While the right of the citizen to demand condemnation of vessels
or property as prize for his benefit must be derived from acts of
Congress, and their scope is not to be enlarged in his favor by
construction, where there is no controversy in respect to the
existence of the grant, a more liberal construction may be applied
in carrying the intention of Congress into effect.
1. Vessels lying on the bottom in shallow water in such
condition, as the result of a naval engagement, that they cannot be
floated by any of the means possessed by the naval force overcoming
them, but which are afterwards, by the independent means of the
government, raised and repaired and appropriated to its own use,
are not to be regarded as sunk or destroyed within the meaning of
sec. 4635, Rev.Stat., but they may be regarded as within the
provisions of secs. 4624 and 4625, and their money value may stand
in place of prize and be so adjudicated.
2. The legal status of property taken from vessels in such
condition must be regarded as the same as the vessel to which it
belongs.
3. Naval stores -- public enemy property -- designed for hostile
uses, stored on the sea shore in an establishment for facilitating
naval warfare, when taken by a naval force, as a result of a naval
engagement, can be adjudged as prize for the benefit of the
captors.
As the right of the government of the capturing naval force is
supreme, it may, when in its judgment the public interest demands
it, restore a prize, and the courts cannot proceed to condemnation
as to captured property restored under a treaty of peace before
decree.
The strength of the capturing naval force under Admiral Dewey's
command at Manila was superior to that of the Spanish fleet on May
1, 1898.
4. Cascoes, or native boats, and certain floating derricks,
property of private persons in the Philippine Islands, were rightly
held by the district court not to be subject to condemnation as
prize.
5. Vessels performing the functions of colliers and not in a
condition to render effective aid, if required, during a naval
engagement, and the masters and crews thereof who have been
shipped, but who are not commissioned or enlisted men in the United
States Navy, are not entitled to participate in prize money or
bounty resulting from the capture and destruction of the enemy's
vessels.
Page 188 U. S. 255
These are appeals taken from a decree of the Supreme Court of
the District of Columbia, sitting as a district court of the United
States in admiralty, in a suit in prize brought by Admiral Dewey in
behalf of himself and the officers and crew of the naval forces on
the Asiatic station, taking part in the battle of Manila bay.
May 1, 1898, Admiral Dewey, being then a Commodore in the United
States Navy, with a fleet under his command, engaged a Spanish
fleet consisting of the
Regina Cristina, Castilla, Don Juan de
Austria, Don Antonio de Ulloa, General Lezo, Marques del Duero,
Argos, Velasco, Isla de Cuba, Isla de Luzon, Isla de Mindanao,
Manila, and two torpedo boats, supported by shore batteries,
submarine mines, and torpedoes. At the close of the battle, all
these vessels were confessedly destroyed except the
Manila, which was captured, and the
Don Juan de
Austria, Isla de Cuba, and
Isla de Luzon, in respect
of which the facts were these: under the severe fire of the
American fleet, they steamed to a position of greater safety, and,
after the battle, backed ashore, and when in shallow water their
sea valves were opened and they settled on the bottom. They, and
other armed vessels, were afterwards set on fire by a detachment
from the United States fleet, in obedience to a signal from the
flagship when the firing ceased. All captured vessels not destroyed
were appraised and appropriated to the use of the United States,
except one or more private vessels, which were restored to their
owners, and not including the
Don Juan de Austria, the
Isla de Cuba, and the
Isla de Luzon.
May 3, 1898, Commodore Dewey took possession of the Cavite
arsenal, containing a large quantity of naval stores and supplies,
and some boats, and he also took possession of certain land
batteries. Some of the property taken at the arsenal, besides that
taken from the sunken vessels, was included in the
appraisement.
The protocol between the United States and Spain, signed August
12, 1898, provided as follows:
"The United States will occupy and hold the city, bay, and
harbor of Manila, pending the conclusion of a treaty of peace,
which shall determine the control, disposition, and government of
the Philippines. . . .
Page 188 U. S. 256
Upon the conclusion and signing of this protocol, hostilities
between the two countries shall be suspended."
About the first of September, 1898, an examination was made of
the
Don Juan de Austria, the
Isla de Cuba, and
the
Isla de Luzon, and the commander-in-chief advertised
for bids for raising, repairing, and fitting them out. In October,
he contracted, on behalf of the United States, with a dock company
to effect this purpose. The work of raising the vessels was begun
on October 29 and finished on November 24. They were then
overhauled sufficiently to enable them to proceed to Hong Kong,
where they were reconstructed and refitted for use in the United
States Navy, of which they became a part.
Full report was made to the Navy Department in July, 1899, of
the condition of each of these vessels, upon being raised, and of
the progress of reconstruction, including estimates of the value of
the vessels when completed, exclusive of armament, and of the cost
of raising, fitting out, and repairing them. And an appraisement
was made in that department of the three vessels when completed,
giving the value, and the cost of repairs, from which it also
appears that they were first commissioned in the United States Navy
in 1900.
Some of the other sunken vessels might probably have been raised
to advantage, but no attempt was made to do so, though a small
amount of property was taken from them for government use. They
were all advertised for sale in September, 1898, but no bids were
received.
Shortly after the battle, the commander-in-chief took possession
for government use of some cascoes or cargo boats, and two floating
derricks belonging to private parties.
The treaty of peace between the United States and Spain
provided:
"Stands of colozs, uncaptured war vessels, small, arms, guns of
all calibers, with their carriages and accessories, powder,
ammunition, livestock, and materials and supplies of all kinds,
belonging to the land and naval forces of Spain in the Philippines
and Guam, remain the property of Spain."
By virtue of this provision, so much of the public property
captured at the Cavite arsenal, and elsewhere on land, remaining
unused at the date of the exchange of ratifications, was
subsequently restored to Spain.
Page 188 U. S. 257
Actions were instituted for bounty under section 4635 of the
Revised Statutes, on account of all the vessels other than the
Don Juan de Austria, the
Isla de Cuba, the
Isla de Luzon, and those enumerated in the appraisement,
and bounty has been granted under that section for the destruction
of those vessels.
Dewey v. United States, 35 Ct.Cl. 172;
S.C., 178 U. S. 178 U.S.
510.
July 20, 1899, this libel was filed against the
Don Juan de
Austria, the
Isla de Cuba, the
Isla de
Luzon, all the property taken from them and from the sunken
vessels, all the vessels and other property taken afloat, and all
the property captured ashore.
The United States filed an answer denying that the
Don Juan
de Austria, the
Isla de Cuba, and the
Isla de
Luzon, the property captured on board of them, the property
captured on land, and the cargo boats were subject to condemnation
as prize. March 26, 1901, an intervening libel was filed by Edwin
F. Stovell, on behalf of himself and the officers and crew of the
Nanshan, to which an answer was filed by libellant. The
case having been heard, a decree of condemnation and distribution
was made November 5, 1901, which adjudged the
Isla de
Cuba, the
Isla de Luzon, and the
Don Juan de
Austria, and the
Manila and all other captured
vessels named in the appraisement, except such as might have been
returned to private owners, and all property captured upon or
belonging to any of these vessels, or any vessels sunk or destroyed
on May 1, 1898, to be lawful prize of war. All property captured
ashore and all nonseagoing craft belonging to the arsenal, as well
as all cascoes and the floating derricks, not belonging to the King
of Spain, were held not to be prize, and as to such property the
libel was dismissed. The
Nanshan, and the
Zafiro,
a vessel in the same situation, were held not entitled to share in
any of the prize property, and the hostile fleet was held to have
been of inferior force to the vessels making the capture. An appeal
was taken by the United States, a cross-appeal by libellant, and an
appeal by the intervener.
