This is a case, in which the general principles are stated in the proceedings and exhibits. There are some circumstances, however, clearly ascertained by those exhibits, which I shall have occasion to mention in the course of the observations I shall make on the merits hereafter. The libel complains of the illegal capture of the sloop George [Robert Smith, master], and her cargo, the property of .the libellant, then and now a subject of Holland, during the late war, to Wit, in July, 177S, by the schooner privateer Addition, Moses Griffin, commander, belonging to the testator Joseph Carson, and others, who are named in the answer of Joseph Carson, in his life time. It is alleged, on the part of the respondents, that the vessel captured was employed in carrying goods, belonging to the subjects of Great Britain, contrary to the regulations and laws of the then [541]*541congress. They rely on the libel and condemnation in the state court of admiralty of New Jersey.. The verdict of the jury, ascertaining the facts, and the condemnation by the' court, and order of sale and for payment of nett proceeds to the captors. The sale of the vessel and cargo at vendue, and the monies being received by the marshal of the court, in whose hands, it is said, they now remain, in depreciated paper, not having been distributed to and among the captors, and of course the respondents, or their testator, received no part thereof; and therefore they allege that the marshal only is chargeable to the libellant, and not the respondents or the testator. They insist that there was probable cause of seizure, and therefore the captors are not answerable in damages. They also plead an abatement to the jurisdiction of the court, because they assert that the subject of prize or no prize belongs to the admiralty of New Jersey, and not to this court, which has no cognizance of the question, nor has it power to effectuate its judgment against executors. On the part of the executors, particularly, an answer was put in denying their being chargeable for the torts of the testator, which as well as their consequences die with his person. But, on an explanation on the behalf of the libellant, that he claimed no damages for the tort merely as a tort, but sought for restitution of his property only, this point was abandoned by the advocates for the respondents. The libellant, to repel this defence, and denying in the usual form the facts as stated, sets forth the reversal of the judgment of the court of Jersey by the court of appeals of the United States on the 23d of December, 1780, which contains a direction to the latter court to make restitution of the property with costs but not damages. They also join issue on the point of jurisdiction; and distinguish between a suit commenced in the life-time of the testator, and one brought, in the first instance, against the executor. Five points were made by the advocates for the respondents: (1) The tort dying with the person. (2) The jurisdiction of this court is not competent, as it is not a prize court. (3 and 4) If a prize court, yet, as the cause originally attached in the court of Jersey, that was the only court in which the consequences are cognizable; and is alone competent to effectuate the decree of the court of appeals. (5) A capture with probable cause is not a subject of action for damages.
The first point being waved brings the question to the competency of jurisdiction, which, in order as well as necessity, should be the first point considered, because, if the court has no jurisdiction, it is nugatory to enquire into the merits of the cause.
On this point, as it first struck me, I confess I had doubts. The account given by Lord Mansfield of the arrangement of the court of admiralty in England, as in the Case of Lindo and Rodney. 2 Doug. C13, note (1 Williams, Abr. 403), produced hesitation; and my respect for the opinion of that great character, as well as the arguments of the advocates in the present cause, induced a deliberate consideration of the subject. The division of the court of admiralty, into two sides, prize and instance, until I saw this case, appeared new to me;3 and it is allowed [542]*542not to have been generally known, If at all, | to the common lawyers in England, before that case was determined. In this country it never was known, nor does it appear that any new commission was ever transmitted to j the colonial judge of the admiralty from ! Great Britain before the Revolution, in case:; ! of wars between that kingdom and its ene- ' mies. I have traced, from records and other i authentic information, the proceedings of the ' admiralty court of Pennsylvania, for a pe- , riod exceeding fifty years: and I have the ¡ best reasons for believing, that the practice in other colonies was similar; in all the proceedings, prize-suits are called suits civil and maritime. During the late war, when we .assumed and effected our independence, the 1 proceedings were unaltered in ihis point. I ¡ ■do not find that there is any such distinction in any other nation, except it should be found in Holland; and of this I much doubt. The ■authority, out of Bynkershoek, produced by j ■one of the advocates for the respondent, j founded on an ordinance of the Earl of Eei- j ■cester, shews that there is a court there, ¡ whose authority is entirely confined to cap- . tures as prize, and it has no jurisdiction even . ■of other maritime cases. This, therefore, is ' not applicable to a question concerning the ; powers of a court of admiralty; which is al- ¡ lowed, even in the Case of Lindo and Rod- ¡ •ney to possess jurisdiction in all maritime i •cases: though in England it is said to act ; under a peculiar (and therefore, not a general- i ly known) organization; I take it, therefore, ¡ for granted, because the contrary has not i been shewn, that, in England alone, are these ; •distinct. branches of the same court to be I found. In all the books of reports, in which | ■cases of prohibitions to the admiralty are | mentioned, precedent to the .Case of Lindo ' .