Parlin v. United States

1 Ct. Cl. 174
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedOctober 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Ct. Cl. 174 (Parlin 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
Parlin v. United States, 1 Ct. Cl. 174 (cc 1864).

Opinion

.Casey, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Some time in the year 1S14, and during the war between the United States and Great Britain, a large British fleet entered the Penobscot river, took possession of the town of Castine, and held it for some time. While this fleet lay at Castine, a sloop, which was a tender to one of the enemy’s men-of-war, together with a launch, was sent up [175]*175the river, under the command of Lieutenant Simons, of the British ■navy. He landed at the town of Frankfort, demanded the arms of the militia of the place, and a lot of cocoa, which was secreted some distance from the town. The arms, to the number of about one hundred, were delivered up to him, and placed on board the sloop. The authorities of the town, to prevent further depredations upon the citizens and their property, employed teams and had the cocoa brought into town, and there delivered to the British officer upon the wharf. There is some discrepancy in the testimony as to what amount of the cocoa had been placed on board the sloop. The weight of the evidence shows that a portion of it was on board. The balance remained on the wharf. At this juncture the claimant, who was a lieutenant in the 40th regiment United States troops, commanded by Colonel John Loring, with a detachment of from twenty to thirty men, entered the town, took the British officer and his crew prisoners, sent them off to Portland as such, and delivered them to the general commanding at that post. The sloop and launch, with a portion of the cocoa, and aboirt one hundred muskets found on board, were burned and totally destroyed, except about thirty of the muskets, which Lieutenant Morse retained for the use of his own men.

The claimant brings this suit on behalf of himself and his men, or their heirs, who served under him at that time, to recover the bounty allowed by the act of 3d March, 1813, (2 Stat., 816,) for the destruction of any armed vessel of the enemy. He also claims the bounty allowed by the act of 19th March, 1814, (3 Stat., 105,) allowing to certain persons a bounty of one hundred dollars for every prisoner captured and delivered to any agent of the United States in any port, &c.

The United States resist a recovery in this case on the grounds—

1st. That the vessel destroyed was not an armed vessel within the purview of the act of 1813.

2d. That there was no actual cargo on board for which any allowance can be made.

3d. That the bounty for prisoners was confined to those captured and delivered under the act of 1814 to the owners, officers, and crews-of the commissioned privateers of the United States.

4th. The statute of limitations.

1. The act of 3d March, 1813, under which the plaintiffs claim for the vessel and cargo is, is as follows :

“ That during the present war with Great Britain, it shall be lawful [176]*176for any person or persons to burn, sink, or destroy any British armed vessel-of-war, except vessels coming as cartels or flags of truce ; and for that purpose to use torpedoes, submarine instruments, or any other destructive machine whatever; and a bounty of one-half the armed vessel so burnt, sunk, or destroyed, also one-half the value of her guns, cargo, tackle, and apparel, shall be paid out of the treasury of the United States to such person or persons who shall effect the same, otherwise than by the armed or commissioned vessels of the United States.”

To constitute a “ British armed vessel-of-war” under this act, it was not necessary that she should have any particular or specified armament. If she belonged to the British navy, and was used for hostile purposes, being armed with muskets, pikes, cutlasses, &c., it was enough to bring her within the intention of the act.

That she bore this character the evidence does not leave in doubt. She was detached from a fleet of nineteen or twenty armed vessels which lay below in the river at Castine. The barge or launch that accompanied her approached the wharf, armed with cutlasses and blunderbusses, while the sloop lay out in the river, having at least a number of -muskets on board. She was in command of officers and seamen of the British navy — a lieutenant, quartermaster, midshipman, and eleven seamen. She was sent on a hostile mission, and was engaged in executing it when her crew was captured and the sloop and her barge destroyed. We cannot doubt that she comes directly within the description contained in the act. Nor is she entitled to the benefit of the exception of a vessel coming “as á cartel or flag of truce.” It is true this sloop and launch came to Frankfort flying a flag of truce. But it is also true that her mission and purpose was a hostile one, and that she was engaged in carrying out that hostile purpose at the very moment when she was seized by Lieutenant Morse and his men. This was perfectly well understood by Morse, that the flag of truce could not protect the British officer while he plundered a town. He acted on that principle, and he acted properly, and the United States authorities sustained him in so doing by refusing to give up the prisoners he had captured.

2. The evidence, or at least the weight of the evidence, shows that a portion of the cocoa was on board the sloop when she was captured.

Walter Robbins’s, Record, on folios 21 and 23; Benjamin Thompson, folio 42 ; Stephen Kempton, folio 50 ; and James B. Chick, folio 65, all agree that a part of the cocoa had been placed on board the sloop. [177]*177The last witness says “ the hold of the sloop was nearly or quite full with the 'cocoa.” And we think for' such part as was on board the claimants should recover. The act was passed to encourage the destruction of the armed vessels of the enemy entering our inland waters, by stimulating the exertions of private persons, as well as soldiers or sailors, to engage in adventures for that purpose. It had relation to •the public defence and safety in. a time of war, and is to receive a liberal and beneficial interpretation in accordance with the purpose and spirit of the enactment. It was a bounty offered for meritorious and hazardous public services, and we are not to apply its words or construe its provisions in a close, cramped, technical spirit, so as to exclude any who came fairly within its purview.

Such we believe to be the liberal and enlarged construction given by our courts and all the departments of the government to this class of enactments. And Congress has, with great magnanimity, in numerous cases where persons have been excluded by the terms of the ■acts, supplied the deficiency by a special law.

Regarding the case in this light, we think the claimants justly en-. titled to the bounty for the sloop and launch, and also for one hundred muskets found on board, and for one-half the cocoa, being twelve and a half tons. The evidence makes the quantity of cocoa in the whole brought in between twenty and thirty tons, Some of the witnesses speak of it as low as twenty and others as high as forty tons. Those who had the best means of judging appear to estimate it as we have stated.

It has, however, been insisted that Lieutenant Morse and his men having been soldiers in the service of the country, it was a part of their duty to capture these prisoners and to destroy this enemy’s property, and therefore the act does not embrace them.

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Related

Crain v. United States
84 F. Supp. 876 (Court of Claims, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ct. Cl. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parlin-v-united-states-cc-1864.