The Bee

3 F. Cas. 41, 1 Ware 336, 1836 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedMay 13, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 F. Cas. 41 (The Bee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Bee, 3 F. Cas. 41, 1 Ware 336, 1836 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12 (D. Me. 1836).

Opinion

'WARE, District Judge.

The counsel for the respondents has supported the motion to-dismiss the libel, on two grounds; first, because the parties in the cause, both the libel-lants and respondents, are foreigners, and subjects of the king of Great Britain; secondly, because the vessel is not only a British vessel, but was taken by the salvors, after the disaster had happened, from British waters, and brought within the jurisdiction of the court

Waiving the question, for the present, whether the court can, under any circumstances, exercise jurisdiction over the cause, I may remark that if the motion had been seasonably made, though it should regularly have been presented in the form of a plea, I should have felt inclined to have yielded to the argument of the counsel, and remitted the parties to their domestic and natural forum. The courts of the United States are not bound to take cognizance of the controversies of strangers having their domicil in a foreign country, as they are of suits which are brought before them by our own citizens; nor are they eager to exercise a voluntary jurisdiction when there is the least disinclination to submit to it. But in this stage of the cause, when it has proceeded thus far without objection, it would be a serious hardship on the libellants to dismiss the libel unconditionally. A proposition was therefore made by the court to dismiss the libel on the parties agreeing that the testimony, which has been taken at considerable expense, should be used without objection in the proper court of their own country. To this proposition the respondents’ counsel objects, and insists on an unconditional dismissal of the suit. They insist on their extreme rights, and though I have no desire to [43]*43sit and decide controversies between foreigners, justice to the libellants requires, under the circumstances of the case, if the court may rightfully exercise jurisdiction, that the cause should proceed to a final decision in this court. The motion, not being addressed to the discretion of the court, but proceeding on the supposed legal rights of the parties, may be considered in two aspects; first, as being founded on a personal privilege of the party of declining the jurisdiction and having the cause transferred to another forum; and secondly, as standing on an entire want of legal capacity in this court to take cognizance of the cause.

If considered in the first point of view, it comes too late. The libel was filed at the last December term, and a warrant of attachment and monition issued, returnable on the first Tuesday of January. The claimants appeared by their proctors before the return day, and filed interrogatories for the taking of depositions on the 20th of December. On the return day the proctors for the claimants entered into a written agreement with the proctor of the libellant, which is filed in the case, that the hearing should be at Portland, in May. In the mean time the testimony in the case has been taken and returned. A claim and answer has been put in for the foreign owners by his Britannic majesty’s consul, and another by the Protection Insurance Company, of Hartford, who are not foreigners but citizens of the United States, praying that the vessel may be delivered to them, “without salvage, or on the payment of such reasonable salvage as the court shall adjudge just and proper.” The insurance company not having accepted the abandonment which has been made by the owners, cannot be, it is true, received as claimants. The Henry Ewbank, [Case No. 6,376.] If they were legally parties, it would be an answer to one of the objections to the jurisdiction. But the foreign claimants, as far as acts can go, have waived any personal privilege, if they had any, of declining the jurisdiction. This objection, to be available, should have been taken before a general appearance, and an answer to the merits.

The next question which presents itself, and which has been argued at the bar, is whether the court is wholly incompetent to exercise jurisdiction over the cause, so that its decree on the merits may, according to the established principles of the jus gentium, be held by a court having jurisdiction over the parties, as a mere nullity. It may, I think, be assumed, as a point settled both on principle and authority, that the court is not rendered incompetent on the mere ground of the alienage of the parties on the record. Story, Confl. Laws; 2 Browne, Civ. & Adm. Law, 119; Abb. Shipp. 447. It is believed that in most civilized nations, foreigners transiently among them are allowed to apply to the tribunals of the country to obtain a decision of controversies which may arise between them. In Home a particular magistrate was appointed to take jurisdiction of such causes, called the Praetor. Peregrinus. Just. Dig. 1, 2, § 28; Poth. Pandect. 1, 2, 20. The courts of this country are not bound to take jurisdiction of controversies between foreigners having no domicil in this country, as they are when parties are citizens or resident among us, and are thus entitled to claim of right the benefit of our laws. It is a question of discretion to the court, whether it will take cognizance of the case, or not, and it cannot be charged with a denial of justice if it remits the parties, with their rights entire, to their domestic forum. Gardner v. Thomas, 14 Johns. 134; Glen v. Hodges, 9 Johns. 67. The question is, therefore, not one affecting the competency of the court, but it turns upon the expediency of taking jurisdiction in the particular case. Courts of admiralty have always been in the habit of entertaining suits between foreigners in cases of salvage, on bottomry bonds, and for seamen’s wages, when a refusal to interpose might occasion a failure of justice. In salvage cases this jurisdiction has been less doubted than in others, because salvage is a question arising under the jus gentium, and does not ordinarily depend on the municipal laws of particular countries. The Two Friends, 1 C. Bob. Adm. 271; The Madonna D’Idra, 1 Dod. 37; The Wilhelm Frederick, 1 Hagg. Adm. 138; The Maria Theresa, 1 Dod. 303; The Forsoket, [Case No. 17,682;] The Jerusalem, [Id. 7,293;] The St. Oloff, [Id. 17,357;] 2 Pet. Adm. 415, [Moran v. Baudin, Case No. 9,785;] Bee, Adm. 106, 112, [Ellison v. The Bellona, Cases Nos. 4,406, 4,407;] The Blaireau, 2 Cranch, [6 U. S.] 240. Indeed, .the court of admiralty, according to Cleirac, was, in its original constitution in all the maritime nations of western Europe, the appropriate tribunal to take cognizance of suits when the parties were foreigners. Jurisdiction de la Marine, art. 1, notes 1, 2; Id. art 2. If the jurisdiction of the court is not ousted by the national character of the parties, then, the property being within the jurisdiction, this, upon common principles, is the proper court to take cognizance of the cause. In proceedings in rem, the forum rei sitae is the natural and proper forum, for it is the only one which can make its jurisdiction effectual by operating directly on the thing. Story, Confl. Laws, 462; The Two Friends, 1 C. Rob. Adm. 277; The Invincible, [Case No. 7,054;] The Jerusalem, [Id. 7,293.] A court sitting in another jurisdiction can only reach the thing through the person of the owner. There may be an exception to the universality of this rule, when the thing is seized within the territorial limits of another sovereignty in violation of its sovereign rights, and brought within the jurisdiction of the court. The Apollon, 9 Wheat. [22 U. S.] 362. But when the thing is found within the jurisdiction of the court, the right to adjudicate upon it follows ordinarily as a matter of course, and it belongs to the party who denies the jurisdic[44]*44tion to bring his case within some exception to the general rule.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F. Cas. 41, 1 Ware 336, 1836 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-bee-med-1836.