Price v. United States

7 Ct. Cl. 567
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Ct. Cl. 567 (Price 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
Price v. United States, 7 Ct. Cl. 567 (cc 1871).

Opinion

Nott, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court :

The cottons captured in Northern Georgia, it is said, fall into two distinct classes: 1st, those captured before the fall of Atlanta; 2d, those captured in and around Atlanta. Nevertheless, through delay in transmitting some parcels of the former-class, these two classes did to a limited extent intermingle. The different captures, however, can be traced, with some uncertainty, into certain Government cotton sales at Cincinnati, and these sales furnished in turn certain distinct funds, out of which the respective captures are to be satisfied. To prevent future errors or misapprehension, it may be necessary to examine and set forth at this time what these different funds are which may be required to respond to this Georgia cotton. It. is to be understood that this court has always held that specific captures traced into and mingled with a mass of captured cotton must afterward contribute proportionably to the losses and disasters which may befall the mass. But unfortunately for the Government, the Treasury Department, in its reports to the court, adopted the opposite course of stating the price per bale which the residue of the cotton brought as the price per bale which claimants should recover; and unfortunately, instead of transmitting at the outset to the court all the facts and evidence in its possession, the Treasury transmitted chiefly its own results, so that it was not for a long time. [569]*569suspected that any error existed in the amounts awarded. And no captures have been in their records so involved, intricate, and obscure as these from Northern Georgia. Combining now all the numerous detached and often contradictory reports which from time to time have been transmitted to the court, and the testimony of witnesses in this and other cases, we are at last able to do, though still in an imperfect and incomplete way, what should have been done at first by the proper officers of the Government, viz, separate the general proceeds into specific funds, aud trace the various captures to the funds where they respectively have gone.

1. It appears by the testimony of Captain George E. Alden, quartermaster on the staff of General Kilpatrick, given in this case, that he made the following shipments to Captain Brown, the quartermaster at Nashville, through'whom all of this cotton, without exception, came:

Bales.

June 3,1804. From Kingston.‘... 72

June 5,1864. From Kingston. 100

June 12,1864. From Adairsville.... 113

June 12,1864. From Adairsville... 15

June 15,1864. From Adairsville... 82

Total shipped direct by Captain Alden. 382

It further appears from the reports of Captain Brown that he received Georgia cotton from two other officers, so that the Account of shipments to Nashville will stand thus :

June 1. By Captain C. M. Smith. 31

June 2. By Captain John Stewart... 50

June 10. By Captain John Stewart.-. 53

June 15. By Captain Alden... 382

Total captured, so far as known. 516

But it appears by the reports of Captain Brown that all of these shipments could not have reached him. His statement of receipts is as follows:

June 1,1864. From Captain Smith. 31

June 2, 1864. From Captain Stewart. 50

[570]*570June 10, 1864. From Captain Stewart. 53

June 13,1864. From Chattanooga, by railroad. 150

June 13,1864. From Chattanooga, by railroad. 53

•June 25,1864. From Adairsville, by railroad. 70

Total that reached Nashville.-. 407

It may be noted here that all of the cotton shipped by Captain Smith on the 1st had been derived by him from Captain ■Stewart, and by him from Captain Alden; and that a portion of that shipped by Captain Stewart had been likewise derived from Captain Alden; and that all of these captures so intermingle that none can be intelligibly distinguished, but each unites with the others to make up the number of five hundred and sixteen bales, which is the foundation of this fund.

With the four hundred and seven bales of G-eorgia cotton which Captain Brown received in'May and June, he mingled three parcels of Alabama cotton, consisting of forty-eight bales coming from Decatur, twenty-four from Huntsville, and seventy-nine from Captain Arthur Edwards, (whose report states that it was captured by a gunboat near Decatur,) amounting in all to one hundred and fifty-one bales, and making, with the four hundred and seven bales from Georgia, five hundred and fifty-eight bales.

These five hundred and fifty-eight bales CaptainBrown turned over to Treasury Agent Fuller during the months of May and June.

It next appears, from a report of the Treasury Department, that there was a sale in Cincinnati, on the 18 th July, of four hundred and sixty-three bales of Georgia cotton. There was, in fact, a sale of a much larger amount of cotton, bat the Department in making up its report has taken four hundred.and sixty-three bales as the proportion from Georgia.

By referring to the Treasury agent’s return for May and. June, we find that this amount of four hundred and sixty-three bales was undoubtedly made up as follows :

May 30, Chattanooga. 13

June 7, Chattanooga. 40

June 13, Chattanooga. 316

[571]*571June 24, Chattanooga. -24

June 28, Chattanooga. 70

Total attributed to Chattanooga. 463

But this quantity does not represent the four hundred and seven bales of Captain Brown; for, first, the twenty-four bales noted as of the 24th June are undoubtedly the twenty-four bales of Alabama cotton received by Captain Brown on the same day from Huntsville; and, second, the remainder contains more Georgia and less Alabama cotton than Captain Brown’s more specific reports show that he sent forward. The four hundred and seven bales, as we have previously seen, represent the proportionate part of the fund which is to be credited to the Georgia cotton. Instead of taking $282,062.96, the gross product of the four hundred and sixty-three bales, we must take only that proportion thereof, which will represent being $247,944.40 as the first fund.

2. On the 3d July, 1864, Captain Brown received from Captain Dunbar, quartermaster at Chattanooga, twenty bales of cotton, which, as we have previously found, were the property of one Elisha Hunt. {Runt’s Case, 40. Cls. It., p.438.) These were turned over to the Treasury agent on the same day. On the 7th July, thirteen bales were also received by Captain Brown from Chattanooga, and likewise turned over to the Treasury agent. The thirty-three bales thus made up were shipped by the Treasury agent on the 20th July, (as shown by his return of September 30, 1864,) and appear to have been sold in Cincinnati on the 15th August, bringing $20,421.77. This constitutes the second fund.

3. On the 24th August, 1864, Captain Brown received forty-two bales of cotton. They are described as.coming “from Chattanooga, per United States military railroad,” but their previous history remains undisclosed.

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Related

Ross v. United States
12 Ct. Cl. 565 (Court of Claims, 1876)

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