Molina v. United States

6 Ct. Cl. 269
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Ct. Cl. 269 (Molina v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Molina v. United States, 6 Ct. Cl. 269 (cc 1870).

Opinion

MilligAN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an action brought to recover tbe net proceeds of twenty-four bales of upland cotton, alleged to have been the joint property of tbe claimants when it was seized by the military forces of the United States.

[272]*272The facts as found by the court are as follows-:

1. Both claimants are aliens — subjects of the kingdom of Spain.

2. The claimant, Iiamon Molina, in December, 18G4, was the owner of twenty-four bales of upland cotton, which was then stored at the cellar of his store, under the Scriven House, in the city of Savannah.

3. The cotton thus stored, on the 25th of February, 1805, was seized by the United States military forces, under the orders of Colonel Bausom, United States quartermaster, charged with the duty of collecting captured and abandoned property, and shipped to New York, and there sold, and the net proceeds, amounting to $4,207 92, paid into the Treasury.

4. The claimants never gave any aid or comfort to the late rebellion, and throughout the war maintained a course of strict neutrality between tlje two belligerent parties.

5. The proof of the laws of Spain authorizing a citizen of the United States to sue the Spanish government for claims against that government rests in the testimony of one witness, Mr. Francisco Fessor, who proves that he is a Spanish citizen and subject, and that he was educated to the profession of the law in Cuba, and practiced his profession in Havana for ten years, and that the laws of the island of Cuba are the same as the laws of Spain in all essential points, except local usages and institutions, such as slavery.

6. In respect to the Spanish law, it appears that the right of an alien and of a Spanish subject to appear before the courts of law, ■ generally, and bring on all manner of actions, whether against the government, or against all other persons and corporations, is precisely the same. The law makes no distinction between aliens and subjects; all alike have the right to claim against the action of the government, and to procure redress from the special courts appointed for the purpose, and by special rules of procedure, whenever the action of the government or of any of its officers is claimed, or pretended to be, in violation of written law, or in violation of contracts entered into by the government;-or when questions arise concerning the interpretation, validity, or annulling of those contracts; or, in fact, in any other question in which established or acquired rights or property are injured.

7. There is no unwritten or common law in Spain; the stat-' [273]*273ute or written law is the only one admitted with force. Tlie right of aliens or citizens to sue the government is derived from the principle of law that whatever is not forbidden is lawful ,* and as there is no law which forbids a foreigner or a native to come forward and sue the government, he is admitted with that right, and has .been by traditional practice of centuries. There is no known period from which that right dates its origin. It is coeval with the establishment of jurisprudence in Spain, because it is a maxim of civil law from which Spain’s law is derived.

8. As to the tribunals in which actions are brought against the government, it appears that in Spain these suits against the government are brought before the bodies called the “Provincials’ councils,” which, besides exercising certain governmental functions, have also a judicial capacity for that peculiar description of suits.

An appeal may be taken from all these councils, or from the primary court, to the “ Council of State of the Nation.” The form of procedure is similar in its principles to that which is in force in the ordinary courts of law, only that the terms and delays are briefer, more rapid, and the forms of law simpler. In this class of suits, where the government is the defendant, it is designated uMscus, State or Government.” uMseus ” properly means the treasury, the department of the government which collects and pays and receives money. But as all suits against the government may be defined to be a claim for money, or for a pecuniary indemnity, almost all these claims are said to be made against the “Fiscns.” These courts which have been mentioned as having jurisdiction to try actions against the government, on behalf of aliens as well as citizens, render a judicial judgment. Until the establishment of these special tribunals to take cognizance against the government, which date only from the beginning of this century, it was lawful to sue the government in the ordinary courts, to obtain judgment, and to carry out the execution of such judgments, even to the extreme of attaching and selling the property of the government. When this mode of procedure under these special tribunals was established, the courts were forbidden to issue writs of execution against the government, the mode of satisfaction being to apply with a copy of the judgment' before the government, and have the claim, or whatever the amount awarded by [274]*274tbe court is, inserted iu the budget, which at once gives authority to the corresponding’ treasurer or paymaster, to make the payment. The judgment rendered by the court is conclusive of the right, and no further legislation is required to establish it. • These judgments are paid, as a matter of course, by the government, only sometimes there arises some difficulty in consequence of the penury of the treasury. There is no dispute about it; there is supposed to be none in law. There has never existed in Spain any difference between the right of an alien and a citizen to sue the government.

On the foregoing facts found in the record, we find as an ultimate fact that the government of' Spain accords to citizens of the United States the right to prosecute claims in its courts against that government, as fully as they are allowed by law to prosecute them against the government of the United States.

In the attitude of this case, there are only two questions of any importance presented for our decision: 1. The variance between the petition and the proof as to the ownership of the cotton sued for; and, 2. - The right of the claimants to maintain this action under the second section of the Act 2,7th July, 1868.

1. As to the first question, it may be remarked that in the petition it is averred that the cotton, 'jvhich is the foundation of this action, was jointly owned by the claimants at the date of the capture$ and the proof shows that the title was vested, in Eamon Molina alone, and his co-claimant, Francis E. Molina, had no interest whatever in it. The Act 12th March, 1863, under which this suit was brought, among other things, requires every claimant to prove to the satisfaction of the court his ownership of the property claimed, and his right to the proceeds. The averment of these essential facts must, if traversed at all, be traversed in the manner and form in which they are pleaded, and a failure to support the affirmative of the issue thus presented is as fatal at the common law as if no proof had been offered to sustain it. (Stevens on Pleading, 85, margin.)

But the rigor of this rule has been to a great extent obviated by statute both in England and the United States. The British statute 3 and 4 Will. IY,c.

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6 Ct. Cl. 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/molina-v-united-states-cc-1870.