Errors were assigned:
By the United States, that the district court erred in holding
(1) that the vessels of war raised and reconstructed for the
Page 188 U. S. 258
Navy, with guns, munitions, equipment, stores, and other
articles found upon them, were lawful prize of war for the benefit
of the captors; (2) as also guns, munitions, equipment, stores, and
other articles on board the Spanish vessels of war sunk or
otherwise destroyed, and not restored.
By libellant, that the district court erred in holding (1) that
the property captured at the naval station at Cavite was not lawful
prize; (2) that the cascoes were not lawful prize.
By the intervener, in holding that the
Nanshan (and
with her the
Zafiro) was not entitled to share in the
prize property.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Captures in war inure to the government, and can become private
property only by its grant. The right of the citizen to demand
condemnation of vessels or property as prize for his benefit must
be derived from acts of Congress, and their scope is not to be
enlarged in his favor by construction.
The
Siren, 13 Wall. 389. Although, in matters of
detail, where there is no controversy in respect of the existence
of the grant, a more liberal construction may be applied in
carrying the intention of Congress into effect.
The correctness of the decree so far as it related to Spanish
seagoing vessels with their equipment and the property found
Page 188 U. S. 259
on board of them, captured at the battle or soon afterward, and
not restored to their owners, is conceded.
1. The first question to be determined is whether the
Don
Juan de Austria, the
Isla de Cuba, and the
Isla
de Luzon were properly adjudicated as prize for the benefit of
captors, in view of their condition immediately after the
engagement, and their being subsequently raised, reconstructed, and
commissioned in the Navy.
In the consideration of that question, we assume that "capture"
and "prize" are not convertible terms, and that, for the subject of
capture to be made prize for the benefit of the captors, the taking
must meet the conditions imposed by the statutes.
The statutory provisions bearing on the case are to be found in
Title LIV of the Revised Statutes, entitled Prize, embracing
sections 4613 to 4652, inclusive, some of which are given below,
together with certain of the "Instructions to Blockading Vessels
and Cruisers," issued by General Order, June 20, 1898.
*
Page 188 U. S. 260
Ordinarily, the property must be brought in for adjudication, as
the question is one of title, which does not vest until
condemnation, but it will be seen that, by section 4615, if the
captured vessel, or any part of the captured property, is not in
condition to be sent in for adjudication, a survey and appraisement
shall be had, the property sold, and the proceeds deposited subject
to the order of the court, and by sections 4624 and 4625, captured
vessels and property may be appropriated to the use of the United
States, and the money value stand in place of the prize. And
proceedings may be had where property which might have been brought
in has been entirely lost or destroyed. Adjudication is
contemplated in all cases.
By section 4635, a bounty is given for each person on board a
vessel of the enemy which is "sunk or otherwise destroyed" in an
engagement, of $100 if the hostile fleet is of inferior, and of
$200 if of equal or superior, force, and $50 for every person on
board at the time of such capture, where the vessels
Page 188 U. S. 261
taken are immediately destroyed in the public interest, but not
in consequence of injuries received in action.
This bounty is to be divided in the same manner as prize money,
and the prize money in the one case and the bounty in the other
cover the entire results of success.
We agree with counsel for libellant that the words "sunk or
otherwise destroyed" are equivalent to "destroyed by sinking or
otherwise." There are two general classes, then, under the statute
-- vessels destroyed, and vessels captured and condemned, or
appropriated.
The facts before us are somewhat peculiar, and serve to
illustrate the variant circumstances that may occur in naval
engagements, and create modifications of the general
classification. These vessels were run ashore and sunk by their own
commanders, with the result that they were only temporarily
disabled, and the commanding officer of our fleet, in the public
interest, as the engagement closed, directed their destruction to
be completed
Page 188 U. S. 262
by burning. In the report of the action, dated May 4, 1898, they
were included among the vessels reported as burnt, but they were
not included in the appraisement made by the board of appraisal and
survey ordered in accordance with section 4624, and following, of
the Revised Statutes, to survey, appraise, and take a careful
inventory of "enemy's property captured and appropriated for the
uses of the United States government." After hostilities were
suspended an examination of the wrecks of the
Don Juan de
Austria, the
Isla de Cuba, and the
Isla de
Luzon was made, and subsequently the vessels were raised,
under a contract entered into by the commander-in-chief for the
government, and reconstructed. If the vessels had not been raised
and saved, they would have remained abandoned as destroyed; but, as
they were saved and appropriated by the government, they cannot be
said in fact to fall within that category. We attach no importance
to the official reports referring to the vessels as destroyed,
which was true in the
Page 188 U. S. 263
sense in which the word was then used, for the question really
is, whether, when salvage had been effected, the government can
maintain that the captors did not take them, but that they were
destroyed so that they could not be treated as prize.
The position of the government is that, as these vessels were
sunk and destroyed to such an extent that libellant's naval force
was powerless to salve them by its own resources, their subsequent
reconstruction and appropriation by the government had no effect on
their legal status, which had been determined immediately after the
battle.
It is insisted that, if not prize then, they could not be prize
afterwards, and yet it is not denied that, when the question of
title is settled by decree, it takes effect by relation as of the
date of the capture. And because this is so, the fact that
hostilities had ceased before the vessels were raised becomes
immaterial.
The contention is that, if a vessel lies on the bottom in
shallow water, but in such a condition that she cannot be
floated
Page 188 U. S. 264
by any of the means ordinarily possessed by a naval force, such
vessel must be regarded as "sunk" within the meaning of the
statute, even though she has received no structural injury; or if a
vessel, though not sunk, be so structurally injured as to destroy
her power of floating, and she cannot be repaired by any means
possessed by the naval forces in the place where she lies, such
vessel must be regarded as structurally "destroyed" within the
meaning of the statute.
And it is said that a close analogy is furnished by the cases of
constructive total loss of a vessel, such as justifies an
abandonment to the underwriters. Nevertheless, counsel argues that
there are differences between those cases and cases under section
4635. Thus, while it is admitted that, in the former, the owner
need not abandon unless he see fit to do so, the right of election
on the part of captors as to whether the vessel should be treated
as destroyed or as a prize is denied in the latter, and another
difference suggested is that the owner of a submerged or stranded
vessel could contract with a third party to
Page 188 U. S. 265
raise it, while captors cannot. We think, however, that the
alleged differences destroy the analogy altogether, or rather that
its application, when correctly stated, leads to the opposite
result. Abandonment rests on the election of the parties, and there
was here neither a right of abandonment nor any acts from which
abandonment on the one side and acceptance on the other could be
fairly inferred.