•and Rodney, these prohibitions are moved I for and granted generally to the court of ad- i miralty; though, in a case in Term Reports I (long after the Case of Lindo and Rodney) ¡ the distinction is taken (3 Term R. 323: 1 . Williams, Abr. 4(>6>. and the prohibition ■ moved for to the prize court. This very in- ! ■stance shews it to be a novelty, in the com- ¡ mon law courts there: for if it had been I known as an old practice, the particular desig- i nation of the prize court, would have been ' unnecessary; and the prohibition would have < been granted to the admiralty, generally, as ! it ever had been in former cases. Acting as we now do in a national, and not a dependent i capacity. I cannot conceive that we are bound . to follow the practice in England, more than ‘ that of our own, or any other nation. 4 Cus- I toms purely colonial were parts of our laws even iii the times of our connections with Britain. 1 need instance only ■ one. to wit, that of the inode of conveyance of femme coverts estates, contrary to the laws of England. [Davey v. Turner] 1 Dall. [1 U. S.] 11; [Lloyd v. Taylor] Id. 17. This is a case at common law, in which we then were, and now are. particularly called to follow their rules and practice in general. The admiralty proceeds by a law which considers all nations as one community, and should not be tied down to the precedent of one nation; though it were more clearly ascertained. I shall therefore conclude that, if the powers of an admiralty and maritime court are delegated by congress to this court, those of a prize court are mixed in the mass of authority with which it is invested; and requires no particular specification.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
This is a case, in which the general principles are stated in the proceedings and exhibits. There are some circumstances, however, clearly ascertained by those exhibits, which I shall have occasion to mention in the course of the observations I shall make on the merits hereafter. The libel complains of the illegal capture of the sloop George [Robert Smith, master], and her cargo, the property of .the libellant, then and now a subject of Holland, during the late war, to Wit, in July, 177S, by the schooner privateer Addition, Moses Griffin, commander, belonging to the testator Joseph Carson, and others, who are named in the answer of Joseph Carson, in his life time. It is alleged, on the part of the respondents, that the vessel captured was employed in carrying goods, belonging to the subjects of Great Britain, contrary to the regulations and laws of the then [541]*541congress. They rely on the libel and condemnation in the state court of admiralty of New Jersey.. The verdict of the jury, ascertaining the facts, and the condemnation by the' court, and order of sale and for payment of nett proceeds to the captors. The sale of the vessel and cargo at vendue, and the monies being received by the marshal of the court, in whose hands, it is said, they now remain, in depreciated paper, not having been distributed to and among the captors, and of course the respondents, or their testator, received no part thereof; and therefore they allege that the marshal only is chargeable to the libellant, and not the respondents or the testator. They insist that there was probable cause of seizure, and therefore the captors are not answerable in damages. They also plead an abatement to the jurisdiction of the court, because they assert that the subject of prize or no prize belongs to the admiralty of New Jersey, and not to this court, which has no cognizance of the question, nor has it power to effectuate its judgment against executors. On the part of the executors, particularly, an answer was put in denying their being chargeable for the torts of the testator, which as well as their consequences die with his person. But, on an explanation on the behalf of the libellant, that he claimed no damages for the tort merely as a tort, but sought for restitution of his property only, this point was abandoned by the advocates for the respondents. The libellant, to repel this defence, and denying in the usual form the facts as stated, sets forth the reversal of the judgment of the court of Jersey by the court of appeals of the United States on the 23d of December, 1780, which contains a direction to the latter court to make restitution of the property with costs but not damages. They also join issue on the point of jurisdiction; and distinguish between a suit commenced in the life-time of the testator, and one brought, in the first instance, against the executor. Five points were made by the advocates for the respondents: (1) The tort dying with the person. (2) The jurisdiction of this court is not competent, as it is not a prize court. (3 and 4) If a prize court, yet, as the cause originally attached in the court of Jersey, that was the only court in which the consequences are cognizable; and is alone competent to effectuate the decree of the court of appeals. (5) A capture with probable cause is not a subject of action for damages.
