Although a writ which the court has power to issue in a proper
case may have been irregularly issued, the marshal is authorized
and bound to act thereunder if it comes into his hands as an
apparently valid writ.
Although the attempted delegation of authority may have been
ineffectual to clothe the person signing a writ with power to do
so, the marshal is protected in executing it if it is in the usual
form and bears the seal of the court; such an irregularity can be
cured by amendment substituting the signature of the person
properly authorized.
If process
in rem is apparently valid and it does not
appear on the face thereof that the libel on which it is issued
discloses only a personal action for damages, the marshal is
protected in executing it.
A collector of the port cannot be held responsible for detention
of a vessel because he places an inspector thereon with orders to
detain her if she attempts to sail if, at the time, the vessel is
validly in custody
Page 222 U. S. 108
of the marshal and the inspector is withdrawn before the
possession of the marshal terminates.
163 F. 233 reversed.
The facts, which involve the validity of process of the district
court and the power and duty of the marshal thereunder, are stated
in the opinion.
Page 222 U. S. 110
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action at law in the Circuit Court for the District
of South Carolina by a citizen of Pennsylvania against a citizen of
South Carolina, as collector of the port of Charleston, to recover
damages for the alleged unlawful detention, from November 16 to
December 5, 1895, of the American steamship
Laurada, of
which the plaintiff was the owner.
The answer admitted that the defendant, as such collector,
acting under instructions from the Secretary of the Treasury,
caused the vessel "to be formally detained by placing an inspector
on board," but alleged that the Marshal for the District of South
Carolina had seized the vessel on November 15, 1895, under a
monition and warrant of arrest issued out of the district court for
that district upon a libel filed in that court against the vessel,
her engines, etc.; that the marshal retained the custody of the
vessel, under that process, from November 15 until December 18,
1895, and that, if any damage was sustained by the plaintiff by
reason of the detention of the vessel, it did not result from any
act of the defendant.
Upon the trial of the issue so presented, the evidence, without
any conflict, established these facts:
On November 15, 1895, the marshal, acting upon the monition and
warrant of arrest soon to be mentioned,
Page 222 U. S. 111
seized the vessel at Charleston and detained her in his custody
until December 18 following, when she was surrendered to her master
upon the execution of an agreement, with sureties, conformably to
Rev.Stat. § 941 and the 11th Admiralty Rule. On November 16,
while the vessel was so in the custody of the marshal, the
defendant, as collector of the port, acting under directions from
the Secretary of the Treasury, placed an inspector on board the
vessel, and thereby assumed a qualified control over her; but the
custody of the marshal was not disturbed or questioned, or intended
to be, the defendant's purpose being only to make sure that the
vessel would be detained according to the directions of the
Secretary of the Treasury in the event that the custody of the
marshal should be terminated. On December 6, the Secretary of the
Treasury abandoned the purpose to detain the vessel, and the
defendant thereupon withdrew the inspector, the marshal still
retaining his custody.
The monition and warrant of arrest under which the marshal acted
was issued out of the district court upon the libel presently to be
described, and what was done by him was in strict conformity to the
command of the writ. When the writ was issued, the clerk of the
district court was fatally ill and absent from his office, and the
deputy, his son, was attending him. A second son, who was not a
deputy, was temporarily in charge of the clerk's office, with
instructions, given by the deputy, to receive and file papers, and,
if it became necessary, to sign and issue process. Acting upon
these instructions, the brother signed and issued the writ in
question, doing so in such manner that it purported to have been
signed and issued by the deputy on behalf of the clerk. The libel
upon which the writ issued purported, in some respects, to be one
in rem, but it plainly disclosed that the libellants were
not possessed of a maritime lien upon the vessel, her engines,
etc., but only of a right to damages.
See
Vandewater v.
Mills, 19 How.