The public interest required the United States and the captors
to preserve the property, if that were possible, and it would be an
anomalous conclusion to hold
in invitum that the United
States could pay bounty for these vessels as destroyed and at the
same time retain and use them.
The vessels were not derelict, abandoned without hope of
recovery, but, on the contrary, their preservation was recommended,
and, in the circumstances, Commodore Dewey, having duly taken the
steps prescribed by the statute in respect of vessels confessedly
captured, was not obliged to determine at once at his peril into
which class these particular vessels fell, and to literally comply
with section 4615, in regard to captured property "not in condition
to be sent in for adjudication."
War is not waged for predatory purposes, but Congress chose to
grant reward for success, and in doing so cannot be assumed to have
intended that such reward should be subjected to the restrictions
of close bargains. The intention was that either prize money or
bounty should be paid. Of course, by capture without destruction
the government might obtain distinct acquisitions, and the captors
would be recompensed at the expense of the enemy.
Circumstances have frequently occurred in which the public
interest has required the destruction of vessels capable in
themselves of being brought in -- as, for example at the battle of
the Nile, when Nelson was obliged to burn prizes in order to avoid
the delay in refitting them and the loss of the service of other
ships to convoy them to Gibraltar; but there, his government could
not assist him or take the captured vessels off his hands.
Section 4635 provided that bounty should be paid in all cases
where an enemy vessel of war was sunk or otherwise destroyed,
either in an engagement, or in consequence of injuries received
Page 188 U. S. 266
in action, or after capture when the destruction was for the
public interest; but the statute does not demand the construction
that every vessel must be considered as destroyed, which, though
susceptible of salvage and saved, could not have been and was not
saved by the unaided resources of the capturing force.
It is true that, when the government succeeded in raising and
restoring the vessels, it saved them for itself, but it may
reasonably be held that this was subject by relation to the right
of the captors to an adjudication giving them, after the costs and
expenses were deducted, a share in the residue of value.
If the effort at salvage had failed, or if the cost had equaled
or exceeded the value, the captors would still be entitled to
bounty, for it was not intended that the grant should be defeated
by laying them under a rigid rule of election. And, on the other
hand, these vessels were not "appropriated to the use of the United
States" by the mere effort of the government to raise them.
The act of raising was not the use contemplated by the statute.
Such use was dependent on the success of the effort at salvage. The
loss, which might have been total, became, on success, partial --
that is, confined to the extent of the expenditure, and the taking
possession to accomplish that result, became, by success,
appropriation to use.
The case of the
Albemarle is in point, although
apparently no opinion ruled the question in terms.
The
Albemarle was sunk by Lieutenant Cushing on the
night of October 27, 1864; was raised in March, 1865; reached
Norfolk, April 27, 1865, and was appropriated to the use of the
United States. She was appraised by a duly appointed board of naval
officers, and the value found was deposited by the Secretary of the
Navy with the Assistant Treasurer of the United States at
Washington. Proceedings to condemn the
Albemarle as prize
were instituted in the District Court of the United States for the
District of Columbia, and went to a decree of condemnation. The
case was not reported, but the proceedings will be found in
Swan v. United States, 19 Ct.Cl. 51, in the course of
subsequent litigation, as also in
United States v.
Steever, 113 U. S. 747. No
appeal was taken, and the conclusion that a
Page 188 U. S. 267
vessel thus situated could be decreed to be prize was accepted
by all the departments. We perceive no adequate reason to depart
from that precedent.
2. As to the property taken from the vessels raised and
reconstructed, and that taken from the vessels destroyed, we think
its legal status must be regarded as the same as that of the vessel
to which it belonged.
By section 4613, it is declared that the provisions of Title LIV
shall apply to "all captures made as prize by authority of the
United States or adopted and ratified by the President of the
United States."
The taking must be under such conditions as make the subject of
the capture prize, and the sections preceding section 4635
recognize that property other than vessels may be prize, using the
words "ship and cargo," "vessel, arms, munitions, or other
material," "captured property," "prize property." But section 4635
refers to the destruction of "a ship or vessel of war," which could
not be "sunk or otherwise destroyed" under that section, and be
"prize" under the preceding sections, and, as we have already said,
the grant of bounty, to be divided "in the same manner as prize
money," appears obviously to have been "intended as a substitute
for the prize itself," as ruled by Lowell, J., in
The
Selma, 1 Lowell 30, or as given in lieu of prize money, as
observed by Mr. Justice Field in
Porter v. United States,
106 U. S. 607.
No question of cargo is involved. Cargo is the lading of a ship
or vessel, and may be prize when the vessel is not, or the vessel
may be when the cargo is not. The inquiry here relates to things
belonging to the outfit of vessels of war, for whose capture prize
money is paid, and for whose destruction bounty is paid. The injury
to the enemy is the same in either case, but the reward cannot be
the same, as it is arbitrary in the one case, and not in the other,
and arrived at in accordance with the general rules prescribed as
required by the circumstances. The statute did not contemplate a
division of the grant and an award of prize money and bounty in
respect of the same transaction, unless, indeed, the capture
embraced distinct and separate properties.
Page 188 U. S. 268
What is included then by the term "a ship or vessel of war"
under section 4635? Whatever the toleration extended in courts of
admiralty to the use, in practice, of words apparently superfluous,
the word "ship" embraces her boats, tackle, apparel, and
appurtenances, because part of the ship as a going concern, and,
for the same reason, "ship or vessel of war" includes her armament,
search lights, stores -- everything, in short, attached to or on
board the ship in aid of her operations.
The first congressional legislation regulating prize was the Act
of March 2, 1799, 1 Stat. 715, c. 24, providing:
"SEC. 5.
And be it further enacted, That all captured
national ships or vessels of war shall be the property of the
United States, all other ships or vessels, being of superior force
to the vessel making the capture, in men or guns, shall be the sole
property of the captors, and all ships or vessels of inferior force
shall be divided equally between the United States and the officers
and men of the vessel making the capture."
"SEC. 6.
And be it further enacted, That the produce of
prizes taken by the ships of the United States, and bounty for
taking the ships of the enemy, be proportioned and distributed in
the manner following, to-wit:"
"[Then followed twelve subdivisions in respect of the
distribution of prize money.]"
"13. The bounty given by the United States on any national ship
of war, taken from the enemy and brought into port, shall be, for
every cannon mounted, carrying a ball of twenty-four pounds, or
upwards, two hundred dollars; for every cannon carrying a ball of
eighteen pounds, one hundred and fifty dollars; for every cannon
carrying a ball of twelve pounds, one hundred dollars, and for
every cannon carrying a ball of nine pounds, seventy-five dollars;
for every smaller cannon, fifty dollars, and for every officer and
man taken on board, forty dollars, which sums are to be divided
agreeably to the foregoing articles."
These sections admit of no other meaning than that the tackle,
sails, apparel, stores, guns, ammunition, and other appurtenances
of captured national vessels of war should be the property of the
United States, as well as the ships themselves, and so of ships or
vessels going to the captors.
