Robinson v. Hook

20 F. Cas. 1017, 4 Mason C.C. 139
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine
DecidedOctober 15, 1826
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 20 F. Cas. 1017 (Robinson v. Hook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Hook, 20 F. Cas. 1017, 4 Mason C.C. 139 (circtdme 1826).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

This is a cause of a somewhat extraordinary nature. The secret papers disclose one of the most extensive enterprises for the illicit importation of British goods from the British provinces, into the United States, on American account, during the late war, by means of collusive captures and otherwise, which was probably ever undertaken in violation of our laws. That its success was not as complete, as the plan was broad, is owing, in a great measure, to the seizure of these very papers, which had the double tendency of deterring the parties from the full execution of the scheme, and of stimulating the vigilance of the officers of our own government to defeat it. I am sorry to perceive, that the duces facti are native merchants, and that their own examinations, taken in this very cause, leave not the slightest doubt of their intentional guilt. I will not attempt to characterize these transactions in the language which belongs to them; though it cannot be concealed, that they are such as must carry along with them the reproaches of the country, and probably, in moments of cool reflection, the pains of self-condemnation to the parties themselves. Some things are indeed made clear by these papers, which were involved in much embarrassment and obscurity in the course of the prize proceedings of the late war. In the lenient administration of prize law, which was adopted by the courts of the United States during this period, and especially in lending an indulgent ear to the claims of our own citizens, it is some consolation to know, that the justice of those sentences of condemnation, which admitted of most controversy, have, in an unexpected manner, been, confirmed by facts recently brought to light. ' In considering the present case, it is material to observe, that however great may be the merit of the plaintiff and his coadjutors, in refusing the bribes offered to them for the suppression of these papers, and in putting them into the possession of the government for public purposes, and however great may be the benefit derived to the government, by the facilities thus afforded to detect frauds, and to escape from mischievous violations of its rights, it is not within the cognizance of this court to administer any remedy for such services. So far as they are entitled to reward, beyond that gratitude, which must always be felt for public benefactors, it belongs exclusively to another department of the government, to recognise and adjust the claim. Courts of equity can only enforce existing rights, which are already vested in the parties, and give such remedy as ex aequo et bono ought to attach to them. It is material also to state, that the present bill is exclusively framed upon the notion of a legal right. In its general structure it proceeds upon the ground, that the plaintiff is entitled to the share of the informer, in cases of property seized and condemned for illicit traffic, in consequence of his information. It states, that sundry seizures were made, or claims inteiposed, in behalf of the United States, by the defendant, by means of this information, and that the defendant received large sums of money, as the informer’s part upon the condemnations, on those seizures and claims, which he ought to account for and pay to the plaintiff: If there be any allegation in the bill more broad in its terms, it is too loose and indefinite to found any decree upon. There is no charge of any contract or agreement between the parties, as to what use should be made of the papers, or that the defendant should act as general agent of the plaintiff in relation to them, and apply them for his benefit in the best manner he could, and account for any moneys so received, deducting a reasonable compensation. I do not mean to suggest, that, upon the present state of the evidence, such a charge would materially aid the cause; but I wish to show, what in one aspect of the cause may be important, that no special trust or confidence is asserted, and that so far as the bil[ avows merits, it is upon the fact that the plaintiff is informer.

What, then, is to be deemed the nature of the bill? It cannot proceed upon any loose notion, that a party, who gives material information, is entitled at common law, or in a court of equity, to a part of the proceeds of any property seized and condemned by means of such information, or to any particular compensation for such information, when given to officers of the government. It is the duty of every citizen to aid in detecting violations of the laws, and enforcing the administration of public justice. His reward, in such cases, is to be found in the consciousness of a performance of duty to his country, and in the approbation of his fellow citizens. There is no pecuniary recompense attached by the principles of law to 'services of this nature. He who brings a felon to public justice, or refuses to conceal a crime, is certainly entitled to great credit for his good conduct; but it has never been supposed that a contract could thereby be implied to share in the property, which should accrue to the government or its officers upon the conviction. The law does not award pecuniary compensation for the performance of general duties; and it is only where some statute has held out, from policy, a specific reward, that the public faith is [1019]*1019pledged to allow it. The bill, then, must be understood to claim the informer’s share of forfeited property in such cases only as are provided for by some statute; for a more general right is not acknowledged in the principles of our jurisprudence. It would have been well if the bill had. in this respect, aimed at something like certainty and accuracy; and had put the court in possession of the cases in which an informer is entitled to a share, and what that share is, to the extent at least of the claims asserted by the plaintiff. Whether in strictness the bill can be maintained without such allegations (for otherwise it is a mere searching and inquiring bill), I do not decide, because the point has not been pressed by counsel; and I am, generally, dis-inelineft to take .exceptions, where the merits of the cause, as it has been argued, can be disposed of without insisting on them. For the same reason I pass over the question, whether the proper parties are before the court. Upon the plaintiff’s own showing other persons were concerned in the original enterprise, by which the secret papers were obtained, and no reason is stated in the bill, why they are not made plaintiffs, or why the plaintiff is to be deemed the sole informer entitled to compensation. The cause is not without its difficulties from this omission. But waiving all discussion upon these collateral questions, I come to the consideration of the points;, which have been mainly relied upon by counsel, to maintain or defeat the bill.

The first is, that the court has no jurisdiction to entertain the cause. Its jurisdiction over the parties, as citizens of different states, is not controverted. But it is said, that causes of this nature are not within the proper cognizance of a court of equity. The argument addressed to the court is, that seizures like the present are causes exclusively of admiralty jurisdiction, and that the right to distribute the proceeds attaches as a necessary incident to the court, having possession of the cause, in the same exclusive manner as the seizure itself. Consequently, if the plaintiff has any remedy at all, it is a remedy to be administered upon his petition, as informer, to the admiralty court, which awarded the condemnation and distribution of the proceeds.

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Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 1017, 4 Mason C.C. 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-hook-circtdme-1826.