Otis v. Walter

19 U.S. 583, 5 L. Ed. 336, 6 Wheat. 583, 1821 U.S. LEXIS 383
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 16, 1821
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 19 U.S. 583 (Otis v. Walter) 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
Otis v. Walter, 19 U.S. 583, 5 L. Ed. 336, 6 Wheat. 583, 1821 U.S. LEXIS 383 (1821).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Livingston

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action of trover brought by the defendant in error, against the plaintiff and others, in .the Court of Common Pleas, held at Boston, within and for the county of Suffolk, to recover the value of jeighty-six barrels of flour, and sundry other articles, in which judgment was recovered against the plaintiff in error, from which judgment there was an appeal to the Supreme judicial Court, which is the highest Court of law in the commonwealth of Massachusetts, in which judgment was rendered against the plaintiffs in error, for the sum of $2,488 75 cents, and costs of suit, ánd in favour of the other defendants. On the judgment, the defendant below, William Otis, has prosecuted a writ of error to this Court, under the 25th section of the Judiciary Act of .the United States ; and we áre now to decide whether there was- any error in the direction given by the judge before whom this action was tried, and which appears on the bill of exceptions attached to the recora in this cause.

The property in question had been seized by William Otis, as Deputy Collector of the customs for the port and district of Barnstable, in the commonwealth of Massachusetts, under the 11th section of an act in addition to the act, entitled, “ An act laying an embargo on all ships and vessels in the ports and harbours of the United States;” and the several acts supplementary thereto, and for other purposes, passed the 25th April, 1808. On the bill of exceptions, the following facts appear. On the part of the *585 plaintiff, Lynde Walter, it was proved, that the goods mentioned in the declaration were his property ; that they were put on board of the sloop Ten Sisters, at Ipswich, in Massachusetts, bound for the port of Yarmouth 5 that it was agreed or understood between Walter and Hallett, who was master of the sloop; that the latter was to carry said goods to Barnstable, or to a place called Bass river, in Yarmouth, with orders to sell the same, provided he could obtain a certain price fixed by Walter, otherwise to deliver them to Freeman Baker,' of Yar-mouth 5 that said sloop, on the 19th November, 1808, cleared out at Ipswich, to proceed to the port of Yarmouth, as expressed in the clearance obtained from the Collector at that place ; that said sloop proceeded round Cape Cod to Hyannis, in the town and district of Barnstable, and the master applied to William Otis, a deputy Collector for that port and district, for a permit to land the cargo, which he refused to give, but ordered him not to discharge any thing from the sloop, until he should have a permit so to do. That in a day or two afterwards, Otis came on board the sloop with four men, and seized sloop and cargo, and putting a pilot and crew on board, he sent her to Falmouth, in the district of Barnstable, where Otis had the.cargo discharged and stored, in, and under a dwelling-house in Falmouth : the master forbidding Otis to meddle with the sloop or cargo. The master. also exhibited to Otis his manifest, and swore to the. correctness of the same.

On.the part of Otis, it was proved, that he was deputy Collector for Barnstable — that on the 29th No *586 vember, 1808, he duly reported to the President of the United States, the detention of this sloop, and her cargo, under and by virtue of the act abovemen-tioned, which detention was confirmed and approved by the President, on the 8th of December, r 1808. That the sloop, when seized, lay at anchor about half a mile from the shore or beach, which is in the town and port of Barnstable, near the centre thereof, six miles distant, from.Bass river, on which Freeman Baker’s house and store, are situated, and. about five miles from the harbour of Yarmouth. That Freeman-Baker’s landing is situate above a quarter of a mile from the mouth of Bass river, xm said river, in the town of Yarmouth, about six miles and an half by water, from where the sloop was seized, and lies to the eastward of Point Gammon. Hyannis, where the vessel was seized, is westward of Point Gammon, 'and in the town of Barnstable. That the sloop, when seized, had not. arrived at the harbour of Yarmouth, but was lying in the port or harbour of Barnstable, about three miíés from the harbour of Yarmouth, which lies east north east from the port of Barnstable, and the. sloop on her way from Ipswich to the place where she was seized, passed the place for which she was cleared, because the weather would not permit the master to get her either into the*harbours of Bass river, or Gage wharf, and because he lived near Hyannis, and wished to see fiis family, and to lay his vessel in a safe place, and to land certain articles of bedding", &c. from the vessel, as it was his intention to strip the vessel when she arrived at Yarmouth. After the master arrived in *587 Hyannis Bay, it was hie intention to land his cargo at Gage wharf, which is in the town of Yarmouth: , about three rods distant from the line of Barnstable; and about six miles and an half from the place where the sloop was anchored when seized. Between Yar-mouth harbour or Bass river harbour, and Hyannis, or Barnstable harbour, where the vessel was seized, is a long point of land, called Point Gammon, extending several miles into the sea, and the distance. by the nearest course of the ship-channel, or deep water, from Bass river to Hyannis, is ten miles, and in going from Ipswich to Hyannis, the sloop passed Bass river harbour, or Yarmouth harbour and Point Gammon. The cargo, when stored by the Collector, Was some of it in bad and perishable condition, and was put in better order by coopering, &c. before being stored.

* On this evidence, the jury were charged : that under the clearance, the captain had a right to go to any part of Yarmouth with his vessel, notwithstanding it might have been the intention of him and the owner, that.she should goto Bass river-in that town : that if she had been carried beyond Bass river by force of the winds, and contrary to the master’s , intention, and came to anchor in Hyannis Bay, within the limits of the town of Barnstable, for that cause, still, if the jury believed that, in consequence of this state of things, the captain had concluded to give up his intention of going to Bass river, and in lieu thereof, to carry his: vessel to Gage’s wharf, which is within the town of Yarmouth," on the same side of Point Gammon as Barnstable, and to all sub'- *588 stantial purposes, the same harbour; and foi this purpose, was waiting only for. a proper opportunity to take the vessel into that wharf, they might justly and fairly determine that the voyage was terminated at the time Otis took possession of the vessel.

Whether this part of the charge: were correct, will depend on the true construction of the 11th section of the act of Congress, under, which this seizure .was made, and. which has already, been referred to. Its language is, “ that the Collectors of the customs be, and they are .hereby respectively authorized -to detain any. vessel.ostensibly bound with a cargo to some other port- of the United States,'-whenever, in theif opinion, the intention-is to violate, or eyade any of the provisions of the acts laying an embargo, until the decisión oTthe president of the United States be had thereupon.”

Of ostensible.destination of the Ten Sisters, at the time of her leaving Ipswich, there can he no doubt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 U.S. 583, 5 L. Ed. 336, 6 Wheat. 583, 1821 U.S. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otis-v-walter-scotus-1821.