The Amiable Isabella

19 U.S. 1, 5 L. Ed. 191, 6 Wheat. 1, 1821 U.S. LEXIS 380
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 22, 1821
StatusPublished
Cited by230 cases

This text of 19 U.S. 1 (The Amiable Isabella) 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 Amiable Isabella, 19 U.S. 1, 5 L. Ed. 191, 6 Wheat. 1, 1821 U.S. LEXIS 380 (1821).

Opinion

At the present term the opinion Of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Story.

-This cause was .heard upon the whole evidence,, introduced' by both parties, at the last term; and as'it.embraced,several points of great importance and difficulty, thé Coiirt, ex tne.ro moty, directed one of those points to be reargued ; and another, including'a final construction of the Spanish treaty in matters of deep and universal interest, was reargued upon the application of the Government itself.. The last argument was' heard at so laten period of the session, that it whs found impracticable for all 'of us-to prepare deliberate opinions, and the qause was ordered by the Court to be *66 conurnied for advisement. The Court has, now coñ~e. to~-a result, which 1~üm. dfrectedto'pronc~u~ce.

Whether a seizure be a droit of Admiralty, is a question entirely between the Go-yerament and the captors, with which the. claimant . has nothing to do.

A preliminary questiOn was raised at.~the or~gina1 argument, .that the libel ought to be dismissed, be. cause the capture was made without public ~itb~rity, and by a non-co~imissibned vessel.. Whetber. this be so or not, we do, not `think'it matedal how .to inquire. 1i is, a-question. between' the Government and the captors, with which .il~ claimant ha nothing tQ do. . If the ship ~ñd. cargo be enemy property~. it cannot be restored to the claimant. If the ~~aptors made the capture without' an-ylega,l conupisskw~ and it is decreed good. pr'i~e, the ~x~ndemnation must, ~jnder such circurn5tances, . be. :~ `the Gpvernment, it~e1f. If with a cOmmi~sion, then it n~ay be to the captors. But in any view, the. question is matterof subsequent inqiii~r~r... aftei~ `tlke. principal question .~f prIze is, disposed of; am!: ~he Government may.; if irchooses; contest the ilght of, the' captors by a~in terlocutory apjlication after~a. decree of condemnation has passed, and `bef~re distribution is decreed The claim:ant can have no just. intekest in that ques-' tion, and camwt be perrn~ttecFto moot it before this Court.

Having.dis.posed of thia point, wbich,indeecl,Iias been long ~recognised aa a ~ett~ed principle .of~the law of~pri~e, the p~th is open for the consideration of the other points of the cause.

The. captors cont~end, that the whole evidence es~ táblishes, that the ship and ëargo are enemies :~~_ pefty, the property of British subjects disguised under Spanish documents, and. bound to a British port. *67 That the voyage had its origin^ in London, and was to terminate there ; and that the usual frauds of false papers, false destination,, and suppression of evidence,- have been resorted to for the purpose of giving a neutral character to hostile interests.

The-counsel for the claimant deny the matter of fact, and assert, that the proprietary interest of ship and cargo is bom fide Spanishand endeavour, with great ingenuity and force, to explain away the diffi'culties with which it-is admitted, on’all sides, this part of the cause is surrounded. If this , ground should: be thought not to ba éntirely and satisfactorily made out, the counsel, for the claimant farther contend, that the ship was duly documented as a Spanish ship, according to the1 stipulations Of the Spanish treaty of 1795 .; and that the effect of those stipulations is to preclude all inquiry into the proprietary interest of ship and cargo. Of the foriher, because the: passport is conclusive evidence of the national character and ownership of the ship, which all persons are estopped to deny; of the latter, because, by the treaty, free ships make free goods, and the national character of the cargo becomes wholly immaterial.

To-this point, which, if settled one way, is decisive of the cause, the counsel for the captors have givén several answers. 1. That the passport of this ship was obtained by fraud, and this is aliyays in-quirable into, and vitiates all, even thé most sacred instruments and récords. 2. That the passport is not conformable to the treaty, not having been issued by royal authority, or authenticated by the royal Go *68 vernment, but issued by a mere colonial Governor; and. that, such as it is, it does not state thé ship to be owned by Spanish subjects, which is indispensable under the treaty. 3. That the substituted proof required by the 17th' article of the treaty, whére the passport is not regular, must be such as is subject to the thorough examination of the Prize Court. 4. That the form of the passport, referred to in the 17th article of the treaty, never having been annexed to it by the contracting parties, that article, so far as it purports to give'any effect to passports, is inoperative and imperfect, and thje imperfection cannot bé supplied by any judicial tribunal:

Such aré the-leading propositions, pressed with great ability and earnestness into the discussion,.of this cause; by the respective parties. They émbrace principles of nternational law of vast importance ; they embracf private interests óf no inconsiderable magnitude ; and they' embrace the interpretation of a treaty which we are bound to observe with the most scrupulous good faith, and which our Government coüld not violate without disgrace, and which this Court could riot disregard without betraying its duty. It need not be said, therefore, that we feel the responsibility of our stations on this occasion, and that in. delivering,~our opinion tó thé world, we have pondered on it with great solicitude and deliberation, and. have looked -to consequences no farther than the sound principles of.interpretation and inter-natiprial justice required us to look.

The point to which the Court will first direct its attention, is that last made, viz. whether thé 17th *69 article of the treaty of 1796, so far as it réspects passports, is- inoperative and imperfect in conse- . quence of the omission to annex the. form of the passport, to the treaty. . This is a very delicate and interesting. question.

The 17th article of the Spanish treaty, of 1795, so far as it respects passports, is inoperative in consequence of the omission to annex the form of passport to the treaty.

. The 1.7th.article provides,.“.that in case either of the parties hereto shall he engaged, in a war, the ship's and vessels belonging to the subjects or people óf the other party, must be furnished with sea letters or. passports, (patentes de triar o pasaportes,) expressing the name, property, (propiedad,) and bulk of the ship ; as, also, the ríame and place of habitation of the .piaster or commander of the said ship, that it mhy appear thereby, that the ship really and truly belongs to the subjects of. one of the parties, which passports (dichos pasaportes) shall be ,madé out and gfanted according to the form, annexed to this, treaty.” TheA article- proceeds to declare, “ that such ships, being laden/are to be provided not only with passports, as above mentioned, buti also, with certificates contáining the several particulars of the cargo, , the place whence ,the ship sailed, that so it may be known whether any forbidden or contraband goods be on board the same; which certificates shall be made out. by the officers of the place whence the.

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NEGUSIE
27 I. & N. Dec. 347 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 U.S. 1, 5 L. Ed. 191, 6 Wheat. 1, 1821 U.S. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-amiable-isabella-scotus-1821.