Jennings v. Carson

8 U.S. 2, 2 L. Ed. 531, 4 Cranch 2, 1807 U.S. LEXIS 362
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 11, 1807
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 8 U.S. 2 (Jennings v. Carson) 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
Jennings v. Carson, 8 U.S. 2, 2 L. Ed. 531, 4 Cranch 2, 1807 U.S. LEXIS 362 (1807).

Opinion

Marshall, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.—The privateer Addition, cruising under a commission granted by the congress of these United States, during the war between this country and Great Britain, captured the sloop George, brought her into port and libelled her in the court of admiralty for the state of New Jersey, where she was condemned as lawful prize, by a sentence rendered on the 31st of October 1778, and ordered to be sold by the marshal. From this sentence, Richard D. Jennings, the owner, prayed an appeal, which, on the 23d of December 1780, came on to be heard, before the court of appeals constituted by congress, when the sentence of the court of New Jersey was reversed, and restitution of the vessel and cargo was awarded. Pending the appeal, on the 18th of November 1778, the order of sale *was executed, and the proceeds of sale remained in possession of the marshal. It does not appear, that L any application was ever made to the court of New Jersey, to have execution of the decree of the court of appeals, and this suit is brought to carry it into execution, or, on some other principle, to recover from the estate of Joseph Carson, who was part-owner of the privateer Addition, the value of the George and her cargo.

So far as this bill seeks to carry into effect the decree of the 23d of December 1780, there is no doubt of the jurisdiction of the court; but the relief granted can only be commensurate with that decree. It is, therefore, all essential to the merits of this cause, to inquire how far Joseph Carson, the testator of the defendants, was bound by the sentence which this court is asked to carry into effect.

The words under which the plaintiffs claim are those which direct. the restoration of the George and her cargo. As the captors are not ordered, by name, to effect this restoration, and as the order bound those in possession of the subject on which it must be construed to operate, it must be considered as affecting those who could obey it, not those who were not in possession of the thing to be restored, had no power over it, and were, con *14 sequently, unable to re-deliver it. Had Richard D. Jennings appeared before the court of New Jersey with this decree in his hand, and demanded its execution, the process of that court would have been directed to those who possessed the thing to be restored, not to those who held no power over it, either in point of fact or law.

This • position appears too plain to require the aid of precedent, but if such aid should be looked for, the case of Penhallow v. Doane unquestionably affords it. In that case, a decree of reversal and restitution was satisfied, by directing the proceeds of the sales to be paid ; and even the judge who tried the cause at the circuit, concurred with his brethren in reversing his own judgment, so far as it had decreed joint damages, and had thereby rendered the defendant liable for more than he had received. The case of Penhallow v. Doane, therefore, which must be considered as ex-*22] pounding the decree *of the court of appeals now under consideration, has decided that Joseph Carson was bound to effect restitution by that decree, so far only as he was, either in law or in fact, possessed oí the George and her cargo, or of the proceeds.

To this point, therefore, the inquiries of the court will be directed. In prosecuting them, it will be necessary to ascertain whether, 1st. The George and her cargo were, previous to the sentence, in the custody of the law, or of the captors. 2d. Whether the court of admiralty, after an appeal from their sentence, possessed the power to sell the vessel and cargo, and to hold the proceeds for the benefit of those having the right.

It appears, that the court of New Jersey, which condemned the George and her cargo as prize, was established in pursuance of the recommendation of congress, and that no legislative act had prescribed its practice, or defined its powers. The act produced in court was passed at a subsequent period, and consequently, cannot govern the case. But the court cannot admit the correctness of the argument drawn from this act, by the counsel for the plaintiffs in error. It cannot be admitted, that an act defining the powers and regulating the practice of a pre-existing court, contains provisions altogether new. The reverse of this proposition is generally true. Such an act may rather be expected to be confirmatory of the practice and of the powers really exercised. Since we find a court instituted and proceeding to act as a court, without a law defining its practice or its powers, we must suppose it to have exercised its powers in such mode as is employed by other courts instituted for the object, and as is consonant to the general principles on which it must act.

That by the practice of courts of admiralty, a vessel, when libelled, is placed under the absolute control of the *court, is not controverted ; *23] but the plaintiffs contend, that this power over the subject is not inherent in a court of admiralty, but is given by statute, and in support of this opinion, the prize acts of Great Britain have been referred to, which, unquestionably, contain regulations on this point. But the court is not of opinion, that those acts confer entirely new powers on the courts whose practice they regulate. In Browne’s Civil and Admiralty Law, in his chapter on the jurisdiction of the prize courts, it is expressly stated, that those courts exercised their jurisdiction anterior to the prize acts, and the same opinion is expressed by Lord Mansfield, in the case of Lindo v. Rodney, which is cited by Browne. The prize acts, therefore, most probably regu *15 lated pre-existing powers in the manner best adapted to the actual circumstances of the time.

It is conceived, that the constitution and character of a court of admiralty, and the object it is to effect, will throw much light on this subject. The proceedings of that court are in rem, and their sentences act on the thing itself. They decide who has the right, and they order its delivery to the party having the right. The libellant and the claimant are both actors ; they both demand from the court the thing in contest. It would be repugnant to the principles of justice, and to the practice of courts, to leave the thing in possession of either of the parties, without security, while the contest is depending. If the practice of a court of admiralty should not place the thing in the custody of its officers, it would be essential to justice, that security should be demanded of the libellant, to have it forthcoming to answer the order of the court.

If the captor should fail to libel the captured vessel, it has been truly stated in argument, that the owner may claim her in the court of admiralty. How excessively defective would be the practice of that court, if, on receiving such a claim, it neither took possession of the vessel, nor required security that its sentence should be performed. Between the rights of a claimant, where a libel is filed, and where it is not filed, no distinction is perceived, *and the court conceives the necessary result of proceedings in rem to be, that the thing in litigation must be placed in the custody of the *- law, and cannot be delivered to either party, but on sufficient security.

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Bluebook (online)
8 U.S. 2, 2 L. Ed. 531, 4 Cranch 2, 1807 U.S. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennings-v-carson-scotus-1807.