Page 188 U. S. 269
And the acts of April 23, 1800, 2 Stat. 45, c. 33, July 17,
1862, 12 Stat. 600, c. 204, June 30, 1864, 13 Stat. 306, c. 174,
and the Revised Statutes, contain nothing inconsistent with that
view.
Parsons, in his work on Marine Insurance, says that "insurance
on the ship covers all that belongs to it, as hull, sails, rigging,
tackle, apparel, or furniture," and he quotes from Emerigon, c. 10,
§ 2, p. 234:
"The expression 'on the body' embraces, in its generality, as I
have just said, all that regards the ship. Such are the hull of the
vessel, its rigging and apparel, munitions of war, stores and
victualing, advances to the crew, and all that has been expended in
the fitting it out."
1 Marine Ins. 524.
And in his work on Shipping and Admiralty, vol. 1, p. 78, the
same author says:
"How much passes by the word 'ship,' or the phrase 'ship and her
appurtenances -- or apparel -- or furniture' -- or the like, cannot
be positively determined by any definition. Stowell and Abbott
agree that whatever is on board a ship for the objects of the
voyage and adventure in which she is engaged, belonging to the
owners, constitutes a part of the ship and her appurtenances,
within the meaning of the English statute of 53 Geo. 3, c.
159."
That was an act "to limit the responsibility of shipowners," and
provided that owners should not be liable "further than the value
of their own vessel, and the freight due or to grow due," and in
several clauses of the act the responsibility was referred to as
limited "to the value of the ship with all her appurtenances and
freight."
In
The Dundee, 1 Hagg. 109, the question arose whether
the value of certain fishing stores should be included. Lord
Stowell held that it should, and that the word "appurtenances"
distinguished between cargo, which was intended to be disposed of
at the foreign port, and having a merely transitory connection with
the ship, and those accompaniments that were indispensable
instruments, without which the ship could not perform its
functions. The owners declared in prohibition in the King's Bench,
Gale v. Laurie, 5 B. & C. 156, and Abbott, C.J.,
afterwards Lord Tenterden announced the same conclusion, and, among
other things, said:
"The fishing stores were not
Page 188 U. S. 270
carried on board the ship as merchandise, but for the
accomplishment of the objects of the voyage, and we think that
whatever is on board a ship for the object of the voyage and
adventure on which she is engaged, belonging to the owners,
constitutes a part of the ship and her appurtenances within the
meaning of this act, whether the object be warfare, the conveyance
of passengers or goods, or the fishery. This construction furnishes
a plain and intelligible general rule; whereas, if it should be
held that nothing is to be considered as part of the ship that is
not necessary for her navigation or motion on the water, a door
would be opened to many nice questions, and much discussion and
cavil."
In
The Witch Queen, 3 Sawy. 201, Judge Hoffman held
that, where a vessel was supplied with a diving bell, air pump, and
other apparatus for the accomplishment of the enterprise in which
she was about to engage, the lien of the materialmen extended to
all articles belonging to the owner, which, not being cargo, had
been placed on board for the objects and purposes of the voyage.
The decision proceeded on our eighth rule in admiralty, referring
to "suits
in rem against a ship, her tackle, sails,
apparel, furniture, boats, or other appurtenances;" and
The
Dundee, decided twenty years before the adoption of the rule,
was cited as showing the sense in which the term "appurtenances"
had been used.
To be sure, the words tackle, sails, apparel, boats,
appurtenances, are not used in Title LIV, but we think that such
minuteness was unnecessary, and that the words "ship or vessel of
war belonging to the enemy" are sufficiently comprehensive to
embrace not only everything essential to the ship's navigation, but
to the purposes of her existence.
Necessarily, there is nothing in the distinction attempted to be
drawn between the ship and her "appliances and outfit;" nor can we
concur in the view that the latter may be regarded as cargo in any
aspect.
It is said that the destroyed hostile vessel of war should be
held the subject of bounty, and property taken from her the subject
of prize money, because bounty alone would be an inadequate
reward.
Page 188 U. S. 271
This, even if true, would not justify us in attributing to the
statute a scope not permitted by its terms.
Section 4635 is couched in the same language as when enacted
July 17, 1862, after the battle between the
Monitor and
the
Merrimac had admonished us of the impending change in
the construction of vessels of war, yet the bounty provision was
reenacted in 1864, and incorporated into the Revised Statutes, and
while, in these days, the amount of bounty may seem inconsiderable
in comparison with the value of the vessel destroyed, we must take
the statute as we find it.
3. The battle of Manila was fought on the first day of May, and
on the third, the enemy's forces evacuated the Cavite arsenal,
which was taken possession of by a landing party. This naval
station contained a considerable amount of arms, munitions, and
material for the repairing, equipment, and fitting out of ships,
and some nonseagoing boats were in use there. The property was
appraised in due course; some of it was used in the Navy prior to
the exchange of ratifications of the treaty of peace, and the
remainder restored to Spain thereafter. The district court declined
to adjudicate this property to be prize, because captured on
land.
These were naval stores taken at a naval station, by a naval
force, as the result of a naval engagement, and the question is
whether the fact that they were taken from a navy yard instead of
from a vessel rendered the statute inapplicable.
Generally speaking, forts, cities, lands taken from the enemy
are called conquests; movables taken on land, booty; on the high
seas, prize. And the high seas include coast waters without the
boundaries of low water mark, though within bays or roadsteads --
waters on which a court of admiralty has jurisdiction.
United
States v. Ross, 1 Gall. 624.
Mr. Justice Story and Mr. Wheaton thought that the jurisdiction
in prize extended "as well to goods taken on land by a naval force,
or in consequence of the operations of a naval force, as to
property captured on the water." Wheaton on Captures 278; Pratt's
Story's Notes on Prize Courts 28; 2 Wheat.Appx. 1. Both these
learned authors cite English authorities, and among them the
leading case of
Lindo v. Rodney, 2 Douglas 613, note.
Page 188 U. S. 272
In that case, the property was captured on the Island of St.
Eustatius, and a writ of prohibition to restrain the prize court
was applied for. It was stated that the only question was "whether
the goods being taken on land, though in consequence of a surrender
to ships at sea, excludes the only prize jurisdiction known in this
kingdom." The question was answered in the negative in an elaborate
opinion, and the rule discharged. Lord Mansfield, among other
things, said:
"In short, every reason which created a prize court as to things
taken upon the high seas holds equally when they are thus taken at
land. The original cause of taking is here at sea. The force which
terrified the place into a surrender was at sea. If they had
resisted, the force to subdue would have been from the sea. Mr.
Piggott candidly said, it would be spinning very nicely to contend,
if the enemy left their ship, and got ashore with money, were
followed upon land, and stripped of their money, that this would
not be a sea capture. I agree with him, but I cannot distinguish
that case from this. Both takings are literally upon land. In both,
the prey is, as it were, killed at sea and taken upon land. Here,
the capture of the goods on land is the immediate consequence of
the surrender at discretion to a sea force. Would a sum paid by
capitulation upon land have made it a sea or a land prize?
