Lámar v. McCulloch

115 U.S. 163, 6 S. Ct. 1, 29 L. Ed. 360, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1828
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 26, 1885
Docket828
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 115 U.S. 163 (Lámar v. McCulloch) 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
Lámar v. McCulloch, 115 U.S. 163, 6 S. Ct. 1, 29 L. Ed. 360, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1828 (1885).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blatchford

delivered the opinion of the Court. After stating the facts in the language above reported, he continued:

*181 The foregoing written documents show the connection of the defendant with the case. Mr. Cabell’s application or petition of November 16, 1865, claimed compensation for having collected or secured cotton, cedar timber, and cattle. It enumerated the property. The defendant, in his letter of November 17, 1865, to Mr.- Cabell, refers to it all as “captured property,” but says that as none of it had been actually placed in the possession of any agent of the Treasury Department, or removed from the places where it had been discovered, he desires that Mr. Cabell will return South and do all in his power “ to secure to the 'government the cotton named ” by him, and “ to transport the same to a proper place of shipment.” Only cotton was to be secured; and it is a fair interpretation of the letter, that the cotton was to be secured as having been “ captured property,” and that it was referred to by the defendant as part of the “captured property” enumerated by Mr. Cabell. Mr. Cabell, in his letter to the defendant of December 11, 1865, speaks of the 170 bales he had already shipped as cotton “ formerly owned by the Exporting and Im-' porting Company.”. The defendant, in his letter to Mr. Cabell of December 29, 1865, says that his letter of November 17, 1865, was intended to empower Mr. Cabell to take into his ■possession “any cqttoii belonging to government not in the custody of any .other officer of the department, and which might not otherwise be secured-by them;” that a perusal of that-letter will show that it was not intended to do more than secure his* services in connection with the lots of property which had been specified by him; and that “no indiscriminate seizures and collections were contemplated by it.” Mr. Cabell’s letter to the defendant of February 17, 1866, says that the 272 bales he had shipped from Jacksonville to New York on January 25, 1866, were “owned by the Exporting and Importing Company of Georgia (President, G. B. Lamar), a company engaged in the sole business, of blockade running, and holding said property for the purpose of aiding and abetting the rebellion.” In' his petition of February 27, 1866, to the defendant, Mr. Cabell states that he had been appointed by Mr. Alexander, in July, 1865, to “ collect and receive all the cotton, tobacco, and *182 other property belonging to the United States,” and speaks, of the 268 bales as “government cotton,” and speaks of Mr. Alexander as agent of the Treasury Department, “ under the regulations of said department for the collection of captured and abandoned property in the disloyal States.” In his letter of May 25, 1867, to Mr. Sargent, the defendant speaks of the 272 and 268 bales as being “ held by government as captured or abandoned property,” and directs the $4,881.10 to be paid out of the “ proceeds of captured and abandoned property.”

By § 1 of the' act of March 12, 1863, ch. 120, 12 Stat. 820, the Secretary of the Treasury was authorized to appoint special agents “to receive and collect all abandoned or captured property ” (with specified exceptions), in any State designated as in insurrection'by the proclamation of the President of July 1, 1862, 12 Stat. 1266. Florida was such a State. By § 2, the property collected, if not appropriated fo public use; was to be forwarded to a place of sale in, the loyal States, and sold at auction, and the proceeds paid into the Treasury of the ■ United States. By § 3, the Secretary of the Treasury was to cause “ books of account .to be kept, showing from whom such property'was received, the cost of transportation, and proceeds of the sale thereof.” Section 3 further provided as follows : “ And any person claiming to have been the owner of any. such abandoned or captured property may, at any time within two years after the suppression of the rebellion, prefer his claim to the proceeds thereof in the Court of Claims; and on proof to the satisfaction of said court of his ownership of said property, of his right to the proceeds thereof, and that he has never given any aid or comfort to the present rebellion, to receive the residue of such proceeds, after the deduction of any purchase money which may have been paid, together with the expense of transportation and sale of said property, and any other lawful expenses attending the disposition thereof.”

By § 3 of the act of July 27, 1868, ch. 276, 15 Stat. 243, it was declared to have been the true intent and meaning of the act of March 12, 1863, “ that the remedy given in cases of seizure made under said act, by preferring claim in the Court of Claims, should be exclusive, precluding the owner of any *183 property taken by agents of the Treasury Department as abandoned or captured property, in virtue or under color of said act, from suit at common law, or any other mode of redress whatever, before any court or tribunal other than said Court of Claims; and in all cases in which suits of trespass, replevin, detinue, or any other form of action may have been brought and are now pending, or shall hereafter be brought, against any person, for or on account of private property taken by such person as an officer or agent of the United States, in virtue or under color of the act aforesaid,” “the défendant may and shall plead or allege, in bar thereof, that such act was done or omitted to be done by him as an officer or agent of the United States, in the administration of one of the acts of Congress aforesaid, or in virtue or under color thereof, and such plea or allegation, if the fact be sustained by the proof, shall be, and shall be deemed and adjudged in law to be, a complete and conclusive bar to any such suit or action.” This statute was in force when this suit was brought, and when the issues in it were joined, and the provision as to the jurisdiction of, and exclusive remedy in, the Court of Claims, is re-enacted, in substance, in § 1059 of the Revised Statutes, which gives jurisdiction to the Court of Claims to hear and determine all claims for the proceeds of captured or abandoned property, as provided by the act of March 12, 1863, or by the act of July 2, 1864, ch. 225, 13 Stat. 375, and then adds: “Provided, That the remedy given in cases of seizure under the said acts, by preferring claim in the Court of Claims, shall be exclusive, precluding the owner of any property taken by agents of the Treasury Department as abandoned or captured property, in virtue or under color of said acts, from suit at common law, or any other mode of redress whatever, before any court other than said Court of Claims.”

The occasion for the enactment of the provisions of § 3 of the act of July 27,1868, appears to have been this: One Elgee brought a suit in a State court in Missouri, against one Lovell, to recover the possession of some bales of cotton. Lovell removed the case into the Circuit Court of the United States for the Districts of Missouri, on the ground that he was in posses- *184 , sion of the cotton as agent for the government of the United • States, which claimed it as abandoned property, under the act of March 12,1863. Elgee having died, the suit was continued in the.name of his administrator. It was decided by the Circuit Court, held by Mr. Justice Miller and District Judges-Treat and Krekel, in October, 1865, and is reported in 1 Woolworth, 103, as. Elgee's Administrator

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 U.S. 163, 6 S. Ct. 1, 29 L. Ed. 360, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamar-v-mcculloch-scotus-1885.