Jecker, Torre, & Co. v. Montgomery

59 U.S. 110, 15 L. Ed. 311, 18 How. 110, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 673
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 17, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 59 U.S. 110 (Jecker, Torre, & Co. v. Montgomery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jecker, Torre, & Co. v. Montgomery, 59 U.S. 110, 15 L. Ed. 311, 18 How. 110, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 673 (1856).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

- This is an appeal from a decree in admiralty by the circuit .court of the United States for the District of Columbia, by which decree the ship Admittance, claimed by the appellants, Charles B. Fessenden and Richard S. Fay, as owners, and the cargo of the same ship claimed by the appellants,'. Jecker, Torre and Co. and Manual Quintana, were upon a libel filed by the appellee, John B. Montgomery, condemned as prize of war.

It will serve to explain the nature of the present controversy, and the character of the decree of the circuit court above.mentioned, to refer to the proceedings heretofore had therein upon a libel filed by the claimants of the cargo for restitution, and to the decision of this court upon cross-appeals from those proceedings, both by the claimants and the captor, out of which last-mentioned decision the case before us has arisen.

By the decision of this court just referred to, (see 13 Howard, p. 498,) we hold the following propositions to have been expressly ruled:—

1. That the admiralty court of the District of Columbia had jurisdiction of the libel for the condemnation of the property in contest, although such property was not brought within its jurisdiction ; and if they found the subject liable to condemnation, might proceed to ,6oiidemn, although not in fact within the custody or control of the court.

2. That the admiralty court in the District of Columbia, having jurisdiction of the case, it was its duty to order the captors *112 to institute proceedings in that, court to condemn the property as prize, by a day to be named-in the order; and in .default thereof to be proceeded against upon a libel for an unlawful seizure; because the property of the claimant is not devested by the capture, but by condemnation in a prize court — is not devested until condemnation, though such condemnation will relate back to the capture.

3. That the grounds alleged for the seizure of the vessel and cargo, namely, that the vessel sailed from New Orleans with the design of trading with the enemy, and did in fact hold illegal intercourse with them, are sufficient, if supported by testimony, .to subject both vessel and caigo to condemnation.

4. And if they were liable to condemnation, the reasons assigned in'the answer for not bringing the vessel and cargo into a port of the United States for trial — namely: that it was impossible sp to do consistently with the public interest — is sufficient, if supported by proofs, to justify the captors in selling vessel and cargo in California,, and to exempt the captors from damages on that account.

5. That to a libel for restitution, probable cause for seizure' is. no defence; but is so only against a claim for damages, in cases in which the' property has been restored or lost after-seizure.

Under the authority of the rulings just enumerated, and in obedience to the mandate founded thereupon, the libel in the cause .now before us was filed; and the case 'made by the parties presents, as the material’ questions for consideration, the inquiries ; 1. Whether the vessel sailed with the design of trading with the enemy, and did in fact hold illegal intercourse with them. 2. Admitting that the vessel and cargo were .in the first instance liable to condemnation, whether the reasons assigned for not bringing them within the United States were so supported by proof, as to justify the1 captor in not bringing them' within the United States, and in selling them in California, without a forfeiture of their-rights as captors. -

As a principle applicable to the first of these inquiries, it may be averred as a part of the law of nations —forming á part, too,, of the municipal. jurisprudence of every country — “that in a state of' war between two nations, declared by the authority in whom the municipal constitution vests the power of making war, the two 'nations and all their citizens or subjects.are enemies to each other.” The' consequence of this state of hostility is, that all intercourse and communication between them is unlawful. Vide Wheaton on Maritime Captures, cap. 7, p. 209, quoting from Bynkershoeck this passage: lí Ex natura belli commercia. inter hostes cessare, non est dubitandum. Quamvis nulla specialis *113 sit commerciorum prohibition ipso tamen ju/re. belli, commercia inter hostes esse vetita, ipsa indictiones bellorum, satis declarant.

Upon this principle of public law,'it has been the established rule of the high court of admiralty in England, that a trading with the enemy, except by a royal license, subjects the property to confiscation. The decisions of that court show that the rule has been rigidly enforced, as, for instance, where the government had authorized a homeward trade from the enemy’s possessions, but had not specifically protected an outward trade to the same; and again, in instances where cargoes have been laden before the war, but where the parties had not used all possible diligence to countermand the voyage after the first notice of hostilities; and this rule has been enforced, not only against subjects of the Crown, but likewise against those of its allies in the war, upon the assumption that the rule was founded on the universal principle which states allied in war had a right to apply to each other’s subjects. Vide Wheaton on Captures, p. 212; and l C. Robinson’s Adm. R. 196, The Hoop.

The same rule has been adopted with equal strictness by this court. In the case of The Rapid, reported in 8 Cranch, 155, the claimant, a citizen of the United States, had purchased goods in the enemy’s country a long time before the declaration of war, and had deposited them on'an island near the boundary line between the two countries. Upon the breaking out of hostilities, his agents had hired the vessel to proceed to the place of deposit and bring away these goods. Upon her return the vessel was captured, and, with the cargo, was condemned as prize of war for trading with the enemy. In applying the law to this state of facts, this court said, and said unanimously; That the' universal sense of nations has acknowledged the demoralizing effects that would result from, the admission of individual intercourse. The whole nation are embarked in one common bottom, and must be reconciled to submit to one common fate. Every individual of the one nation must acknowledge every individual of the other nation as his own enemy, because the enemy of his country. But, after deciding what is the duty of the citizen, the question occurs, what is the consequence of a breach of that duty ? The law of prize is a part of the law of nations. In it, a hostile character is attached to trade, independently óf the character of the trader who pursues or directs it. Condemnation to the use of the captor is equally the fate of the property of the belligerent and of the property engaged in anti-neutral trade. But a citizen or an ally may be engaged in a hostile trade, and thereby involve his property in the fate of those in whose cause he embarks.” Again, the court say: “ If by trading, in prize law was meant that signification *114 of the term which consists in negotiation or contract, this case would not come under the penalties of the rule.

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Bluebook (online)
59 U.S. 110, 15 L. Ed. 311, 18 How. 110, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jecker-torre-co-v-montgomery-scotus-1856.