Cui
bono, should all this subtlety be spun when the reason for a
jurisdiction to judge a capture at sea and such a capture at land
is exactly the same?"
This reasoning shows that, even though the general proposition
may have been stated somewhat broadly by Story and Wheaton,
circumstances may bring particular cases within it, and that mere
contact with land does not
ipso facto exclude jurisdiction
in prize.
In
The Siren, 13
Wall. 389,
80 U. S. 392,
Mr. Justice Swayne, speaking for the Court, said:
"While the American colonies were a part of the British Empire,
the English maritime law, including the law of prize, was the
maritime law of this country. From the close of the Revolution down
to this time, it has continued to be our law, so far as it is
adapted to the altered circumstances and condition of the country,
and has not been modified by the proper national authorities. "
Page 188 U. S. 273
It was there decided that a seagoing vessel captured by the Army
and Navy jointly was not subject of condemnation as prize, and that
only captures made by naval force alone were so subject. "Whenever
a claim is set up," said the Court, "its sanction by an act of
Congress must be shown. If no such act can be produced, the alleged
right does not exist."
Hence, captures are made as prize for the benefit of captors
when they come within the scope of our prize statutes, and not
otherwise.
In
The Emulous, 1 Gall. 563, 575, Mr. Justice Story
said:
"The admiralty therefore not only takes cognizance of all
captures made at sea, in creeks, havens, and rivers, but also of
all captures made on land where the same have been made by a naval
force, or by cooperation with a naval force. This exercise of
jurisdiction is settled by the most solemn adjudications."
The decree in
The Emulous was reversed in
Brown v. United
States, 8 Cranch 110, but that was on the ground of
the unlawfulness of the taking, and so referred to by Mr. Justice
Gray in
The Paquete Habana, 175
U. S. 711.
In
United States v. 269 1/2 Bales of Cotton, Woolworth
236, an officer of the Army embarked a battalion of cavalry on
vessels of the United States, and in the service of the government,
but not part of the naval force, and, proceeding by river and by
land, penetrated into a certain district of Mississippi then held
by the enemy, and by force of arms overpowered a body of hostile
troops and took from their possession 269 1/2 bales of cotton,
which were subsequently libelled. And Mr. Justice Miller, on
circuit, held that the cotton was captured by the Army, and not by
the Navy, and dismissed the libel. While Mr. Justice Miller there
remarked that the result of
Brown v. United States was
"that property on land is not, without the aid of the statute,
liable to capture and condemnation as prize of war," yet, after
considering many English cases at some length, and referring to
The Emulous and the case of
Six Hundred and Eighty
Pieces Merchandise, 2 Sprague 233, he said:
"In every one of the cases where the court has sustained its
jurisdiction in prize, it appears that the force making the
capture, or cooperating in the act, was the naval arm, or by its
presence and active assistance it
Page 188 U. S. 274
contributed immediately in effecting the capture; that it
operated from the sea; that the place captured was an island, town,
or fortress, itself established to resist naval attack, and to
support and succor naval expeditions, and accessible from the sea,
so that the attacking squadron could directly bring to bear upon it
the stress of its armament."
And, referring to property captured on land by land forces, he
added:
"However desirable it may be that, in a war between nations,
there should exist a tribunal similar to the prize court, to
administer the law of nations with reference to property captured
on land, we find no warrant for asserting that any such authority
exists in the admiralty courts of the United States, unless the
circumstances of the capture show some element of a force operating
from, or on, the water, which would bring it within the recognized
rules on that subject."
In the case of
Mrs. Alexander's
Cotton, 2 Wall. 404, a joint expedition of gunboats
under Rear Admiral Porter and a body of troops under Major General
Banks proceeded up the Red River, and, during its advance,
seventy-two bales of cotton, the private property of Mrs.
Alexander, were taken from her plantation, where they were stored
in a cotton gin house about a mile from the river, by a party from
one of the gunboats. The cotton was hauled by teams to the river
bank, sent to Cairo, libelled as prize of war in the District Court
for the Southern District of Illinois, May 18, 1864; claimed by
Mrs. Alexander; sold
pendente lite, and the proceeds
decreed to her. The United States appealed and asked the reversal
of the decree and the condemnation of the cotton as maritime prize.
This Court held that the capture was justified by legislation and
by public policy, but that the property was not maritime prize;
that there was no authority to condemn any property as prize for
the benefit of the captors except under the Act of July 17, 1862,
12 Stat. 600, c. 204, and that as the second section of that act
provided that "the proceeds of all ships and vessels, and the goods
taken on board of them, which shall be adjudged good prize," should
be the property of the captors, in whole or in part, property on
land was excluded from the category of prize for the benefit of
captors, and that this was decisive of the case
Page 188 U. S. 275
so far as claims of captors were concerned. The decree was
reversed and the cause remanded with directions to dismiss the
libel.
In that case, the capture was the result of a joint expedition;
the property was private property; unprotected and stored at a
distance from the river; valuable for domestic use, and so valuable
as to be of peculiar assistance to the enemy, but not in any sense
war material.
In the present case, the capture was made by naval force alone;
the property was public property, consisting of arms, munitions,
and naval material, in a naval station taken through the operations
of the fleet from the sea.
For the reasons indicated by Mr. Justice Miller, in harmony with
the observations of Lord Mansfield, the rulings in that case and in
The Siren are not controlling in this, and, moreover, the
terms of the applicable statute are not the same.
The sections constituting Title LIV of the Revised Statutes were
brought forward from the Act of June 30, 1864, 13 Stat. 306, c.
174.
Section 2 of the Act of July 17, 1862, referred to by Mr. Chief
Justice Chase in the case of
Mrs. Alexander's Cotton,
reads as follows:
"That the proceeds of all ships and vessels, and the goods taken
on board of them, which shall be adjudged good prize, shall, when
of equal or superior force to the vessel or vessels making the
capture, be the sole property of the captors, and when of inferior
force, shall be divided equally between the United States and the
officers and men making the capture."
This section was identical with section 5 of the Act of April
23, 1800, and was expressly repealed by section 35 of the Act of
June 30, 1864, while section 10 of the latter act, afterwards
section 4630 of the Revised Statutes, provided:
"That the net proceeds of all property condemned as prize shall,
when the prize was of superior or equal force to the vessel or
vessels making the capture, be decreed to the captors, and when of
inferior force, one-half shall be decreed to the United States and
the other half to the captors;"
and section 33:
"That the provisions of this act shall be applied to all
captures made as prize by authority of the United States, or
adopted and ratified
Page 188 U. S. 276
by the President of the United States,"
which was reenacted as section 4613 of the Revised Statutes.
The effect of this legislation was not to revive section 5 of
the act of 1800, as contended, nor to give jurisdiction in
admiralty in respect of property captured on land by land forces,
but, if the language of the act of 1862 confined the rights of
captors to the proceeds of ships and cargoes, it seems clear that
the language of the act of 1864, that the captors should be
entitled to "the net proceeds of all property condemned as prize,"
operated to so far remove the restriction as to permit the statute
to extend to other property fairly coming within accepted rules of
prize.
