Crawford v. The William Penn

6 F. Cas. 781, 3 Wash. C. C. 484
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 15, 1819
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 6 F. Cas. 781 (Crawford v. The William Penn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. The William Penn, 6 F. Cas. 781, 3 Wash. C. C. 484 (circtdnj 1819).

Opinion

WASHINGTON, Circuit Justice.

This is a libel founded upon a bottomry bond, executed on the 13th of April 1813, at Jamaica, by the master of the ship William Penn; on the ship, her tackle, and apparel, for the necessary repairs and outfit of the ship; to enable her to perform her voyage from that island to the United States. The libel states, that the libellants did, on the day above mentioned, at Port Royal, in the island of Jamaica, lend on bottomry, on the said ship, her freight, tackle, and apparel, to the master of the said ship, £1,370 8s. 4d., current money of Jamaica; the said port being a foreign port; and none of the owners of the said ship being at or near the same; the said captain being otherwise unable to procure the necessary moneys, to refit and victual the said ship, to complete his intended voyage, &c. &c.; a copy of which bond is annexed to the libel, as part thereof, &c. To this libel, ten distinct pleas have been filed; some of which, with the replications to them, have given rise to the questions which the court is now called upon to decide; and which may be comprised under the following heads: (1) Whether there is such a variance between the libel and the bottomry bond, as ought to prevent a decree passing in favour of the libellants? (2) Whether the contract, being made with alien enemies, is void? (3) Whether the bond is void, upon the ground that the advances were made, not to enable the master to complete his original voyage, which was to Lisbon, but to return to the United States, under a new contract to bring home American prisoners; as appears from the pleadings and the evidence to have been the case?

1. That the variances pointed out exist, is unquestionable; and in an action at common law, it may be admitted, they would be fatal. But the court cannot so easily admit the application of common law rules, to cases existing in courts proceeding according to the forms of the civil law. To use an expression of Mr. Justice Story, in delivering the opinion of the supreme court, in the case of The Adeline, 9 Cranch [13 U. S.) 285, “no proceedings can be more unlike, than those in the courts of common law and admiralty.” In. the former, a variance between a written instrument on which the action is founded, as set out in the declaration, and the instrument itself, though a proferí of it is made; may be taken advantage of upon oyer, or at the trial. But in the latter, the materiality of the variance to the opposite party, is the only ground upon which an objection can be founded. It is admitted, that the respondent ought to be informed, by the libel, of the nature of the demand to which he is to answer, so as to put it in his power to meet it fairly and fully. If the libel should not state the case with sufficient certainty, the court will not suffer the respondent to be surprised, by a case different from-that alleged, but will, as a matter of course, authorize amendments to be made, so as to remove the objection. But if either party has made a mistake in setting out his case, and yet not such as could mislead the other party; the court will proceed to make a decree, notwithstanding the variance. Such is the present case. The libel claims the freight as hypothecated contrary to the tenor of the bond. But then the bond itself is made part of the libel, and is referred to as the foundation of the hypothecation; and by this, the respondent was apprized that the freight was not hypothecated, and could not be demanded; and he must have perceived, that the mention of the freight, was a mistake of the proctor who drew the libel. As to the other variance, it is equally immaterial to the real merits of the controversy; nevertheless, the libellants will be permitted to amend this libel, if they desire it, so as to produce a more exact correspondence between it and the case they mean to prove.

2. This is the important question in the cause. But before we examine it, it will be proper to notice an argument of the libel-[783]*783lants’ counsel, intended to prove, that the -consideration of this point, is precluded by the decision of the court at the former hearing; which overruled the plea of alien enemy, and ordered the defendant to answer the libel. We understand the argument to be, that the demurrer to the replication, which ■ asserted that the William Penn was employed as a cartel, and sailed under the protection of a flag of truce, admitted that fact; • and that the respondent is not now at liberty to controvert it, and again to rely upon the plea of alien enemy. To this argument, the •court cannot accede, even if that were the case now before it for decision. According to the practice of the civil law courts, a plea, whether dilatory or peremptory, is merely intended to put an end to the cause at an ■early stage of it; to avoid the expense and delay of going at large into it, if the court should be of opinion, that the matter pleaded is sufficient to produce that effect. But the ■opinion of the court, upon admissions of facts implied from the pleadings, will not prevent the party thus making the admission, for the purpose of obtaining a decision upon the law ■arising out of it, from controverting the same fact, and compelling the other party to prove it This doctrine is exemplified, in the everyday practice of the court of chancery. If the defendant file a plea in bar, and the plaintiff set it down for argument, he necessarily admits the truth of the plea; as much so, -as if he had demurred to it; for otherwise, the legal effect of the matter pleaded could not be decided. And yet, if the plea be allowed by the court, the plaintiff may, notwithstanding his implied admission, reply to the plea, and deny the truth of the facts contained in it, and put the defendant to establish them by proof. Solicitor’s Guide, 243,244, •233; Gilb. 184; Coop. Eq. PI. 232. The reason of the ease just stated, applies with equal force to the present. Nothing is more calculated to lead to error, than an indiscriminate application of the rules which prevail in courts of common law, to courts proceeding according to the forms of the civil law. A demurrer, for instance, in the former, is in chief, and is a perpetual bar, if judgment be against the party demurring; but if a defendant in chancery demur, and it is overruled, he may afterwards insist upon the same thing by his answer. Dormer v. For-tescue, 2 Atk. 2S4. It has been thought prop- ■ er to make these general' observations respecting the practice of the court of equity, that the objection, so much relied upon by the libellants’ counsel, may be put to rest. But the present case steers perfectly clear of the objection, and would do so, even in a ■court of common law. The matter of the plea, which, with the replication, formed the subject, of inquiry at the former hearing of this case, was perfectly distinct from that ■contained in the third plea, now under consideration. That was a dilatory plea, to the disability of the libellants to sue, upon the fact asserted in the plea, — that they were, at the time the suit was brought, and when the plea was filed, alien enemies. This is a plea in bar, founded upon the matter set out in the plea, that, at the time the contract was entered into, the libellants were alien enemies; and, for that reason, the contract was void. The facts stated in the two pleas were, therefore, altogether different This opinion brings into view the replication of the libel-lants to the third plea, which asserts the invalidity of the bottomry bond, on the ground that the contract was made with alien enemies.

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Bluebook (online)
6 F. Cas. 781, 3 Wash. C. C. 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-the-william-penn-circtdnj-1819.