Jones v. Shore's

14 U.S. 462, 4 L. Ed. 136, 1 Wheat. 462, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 342
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1816
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 14 U.S. 462 (Jones v. Shore's) 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
Jones v. Shore's, 14 U.S. 462, 4 L. Ed. 136, 1 Wheat. 462, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 342 (1816).

Opinion

Story, -Í.,

delivered the'opinion of the court, and, after stating the facts, proceeded as follows :

. As the United States have not asserted any claim, the first question for the decision, of the court is, whether the present collector ancTsurveyor, the actual incumbents in office, or the .representatives oí the late collector and surveyor, in right of their testator and intestate, are entitled to the moiety of the money received in satisfaction of the judgment above stated, and now in the custody of the circuit court.

By the express provisions of law, all penalties and forfeitures accruing, under the embargo acts, with a few exceptions, not applicable to this case, are,to be distributed and accounted for in the manner prescribed by the collection law of the 2d of March, 1799, ch. 122. To this latter act, therefore, the arguments of counsel have been chiefly directed; and ppon the true construction of tlie 89th section of'tbe act, the decision of this cause must principally rest *469 The 89th section enjoinSAhe collector, within whose district a seizure shall be made, or forfeiture incurred, to cause suits for the same to be commenced without delay, and prosecuted to effect; and authorizes him to receive from the court, within which a trial is had, or from the proper officer thereof, the sums so received, after deducting the proper charges, and on receipt thereof requires him to pay and distribute the. same .withotlt delay, according to law, and to transmit, quarter-yearly to the treasury an account of all the moneys received by him for fines, penalties, and forfeitures, during such quarter. The 91st section declares that all fines, penalties, and forfeitures,' recovered by virtue of the. act, and not otherwise appropriated, shall, after deducting all proper costs and charges, be disposed as follows, viz., .“ one moiety shall be for the use of the United States, and be paid into the treasury thereof, by the collector receiving the same; the other moiety shall be divided between, and paid in. equal proportions to, the collector and naval officer of the district, and surveyor of the port, wherein the same shall have been incurred, or to such of the said officers as there may be within the same district; and in districts where only one of the aforesaid officers shall have been established, the said moiety shall be given to such officer.” Then follow provisions referring to the distribution in cases where the recovery has been had in pursuance of information given by any informer, or by any officer of a revenue^ cutter.

It is argued on behalf of the present collector and surveyor, that upon tl^e true construction of these *470 clauses rio title to a distributive share of penalties and forfeitures.vests until the money has been actually received by the collector from .the officer of the court; and that upon such receipt it vests in the proper officers of the customs who are then in office. And in support of this argument it is further asserted that until this epoch the claim is a mere expectancy and not a right; the interest being in abeyance, uncertain, and contingent. An attempt has been made to press the language of the act into’ the service of this argument. But it certainly will not support it: this language of the act, in its most obvious import, does not seem to have contemplated any charge in the officers of the customs between the time-of the accruing and the receipt of the penalty or forfeiture. It seems principally to have been adapted to cases of the most ordinary occurrence, and it is only by añ equitable construction that it can, in aid of the legislative intention, be brought to reach the present case. The. act must recéive. the .same construction in relation to forfeitures in rém, as in relation to personal penalties. Both are distributable in the same manner, and subject to the same rules. The case, therefore, .will be first considered, in reference to forfeitures in rem.

Whenever a forfeiture in rein accrues,.it is by the ;ici.pa'ade. the duty of the collector to seize the thing, afid to prosecute a suit therefor, to final judgment. The law contemplates that he may seize, upon probable Caiiso of seizure, not simply in cases of person-id. knowledge, hut upon the information of others. JJhr.-seizes, however, at'his peril, and if the act be not Justifiable, he. is subject to a personal responsibility *471 ibr all damages. He is placed,'therefore, in a situation in which he is bound to act, and yet is not protected against the legal consequences of his acts. It is unquestionably with a view to stimulate his vigilance, and reward his exertions, that the law has given him a share of the forfeitures recovered by his enterprise and' activity. And yet it would follow upon the argument which has been stated, that the collector who seizes might1 be liable to all the responsibility of the act, in case of a failure, without receiving any of the fruits of his toil, if crowned with success. This certainly would seem to be against the policy of the legislature, as well as against the plainest rules of equity. It is a maxim of natural justice, qui sentit commodum smtire debet et ohus ; and the words of a statute ought to be very^ clear that should lead to a different determination. But. the case is not left to the result of general 'reasoning upon the intent and policy of the'legislature. It is not true, that the right of a seizing officer to a distributive share is a mere expectancy. By the common law a party entitled to a share of a thing forfeited, acquix-es by the seizure an inchoate right, which is consummated by a decree of condemnation, and when so consummated, it relates back to the time of the seizux'e. This principle is familiarly applied to many cases of forfeitures to the crown; and even in respect to private pei'sons entitled to forfeitures, the interest which is acquired, by seizure has been deemed a sufficient title to sustain an action of detinue for the propeity. And it is very clear that-the 3«gislsriuj‘« steadily kept in view this principle of the *472 common law; for the act has expressly provided that any .officer entitled to a part of the forfeiture may be a witness at the trial; and, in such a case, he shall lose his share in the forfeiture. The law, therefore, deems him a party having a real substantial interest in the cause, and not a mere expectancy — a fleeting hope that only keeps its promise to the ear, but breaks it to the sense.” It is true, that the act in making distribution of forfeitures speaks of the parties entitled to them by the description of their office; but it cannot, with any colour of . reason, be argued that this designation of office meant to exclude a designaiio personae. On the contrary, it is most manifest that the act meant to point out the person entitled by a description of his office.. The question then recurs, who. is the person meant under this description of office ? Is it the person who happens to be in office when the.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 U.S. 462, 4 L. Ed. 136, 1 Wheat. 462, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-shores-scotus-1816.