The first point being waved brings the question to the competency of jurisdiction, which, in order as well as necessity, should be the first point considered, because, if the court has no jurisdiction, it is nugatory to enquire into the merits of the cause.
On this point, as it first struck me, I confess I had doubts. The account given by Lord Mansfield of the arrangement of the court of admiralty in England, as in the Case of Lindo and Rodney. 2 Doug. C13, note (1 Williams, Abr. 403), produced hesitation; and my respect for the opinion of that great character, as well as the arguments of the advocates in the present cause, induced a deliberate consideration of the subject. The division of the court of admiralty, into two sides, prize and instance, until I saw this case, appeared new to me;3 and it is allowed [542]*542not to have been generally known, If at all, | to the common lawyers in England, before that case was determined. In this country it never was known, nor does it appear that any new commission was ever transmitted to j the colonial judge of the admiralty from ! Great Britain before the Revolution, in case:; ! of wars between that kingdom and its ene- ' mies. I have traced, from records and other i authentic information, the proceedings of the ' admiralty court of Pennsylvania, for a pe- , riod exceeding fifty years: and I have the ¡ best reasons for believing, that the practice in other colonies was similar; in all the proceedings, prize-suits are called suits civil and maritime. During the late war, when we .assumed and effected our independence, the 1 proceedings were unaltered in ihis point. I ¡ ■do not find that there is any such distinction in any other nation, except it should be found in Holland; and of this I much doubt. The ■authority, out of Bynkershoek, produced by j ■one of the advocates for the respondent, j founded on an ordinance of the Earl of Eei- j ■cester, shews that there is a court there, ¡ whose authority is entirely confined to cap- . tures as prize, and it has no jurisdiction even . ■of other maritime cases. This, therefore, is ' not applicable to a question concerning the ; powers of a court of admiralty; which is al- ¡ lowed, even in the Case of Lindo and Rod- ¡ •ney to possess jurisdiction in all maritime i •cases: though in England it is said to act ; under a peculiar (and therefore, not a general- i ly known) organization; I take it, therefore, ¡ for granted, because the contrary has not i been shewn, that, in England alone, are these ; •distinct. branches of the same court to be I found. In all the books of reports, in which | ■cases of prohibitions to the admiralty are | mentioned, precedent to the .Case of Lindo ' .•and Rodney, these prohibitions are moved I for and granted generally to the court of ad- i miralty; though, in a case in Term Reports I (long after the Case of Lindo and Rodney) ¡ the distinction is taken (3 Term R. 323: 1 . Williams, Abr. 4(>6>. and the prohibition ■ moved for to the prize court. This very in- ! ■stance shews it to be a novelty, in the com- ¡ mon law courts there: for if it had been I known as an old practice, the particular desig- i nation of the prize court, would have been ' unnecessary; and the prohibition would have < been granted to the admiralty, generally, as ! it ever had been in former cases. Acting as we now do in a national, and not a dependent i capacity. I cannot conceive that we are bound . to follow the practice in England, more than ‘ that of our own, or any other nation. 4 Cus- I toms purely colonial were parts of our laws even iii the times of our connections with Britain. 1 need instance only ■ one. to wit, that of the inode of conveyance of femme coverts estates, contrary to the laws of England. [Davey v. Turner] 1 Dall. [1 U. S.] 11; [Lloyd v. Taylor] Id. 17. This is a case at common law, in which we then were, and now are. particularly called to follow their rules and practice in general. The admiralty proceeds by a law which considers all nations as one community, and should not be tied down to the precedent of one nation; though it were more clearly ascertained. I shall therefore conclude that, if the powers of an admiralty and maritime court are delegated by congress to this court, those of a prize court are mixed in the mass of authority with which it is invested; and requires no particular specification. They are called forth, if generally delegated, by the occasion; and not by repeated and new interferences of government. Nor do I believe that, even in England, any new authority is vested; though a kind of legal and solemn notice is given of a war, in which subjects for the prize authority of