De Lovio v. Boit

7 F. Cas. 418, 2 Gall. 398
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1815
StatusPublished
Cited by120 cases

This text of 7 F. Cas. 418 (De Lovio v. Boit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Lovio v. Boit, 7 F. Cas. 418, 2 Gall. 398 (circtdma 1815).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.-

This is a libel brought in the district court upon a policy of insurance, alleging it to be a maritime contract, of which that court, as a court of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, has cognizance. There is a plea to the jurisdiction, and the present question rests solely on the general sufficiency of that plea as a declina-tory bar. It has been argued, and now stands for judgment. I shall make no apology for the length of this opinion. The vast importance and novelty of the questions, which are involved in this suit, render it impossible to come to a correct decision without a thorough examination of the whole jurisdiction of the admiralty. I shall, therefore, consider, in the first place, what is the true nature and extent of the ancient jurisdiction of the admiralty; in the next place, how far it has been abridged or altered by statutes, or by common law decisions; and in tbe last place, what causes are included in the delegation by the constitution to the judicial power of the United States of “all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction.”

The admiralty is a court of very high antiquity. It has been distinctly traced as early as the reign of Edward the First. Fitzj [419]*419Avowry, 192; Selden on Fortescue, 67, note; e to c 32); Zouch, Adm. Jur. 114; Spel. Gloss, voce “Admiral;” GodolpMn, Adm. Jur. 22-30; Exton, Adm. Jur. 3; Seld. de Dom. Maris, lib. 2, c. 16, p. 161; Id. c. 24; 12 Coke, 79. If it be not of immemorial antiquity, as Lord Coke supposes (Co. Litt. 11b, 260b; Greenway v. Barker, Godb. 260; 2 Brownl. & G.16), it is almost certain, that its origin may be safely assigned in some anterior age. Go-■dolph. 29; Burroughs, Sover. of British Seas, 7-9: Seld. de Dom. Maris, lib. 2, cc. 14-16. 24; 2 Brown, Adm. 24; 1 Valin, Comm. 1. There is strong probability of its existence in the reign of Bichard the First since the . Laws of Oleron, which were compiled and. promulgated by him on his return from the Holy Land, have always been deemed the -laws of the admiralty, and could not have been fully enforced in any other court Seld. de Dom. Maris, lib. 2, c. 24, p. 206; Seld. ad Fletam, c. 8, § 5; Godolph. 143-146; Bough-ton’s Articles, art 19, and notes C 16, and C 17 in Clerke, Prax. 121; Co. Litt lib., 260b.; 3 Beeve, Eng. Law, 198; Exton, 24, etc., 3S. And the learned Selden has shown considerable evidence of its juridical authority in the reign of Henry the First Seld. de Dom. Maris, lib. 2, c. 24, p. 209.

■ What was originally the nature and extent •of the jurisdiction of the admiralty cannot now with absolute certainty be known. It is involved in the same obscurity, which rests on the original jurisdiction of the courts of •common law. It seems, however, that at a. very early period, the admiralty had cogni-zanee of all questions of ~prize; of torts and •offences, as well in ports -within the ebb and'flow of the tide, as upon the high se&s^. of maritime contracts and navigation; and also the peculiar custody of the rights, preroga-. tires, and authorities of the crown, in the British seas. The forms of its proceedings were borrowed from the civil law (Zouch, 88; Seld. ad Fletam, c. 8, § 4; Co. Litt. lib), and the rules by which it was governed, were, as is every where avowed, the ancient laws, customs and usages of the seas. 3 Beeves, Eng. Law, 198; Exton, 33; Seld. ad Fletam, -c. S, §§ 5, 6; Vin. Abr. p. 506, pi. 8. In fact, there can scarcely be the slightest doubt, that the admiralty of England, and the maritime •courts of all the other powers of Europe, were formed upon one and the same common model; and that their jurisdiction included the same subjects, as the consular courts of the Mediterranean. Exton, 44, 46, 49, 53; 1 Valin, Comm. 1, 120; Boccus, Assecur. note •SO; Cleirac, Juris, de la Marine, 191; Zouch, S7. These courts are described in the Con-solato del Mare, as having jurisdiction of “ai! controversies respecting freight; of damages to goods shipped; of the wages of mariners; of the partition of ships by public sale; of jettison; of commissions or bailments to masters and mariners; of debts contracted by the master for the use and necessities of his ship; of agreements made by the master with merchants, or by merchants with the master; of goods found on the high seas or on the shore; of the armament or equipment: of ships, gallies or other vessels; and generally of all other contracts declared in the customs of the sea. Compare Consolato del Mare (Ed. Casaregis) c. 22; Cleirac, Us et Cout. Jurisd. de la Marine, art. 1, note 3, 192; Consulat de la Mer, par Boucher, c. 22; Zouch, 90; 2 Brown, Adm. 30.

In support of these observations, it may hot be unfit to trace the early history of the jurisdiction of the admiralty in some of the more ancient records, which have escaped the ravages of time. •

The Black Book of the Admiralty asserts, that in the reign of Henry the Fust, and- in the time of many kings before (“en temps du premier roy Henry, et. en temps de plusieurs rois devant”), when any man was indicted of felony, the admiral or his lieutenant delivered a capias to the admiral (the marshal) of the court, or the sheriff, to arrest him; and a very particular account is given of the manner of proceeding in case of his avoidance. See Clerke, Prax.; Bough, art 122, note C 16, 17; Exton, 32; Seld. de Dom. Maris, lib. 2, c. 24, p. 209. Hence its existence and criminal jurisdiction may be inferred at that early period. The celebrated code of maritime laws, commonly called the Laws of Oleron, were compiled by Bichard the First, as has been already observed, on his return from the Holy Land. Besides these, he promulgated several maritime ordinances at Grimsby for the government of the admiralty. Prynne on 4 Inst 108; Exton, 26, 27, 182; Clerke, Prax. 113, C 18. In the reign of King John, several ordinances were made with reference to the admiralty; particularly the ordinance directing the admiralty to make inquisition of all persons unlawfully taking customs, or the fees-called anchorage (Exton, 28, 29; Bough. ■ art. 35, 36, note C 26; Clerke, Prax. 139, 140), and the famous ordinance for striking sail (or veiling the bonnet), in token of the superiority of the British sovereign over the adjacent seas. Clerke, Prax. 166; Burrough, Sovereignty, etc.; Seld. de Dom. lib. 2, c. 26, p. 215. In the reign of Henry the Third, the Laws of Oleron were ratified and republished. 1 Bib. Legum cites Prynne on 4 Inst 108; 2 Brown, Adm. 39, 40. In the reign of Edward the First there was a memorable ordinance prohibiting the courts having franchises, &e. from taking cognizance of any plea, exceeding 40 shillings sterling, touching merchants or mariners, as well by deed, as by charter of ships, obligations and other transactions; and further declaring, that every contract between merchant and merchant or merchant and mariner beyond sea, or within the flood mark, shall be tried before the admiral, and not elsewhere.4

[420]*420The immemorial jurisdiction of the admiralty is still more emphatically asserted, as to all causes arising upon the British seas, in the record in the tower entitled, “De su-perioritate maris Angliae et jure officii Ad-miralitatis in eadem,” in the 26th year of the same reign.5

But.it is principally in the records of the reign of Edward the Third, that oúr attention should be closely drawn to the nature and extent of the jurisdiction of the admiralty; for to this period has the statute of 13 Rich. II., explicitly referred. Edward the Third gave to the laws of Oleron their final-confirmation (2 Brown, Adm.

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 418, 2 Gall. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-lovio-v-boit-circtdma-1815.