The British merchant steamship
Appam, captured on the
high seas by a German cruiser and navigated to a port of the United
States in control of German officers and crew, during the war
between
Page 243 U. S. 125
Great Britain and Germany, is
held to have been brought
here as a prize.
Under the principles of international law, as recognized by our
government since an early day in its history and as emphasized in
its attitude in the Hague Conference of 1907, it is a clear breach
of our neutral rights for one of two belligerent governments, with
both of which we are at peace, to make use of our ports for the
indefinite storing and safekeeping of prizes captured from its
adversary on the high seas.
Failure of our government to issue a proclamation on the subject
will not warrant the use of our ports to store prizes indefinitely,
and certainly not where the possibility of removal depends upon
recruiting crews in violation of our established rules of
neutrality.
The Treaty with Prussia of 1799, 8 Stat. 172, 173, Article 19,
makes no provision for indefinite stay of vessels, and includes
prizes only when in charge of vessels of war.
The violation of neutrality committed by a belligerent in
wrongfully making use of one of our ports for storing indefinitely
a merchant vessel and cargo captured on the high seas affords
jurisdiction in admiralty to the United States district court of
the locality to seize the vessel and cargo and restore them to
their private owners.
In such case, proceedings in a prize court of the belligerent
country could not oust the jurisdiction of the district court
having the vessel in custody or defeat its judgment.
234 F. 389 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 243 U. S. 142
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are appeals from the District Court of the United States
for the Eastern District of Virginia, in two admiralty
Page 243 U. S. 143
cases. No. 650 was brought by the British & African Steam
Navigation Company, Limited, owner of the British steamship
Appam, to recover possession of that vessel. No. 722 was a
suit by the master of the
Appam to recover possession of
the cargo. In each of the cases, the decree was in favor of the
libellant.
The facts are not in dispute, and from them it appears that,
during the existence of the present war between Great Britain and
Germany, on the 15th day of January, 1916, the steamship
Appam was captured on the high seas by the German cruiser
Moewe. The
Appam was a ship under the British
flag, registered as an English vessel, and is a modern cargo and
passenger steamship of 7,800 tons burden. At the time of her
capture, she was returning from the West Coast of Africa to
Liverpool, carrying a general cargo of cocoa beans, palm oil,
kernels, tin, maize, sixteen boxes of specie, and some other
articles. At the West African port, she took on 170 passengers,
eight of whom were military prisoners of the English government.
She had a crew of 160 or thereabouts, and carried a three-pound gun
at the stern. The
Appam was brought to by a shot across
her bows from the Moewe, when about a hundred yards away, and was
boarded without resistance by an armed crew from the
Moewe. This crew brought with them two bombs, one of which
was slung over the bow and the other over the stern of the
Appam. An officer from the
Moewe said to the
captain of the
Appam that he was sorry he had to take his
ship, asked him how many passengers he had, what cargo, whether he
had any specie, and how much coal. When the shot was fired across
the bows of the
Appam, the captain instructed the wireless
operator not to touch the wireless instrument, and his officers not
to let anyone touch the gun on board. The officers and crew of the
Appam, with the exception of the engine room force,
thirty-five in number, and the second officer, were ordered
Page 243 U. S. 144
on board the
Moewe. The captain, officers, and crew of
the
Appam were sent below, where they were held until the
evening of the 17th of January, when they and about 150 others,
officers and crews of certain vessels previously sunk by the
Moewe, were ordered back to the
Appam and kept
there as prisoners. At the time of the capture, the senior officer
of the boarding party told the chief engineer of the
Appam
he was now a member of the German navy; if he did not obey orders,
his brains would be blown out, but if he obeyed, not a hair of his
head should be touched. The
Appam's officer was instructed
to tell his staff the same thing, and if they did not obey orders,
they would be brought to the German officer and shot. Inquiries
were made by the German officer in command of the
Appam as
to revolutions of the engines, the quantity of coal on hand, and
the coal consumption for different speeds, and instructions were
given that steam be kept up handy, and afterwards the engineer was
directed to set the engines at the revolutions required, and the
ship got under way.
