Leonard v. Nye

125 Mass. 455, 1878 Mass. LEXIS 103
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 125 Mass. 455 (Leonard v. Nye) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leonard v. Nye, 125 Mass. 455, 1878 Mass. LEXIS 103 (Mass. 1878).

Opinion

Gray, C. J.

This case presents the question, whether money paid by the United States according to a decision of the Court of Commissioners of Alabama Claims, under the act of Congress of June 23, 1874, to the owner of a cargo destroyed in 1865 by one of the insurgent cruisers, with respect to which it was determined by the award made at Geneva by the Tribunal of Arbitration, constituted by virtue of the Treaty of Washington of 1871, that Great Britain had failed to fulfil her duties as a neutral government, belongs to an assignee of such owner, appointed under the bankrupt act of 1867, after the destruction of the property, and before the making of the treaty.

The leading American authority upon this subject is Qomegys v. Vasse, 1 Pet. 193. In 1802, Vasse, who had previously been an underwriter on ships and cargoes, the property of citizens of the United States, captured and carried into the ports of Spain and her dependencies, and who had received abandonments from the owners and had paid them the losses caused by such captures, was proceeded against as a bankrupt under the act of Congress of April 4, 1800, and an assignment of his property was made to Comegys and others as his assignees in bankruptcy. By the treaty with Spain of 1819, by'which Florida was ceded to the United States, the United States renounced all claims of their citizens upon the government of Spain for such captures, and undertook to make satisfaction, to an amount not exceeding five millions of dollars, for the same as ascertained by commissioners appointed by the President to receive, examine and decide upon the amount and validity of all such claims. 8 U. S. Sts. at Large, 258, 260. In 1821, Congress authorized such commissioners to be appointed, conformably to the stipulations of the treaty. 3 U. S. Sts. at Large, 639. In 1824, the assignees in bankruptcy of Vasse received from the treasury of the United States about nine thousand dollars, being the sum awarded by the commissioners on account of the captures and losses of the vessels and cargoes insured by Vasse ; and Vasse afterwards brought an action of assumpsit against his assignees to recover this sum.

The Supreme Court of the United States, in an opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Story, unanimously held, 1st. That the decisinn of the commissioners was not conclusive of the right of [458]*458the assignees to hold against the bankrupt the money awarded to them ; 2d. That the abandonment by the owners of the ships and cargoes to Vasse, the underwriter thereon, assigned not only the property itself, or its proceeds if restored after an unjust capture, but also any compensation awarded by way of indemnity therefor, and, consequently, that the sum awarded by the commissioners belonged to Vasse, if it had not passed by assignment from him ; and also by a majority of the court (overruling the decision of Mr. Justice Washington on the circuit, reported 4 Wash. C. C. 570,) decided that this right of Vasse had passed by the assignment in bankruptcy to his assignees, and therefore he could not maintain the action against them.

The grounds of the decision upon the first point may be summed up thus : The authority of the commissioners and the effect of their award were limited to ascertaining and determining the validity and amount of the original claims for damages and injuries against Spain. The determination of that question did not require the commissioners, and the powers conferred upon them did not permit the summoning in of the necessary parties and witnesses to enable them, to adjust the conflicting rights of different citizens in the fund awarded, or to decide who was the original legal, as contradistinguished from the equitable, owner, or whether the present ownership was in assignees, personal representatives, or bond fide purchasers. But the rights of any claimant, as well as of all other persons, in the sum awarded to him by the commissioners, were left to the ordinary course of judicial proceedings in the established courts, where redress could be administered according to the nature and extent of the rights or equities of all the parties. 1 Pet. 212, 213. A similar decision was afterwards made by the same court as to an award of the commissioners under the treaty with France of 1831, and the act of Congress of 1832 to carry that treaty into effect. 8 U. S. Sts. at Large, 430. 4 U. S. Sts. at Large, 574. Frevall v. Bache, 14 Pet. 95.

The reasons assigned in Comegys v. Vasse for the decision upon the second point bear so strongly upon the case before us, as to make it proper to state them more fully, which cannot be better done than by quoting some passages from the opinion.

[459]*459“In general, it may be affirmed, that mere personal torts, which die with the party, and do not survive to his personal representative, are not capable of passing by assignment; and that vested rights ad rem and in re, possibilities coupled with an interest, and claims growing out of, and adhering to property, may pass by assignment.” “ The law gives to the act of abandon, ment, when accepted, all the effects, which the most accurately drawn assignment would accomplish.” “ Whatever may be afterwards recovered or received, whether in the course of judicial proceedings or otherwise, as a compensation for the loss, belongs to the underwriters.” Both upon authority and upon principle, “ the right to the compensation in this case was in its nature assignable, and passed by abandonment to Vasse.” “ The right to indemnity for an unjust capture, whether against the captors or the sovereign, whether remediable in his own courts, or by his own extraordinary interposition and grants upon private petition, or upon public negotiation, is a right attached to the ownership of the property itself, and passes by cession to the use of the ultimate sufferer. If so assignable to Vasse, it was equally, in its own nature, capable of assignment to others; and the only remaining inquiry would be, whether it had so passed by assignment from him.”

“ It is not universally, though it may ordinarily be one test of right, that it may be enforced in a court of justice. Claims and debts due from a sovereign are not ordinarily capable of being so enforced. Neither the King of Great Britain, nor the government of the United States, is suable in the ordinary courts of justice, for debts due by either. Yet who will doubt that such debts are rights ? It does not follow, because an unjust sentence is irreversible, that the party has lost all right to justice, or all claim, upon principles of public law, to remuneration. With reference to mere municipal law, he may be without remedy; but with reference to principles of international law, he has a right, both to the justice of his own and the foreign sovereign. The theory, too, that an indemnification for unjust captures is to be deemed, if not a mere donation, as in the nature of a donation, as contrasted with right, is not admissible.” “ The very ground of the treaty is, thac the municipal remedy is inadequate ; and that the party has a right to compensation for illegal [460]*460captures, by an appeal to the justice of the government. It was never understood, that the case was one to which the doctrine of donation applied.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Luckhardt v. Mooradian
207 P.2d 579 (California Court of Appeal, 1949)
Taft v. . Marsily
24 N.E. 926 (New York Court of Appeals, 1890)
Knevals v. Blauvelt
19 A. 818 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1890)
Kingsbury v. Mattocks
17 A. 126 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1889)
McCann v. Randall
17 N.E. 75 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1888)
Goreley v. Butler
16 N.E. 734 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1888)
Heard v. Sturgis
16 N.E. 437 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1888)
Brooks v. Ahrens
12 A. 19 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1888)
Pierce v. Stidworthy
9 A. 617 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1887)
Grant v. Bodwell
7 A. 12 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1886)
Bachman v. Lawson
109 U.S. 659 (Supreme Court, 1884)
Brigham v. Home Life Insurance
131 Mass. 319 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1881)
Belcher v. Burnett
126 Mass. 230 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1879)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 Mass. 455, 1878 Mass. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leonard-v-nye-mass-1878.