchant vessel an immunity from search which belongs only to a
national ship, and by joining a convoy, every individual ship puts
off her pacific character and undertakes for the discharge of
duties which belong only to the military marine, and adds to the
numerical, if not to the real, strength of the convoy. If, then,
the association be voluntary, the neutral, in suffering the fate of
the whole, has only to regret his own folly in wedding
Page 16 U. S. 424
his fortune to theirs, or if involved in the aggression or
opposition of the convoying vessel, he shares the fate which the
leader of his own choice either was or would have been made liable
to in case of capture. To elucidate this idea, let us suppose the
case of an individual who voluntarily fills up the ranks of an
enemy or of one who only enters upon the discharge of those duties
in war which would otherwise take men from the ranks, and the
reason will be obvious why he should be treated as a prisoner of
war and involved in the fate of a conquered enemy. But it is not so
with the goods which constitute the lading of a ship -- those give
neither real nor numerical strength to an enemy, but rather
embarrass and impede him. And even if it be admitted that in all
cases a cargo should be tainted with the offense of the carrying
vessel, it will be seen that the reason upon which those eases
profess to proceed is not applicable to the case of neutral goods
on board of a hostile carrier. Resistance, either real or
constructive, by a neutral carrier is, with a view to the law of
nations, unlawful, but not so with the hostile carrier -- she had a
right to resist, and in her case, therefore, there is no offense
committed to communicate a taint to her cargo.
But it is contended that the right to use a hostile armed
carrier is inconsistent with the belligerent's right of search or
of capture or of adjudication, for on this point the argument is
not very distinct, though I plainly perceive it must be the right
of adjudication, if any, that is impaired. The right of capture
applies only to enemy ships or goods, the right of search to
Page 16 U. S. 425
enemy goods on board a neutral carrier, and therefore it must be
the right of adjudication that is supposed to be impaired, which
applies to the case of goods found either on board of a neutral or
belligerent, and this mere
scintilla juris is at last the
real basis upon which the exception contended for must rest. But in
what manner is this right of adjudication impaired? The neutral
does not deny the right of the belligerent to decide the question
of proprietary interest. If it be really neutral, of what
consequence is it to the belligerent who is the carrier? He has no
right to capture it, and if it be hostile covered as neutral, the
belligerent is only compelled to do that which he must do in all
ordinary cases -- subdue the ship before he gets the cargo. It
cannot be expected that the belligerent will rest his complaint
upon the humiliating ground of his inability to subdue his enemy,
and if he should, the neutral may well reply it is his affair or
his misfortune, but ought not in any of its consequences to affect
the rights of the neutral. Nor is it at all certain that lading on
board an enemy carrier is done at all times with an intent to avoid
capture; it may be to solicit it, as in the case of the late war,
when British goods, though neutral owned, could only be brought
into our market through the medium of capture. There, instead of
capture's being a risk of the voyage, it was one of the chances of
profit. And the hostile carrier may have been preferred to the
neutral, with the express view of increasing the chance of
capture.
When we come to analyze, and apply the arguments
Page 16 U. S. 426
of the defenders of this exception, I think it will be found
that they expose themselves to the imputation of unfairness in
professing to sustain an exception when they mean to aim a blow at
the whole neutral right of using a belligerent carrier, or they do
not follow up their reasoning in its consequences, so as to be
sensible of the result to which it leads. The exception which
exhausts the principal rule must be incorrect if the rule itself be
admitted as a correct one; it is, in fact, an adverse proposition,
and it appears to demonstrate that all the arguments urged in favor
of the exception now under consideration, if they prove anything,
prove too much and obviously extend to the utter extinction of the
rule itself or the destruction of every beneficial consequence that
the neutral can derive from it. Thus, if it be unlawful to employ
an armed belligerent carrier, then what proportion of armament or
equipment will render it unlawful? Between one gun and one hundred,
the difference is only in degree, not in principle, and if it is
left to the courts of the belligerent to apply the exception to
successive cases as they arise, it evidently becomes a destroying
principle which will soon consume the vitals of the rule. And the
neutral will soon consider it as a snare, not a privilege.