Lieutenant Berg, who was the German officer in command of the
Appam after its capture, told the engineer on the second
morning that he was then in charge of the ship, asked of him
information as to fuel consumption, and said that he expected the
engineer to help him all he could, and the more he did for him, the
better it would be for everybody on the ship. The engineer said he
would, and did so. The engines were operated with a bomb secured to
the port main injector valve, and a German sailor stationed
alongside the bomb with a revolver. There was a guard below of four
or five armed Germans, who were relieved from time to time, but did
not interfere with the working of the ship. The German officer,
Lieutenant Berg, gave directions as to working the engines, and was
the only officer on board who wore a uniform.
Page 243 U. S. 145
On the night of the capture, the specie in the specie room was
taken on board the
Moewe. After Lieutenant Berg took
charge of the
Appam, bombs were slung over her bow and
stern, one large bomb, said to contain about 200 pounds of
explosive, was placed on the bridge, and several smaller ones in
the chart room. Lieutenant Berg informed the captain of the
Appam, pointing to one of the bombs, "That is a bomb; if
there is any trouble, mutiny, or attempt to take the ship, I have
orders to blow up the ship instantly." He also said, "There are
other bombs about the ship; I do not want to use them, but I shall
be compelled to if there is any trouble." The bombs were kept in
the positions stated until the ship arrived at the Virginia Capes,
when they were removed. Lieutenant Berg, on reaching Hampton Roads,
asked the crew of the
Appam to drop the anchor, as he had
not men to do it.
During the trip to the westward, the officers and crew of the
Appam were not allowed to see the ship's compass to
ascertain her course, and all lights were obscured during the
voyage. The German prisoners, with the exception of two who went on
board the
Moewe, were armed and placed over the passengers
and crew of the
Appam as a guard all the way across. For
two days after the capture, the
Appam remained in the
vicinity of the
Moewe, and then was started westward. Her
course for the first two or three days was southwesterly, and
afterwards westerly, and was continued until her arrival at the
Virginia Capes on the 31st of January. The engine room staff of the
Appam was on duty operating the vessel across to the
United States, the deck crew of the
Appam kept the ship
clean, and the navigation was conducted entirely by the Germans,
the lookouts being mostly German prisoners.
At the time of the capture, the
Appam was approximately
distant 1,590 miles from Emden, the nearest German port; from the
nearest available port, namely
Page 243 U. S. 146
Punchello, in the Madeiras, 130 miles; from Liverpool, 1,450
miles, and from Hampton Roads, 3,051 miles. The
Appam was
found to be in first-class order, seaworthy, with plenty of
provisions, both when captured and at the time of her arrival in
Hampton Roads.
The order or commission delivered to Lieutenant Berg by the
commander of the
Moewe is as follows:
"Information for the American Authorities. The bearer of this,
Lieutenant of the Naval Reserve Berg, is appointed by me to the
command of the captured English steamer
Appam, and has
orders to bring the ship into the nearest American harbor and there
to lay up. Kommando S. M. H.
Moewe. Count Zu Dohna,
Cruiser Captain and Commander. [Imperial Navy Stamp.] Kommando S.
M. H.
Moewe."
Upon arrival in Hampton Roads, Lieutenant Berg reported his
arrival to the collector, and filed a copy of his instructions to
bring the
Appam into the nearest American port and there
to lay up.
On February 2nd, his Excellency, the German Ambassador, informed
the State Department of the intention, under alleged treaty rights,
to stay in an American port until further notice, and requested
that the crew of the
Appam be detained in the United
States for the remainder of the war.
The prisoners brought in by the
Appam were released by
order of the American government.
