The Adula

176 U.S. 361, 20 S. Ct. 432, 44 L. Ed. 505, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1744
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 26, 1900
Docket167
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 176 U.S. 361 (The Adula) 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
The Adula, 176 U.S. 361, 20 S. Ct. 432, 44 L. Ed. 505, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1744 (1900).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The rectitude of the decree of the District Court condemning the Adula as prize of war depends upon the existence of a lawful and effective blockade at Guantanamo, the'knowledge of such blockade by those in charge of the vessel, and their intent in making the voyage from Kingston.

1. No blockade of Guantanamo was ever proclaimed by the President. A proclamation had been issued June 27, establishing a blockade of all ports on the southern coast of Cuba between Cape Frances on the west and Cape Cruz on the east, but as both Santiago and Guantanamo are to the eastward of Cape Cruz, they were not included. It appears, however, that blockades of Santiago and Guantanamo were established in the early part of June by order of Admiral Sampson, com-, mander of the naval forces then investing the ports on the' southern coast of Cuba, and were maintained as actual and effective blockades until after the capture of the Adula.

The legality of a simple or actual blockade as distinguished from a public or Presidential blockade is noticed by writers upon international law, and is said by Ilalleck to be “ constituted merely by the fact of an investment, and without any necessity of a public notification. As it arises solely from facts it ceases when they terminate; its existence must, therefore, in all cases, be established by clear and decisive evidence.” (Ilalleck Int. L. chap. 23, sec. 10.) A defacto blockade was also recognized as legal by this court in the case of The Circassian, 2 Wall. 135, 150, in which the question arose as to the blockade of New Orleans during the civil war. In. delivering the opinion of the court, the Chief Justice observed: “There is *367 a distinction between simple and public blockades which supports this conclusion. A simple blockade may be established by a naval officer, acting upon his own discretion or under direction of superiors, without governmental notification; while a public blockade is not only established in fact, but is notified, by the government directing it, to other governments. In the case of a simple blockade, the captors are bound to prove its. existence at the time of capture; while in the case of a public blockade, the claimants are held to proof of discontinuance in order to protect themselves from the penalties of attempted violation.” A like ruling was made by Sir William Scott in the case of The Bolla, 6 C. Bob. 364, which was the case of an American ship and cargo, proceeded against for the breach of a blockade at Montevideo, imposed by the British commander. It was argued, apparently upon the authority of The Ilenrielc and Maria, 1 C. Bob. 123, that the power of imposing a blockade is altogether an act of sovereignty which cannot be assumed or exercised by a commander without special authority. But says the learned judge: “ The court then expressed its opinion that this was a position not maintainable to that extent; because a commander going out to a distant station may reasonably be supposéd to carry with him such a portion of sovereign authority, delegated to him, as may be necessary to provide for the exigencies of the service upon, which he is employed. On stations in Europe, where government is almost at hand to' superintend and direct the course of operations, under which it may be expedient that particular hostilities should be carried on, it may be different. But in distant ports of the world it cannot be disputed, I conceive, that a commander must be held to carry with him sufficient authority to act, as well against the commerce of the enemy, as against the enemy himself, for the immediate purpose of reduction.” See also The Johanna Maria, Deane on Blockades, 86.

In view of the operations then being carried on for the purpose of destroying or capturing the Spanish fleet and reducing Santiago, we think it was competent for Admiral Sampson to establish a blockade there and at Guantanamo as an adjunct to such operations. Indeed, it would seem to have been *368 a necessity that restrictions should be placed upon the power of neutrals to carry supplies and intelligence to the enemy, as they would be quite' sure to do, if their ships were given free ingress and egress from these harbors. While there could be no objections' to vessels carrying provisions to the starving insurgents, if their destination could be made certain, the probabilities were that such provisions carried to a beleaguered port, would be immediately seized by the enemy and used for tlie sustenance of its soldiers. The exigency was one which rendered it entirely prudent«£or the commander of the fleet to act, without awaiting instructions from Washington.

But it is contended that at the time of the capture, the port of Guantanamo was completely in the possession and control of the United States, and therefore' that the blockade had been terminated. It appears, however, that Guantanamo is eighteen miles from the mouth of Guantanamo Bay. Access to it is obtained either by a small river emptying into the upper bay, or by rail.from Caimanera, a town on the west side of the upper bay. It- seems that the Marblehead and the Yankee were sent to Guantanamo on June 7; entered the harbor and took possession of the lower bay for the use of American vessels ; that the Panther and Yosemite were sent there on the 10th, and on the 12th the torpedo boat Porter arrived from Guantanamo with news of a land battle, and from that time the harbor was occupied by naval vessels, and by a party of marines who held the crest of a hill on the west side of the harbor near its entrance, and the side of the hill facing the harbor. But the town of Guantanamo, near the head of the bay, was still held by the Spanish forces, as were several other positions' •in the neighborhood. The campaign in the vicinity was in active progress, and encounters between the United States and Spanish troops were of frequent-occurrence.

In view of these facts we are of opinion that, as the city of Guantanamo was still held by the Spaniards, and as our troops occupied only the mouth of the bay, the blockade was still operative as against vessels bound for the city of Guantanamo. Here again the case of The Circassian, 2 Wall. 135, is decisive. The Circassian was captured May 4, 1862, for an attempted *369 violation of the blockade of New Orleans. The city, including the ports below it on the Mississippi, was captured during the last days of April, and military possession of the city taken on May first. It was held that neither the capture of the forts nor the military occupation of the city terminated the blockade, upon the ground that it applied, not to the city alone, but controlled the port, which included the whole parish of New Orleans, and lay on both sides of the Mississippi, and all the ports on that river and on the lakes east of the city. The following language of the Chief Justice is equally pertinent to this case: “Now, it may be well enough conceded that a continuous and complete possession of the city and the port, and of the approaches from the Gulf, would make a blockade unnecessary, and would supersede it. But, at the time of the capture of the Circassian, there had been no such possession. Only the city was occupied, not the port, much less the district of country commercially dependent upon it, and blockaded by its blockade.

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Bluebook (online)
176 U.S. 361, 20 S. Ct. 432, 44 L. Ed. 505, 1900 U.S. LEXIS 1744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-adula-scotus-1900.