The district court thought the words inadequate to produce this
result, and carefully examined other sections of the act of 1864,
which referred to vessels and cargoes as the usual subjects of
prize. But we should remember that that statute, and Title LIV,
into which it was carried, embraced prize in general, and that
vessels and their cargoes most frequently constituted prize
property brought in for adjudication. So that in making provision
in that regard, Congress was obliged to use such terms as even to
give color to the argument that an enemy's vessels of war could not
be condemned at all for the benefit of captors, and that bounty was
their only reward, as was the case under the act of 1799. But it is
conceded that this is not so, and we think that these sections
ought not to be given the restrictive force attributed to them.
We are also unable to see that the significance of the change in
phraseology is lessened when considered with the other legislation
referred to.
The Act of March 12, 1863, 12 Stat. 820, c. 120, provided for
the collection of all abandoned or captured property in
insurrectionary districts, and
"that such property shall not include any kind or description
which has been used, or which was intended to be used, for waging
or carrying on war against the United States, such as arms,
ordnance, ships, steamboats, or other water craft, and the
furniture, forage, military supplies, or munitions of war."
Section 7 read: "That none of the provisions of this act shall
apply to any lawful maritime prize by
Page 188 U. S. 277
the naval forces of the United States." The property excepted
had been declared "lawful subject of prize and capture wherever
found," and it was made the duty of the President "to cause the
same to be seized, confiscated, and condemned," by the confiscation
Act of August 6, 1861, 12 Stat. 319, c. 60. This act referred to
property taken when used, or intended to be used, in waging war
against the United States, while the act of 1863 referred to
property not so used or intended to be.
By the second section of the Act of March 3, 1863, "further to
regulate proceedings in prize cases," 12 Stat. 759, c. 86, it was
provided that "any captured vessel, any arms or munitions of war or
other material" might be taken "for the use of the government," and
the value deposited in the Treasury of the United States, and for
prize proceedings. This act was expressly repealed by section 35 of
the Act of June 30, 1864, section 10 of which act, as already seen,
provided that the captors might share in the net proceeds of all
property condemned as prize.
Section 7 of the Act of July 2, 1864, 13 Stat. 377, c. 225,
reads:
"That no property seized or taken upon any of the inland waters
of the United States by the naval forces thereof shall be regarded
as maritime prize, but all property so seized or taken shall be
promptly delivered to the proper officers of the courts, or as
provided in this act and in the said act approved March, twelve,
eighteen hundred and sixty-three."
These various acts growing out of the civil war cannot be
regarded as having any important bearing on the Act of June 30,
1864, and Title LIV, insofar as the particular modification of the
act of 1862 is concerned.
And neither these acts, nor sections 5308 to 5311, in respect of
insurrection, and par. 9 of section 563 and par. 6 of section 629,
Revised Statutes, affect the result we have reached.
In our opinion, it would be spinning altogether too nicely to
hold that, because enemy property on land cannot be taken in prize
by land operations, public property designed for hostile uses, and
stored on the sea shore in an establishment for facilitating naval
warfare, might not be made prize, under the statute, when captured
by naval forces operating directly from the sea.
Page 188 U. S. 278
But while the property in question was, in general, susceptible
of condemnation in prize, it was nevertheless, taken subject to the
exercise of the power of restitution. The right of the government
is supreme, and when, in its judgment, the public interest demands
it, prizes may be restored, and the courts cannot proceed to
condemnation.
In
The Elsebe, 5 Rob. 155, Lord Stowell, then Sir
William Scott, decided that up to the period of final condemnation,
the Crown can, by virtue of its prerogative, restore a prize to the
enemy from whom it has been captured, and may take this step
without consulting the captors.
The principle is fully discussed and sustained by unanswerable
reasoning, and is not shaken by his subsequent observations in
The St. Ivan, Edw. 376, that
"captors bring in their prizes subject [in all cases] to such
interposition on the part of the Crown; but it is of very rare
occurrence, and speaking with all due reverence ought to be of rare
occurrence, and only under very special circumstances; as, for
instance, where the detention of the vessel may be detrimental to
the general interests of the country."
Until condemnation, captors acquire no absolute right of
property in a prize, though then the right attaches as of the time
of the capture, and it is for the government to determine when the
public interests require a different destination. In respect of
whatever was restored under the treaty with Spain, the government
must be regarded as absolved from liability.
It further follows from the views we entertain as justifying
condemnation of a portion of this property, that the capturing
naval force must be held to have been superior within the
contemplation of the statute, according to previous decision.
4. The libel was amended some months after it was filed, so as
to cover certain cascoes, or small native boats, and also two
floating derricks or wrecking boats, the property of private
citizens residing in the Philippine Islands. These cascoes appear
to have been large barges, propelled by sweeps and by poling, of
from thirty to sixty tons capacity, of the value of from $1,500 to
$1,800, Mexican, each, and used in discharging cargoes. The
wrecking boats were flat boats, the largest being forty feet long
and fifteen feet broad. They had no means of propulsion, were
Page 188 U. S. 279
not seagoing boats in any sense, and could only be used in
comparatively smooth water. All these boats may have been the
private property of Filipinos, but that is not clear.
It may well be doubted if these craft came within the words
"ship" or "vessel" as used in Title LIV. Whether, in the
circumstances, they could justly be treated as technically enemy
property, is a question not so presented as to require discussion.
They were put to public use by the commanding officer, but what
ultimately became of them does not appear from the record. If
restitution was made, they have ceased to be within the
jurisdiction. And in any view, we are of opinion that they came
within the considerations set forth in
The Paquete Habana,
175 U. S. 677, and
that the district court rightly held that they were not subject to
condemnation.
We are of opinion that the district court committed no error in
its decree in respect of the
Don Juan de Austria, the
Isla de Cuba, and the
Isla de Luzon, and the
property taken from them, as well as the vessels captured and their
appurtenances, or in respect of the lighters and wrecking boats,
but that a share in a portion of the naval stores and material
captured in the Cavite arsenal, and the boats pertaining thereto,
should have been awarded, and that the decree should not have
included property taken from vessels sunk and destroyed.
And this brings us to consider:
5. The decree dismissing the intervention of Stovell.
This was an intervening libel filed by Edward F. Stovell as
captain of the
Nanshan, on behalf of its officers and
crew, as well as himself, seeking to participate in the prize money
that might be awarded on the main libel. Stovell had previously
made an application in the Court of Claims to participate in the
bounty awarded for vessels destroyed, under section 4635 of the
Revised Statutes, which was dismissed by that court. 36 Ct.Cl.
392.