On February 16th, and sixteen days after the arrival of the
Appam in Hampton Roads, the owner of the
Appam
filed the libel in case No. 650, to which answer was filed on March
3rd. On March 7th, by leave of court, an amended libel was filed by
which the libellant sought to recover the
Appam upon the
claim that holding and detaining the vessel in American waters was
in violation of the law of nations and the laws of the United
States and of the neutrality of the United States. The answer of
the
Page 243 U. S. 147
respondents to the amended libel alleged that the
Appam
was brought in as a prize by a prize master, in reliance upon the
Treaty of 1799 between the United States and Prussia; that, by the
general principles of international law, the prize master was
entitled to bring his ship into the neutral port under these
circumstances, and that the length of stay was not a matter for
judicial determination, and that proceedings had been instituted in
a proper prize court of competent jurisdiction in Germany for the
condemnation of the
Appam as a prize of war, and averred
that the American court had no jurisdiction.
The libel against the
Appam's cargo was filed on March
13th, 1916, and answer filed on March 31st. During the progress of
the case, libellant moved the court to sell a part of the cargo as
perishable; on motion, the court appointed surveyors, who examined
the cargo and reported that the parts so designated as perishable
should be sold; upon their report, orders of sale were entered
under which such perishable parts were sold, and the proceeds of
that sale, amounting to over $600,000, are now in the registry of
the court, and the unsold portions of the cargo are now in the
custody of the Marshal of the Eastern District of Virginia.
The argument in this case has taken wide range, and orally and
in printed briefs counsel have discussed many questions which we do
not consider necessary to decide in determining the rights involved
in these appeals.
From the facts which we have stated, we think the decisive
questions resolve themselves into three: first, was the use of an
American port, under the circumstances shown, a breach of this
nation's neutrality under the principles of international law?;
second, was such use of an American port justified by the existing
treaties between the German government and our own?; third, was
there jurisdiction and right to condemn the
Appam and her
cargo in a court of admiralty of the United States?
Page 243 U. S. 148
It is familiar international law that the usual course after the
capture of the
Appam would have been to take her into a
German port, where a prize court of that nation might have
adjudicated her status, and, if it so determined, condemned the
vessel as a prize of war. Instead of that, the vessel was neither
taken to a German port nor to the nearest port accessible of a
neutral power, but was ordered to, and did, proceed over a distance
of more than 3,000 miles, with a view to laying up the captured
ship in an American port.
It was not the purpose to bring the vessel here within the
privileges universally recognized in international law --
i.e., for necessary fuel or provisions, or because of
stress of weather or necessity of repairs, and to leave as soon as
the cause of such entry was satisfied or removed. The purpose for
which the
Appam was brought to Hampton Roads, and the
character of the ship, are emphasized in the order which we have
quoted, to take her to an American port and there lay her up, and
in a note from his Excellency, the German Ambassador, to the
Secretary of State, in which the right was claimed to keep the
vessel in an American port until further notice (Diplomatic
Correspondence with Belligerent governments Relating to Neutral
Rights and Duties, Department of State, European War No. 3, page
331), and a further communication from the German Ambassador,
forwarding a memorandum of a telegram from the German government
concerning the
Appam (
Idem, p. 333), in which it
was stated:
"
Appam is not an auxiliary cruiser, but a prize.
Therefore she must be dealt with according to Article 19 of
Prusso-American Treaty of 1799. Article 21 of Hague Convention
concerning neutrality at sea is not applicable, as this convention
was not ratified by England, and is therefore not binding in
present war according to Article 28. The above-mentioned Article 19
authorizes a prize ship to remain in American ports as long as
she
Page 243 U. S. 149
pleases. Neither the ship nor the prize crew can therefore be
interned, nor can there be question of turning the prize over to
English."
In view of these facts, and this attitude of the Imperial
Government of Germany, it is manifest that the
Appam was
not brought here in any other character than as a prize, captured
at sea by a cruiser of the German navy, and that the right to keep
her here, as shown in the attitude of the German government and in
the answer to the libel, was rested principally upon the
Prussian-American Treaty of 1799.
The principles of international law recognized by this
government, leaving the treaty aside, will not permit the ports of
the United States to be thus used by belligerents. If such use were
permitted, it would constitute of the ports of a neutral country
harbors of safety into which prizes, captured by one of the
belligerents, might be safely brought and indefinitely kept.