Again, the proposition is that the neutral may employ a hostile
carrier, but the indispensable attributes of a state of hostility
are the light of armament, of defense, of attack, and of capture;
if then you strip the belligerent of any one or more of these
characteristics, the proposition is falsified, for he can no
longer
Page 16 U. S. 427
be called a hostile carrier; he assumes an amphibious anomalous
character for which there is no epithet applicable unless it be
that of semi-hostile. And what becomes of the interest of the
neutral? It is mockery to hold out to him the right of employing a
hostile carrier when you attach to the exercise of that right
consequences which would make it absurd for a belligerent to enter
into a charter party with him. If resistance, arming, convoying,
capturing be the acknowledged attributes and characteristics of the
belligerent, then deprive him of these attributes and you reduce
him to a state of neutrality -- nay worse than a state of
neutrality, for he continues liable to all the danger incident to
the hostile character without any of the rights which that
character confers upon him. What belligerent could ever be induced
to engage in the transportation of neutral goods if the consequence
of such an undertaking be that he puts off his own character and
assumes that of the neutral, relinquishes his right of arming or
resisting without acquiring the immunities or protection of the
neutral character. It is holding out but a shadow of a benefit to
the neutral.
Some confusion is thrown over this subject by not discriminating
carefully between the cases where a neutral shipper and a hostile
carrier are the parties to the contract and those in which both
shipper and carrier are hostile. In the latter case the carrier,
when armed, may fairly be understood to have undertaken to fight as
well as to carry. But when a neutral is the shipper, the carrier
(independently of specific contract) is left to fight or not as he
shall deem proper.
Page 16 U. S. 428
Thus, if a neutral shipper charter an unarmed belligerent, he
would not be released from his contract should the belligerent put
arms or men into his ship, otherwise taking ordinary and prudent
precaution for the safety of his vessel -- precautions which would
in general lessen the insurance on the cargo itself -- would be a
violation of the master's contract. And on the other hand, a
belligerent master would be under no obligation to the neutral to
fight if met by an enemy on the ocean, even though particularly
required by the neutral shipper. There is then nothing in that
argument which is founded on the supposition that the neutral is
assisting in expediting a naval hostile equipment when he employs a
belligerent carrier; on the contrary, he either embarrasses the
belligerent in or detaches him from the operations of war.
It makes no difference in my view, whether the right of using a
hostile carrier be considered as a voluntary concession in behalf
of neutrals or as a conclusion from those principles which form the
basis of international law. We find it emanating from the same
source as the right of search and adjudication, and it is of equal
authority. If in practice it should ever be found materially
detrimental to acknowledged national rights, it may be disavowed or
relinquished; or should our own legislative power ever think proper
to declare against the right, it can impose the law upon its own
courts. But until it shall be so relinquished or abrogated, we are
bound to apply it with all the beneficial consequences that it was
intended to produce.
I do not, however, consider it as a mere voluntary
Page 16 U. S. 429
concession in favor of neutral commerce. Were it now, for the
first time, made a question whether a neutral should be permitted
to use a hostile carrier, I should not hesitate to decide that it
would be exceedingly harsh and unreasonable to deny to the neutral
the exercise of such a right. The laws of war and of power already
possesses sufficient advantages over the claims of the weak, the
wise, and pacific. I am in sentiment opposed to the extension of
belligerent rights. Naval warfare, as sanctioned by the practice of
the world, I consider as the disgrace of modern civilization. Why
should private plunder degrade the privileges of a naval
commission? It is ridiculous at this day to dignify the practice
with the epithet of reprisal. If it be reprisal, we may claim all
the benefit of the example of the savages in our forests, to whom
the practice is familiarly known, but we must yield to them in the
reasonableness of its application, for they really do apply the
thing taken, to indemnify the party injured. The time was when war
by land and by sea was carried on upon the same principles. The
good sense of mankind has lessened its horrors on land, and it is
scarcely possible to find any sufficient reason why an analogous
reformation should not take place upon the ocean. The present time
is the most favorable that has ever occurred for effecting this
desirable change. There is a power organized upon the continent of
Europe that may command the gratitude and veneration of posterity
by determining on this reformation. It must take effect when they
resolve to enforce it.
