Lockington v. Smith

15 F. Cas. 758
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 15, 1817
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 F. Cas. 758 (Lockington v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lockington v. Smith, 15 F. Cas. 758 (circtdpa 1817).

Opinion

WASHINGTON, Circuit Justice.

This is an action of assault and battery, and false’ imprisonment, to which the defendant has put in four special pleas of justification. The first sets forth in substance, that at the time when the alleged wrongs were committed, viz. on the 9th of October, 1813, the defendant was marshal of this district. That war had been declared by the government of the United States against the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, which had been duly proclaimed by the [759]*759president. That in conformity with an order of the president, requiring the subjects of the enemy residing within the United States to report themselves to the marshal of the state in which such aliens resided, the plaintiff, on the 18th day of July, 1S12, reported himself to the defendant as an alien and a subject of the king of the United Kingdoms, &c. and a merchant; and the plea avers, that the plaintiff at the time when, was an alien enemy subject of the said king, aged above twenty years, residing in the state of Pennsylvania within forty miles •of tide water, engaged in commerce, and was not naturalized, nor had he made application to any court of the United States to be naturalized. The plea then proceeds to set forth sundry orders issued from the department of state, by the directions of the president, of which public notice was given; as also certain instructions to the respective marshals, issued from the same department, and also from that of the commissary general of prisoners, by order of the president, the most material of which are as follows: ^JThe order of the 23d of February, 1813, required all alien enemies residing within forty miles of tide water, forthwith to apply to the marshal of the district in which they resided, for passports to retire to such places beyond that distance from tide water as should be designated by the said marshal; which order was accompanied by instructions to the marshals, of the same date, requiring them to take into custody and convey to the place assigned to them, all those to whom the said order had reference, who were engaged in commerce, and who did not immediately conform to said order.?:. Also the instructions of the 12th of November, ISIS, requiring the several marshals to offer for execution to every alien enemy within their respective districts who had been or might be thereafter removed from the vicinity of tide water, a parol of honour in a prescribed form; and if refused, commanding them to place every alien enemy so refusing, forthwith in close confinement; also, a subsequent order of the 17th of the same month, instructing the marshals not to liberate any person imprisoned under the .above order of the 12th, without the special order of the commissary general. The plea then proceeds to aver, that on the 13th of March, 1S13, the plaintiff received from the defendant a passport to retire to Reading, a place beyond forty miles from tide water, to which place he did retire, and remained there for some time, but that he afterwards left it contrary to the above regulations, and was found by the defendant at large in the city of Philadelphia: and being required by the defendant to return to Reading, which he refused to do, the defendant gently laid his hands on the plaintiff in order to take him into custody, that he might be conveyed to Reading; and that for this purpose the defendant necessarily imprisoned the plaintiff in the debtors’ apartment, the usual and lawful place of confinement for persons taken into custody by the marshal under the authority of the United States.

The plea then states two unsuccessful attempts of the plaintiff to obtain his discharge, under writs of habeas corpus, the one issued by the chief justice of Pennsylvania, and the other by the supreme court of that state, and proceeds to aver, that the defendant, on the 20th of November, ISIS, in obedience to the above recited order of the 17th of the same month, tendered to the plaintiff the parol of honour therein' prescribed, which the plaintiff refused to execute; in consequence whereof the defendant held the plaintiff in confinement until the 19th of April, 1S14, when he signed the parol and was discharged.

The second plea resembles the first, except that it omits to mention the writs of habeas corpus; and it sets forth an order issued from the department of the commissary general, by the directions of the president, dated the 19th of April, 1813, instructing the several marshals, in any case where an alien enemy should declare his adherence to the enemy and a disposition to support their interest, or who should attempt to disturb the confidence reposed in their government by the citizens of the United States, to place him immediately in close confinement. This plea then avers that the plaintiff at different times, before and during his confinement, was chargeable with actual hostility towards the government of the United States, and with other crimes against the public safety, by declaring his adherence to the enemy, and by declaring his intention to escape from his said restraint and to join the enemy; and by declaring that he corresponded with the subjects of the enemy, and had intercourse with them; whereupon the defendant, having the warrant of the president therefor, gently laid his hands on the plaintiff, and then and there arrested and confined him in the debtors’ apartment aforesaid. and there continued him until the 19th of April, 1S14. when he signed a parol to return to Reading, when he was discharged.

To the two first pleas demurrers have been filed, and various causes assigned; the whole of which may be included under the following heads: First, that the act of congress of the 6th of July, 179S, respecting alien enemies, did not authorise the president to direct the restraint or confinement of such persons for any other purpose than that of removing them from the United States; and that the orders of the president could give no authority to the marshal to confine an alien enemy, unless the marshal was also armed with a special warrant from the president for the removal of such alien from the United States. Second, that if the president had a power to order alien enemies to be confined for any other purpose, still such order must have ' been made by [760]*760some public act of bis own, -and under his seal, of which the orders issued from the department of state, and from that of the commissary general, are no evidence. Third, that the marshal was not justified in arresting and confining the plaintiff without the sanction of the judicial authority, under the second section of the above act of congress. The fourth objection is to the form of these pleas.

Issues in fact are joined on the third and fourth pleas, and need not be noticed at this time. The three first heads of objection to the defence asserted by these pleas, were so fully discussed, and, to my mind, so satisfactorily decided by the chief justice of the supreme court of this state, upon the habeas corpus obtained by the plaintiff, that I deem it unnecessary to go at large over the same ground, but I shall content myself with a brief expression of the reasons upon which my opinion is founded.

, First, the power of the president under ^the first section of the law, to establish by his proclamation or other public acts, rules and regulations for apprehending, restraining, securing, and removing alien enemies, under the circumstances stated in that section, appears to me to be as unlimited as the legislature could make it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockington-v-smith-circtdpa-1817.