From the beginning of its history, this country has been careful
to maintain a neutral position between warring governments, and not
to allow the use of its ports in violation of the obligations of
neutrality, nor to permit such use beyond the necessities arising
from the perils of the seas or the necessities of such vessels as
to seaworthiness, provisions, and supplies. Such usage has the
sanction of international law (Dana's Note to Wheaton on
International Law, 1866, 8th Am. ed. § 391), and accords with
our own practice. Moore's Digest of International Law, 936-938.
A policy of neutrality between warring nations has been
maintained from 1793 to this time. In that year, President
Washington firmly denied the use of our ports to the French
Minister for the fitting out of privateers to destroy English
commerce. This attitude led to the enactment of the Neutrality Act
of 1794, afterwards embodied in the Act of 1818, enacting a code of
neutrality,
Page 243 U. S. 150
which, among other things, inhibited the fitting out and arming
of vessels, the augmenting or increasing of the force of armed
vessels, or the setting on foot in our territory of military
expeditions, and empowering the President to order foreign vessels
of war to depart from our ports, and compelling them so to do when
required by the law of nations. 4 Moore, International
Arbitrations, 3967
et seq.
This policy of the American government was emphasized in its
attitude at the Hague Conference of 1907. Article 21 of the Hague
Treaty provides:
"A prize may only be brought into a neutral port on account of
unseaworthiness, stress of weather, or want of fuel or
provisions."
"It must leave as soon as the circumstances which justified its
entry are at an end. If it does not, the neutral power must order
it to leave at once; should it fail to obey, the neutral power must
employ the means at its disposal to release it with its officers
and crew and to intern the prize crew."
Article 22 provides:
"A neutral power must, similarly, release a prize brought into
one of its ports under circumstances other than those referred to
in Article 21."
To these articles, adherence was given by Belgium, France,
Austria-Hungary, Germany, the United States, and a number of other
nations. They were not ratified by the British government. This
government refused to adhere to Article 23, which provides:
"A neutral power may allow prizes to enter its ports and
roadsteads, whether under convoy or not, when they are brought
there to be sequestrated pending the decision of a prize court. It
may have the prize taken to another of its ports."
"If the prize is convoyed by a warship, the prize crew may go on
board the convoying ship. "
Page 243 U. S. 151
"If the prize is not under convoy, the prize crew are left at
liberty."
And in the proclamation of the convention, the President recited
the resolution of the Senate adhering to it, subject to
"the reservation and exclusion of its Article 23, and with the
understanding that the last clause of Article 3 of the said
convention implies the duty of a neutral power to make the demand
therein mentioned for the return of a ship captured within the
neutral jurisdiction and no longer within that jurisdiction."
36 Stat., Pt. II, p. 2438.
While this treaty may not be of binding obligation, owing to
lack of ratification, it is very persuasive as showing the attitude
of the American government when the question is one of
international law; from which it appears clearly that prizes could
only be brought into our ports upon general principles recognized
in international law, on account of unseaworthiness, stress of
weather, or want of fuel or provisions, and we refused to recognize
the principle that prizes might enter our ports and roadsteads,
whether under convoy or not, to be sequestrated pending the
decision of a prize court. From the history of the conference, it
appears that the reason for the attitude of the American delegates
in refusing to accept Article 23 was that thereby a neutral might
be involved in participation in the war to the extent of giving
asylum to a prize which the belligerent might not be able to
conduct to a home port.
See Scott, Peace Conferences,
1899-1907, vol. II, pp. 237
et seq.
Much stress is laid upon the failure of this government to
proclaim that its ports were not open to the reception of captured
prizes, and it is argued that, having failed to interdict the
entrance of prizes into our ports, permission to thus enter must be
assumed. But whatever privilege might arise from this circumstance,
it would not warrant the attempted use of one of our ports as a
place in which to store prizes indefinitely, and certainly not
where no
Page 243 U. S. 152
means of taking them out are shown except by the augmentation of
her crew, which would be a clear violation of established rules of
neutrality.