Page 222 U. S. 112
82,
60 U. S. 90.
There was, however, no suggestion of this on the face of the writ,
which was in the usual form of a monition and warrant of arrest in
a suit
in rem. It ran in the name of the President, was
addressed to the marshal, commanded him to seize the vessel and to
detain it until the further order of the court, bore
teste
of the judge of the district court, was sealed with the seal of the
court, purported to be signed by the deputy on behalf of the clerk,
and was transmitted from the clerk's office to the marshal's office
in the usual way.
At the conclusion of the evidence showing these facts, the
court, at the request of the defendant, directed a verdict in his
favor, and entered judgment accordingly. The judgment was
subsequently reversed by the circuit court of appeals, 163 F. 233,
and the case is now here on certiorari. 212 U.S. 575.
As it is obvious that the verdict for the defendant was rightly
directed if the seizure and detention of the vessel by the marshal
were justified by the writ under which he acted, we come at once to
the reasons advanced for saying that his acts were not so
justified. They are: (1) that the writ was not signed or issued by
the clerk or his deputy, but by one who was without lawful
authority, and (2) that the case stated in the libel, upon which
the writ issued, was not cognizable as a suit
in rem in
admiralty, but only as a personal action for damages.
Neither reason is sufficient. Both overlook considerations which
operated with impelling force to justify the Acts of the
marshal.
True, the purported signature of the deputy was not his own, but
was affixed by his brother under an attempted but ineffectual
delegation of authority, and yet the writ, in the usual form, was
issued from the office of the clerk, bearing the seal as evidence
of its authenticity. In short, although thus irregularly issued, it
came into the hands of the marshal as an apparently valid writ.
Besides, this irregularity
Page 222 U. S. 113
did not render the writ void, but voidable merely, for it could
have been amended by substituting the true for the purported
signature of the deputy. Rev.Stat. § 948;
Texas &
Pacific Railway Co. v. Kirk, 111 U. S. 486;
Miller v. Texas, 153 U. S. 535;
Semmes v. United States, 91 U. S. 21;
Cotter v. Alabama G.S. Railroad Co., 61 F. 747;
Long
v. Farmers' State Bank, 147 F. 360;
Ambler v. Leach,
15 W.Va. 677.
True also, the case stated in the libel was not cognizable as a
suit
in rem in admiralty, and therefore afforded no basis
for the issuance of the warrant of arrest. But, as this did not
appear on the face of the writ, and as the court was empowered to
issue such process in a proper case, it still must be said that the
writ, as it was received by the marshal, was apparently a valid
one.
In this situation, the case falls clearly within the rule, often
applied in this and other courts, which is well stated in Cooley on
Torts, 3d ed., vol. 2, p. 883, as follows:
"The process that shall protect an officer must, to use the
customary legal expression, be fair on its face. By this is not
meant that it shall appear to be perfectly regular, and in all
respects in accord with proper practice and after the most approved
form; but what is intended is that it shall apparently be process
lawfully issued, and such as the officer might lawfully serve. More
precisely, that process may be said to be fair on its face which
proceeds from a court, magistrate, or body having authority of law
to issue process of that nature, and which is legal in form, and on
its face contains nothing to notify or fairly apprise the officer
that it is issued without authority. When such appears to be the
process, the officer is protected in making service, and he is not
concerned with any illegalities that may exist back of it."
See Conner v. Long, 104 U. S. 228,
104 U. S. 237;
Matthews v. Densmore, 109 U. S. 216;
Harding v. Woodcock, 137 U. S. 43;
Stutsman County v. Wallace, 142 U.
S. 293,
142 U. S. 309;
Marks
Page 222 U. S. 114
v. Shoup, 181 U. S. 562;
Erskine v.
Hohnbach, 14 Wall. 613;
Haffin v.
Mason, 15 Wall. 671;
Bragg v. Thompson, 19
S.C. 572;
Goodgion v. Gilreath, 32 S.C. 388;
Clarke v.
May, 2 Gray 410;
People v. Rix, 6 Mich. 144;
Henline v. Reese, 54 Ohio St. 599;
Savacool v.
Boughton, 5 Wend. 170.
The judgment of the circuit court of appeals is accordingly
reversed, and that of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Reversed.