A claim for the sum awarded by the commissioners under the
Treaty of Indemnity with France of July fourth, 1831.
The powers and duties of the commissioners under the Treaty of
Indemnity with France, were the same as those which were exercised
under the treaty with Spain by which Florida was ceded to the
United States, as decided in the cases of
Comegys v.
Vasse, 1 Pet. 212, and
Sheppard v.
Taylor, 5 Pet. 710. There is a difference in the
words used in the treaty and act of Congress, when defining the
powers of the board of commissioners, but they mean the same thing.
The rules by which the board acting under the French treaty is
directed to govern itself in deciding the cases that come before
it, and the manner in which it is constituted and organized, show
the purposes for which it was created. It was established for the
purpose of deciding what claims were entitled to share in the
indemnity provided by the treaty, and they of course awarded the
amount to such person as appeared from the papers before them to be
the rightful claimant. But there is nothing in the frame of the law
establishing the board, or in the manner of constituting and
organizing it, which would lead to the inference that larger powers
were intended to be given than those conferred on the commissioners
under the Florida treaty.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The controversy has arisen out of the shipment of a cargo of
cotton, indigo, and coffee, made in the fall of 1809, in the brig
Spencer, from Philadelphia to St. Sebastians, or Port
Passage. The vessel duly arrived, and discharged her cargo. She was
afterwards seized, and the cargo sequestrated by the French
government. In the following year, the vessel was liberated, and
returned to the United States, but the cargo was never
restored.
The cargo of the
Spencer thus sequestrated, was
entitled to share in the indemnity provided by the Treaty with
France of July 4, 1831. But a dispute arose before the
commissioners appointed under that treaty, as to the right to
five-sixteenths of the indemnity allowed for this cargo. The
opposing claimants were the present appellant, who claimed for the
whole of the cargo, and the appellee, who claimed for the said
five-sixteenths. The commissioners awarded in favor of the
latter.
The appellant therefore filed his bill against the appellee, in
the Circuit Court for Washington County, in the District of
Columbia, alleging, among other things, that a certain Andrew
Curcier, then a resident merchant in Philadelphia, was the owner of
the
Spencer
Page 39 U. S. 96
and her cargo on the voyage in question, that the said seizure
and sequestration gave him a valid claim against the French
government, which he afterwards, for a valuable consideration,
transferred to the claimant, who took it without notice of any
other claim. And he charges also that if Dabadie, the appellee's
intestate, ever had an interest in the cargo, it had been
relinquished to Curcier by a settlement which took place between
them in 1818, long before the assignment to the complainant. And he
produces, as an exhibit, the account which, as he alleges, contains
this renunciation, and he prays that the appellee may be enjoined
from receiving the five-sixteenths awarded to him by the
commissioners, and that the Secretary of the Treasury, and the
Treasurer of the United States may be enjoined from paying it.
To this bill the appellee put in his plea and answer, pleading
the award of the commissioners in bar of the complainant's bill,
and also insisting, by way of answer, Dabadie owned the
five-sixteenths of the cargo in question, and had a valid claim, on
that account, against the French government; that he had never
transferred or relinquished it to Curcier, and that his (Dabadie's)
administrator was entitled to receive it out of the indemnity
provided by treaty, and he exhibits as the evidence of his interest
in this cargo, an account, signed by Andrew Curcier, in behalf of
himself and Stephen Curcier, and dated June 16, 1810.
A general replication was put in by the complainant, and the
testimony of a witness residing at Marseilles, in France, was taken
by agreement of parties. This witness, it appears, is a native of
France, but resided in Philadelphia, and was engaged in commerce
there from the year 1796 until 1827, when he returned to his own
country, where he has ever since resided. He was intimate with
Curcier and Dabadie, and he states in his testimony that in the
year 1818, at Philadelphia, he, as umpire and mutual friend,
settled an account between them, in which all differences were
finally adjusted; that the voyage of the
Spencer to St.
Sebastians, and the ownership of her cargo, were settled in that
account, and that by the terms of the settlement, the claim on the
French government for indemnity was afterwards to belong to
Curcier. The witness mentions circumstances which took place at the
settlement, to show that his memory is firm and accurate in
relation to it. He states that it was reduced to writing in the
shape of an account current, as was customary, and that two
accounts were made, exactly the same in every particular, both
original, and one of them delivered to each of the parties. No
account current, however, was exhibited to the witness at the time
of his examination, and none therefore has been identified by him
as the account current settled between the parties in 1818, and he
states that he had not recently seen it, nor had any communication
from anyone in relation to its contents.
Upon the hearing, the circuit court dissolved the injunction,
and dismissed the bill, and the case is brought before this Court
by the appeal of the complainant.