admiralty may occur. It does not begin with their wars, but was pre-existent; it does not end with the commencement of peace, for their books shew it to be exercised at any time afterwards. Government never interferes to put an end to it; how then can its power be repeatedly necessary to begin it? The fact is, it is inherent in a court of admiralty; and not lost, but torpid, like other authorities of the court, when there are no occasions for its exercise. But here the question arises: “Have congress, by their judiciary laws, vested this court with general or special admiralty powers?” Congress have authority delegated by the people in the constitution in “all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction.” The words of that part of the judicial?’ law affecting this subject, in which the authorities of this court are described, will be seen in the ninth section of that law: It "shall also have exclusive original cognizance of all civil causes of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, including seizures under laws of impost, navigation, or trade of the United States.” It is said, prize or no prize is a question of a military, not a civil nature. But I find no such distinction in the books. 3 Bl. Connn. p. 09. Blaclcstone in his divisions of courts, does not class that of the admiralty as a military, but a maritime court: and it will appear, that the jurisdiction of prize is within its powers; ‘though he points out. in cases of prizes in the then colonies, that appeals were to members of the privy council and others, in consequence [543]*543of treaties and domestic arrangements. But he says, “The original court, to which this question is committed in England, is the court of admiralty, without any distinction as to the nature of its powers, whether instance or prize, military or civil. In book 3, p. IOS, he mentions the exclusive and undisturbed jurisdiction of the court of admiralty, in cases of prize, and that court determines not according to British laws or practice, but, “according to the laws of nations.” Should I confine myself merely to the en-quiry, whether this could be classed under the description of a “civil cause,” 1 should think there were grounds to support the idea of its being comprehended. In the Case of Atcheson and Everitt, Cowp. 3S2, some light is thrown on this view of the subject; because it appears, that a civil suit may, in substance. but not form, partake of criminal ingredients. So. by parity of reason, may a civil case of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction be mixed with or grounded in transactions of a military nature; but I do not think it necessary nicely to fix this point. 5 What is, perhaps, of most consequence, is to ascertain the intention of congress in distributing a power, clearly in them, to their judiciary department; and what was said by one of the advocates for the libellant strikes me as being just and proper, viz. that the construction should be made from a consideration of all the laws on the subject in pari materia. “The court shall also have cognizance, &c.” that is, being invested with criminal powers in certain cases, it shall also have civil powers as opposed to criminal in admiralty and maritime cases. By recurring to the 12th, 13th, 10th, 21st, & 30th sections of the judiciary laws, it will appear that congress meant to convey all the powers, and in the words of the constitution, as they possessed them in admiralty cases; and actions or suits in these cases can originate only in the district courts. For the foregoing reasons, and some others which might be added, I am of opinion that this court possesses all the powers of a court of admiralty, and that the question of prize is cognizable before it. I have gone thus far into the discussion of this point, because I believe it is the first time it has been agitated in a federal court. I do, therefore, decree, adjudge and determine, that the plea to the jurisdiction of the court, as not being competent to determine prize questions, be, and the same is, hereby overruled. As to the question on the legality, equity and propriety of the court’s interference in the present suit to effectuate the decree of the court of appeals, and all other questions save that on which I have determined, I give no opinion, but hold them under advisement (unless the parties agree that I shall proceed under the present defect of proof in some points, and under some doubts I entertain concerning them) that an appeal may be lodged in the superior court, wherein I confess I should prefer an ultimate decision in a cause said to be important in itself and extensive in its consequences.6