Otis v. Watkins

13 U.S. 339, 3 L. Ed. 752, 9 Cranch 339, 1815 U.S. LEXIS 393
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 10, 1815
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 13 U.S. 339 (Otis v. Watkins) 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. Watkins, 13 U.S. 339, 3 L. Ed. 752, 9 Cranch 339, 1815 U.S. LEXIS 393 (1815).

Opinion

Livingston, J.

delivered the opinión of the Court as follows:

This is an action of trespass* brought in the Supreme Judicial Court of the commonwealth of Massachusetts, for taking, carrying away alyl destroying a certain schooner called the Friendship, witlrher carao, belonging to the Plaintiff below.

The declaration is in common form. The Defendant pleaded that, as deputy collector for the" district of Barnstable, he detained and removed from the. port and harbor of Provincetown to the port and harbor of Barnstable, the said vessel and cargó, that they might be ¡gecurely kept; the said schooner, and. car^o, .at the time of such' detention, lying in the said harbor of Provincetown, within the district aforesaid, ostensibly bound to some other port of the United States, with an irtcnt; in the opinion of the Defendant, to violate or evade the provisions of the embargo laws. He further pleaded that he caused the said vessel to be detained so that the decision of the president of the United States might pe had thereon, who; afterwards, upon his report and re; presentation, did approve and confirm the said detention.

The Plaintiff repíiés that the' Defendant committed the trespass of his own wrong,, and without any such cause, &c. Issue being joined thereon.

On a bill of exceptions taken, to. the charge of the Court, the following facts appear to.have been, given in evidence i That the schooner in question* in the month of December, 1808, was.Iying at Provihcetown, wholly loaded with cod-fish. She had also a barrel of beef* a number of small stores and groceries, with three or four barrels of water, and a number of kegs of pickled lobsters. . That an inspector of the customs, seéing the Friendship in this situation, and judging that the groceries were sufficient for the crew of such a vessel for thirty days, and having no doubt of her being bound to sea, gave information of such, his suspicions, to the collector, who a written order to one Ganett to detain *354 and to bring her into the port of Barnstable, and there, secure her in the best manner possible. That Ganett proceeded to Provincetown with about thirty men, and the said, vessel to Barnstable, about ten leagues, by -water; but when attempting to come up to a wharf, she accidentally, ran-pn to a point of land which projected into the water, and there stuck fast. That she could not be got off during that tide which soon left her; and the weather was very cold, and the harbor was frozen up for a long time, so that the schooner could not be removed. That the Defendant gave notice, by letter, to the' secretary of the treasury of the- United States, of the detention of said vessel, stating, at the same time, his reasons for believing that « she was evidently intended for a foreign port';” which detention was approved of and confirmed by the president. That, as soon as the weather would permit, which was in the month of March following, the Defendant caused the said schooner to be brought ,to- a wharf, and unloaded and secured the cargo. That about 60 or 70 quintals of fish were damaged, and the rest in good order. There was, also, evidence, on the part of the Plaintiff, to prove that the Friendship was actually bound to Boston, and the extent of the injury which his property hfid sustained.

The Court charged the jury that the several matters and things so given in evidence by the'Defendant « did « not, in law, maintain the issue aforesaid on his part; « and also that it was the duty of the collector, as col«lector, to have used reasonable care in ascertaining “ the facts on which to form an. opinion, and to trans- « mit to the president a statement pf those facts for ins « decision.” On an exception to the charge, the cause now comes before us, it having been removed into this Court under the 25th section of the judiciary act; and whether it were- correct or not, is the question which is now to be decided.

This seizure'was made'under the llth section of the . act of the 25th of April, 1808, vol. 9, p. 150, which'provides « That the collectors of the customs be and they « are hefcby respectively authorized %o detain any ves-. sel ostensibly bound with a. cargo to’ some other port “ of the United States, whenever, in their opinions, the *355 *s intention is to violate or evade any of the provisions « of the acts laying an embargo, until the. decision of the president of the United States be had thereupon.”

Thfe issue tendered by the Defendant, and on which the parties went to tri^l, was whether the vessel and Cargo were detained because, in the opinion of the Defendant, she intended, although ostensibly bound to a port in the United States, to violate or evade the provisions of the embargo laws; and whether the vessel was removed to Barnstable that she might be securely kept until the decision of the president was known.

If there were any evidence to prove this issue, it should have been left to the jury to draw their own conclusions. If the Defendant had taken upon himself to say that the vessel did intend to violate the embargo laws, and that such removal was absolutely necessary for her secure detention, such charge would have been less exceptionable; but that it was the opinion of the collector that such violation was in contemplation, and that such removal was for the purpose, of securing the vessel, which were the facts in issue, might very well have been inferred the jury from the evidence before them. Indeed, it would have been difficult for them to have come to a different conclusion | for the collector, from the information which he received, could scarcely fail to form the opinion he did; and there was no evidence whatever to induce them to believe that she could have been removed to Barnstable, considering the care which was taken of her during her removal and after-her arrival there, for any other purpose but for that alleged in the plea. In this particular, then, it is the opinion of a majority of the Court that the charge was erroneous.

The charge is deemed incorrect in another respect. The jury are tpld that it was the collector’s duty to have used reasonable care in ascertaining the facts on which to form an opinion

This instruction implies that the collector is liable if he form an incorrect opinion, or if, in tine opinion of the jury, it shall have been made unadvisedly or without reasonable care and diligence. But the law exposes *356 his conduct to no such scrutiny. If it. did, no public officer would be'hardy enough to act under it. If the jury believed that he honestly entertained the opinion which he acted, although they might think it incorrect and formed hastily or without sufficient grounds, he would be entitled to their protection. Such was the -opinion of this Court in the case of Crowell and Hawes v. M‘Faddon, decided at the last term. This does not preclude proof, on the part of the Plaintiffs, showing malice or other circumstances which may impeach the Integrity of the transaction. The jury, then, were misled when their attention was. drawn from the fact whether the Defendant really' entertained such opinion, and were directed, to enquire "into the reasonable care with which it was formed, which left them at liberty to find a vérdict against the Defendant, however honestly and fairly ho may have acted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 U.S. 339, 3 L. Ed. 752, 9 Cranch 339, 1815 U.S. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otis-v-watkins-scotus-1815.