Britton v. Butler

4 F. Cas. 177, 9 Blatchf. 456, 4 Chi. Leg. News 169, 15 Int. Rev. Rec. 98, 1872 U.S. App. LEXIS 1193

This text of 4 F. Cas. 177 (Britton v. Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Britton v. Butler, 4 F. Cas. 177, 9 Blatchf. 456, 4 Chi. Leg. News 169, 15 Int. Rev. Rec. 98, 1872 U.S. App. LEXIS 1193 (circtsdny 1872).

Opinion

BLATCHFORD, District Judge.

This suit was brought in a state court and transferred into this court. The declaration is in as-sumpsit, on the money counts and an account stated. The damages are laid at $15,000, and the causes of action are alleged to have accrued at New Orleans, in the state of Louisiana, on the 1st day of September, 1862. The defendant pleads the general issue and two special pleas. To each of the special pleas a special demurrer is interposed by the plaintiff, alleging defects in substance and form.

The first special plea avers, that, from the 24th of February, 1862, until the 16th of December, 1862, the defendant was a major-general of volunteers, duly commissioned by the president, in the service of the United States, and was assigned to the military geographical department of the gulf, including within its bounds the state of Louisiana, and, as such commander, so assigned, took possession of the city of New Orleans and the adjacent portion of said state of Louisiana, and held the same by the armed forces of the United States, of which he was in command in time of war, and, with such armed forces, was engaged in carrying on the war and suppressing the recent rebellion against the United States, then having broken out into public territorial war in said state of Louisiana and the adjacent states of Mis[179]*179sissippi and Texas; that, by due proclamation, according to the customs and usages of war, martial law was declared and proclaimed and obtained in. said department, from the 1st of May in said year 1862, all the time till the 16th day of December in said year, and, during all said time, the defendant was acting under the orders and proclamations of the president of the United States, and in administration, and in virtue and under color, of the acts of congress; that, on the 16th of August, 1861, pursuant to the statutes of the United States in such case made and provided, the inhabitants of the states of Louisiana and Mississippi and other states, were, by a proclamation of the president of the United States, declared to be in a state of insurrection against the United States, and that all commercial intercourse should cease, as, by such proclamation, will fully appear; that, at the time of the promises and undertakings, and of the supposed grievances, complained of by the plaintiff, and subsequently thereto, such proclamation was and remained in full force and virtue; that, on or about the 1st of September, in said year, the pickets of the armed forces of the United States then under the command of the defendant, and stationed on the outer lines of the camp or garrison of New Orleans, for the protection of said camp or garrison' against the enemy, captured a person endeavoring to make his way furtively from the lines and territory occupied by the enemy, to wit, from the city of Natchez in said state of Mississippi, then in the armed occupation of the enemy, to the said city of New Orleans, then in the armed occupation and possession of the United States’ forces, as aforesaid; that there were found concealed upon the person so captured two or more drafts, cheeks or bills of exchange, drawn by persons or firms doing business in said city of Natchez, then in the occupation of the enemy, upon persons or firms doing business in the said city of New Orleans, then in the occupation of the United States’ forces; that, thereupon, the defendant, as such major-general, and in obedience to the orders and proclamations of the president of the United States, and in the administration, and in virtue and under color, of the acts of congress in such case made and provided, captured said drafts, checks, or bills of exchange, and caused the proceeds thereof, when collected to be turned over to the treasury of the United States, which said proceeds have been duly passed upon, audited and credited to him by the order of the president of the United States; and that out of the acts and doings aforesaid, and not otherwise, arose the said several causes of action of which the plaintiff complains.

Under the provisions of the 5th section of the act of July 18th, 1861 (12 Stat. 257), and the proclamation of the president, of August 16th, 1861 (12 Stat. 1262). the inhabitants of the states of Mississippi and Louisiana (with certain specified exceptions) were declared to be in a state of insurrection against the United States, and all commercial intercourse between the said states of Mississippi and Louisiana and the inhabitants thereof, and the citizens of other states and other parts of the United States, was made unlawful after the date of said proclamation, with the said specified exceptions. One of those exceptions excepted from the inhabitants of the state of Louisiana the inhabitants of such parts of that state as might be, from time, to time, occupied and controlled by forces of the United States engaged in dispersing the insurgents against the laws, constitution and government of the United States. On the facts set up in the first special plea, it clearly appears, that, on the 1st of September, 1862, and when the matters alleged in the said plea took place, commercial intercourse between the state of Mississippi and the city of New Orleans was unlawful. That being so, the drafts, checks or bills of exchange, mentioned in that plea, drawn by persons doing business in Natchez, Mississippi, on persons doing business in New Orleans, were illegal and void instruments. The Ouachita Cotton, 6 Wall. [73 U. S.) 521, 530; Woods v. Wilder, 43 N. Y. 164.

The defendant contends, that, as the bills of exchange were thus void, they were subjects of confiscation; that, as martial law prevailed, and there were no courts and no civii authorities, the bills of exchange became confiscate at the will of the commanding general, without any of the ordinary processes of law; that the bills thus became the property of the United States, in the hands of the general in command; that he, on behalf of the United States, and as its agent, collected the amounts for which they were drawn, being the same moneys to recover which the suit is brought; and that that is a defence to the suit. It is difficult to see how the consequence logically follows the premises. If the bills of exchange were void, then, even if they were confiscable by mere seizure, it is difficult to see how their seizure and confiscation passed a title to the United States to the moneys in the hands of the drawees of the bills in New Orleans, which the defendant sets up that he after-wards received as a collection of the bills. The bills are not averred to have been accepted by the drawees before they were seized. The confiscation, by the seizure, if of anything, was merely of the naked pieces of paper seized. It gave no valid claim to the United States to collect from the drawees the moneys expressed in the bills. If the moneys were seized in the possession of the drawees, the transaction was no different from what it would have been if the bills of exchange had never been drawn or seized. If the moneys were voluntarily paid by the drawees to the defendant, on a demand for them, as being drawn for by the bills, the [180]*180bills being void instruments, their seizure could confer on the United States, and on the defendant, no title to receive or retain the moneys, which they would not have had if the bills had never been seized or presented. The transaction set up in the first special plea comes down, then, to this, that the defendant, by order of the president of the United States, either took or received the moneys referred to, which are the moneys sued for.

If the defendant took the moneys by seizing them, the act, so far as the special plea shows, was unlawful.

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Related

Woods v. . Wilder
43 N.Y. 164 (New York Court of Appeals, 1870)

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Bluebook (online)
4 F. Cas. 177, 9 Blatchf. 456, 4 Chi. Leg. News 169, 15 Int. Rev. Rec. 98, 1872 U.S. App. LEXIS 1193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/britton-v-butler-circtsdny-1872.