The record in the Court of Claims was made the record in the
district court on the intervention of Stovell, and forms part of
the record on this appeal. The facts are correctly summarized by
Weldon, J., in the opinion of the Court of Claims, as follows:
Page 188 U. S. 280
"The facts found by the court show that the claimant was captain
or master of the original crew of the
Nanshan, which was a
British merchant vessel, purchased by Admiral Dewey at Hong Kong,
under authority of the Secretary of the Navy, in April, 1898. The
vessel was not commissioned, but was registered as an American
steamer, and the original crew was shipped in the American merchant
service. The crew were employed to handle the ship, and the
officers and men were promised and received double the wages they
had theretofore been paid in the British merchant service. They
were not rated in the United States Navy, and the double wages were
not the rates of pay fixed by the President under authority of
Rev.Stat., section 1569. The arrangement as to the employment and
payment of the crew was the result of an agreement made by Admiral
Dewey with the original officers of the
Nanshan. A monthly
list of the names and wages of the crew, in Mexican money, was made
by the original captain or master, the aggregate amount of which
was received by him from the pay inspector of the fleet in a lump
sum, reduced to the value of American gold, which money the captain
distributed to his original crew."
"Admiral Dewey placed on board a naval officer, Lieut. Benj. W.
Hodges, and four enlisted men, and two mounted 1-pounder guns. The
master of the Nanshan, Capt. Edwin F. Stovell, remained on board,
and under him were shipped the seamen, as aforesaid. The naval
officer exercised control over the vessel and gave all orders
concerning her. The merchant captain was merely his executive
officer, being familiar with the crew. The
Nanshan did not
approach the Spanish fleet during the battle of Manila near enough
to enable her to be of any service. The guns were mounted on her as
a protection from boat attacks, but not for offensive operations.
At the time and during the battle of Manila, Lieut. Benj. W. Hodges
had been detailed as aforesaid with four men of the Navy for duty
on said vessel, and was so engaged on said vessel as above stated
at and during the time of the battle. The
Nanshan was
loaded with 3,000 tons of coal. The
Raleigh was detailed
as a special guard in case the reserve division was attacked
separately by the enemy.
Page 188 U. S. 281
The duty of the naval captain on said ship was to take general
charge of the vessel, execute all orders from the flagship
controlling the movements of the
Nanshan, the handling of
the guns, and the signaling, but not to interfere with the internal
management and discipline of the ship, and such things as loading
and discharging cargo."
"After the vessel was bought by Admiral Dewey, the
Nanshan crossed the China sea with the fleet and was a
part of thereof. She kept her position in the fleet. After the
fleet stopped at Subig Bay, the Admiral ordered her commander to
come on board the flagship for his final orders, afterwards
returning to the
Nanshan. The fleet started in single
column, the
Olympia leading, followed by the
Baltimore, the
Raleigh, the
Petrel, the
Concord, the
Boston, the
McCullough, the
Nanshan, and
Zafiro, passing the forts in that
order. The forts on the south side of the channel fired upon the
fleet as they were entering Manila Bay, and the
Nanshan
passed through that fire. The
Nanshan was in reserve
during the action, within signaling distance. She had on board two
1-pounders, taken from the
Olympia, with 360 rounds of
ammunition for those guns; also 11 rifles from the
Raleigh, and 11 revolvers, with a suitable amount of
ammunition, and two boats rigged ready to lower to pick up men if
it was found necessary to do so. The
Nanshan was a heavy
ship, being loaded to the underwriters' mark with coal."
"At the time and during the battle of Manila the
Nanshan was between four and five miles of the Spanish
fleet engaged in that action. She was within signaling distance of
the fleet that effected the destruction of the Spanish vessels, but
was not in such condition as to afford effective aid, her guns not
being able to produce any effect upon the Spanish vessels; she was
ordered to lay off in the bay, clear of the fleet; she could not
have been brought within effective range, because her guns were too
light."
Section 4614 provides:
"The term 'vessels of the Navy,' as used in this title, shall
include all armed vessels officered and manned by the United
States, and under the control of the Department of the Navy."
Section 4632:
"All vessels of the Navy within signal distance
Page 188 U. S. 282
of the vessel or vessels making the capture, under such
circumstances and in such condition as to be able to render
effective aid, if required, shall share in the prize, and in case
of vessels not in the Navy, none shall be entitled to share except
the vessel or vessels making the captures; in which term shall be
included vessels present at and rendering actual assistance in the
capture."
The Court of Claims held, on the facts, that the
Nanshan was not at the time of the battle of Manila in
such a condition as to enable her to render effective aid, if
required; that she was performing the functions of a collier, to be
protected instead of to act aggressively; that her crew had never
been enlisted in the Navy, but had been employed simply to perform
manual labor; that the two 1-pounders and the small arms she had on
board were for purposes of defense, rather than attack; that
"she was not kept in the relation which she sustained to the
engagement for strategic purposes, but for the purpose of
protection to herself, and the incident protection of the rest of
the fleet as the source of their coal supply,"
and that she could not participate in prize money awarded under
section 4632.
By the fifth clause of section 4631, which treats of the
distribution of prize money, after certain deductions the remainder
is to be distributed
"among all others doing duty on board, including the fleet
captain, and borne upon the books of the ship, in proportion to
their respective rates of pay in the service,"
"and under section 1569, the pay to petty officers, seamen, and
others must be fixed by the President. The Court of Claims further
decided that as interveners were shipped and not enlisted, and
their pay had not been fixed by the President, but was a matter of
agreement with the officer who shipped them, this furnished an
additional reason for holding that they were not entitled to share
in the prize money."
It is agreed that the decision as to the
Nanshan
determines the case of the
Zafiro.
The district court adjudged
"that the
Nanshan and
Zafiro, not
participating in any of said captures, and not being armed vessels
of the United States within signal distance of the vessel or
vessels making the capture, under such circumstances and in
Page 188 U. S. 283
such conditions as to be able to render effective aid, if
required, are not entitled to share in any of the prize
property."
Notwithstanding the ingenious argument on behalf of the
intervention, we are not able to arrive at any different
conclusion, and to hold that the
Nanshan and
Zafiro were part of the fighting force of the Navy in the
battle, or present under such circumstances and in such condition
as to be able to render effective aid in that engagement, as
prescribed by the statute. They participated neither actually nor
constructively in the captures.
The rights to share of the commissioned officers and enlisted
men of the United States Navy on board these two vessels depend on
other considerations.
The decree of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia
on the intervening libel is affirmed. The decree on the libel is
reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to enter a decree
in accordance with this opinion.
*
"SEC. 4613. The provisions of this title shall apply to all
captures made as prize by authority of the United States, or
adopted and ratified by the President of the United States."