Page 39 U. S. 97
Two questions have been presented for consideration here:
1. Is the decision of the commissioners appointed under the
treaty with France, conclusive upon the rights of the parties?
2. If the case is not concluded by the decision of the
commissioners, is the appellant, upon the testimony in the record,
entitled to relief?
Upon the first question, the Court has entertained no doubt.
This case cannot, we think, be distinguished from the cases of
Comegys v.
Vasse, 1 Pet. 212, and
Sheppard v.
Taylor, 5 Pet. 710. It has been argued on the part
of the appellee, that these cases were decided under the treaty
with Spain, and that the language of that treaty, and of the act of
Congress creating the board of commissioners under it, differs
materially from the treaty and act of Congress under consideration,
when defining the powers of the board. It is true that there is a
difference in the words used, but in our judgment, they mean the
same thing. The rules by which the board is directed to govern
itself in deciding the cases that come before it, and the manner in
which it was constituted and organized, show the purposes for which
it was created. It was established for the purpose of deciding what
claims were entitled to share in the indemnity promised by the
treaty, and they of course awarded the amount to such person, as
appeared from the papers before them, to be the rightful claimant.
But there is nothing in the frame of the law establishing this
board, or in the manner of constituting and organizing it, that
would lead us to infer that larger powers were intended to be given
than those conferred upon the commissioners under the Spanish
treaty. The plea, therefore, put in by the defendant in bar of the
complainant's bill, cannot be sustained, and the case is fully open
before this Court upon its merits.
Upon the second point there has been much more difficulty. It is
very clear that Dabadie was the owner of five-sixteenths of the
cargo of the
Spencer upon the voyage in the fall of 1809
from Philadelphia, to St. Sebastians or Port Passage. This is
abundantly proved by the account stated and signed by Andrew
Curcier for himself and Stephen Curcier, in June, 1810. For
Dabadie, in this account, is charged with thirteen thousand seven
hundred dollars and thirteen cents, for his five-sixteenths of the
cargo, and with three thousand nine hundred and ninety-three
dollars and ninety-five cents, for insurance upon it. He was
therefore entitled to indemnity to the extent of his interest in
the cargo, and had a valid and just claim for it against the French
government.
Has this interest been transferred to Curcier? The witness above
mentioned deposed that it was relinquished to him, and the
agreement reduced to writing in an account current, settled in
June, 1818. If such an account had been produced by the plaintiff,
it would decide the controversy in his favor. He does indeed
produce an account settled between the parties, with mutual
acquittances, in June, 1818. But it is not such an account as the
witness describes. Neither of the sums with which Dabadie was
debited in the account of 1810, for his share of the cargo, and for
insurance,
Page 39 U. S. 98
appear in any way in this account of 1818. The acquittances
therefore then executed do not apply to them. They apply only to
claims which the parties may have had against one another, and not
to claims which either of them had against the French government or
any other third party.
There is an item in the account of 1818, which has been much
relied on by the complainant, in which Dabadie is credited with
five-sixteenths of the proceeds of the
Spencer's cargo on
this voyage, sold at six months' credit. But there is nothing to
show that any part of the outward cargo was sold in France. On the
contrary, the bill states that the whole cargo was sequestrated,
and claims indemnity for the whole, and the answer admits the
seizure of the whole, and claims indemnity for five-sixteenths of
the entire cargo. We cannot therefore suppose that this item refers
to the proceeds of her outward cargo, for such an inference would
be contrary to the allegations of both the bill and the answer. And
if it refers to a homeward cargo, there is no evidence to show that
such a cargo was brought by the
Spencer, nor, if brought,
by what means or out of what funds it was procured. There is
certainly nothing in the record to connect this item in any manner
with the outward cargo, which was seized; nor to alter the rights
of property in it. It does not answer the description which the
witness gives of the account which he settled in 1818, as the
umpire and mutual friend of the parties, and it is highly probable
that the transaction of which he speaks, may, from the lapse of
time, have been confounded with some subsequent voyage of the same
vessel, out of which disputes may have arisen between the parties.
He states that he has not seen the account, nor communicated with
any person about it, and after twenty years have passed, it ought
not to be a matter of surprise or reproach if some of the items of
an account, and some of the circumstances connected with the
settlement of it, were not accurately remembered. At all events,
there is nothing in the account of 1818, or any account in the
case, that would justify us in saying that the claim of Dabadie to
the indemnity in question was transferred to Curcier, as charged in
the bill.
The decree of the circuit court is therefore
Affirmed.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Columbia holden in and for the County of Washington and was argued
by counsel. On consideration whereof, it is now here ordered and
decreed by this Court that the decree of the said circuit court in
this cause be and the same is hereby affirmed, with costs.