Page 16 U. S. 430
We find the law of nations unfortunately embarrassed with the
principle that it is lawful to impose a direct restraint upon the
industry and enterprise of a neutral in order to produce an
incidental embarrassment to an enemy. In its original restricted
application, this principle was of undoubted correctness, and did
little injury; but in the modern extended use which has been made
of it we see an exemplification of the difficulty of restraining a
belligerent in the application of a convenient principle, and an
apposite illustration of one of the objections to admitting the
exception unfavorable to the use of an armed hostile carrier. But
surely there must be some limit to the exercise of this right by a
belligerent. And it is incumbent upon him to show that the
restraint imposed upon the neutral is indispensable to the exercise
of his own acknowledged right or the punishment inflicted on him to
be justly due to the violation of his neutral obligations. Now what
violation of belligerent right or neutral obligation can result
from the employment of a hostile carrier? If employed to break a
blockade, carry goods that are contraband of war, or engaged in
other illicit trade, the goods are liable to condemnation on
principles having no relation to this case. But if employee in
lawful commerce, where is the injury done to the belligerent? There
is no partiality exhibited on the part of the neutral, for the
belligerents are necessarily excluded from each others' ports, and
cannot be employed except each in the commerce of his own country,
and so far from violating any belligerent right, the neutral
Page 16 U. S. 431
tempts the ship of the enemy from a place of safety to expose
her to hostile capture, or detaches her from warlike operations and
engages her in pursuits less detrimental to the interest of her
enemy than cruising or fighting. To the neutral the right of
employing a hostile carrier may be of vital importance. The port of
the enemy may be his granary; he may have no ships of his own, no
other carrier may be found there; no other permitted to be thus
employed, or no other serve him as faithfully or on as good terms.
So also, with regard to the produce of his own industry, his only
market may be in the port of one of the belligerents and his only
means of access to it through the use of the carriers of that
port.
A case has been referred to in the argument -- the case of
The Fanny, in Dodson's Reports, in which the Court of
Admiralty in England granted salvage upon goods shipped on board an
armed enemy carrier captured by an American Privateer and
recaptured by the British. The ground on which the court professes
to proceed, according to the report, is that these goods were in
danger of being condemned in our courts on the ground that the
shipper had quit the protection of his neutrality and resorted to
the protection of arms.
Had the question decided in that case been one of forfeiture,
and not of salvage, that decision would have been in point. But
even then I should have claimed the privilege exercised by the
learned judge who presides in that court with so much usefulness to
his country, and honor to himself, of founding my own
Page 16 U. S. 432
opinions upon my own researches and resources. Should a similar
case ever again occur in that court, and the decisions of this
Court have passed the Atlantic, that learned judge will be called
on to acknowledge that the danger of condemnation was not as great
as he had imagined, and that independent of the question agitated
in this case, this Court would have had respect to the embarrassing
state of warfare in which the people of Buenos Ayres were involved,
and adjudged that the precautions for defense were intended against
their enemies rather than their friends. With regard to the award
of salvage, it is well known that the grant of salvage upon the
recaption of a neutral was the favorite offspring of that judge's
administration; until then, no contribution had been levied upon
neutral commerce to give activity to hostile enterprise. When a
question of salvage on such a recapture shall occur in this Court,
those adjudications will come under review, but this case cannot be
considered in point until this Court is called on to decide whether
the British example shall prevail, or the obvious dictate of reason
that the neutral should be liberated and permitted to pursue his
voyage, or at least to decide for himself in which of the
belligerent courts his rights will be most secure.
Upon the whole, I am fully satisfied that the decision in the
case of the
Nereide was founded in the most correct
principles, and recognize the rule that lading on board an armed
belligerent is not
per se a cause of forfeiture as not
only the most correct
Page 16 U. S. 433
on principle, but the most liberal and honorable to the
jurisprudence of this country.
Further proof ordered.