"SEC. 4615 . The commanding officer of any vessel making a
capture shall secure the documents of the ship and cargo, including
the log book, with all other documents, letters, and other papers
found on board, and make an inventory of the same, and seal them up
and send them, with the inventory, to the court in which
proceedings are to be had, with a written statement that they are
all the papers found, and are in the condition in which they were
found; or explaining the absence of any documents or papers, or any
change in their condition. He shall also send to such court, as
witnesses, the master, one or more of the other officers, the
supercargo, purser, or agent of the prize, and any person found on
board whom he may suppose to be interested in, or to have knowledge
respecting, the title, national character, or destination of the
prize. He shall send the prize, with the documents, papers, and
witnesses, under charge of a competent prize master and prize crew,
into port for adjudication, explaining the absence of any usual
witnesses, and in the absence of instructions from superior
authority as to the port to which it shall be sent, he shall select
such port as he shall deem most convenient in view of the interest
of probable claimants, as well as of the captors. If the captured
vessel, or any part of the captured property, is not in condition
to be sent in for adjudication, a survey shall be had thereon and
an appraisement made by persons as competent and impartial as can
be obtained, and their reports shall be sent to the court in which
proceedings are to be had, and such property, unless appropriated
for the use of the government, shall be sold by the authority of
the commanding officer present, and the proceeds deposited with the
Assistant Treasurer of the United States most accessible to such
court, and subject to its order in the cause."
"SEC. 4624. Whenever any captured vessel, arms, munitions, or
other material are taken for the use of the United States before it
comes into the custody of the prize court, it shall be surveyed,
appraised, and inventoried by persons as competent and impartial as
can be obtained, and the survey, appraisement, and inventory shall
be sent to the court in which proceedings are to be had, and if
taken afterward, sufficient notice shall first be given to enable
the court to have the property appraised for the protection of the
rights of the claimants and captors. In all cases of prize property
taken for or appropriated for the use of the government, the
department for whose use it is taken or appropriated shall deposit
the value thereof with the Assistant Treasurer of the United States
nearest to the place of the session of the court, subject to the
order of the court in the cause."
"SEC. 4625. If, by reason of the condition of the captured
property, or if, because the whole has been appropriated to the use
of the United States, no part of it has been or can be sent in for
adjudication, or if the property has been entirely lost or
destroyed, proceedings for adjudication may be commenced in any
district the Secretary of the Navy may designate, and in any such
case the proceeds of anything sold, or the value of anything taken
or appropriated for the use of the United States, shall be
deposited with the Assistant Treasurer in or nearest to that
district, subject to the order of the court in the cause. If, when
no property can be sent in for adjudication, the Secretary of the
Navy shall not, within three months after any capture, designate a
district for the institution of proceedings, the captors may
institute proceedings for adjudication in any district. And if, in
any case of capture, no proceedings for adjudication are commenced
within a reasonable time, any parties claiming the captured
property may, in any district court, as a court of prize, move for
a monition to show cause why such proceedings shall not be
commenced, or institute an original suit in such court for
restitution, and the monition issued in either case shall be served
on the attorney of the United States for the district, and on the
Secretary of the Navy, as well as on such other persons as the
court shall order to be notified."
"SEC. 4630. The net proceeds of all property condemned as prize
shall, when the prize was of superior or equal force to the vessel
or vessels making the capture, be decreed to the captors, and when
of inferior force, one-half shall be decreed to the United States
and the other half to the captors, except that in case of
privateers and letters of marque, the whole shall be decreed to the
captors unless it shall be otherwise provided in the commissions
issued to such vessels."
"SEC. 4634. Whenever a decree of condemnation is rendered, the
court shall consider the claims of all vessels to participate in
the proceeds, and for that purpose shall at as early a stage of the
cause as possible, order testimony to be taken tending to show what
part should be awarded to the captors, and what vessels are
entitled to share, and such testimony may be sworn to before any
judge or commissioner of the courts of the United States, consul or
commercial agent of the United States, or notary public, or any
officer of the Navy highest in rank, reasonably accessible to the
deponent. The court shall make a decree of distribution,
determining what vessels are entitled to share in the prize, and
whether the prize was of superior, equal, or inferior force to the
vessel or vessels making the capture. The decree shall recite the
amount of the gross proceeds of the prize, subject to the order of
the court, and the amount deducted therefrom for costs and
expenses, and the amount remaining for distribution, and whether
the whole of such residue is to go to the captors, or one-half to
the captors and one-half to the United States."
"SEC. 4635. A bounty shall be paid by the United States for each
person on board any ship or vessel of war belonging to an enemy at
the commencement of an engagement, which is sunk or otherwise
destroyed in such engagement by any ship or vessel belonging to the
United States, or which it may be necessary to destroy in
consequence of injuries sustained in action, of one hundred
dollars, if the enemy's vessel was of inferior force, and of two
hundred dollars, if of equal or superior force, to be divided among
the officers and crew in the same manner as prize money, and when
the actual number of men on board any such vessel cannot be
satisfactorily ascertained, it shall be estimated according to the
complement allowed to vessels of its class in the Navy of the
United States, and there shall be paid as bounty to the captors of
any vessel of war captured from an enemy, which they may be
instructed to destroy, or which is immediately destroyed for the
public interest, but not in consequence of injuries received in
action, fifty dollars for every person who shall be on board at the
time of such capture."
Instructions:
"20. Prizes should be sent in for adjudication, unless otherwise
directed, to the nearest home port in which a prize court may be
sitting."
"21. The prize should be delivered to the court as nearly as
possible in the condition in which she was at the time of seizure,
and to this end her papers should be sealed at the time of seizure
and kept in the custody of the prize master. Attention is called to
articles Nos. 16 and 17 for the government of the United States
Navy. (Exhibit A.)"
"22. All witnesses whose testimony is necessary to the
adjudication of the prize should be detained and sent in with her,
and, if circumstances permit, it is preferable that the officer
making the search should act as prize master."
"23. As to the delivery of the prize to the judicial authority,
consult sections 4615, 4616, and 4617, Revised Statutes of 1878.
(Exhibit B.) The papers, including the log book of the prize, are
delivered to the prize commissioners; the witnesses, to the custody
of the United States marshal, and the prize itself remains in the
custody of the prize master until the court issues process
directing one of its own officers to take charge."
"24. The title to property seized as prize changes only by the
decision rendered by the prize court. But, if the vessel itself, or
its cargo, is needed for immediate public use, it may be converted
to such use, a careful inventory and appraisal being made by
impartial persons and certified to the prize court."
"28. If there are controlling reasons why vessels may not be
sent in for adjudication -- as unseaworthiness, the existence of
infectious disease, or the lack of a prize crew -- they may be
appraised and sold, and if this cannot be done, they may be
destroyed. The imminent danger of recapture would justify
destruction if there was no doubt that the vessel was good prize.
But in all such cases, all the papers and other testimony should be
sent to the prize court, in order that a decree may be duly
entered."
"
Exhibit A"
"Art. 16. No person in the Navy shall take out of a prize, or
vessel seized as a prize, any money, plate, goods, or any part of
her equipment, unless it be for the better preservation thereof, or
unless such articles are absolutely needed for the use of any of
the vessels or armed forces of the United States, before the same
are adjudged lawful prize by a competent court; but the whole,
without fraud, concealment, or embezzlement, shall be brought in in
order that judgment may be passed thereon, and every person who
offends against this article shall be punished as a court martial
may direct."
"Art. 17. If any person in the Navy strips off the clothes of,
or pillages, or in manner maltreats, any person taken on board a
prize, he shall suffer such punishment as a court martial shall
adjudge."
"
Exhibit B"
"[Sections 4615, 4616, and 4617 Rev.Stat.]"