As to the contention on behalf of the appellants that Article 19
of the Treaty of 1799 justifies bringing in and keeping the
Appam in an American port in the situation which we have
outlined, it appears that, in response to a note from his
Excellency, the German Ambassador, making that contention, the
American Secretary of State, considering the treaty, announced a
different conclusion (Diplomatic Correspondence with Belligerent
governments,
supra, pp. 335
et seq.), and we
think this view is justified by a consideration of the terms of the
treaty. Article 19 of the Treaty of 1799, using the translation
adopted by the American State Department, reads as follows:
"The vessels of war, public and private, of both parties, shall
carry [
conduire] freely, wheresoever they please, the
vessels and effects taken [
pris] from their enemies,
without being obliged to pay any duties, charges, or fees to
officers of admiralty, of the customs, or any others; nor shall
such prizes [
prises] be arrested, searched, or put under
legal process when they come to and enter the ports of the other
party, but may freely be carried [
conduites] out again at
any time by their captors [
le vaisseau preneur] to the
places expressed in their commissions, which the commanding officer
of such vessel [
le dit vaisseau] shall be obliged to shew.
But, conformably to the treaties existing between the United States
and Great Britain, no vessel [
vaisseau] that shall have
made a prize [
prise] upon British subjects shall have a
right to shelter in the ports of the United States, but if [
il
est] forced therein by tempests, or any other danger, or
accident of the sea, they [
il sera] shall be obliged to
depart as soon as possible."
The provision concerning the treaties between the United States
and Great Britain is no longer
Page 243 U. S. 153
in force, having been omitted by the Treaty of 1828.
See Compilation of Treaties in Force, 1904, pp. 641 and
646.
We think an analysis of this Article makes manifest that the
permission granted is to vessels of war and their prizes, which are
not to be arrested, searched, or put under legal process when they
come into the ports of the high contracting parties, to the end
that they may be freely carried out by their captors to the places
expressed in their commissions, which the commanding officer is
obliged to show. When the
Appam came into the American
harbor, she was not in charge of a vessel of war of the German
Empire. She was a merchant vessel, captured on the high seas and
sent into the American port with the intention of being kept there
indefinitely, and without any means of leaving that port for
another, as contemplated in the treaty, and required to be shown in
the commission of the vessel bringing in the prize. Certainly such
use of a neutral port is very far from that contemplated by a
treaty which made provision only for temporary asylum for certain
purposes, and cannot be held to imply an intention to make of an
American port a harbor of refuge for captured prizes of a
belligerent government. We cannot avoid the conclusion that, in
thus making use of an American port, there was a clear breach of
the neutral rights of this government, as recognized under
principles of international law governing the obligations of
neutrals, and that such use of one of our ports was in no wise
sanctioned by the Treaty of 1799.
It remains to inquire whether there was jurisdiction and
authority in an admiralty court of the United States, under these
circumstances, to order restoration to an individual owner of the
vessel and cargo.
The earliest authority upon this subject in the decisions of
this Court is found in the case of
Glass v. The
Sloop Betsy, 3 Dall. 6, decided in 1794, wherein it
appeared that the commander of the French privateer,
The
Citizen
Page 243 U. S. 154
Genet, captured as a prize on the high seas the sloop
Betsy, and sent the vessel into Baltimore, where the
owners of the sloop and cargo filed a libel in the District Court
of Maryland, claiming restitution because the vessel belonged to
subjects of the King of Sweden, a neutral power, and the cargo was
owned jointly by Swedes and Americans. The district court denied
jurisdiction, the circuit court affirmed the decree, and an appeal
was prosecuted to this Court. The unanimous opinion was announced
by Mr. Chief Justice Jay, holding that the district courts of the
United States possessed the powers of courts of admiralty, whether
sitting as an instance or as a prize court, and sustained the
jurisdiction of the District Court of Maryland, and held that that
court was competent to inquire into and decide whether restitution
should be made to the complainants conformably to the laws of
nations and the treaties and laws of the United States.
