Matthews v. McStea

91 U.S. 7, 23 L. Ed. 187, 1 Otto 7, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1326
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 25, 1875
Docket10
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 91 U.S. 7 (Matthews v. McStea) 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
Matthews v. McStea, 91 U.S. 7, 23 L. Ed. 187, 1 Otto 7, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1326 (1875).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Strong

delivered the opinion of, the court.

The single question which this record'presents for our consideration is, whether a partnership, where one member of the firm resided in New York and the others in Louisiana, w,as dissolved by the war of the rebellion prior to April 23,1861.

That the civil war had an existence commencing before that date must be accepted as an established fact. This was fully determined in The Prize Oases, 2 Black, 635; and it is no longer open to denial. The President’s proclamation of April 19,1861, declaring that he had deemed it advisable to set on foot a blockade of the ports within the States of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama; Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas, was a recognition of a war waged, and conclusive' evidence that a state of war existed between the people inhabiting those .States and the United States.

. It must also be conceded, as a general rule, to be one of the immediate consequences of ■ a declaration of war and the' effect of a state of war, even when not declared, .that all commercial intercourse and dealing between the subjects or adherents of the contending powers is unlawful, and is interdicted. The reasons for this rule are obvious. They are, that, in a state of war, all the members of each belligerent are respectively enemies of all the members of the. other belligerent; and, were commercial intercourse allowed, it would, tend to strengthen the enemy, and afford facilities for conveying intelligence, and even for traitorous correspondence. Hence it has become an established doctrine, that war puts an end to all commercial dealing between the citizens -or subjects of the nations or powers at war, and “ places every individual of the respective governments, as well as the governments themselves, in a state of hostility: ” and it dissolves commercial partnerships existing between the subjects. or citizens of the two contending parties prior to the war; *10 for their continued existence would involve community of interest and mutual dealing between enemies.

' Still further, it is undeniable that civil war brings with it all the consequences in this regard which attend upon and follow a state of foreign war. Certainly this is so when civil war is sectional. Equally with foreign war, it renders commercial intercourse unlawful between the contending parties, and it dissolves commercial partnerships.

But, while all this is true as a general rule, it is not without exceptions. A state of war may exist, and yet commercial intercourse be lawful. They are not necessarily inconsistent with each other. Trading with a public enemy may be authorized by the sovereign, and even, to a limited extent, by' a military commander. Such permissions or licenses are partial suspensions of the laws of war, but not of the war itself.. In modern times, they are very common. Bynkershoek, in his Qusest. Jur. Pub., lib. 1, c. 3, while asserting as a universal principle of law that an immediate consequence of the commencement of war is the interdiction of' all commercial intercourse between the subjects of the States at war, remarks, “ The utility, however, of merchants, and the mutual wants of nations, have almost got the better of the laws of war as to commerce.' Hence it is alternatively permitted and forbidden in time of war, as princes think it most for the interests of their subjects. A commercial nation is anxious to trade, and accommodates- the laws of war to the greater or lesser want that it may be in of the goods of others. Thus sometimes a mutual commence is permitted generally; sometimes as to certain merchandise only, while others are prohibited; and sometimes it is prohibited altogether.” Halleck, in his “Treatise on the Laws of War,” p. 676 et seq., discusses this subject at considerable length, and remarks, “ That branch of the government to which, from the form of its constitution, the power of declaring or making war is intrusted, has an undoubted right to regulate and modify, in its discretion, the hostilities which-it sanctions. ... In England, licenses' are granted directly by the crown, or by some subordinate officer to whom the authority of the crown has-been-delegated, either by special instructions, or under an .act of Parliament. In the United States, as a general rule, *11 licenses are issued under the authority of ah act of Congress; but in special cases, and for purposes immediately connected with the prosecution of the war, they may be, granted by the authority of the President, as commander-in-chief of the military and naval forces of the United States.”

It being, then, settled that a war may exist, and yet that trading with the enemy, or commercial intercourse, may be allowable, wé are brought to inquire whether such intercourse was allowed between the loyal citizens of the United States and the citizens of Louisiana until the 23d of April, 1861, when the acceptance was made upon which this suit was brought. And, in determining this, the character of the war and the mariner in which it was commenced ought not to be overlooked. No declaration of war was ever made. The President recognized its existence by proclaiming a blockade on the 19th of April; and it then became his duty as well as his right to direct how it should be carried on. In the exercise of this right, he’ was at liberty to allow or license intercourse; and his proclamations, if they did- not license it expressly, did, in our opinion, license it by very cogent implications. It is impossible to. read them without ¿'-conviction that no interdiction of commercial intercourse, except through the ports of the designated States, was intended.' The first was that of April 15,1861. The forts and property of the United States had, prior to that day, been forcibly seized by armed forces. Hostilities had commenced; and, in the light of subsequent events, it must be considered that a state of war then existed. Yet the proclamation, while calling for the militia of the several States, and. stating what would probably be the first service assigned to them, expressly declared, that, “ in every event, the utmost care would be observed, consistently with the repossession of the forts, places, and property which had been seized from the Union, to avoid any devastation, destruction of or interference with property,- or any disturbance of 'peaceful citizens in any part of the country.” Manifestly, this declaration was not a mere military order. It did not contemplate the treatment of the inhabitants of the States in which the unlawful combinations mentioned in the proclamation existed as public enemies. It announced a different mode of treatment, —the treatment due *12 to friends. It is to be observed that the proclamation of April 15, 1861, yras not a distinct recognition of an existing state of war-. The President had power to recognize it, The Prize Cases, supra; but he did not prior to his second proclamation, that of ApriH9, in which he announced the blockade. ' Even then, the war was only inferentially recognized; and the measures proposed were avowed to be “ with a' view to . . .

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Bluebook (online)
91 U.S. 7, 23 L. Ed. 187, 1 Otto 7, 1875 U.S. LEXIS 1326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-mcstea-scotus-1875.