The question came again before this Court in the case of
The Santissima
Trinidad, decided in 1822, 7 Wheat. 283. In that
case, it was held that an illegal capture would be invested with
the character of a tort, and that the original owners were entitled
to restitution when the property was brought within our
jurisdiction. The opinion was delivered by Mr. Justice Story, and,
after a full discussion of the matter, the Court held that such an
illegal capture, if brought into the jurisdiction of the courts of
the United States, was subject to condemnation and restitution to
the owners, and the learned Justice said:
"If, indeed, the question were entirely new, it would deserve
very grave consideration whether a claim founded on a violation of
our neutral jurisdiction could be asserted by private persons, or
in any other manner than a direct intervention of the government
itself. In the case of a capture made within a neutral territorial
jurisdiction, it is well settled that, as between the captors and
the captured,
Page 243 U. S. 155
the question can never be litigated. It can arise only upon a
claim of the neutral sovereign, asserted in his own courts or the
courts of the power having cognizance of the capture itself for the
purposes of prize. And, by analogy to this course of proceeding,
the interposition of our own government right seem fit to have been
required before cognizance of the wrong could be taken by our
courts. But the practice from the beginning in this class of
causes, a period of nearly thirty years, has been uniformly the
other way, and it is now too late to disturb it. If any
inconvenience should grow out of it, from reasons of state policy
or executive discretion, it is competent for Congress to apply at
its pleasure the proper remedy."
P.
20 U. S.
349.
". . . Whatever may be the exemption of the public ship herself,
and of her armament and munitions of war, the prize property which
she brings into our ports is liable to the jurisdiction of our
courts, for the purpose of examination and inquiry, and if a proper
case be made out, for restitution to those whose possession has
been devested by a violation of our neutrality, and if the goods
are landed from the public ship in our ports, by the express
permission of our own government, that does not vary the case,
since it involves no pledge that, if illegally captured, they shall
be exempted from the ordinary operation of our laws."
P.
20 U. S.
354.
In the subsequent cases in this Court, this doctrine has not
been departed from.
L'Invincible,
1 Wheat. 238,
14 U. S. 258;
The Estrella,
4 Wheat. 298,
17 U. S.
308-311;
La Amistad De
Rues, 5 Wheat. 385,
18 U. S.
390.
It is insisted that these cases involve illegal captures at sea,
or violations of neutral obligation, not arising because of the use
of a port by sending in a captured vessel and keeping her there in
violation of our rights as a neutral. But we are at a loss to see
any difference in principle between such cases and breaches of
neutrality of the
Page 243 U. S. 156
character here involved in undertaking to make of an American
port a depository of captured vessels with a view to keeping them
there indefinitely. Nor can we consent to the insistence of counsel
for appellant that the prize court of the German Empire has
exclusive jurisdiction to determine the fate of the
Appam
as lawful prize. The vessel was in an American port, and, under our
practice, within the jurisdiction and possession of the district
court, which had assumed to determine the alleged violation of
neutral rights, with power to dispose of the vessel accordingly.
The foreign tribunal under such circumstances could not oust the
jurisdiction of the local court, and thereby defeat its judgment.
The Santissima Trinidad, supra, p.
20 U. S.
355.
Were the rule otherwise than this Court has frequently declared
it to be, our ports might be filled, in case of a general war such
as is now in progress between the European countries, with captured
prizes of one or the other of the belligerents, in utter violation
of the principles of neutral obligation which have controlled this
country from the beginning.
The violation of American neutrality is the basis of
jurisdiction, and the admiralty courts may order restitution for a
violation of such neutrality. In each case, the jurisdiction and
order rests upon the authority of the courts of the United States
to make restitution to private owners for violations of neutrality
where offending vessels are within our jurisdiction, thus
vindicating our rights and obligations as a neutral people.
It follows that the decree in each case must be
Affirmed.
* The docket titles of these cases are: No. 650,
Hans Berg,
Prize Master in charge of the Prize Ship "Appam,
" and L.
M. Von Schilling, Vice-Consul of the German Empire, Appellants v.
British & African Steam Navigation Co.; No. 722,
Same
v. Henry G. Harrison, Master of the Steamship
"Appam.
"