The Chapman

5 F. Cas. 471, 4 Sawy. 501, 1864 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 35
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedJanuary 13, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 5 F. Cas. 471 (The Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Chapman, 5 F. Cas. 471, 4 Sawy. 501, 1864 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 35 (N.D. Cal. 1864).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

Late in the month of February, 1S03, the revenue officers at this port were informed that certain persons in this city were engaged in fitting out the schooner Chapman as a privateer, to-cruise under the flag of the Confederate States, against the commerce of the United States. A search for the schooner was at once instituted, and on ascertaining where she lay, detective officers were placed on watch, with instructions to report everything that took place on board of her either in the daytime or during the night. She shortly afterward commenced receiving cargo, amongst which were some very heavy cases, subsequently ascertained to contain guns.

On the fourteenth of March the vessel was cleared at the custom-house, and the authorities became satisfied that her preparations were completed and that she was about to sail. Fearing that she might attempt to get to sea at high tide in the evening, a steam-tug was chartered and placed, with fires banked, in an adjoining slip, ready to start at a moment’s notice. On board of her were the collector, the naval officer and the surveyor, together with Mr. Lees, a detective officer, and a squad of policemen. No movement was made by the schooner during the night, but a large number of persons were observed to go on board of her and conceal themselves in the hold. About daylight, the crew of the schooner commenced loosening her fasts and hauling out beyond a vessel that lay near. She shortly afterward went further out into the stream, and began to hoist her jib and mainsail. About ten days previously, information of what was going on had been communicated by the revenue officers to Colonel Drum, adjutant-general of this department, and an order had been obtained from him, directing Captain Winder, commanding Fort Alcatraz, to receive and hold as prisoners any persons whom the revenue officers might bring to the island. There being no revenue cutter then on this station, Captain Shirly, of the United States ship Cyane, -was also applied to by the collector and surveyor, and a written order to his executive officer was obtained, directing him to furnish two boats’ crews of armed men at any hour of the day or night that they might be called for by the custom-house authorities. An arrangement was accordingly made between the officer of the deck of the Cyane and Messrs. Harwell and McLean, who visited him for that purpose on the night of the fourteenth, that if the vessel should drop out from the slip, and there should be no indications of the presence of the custom-house officers, the boats should be dispatched and the vessel seized.

The schooner having dropped out, as has been stated, and the steam-tug not having moved, the boats of the Cyane were manned and started for the schooner. These proceedings were observed from the tug; but at that moment a person appeared on the wharf and hailed the schooner, and the custom-house officers, being desirous of arresting all the persons concerned in the enterprise, delayed, for a short time, the steam-tug, in order to give an opportunity to this person to get on board. Not having heard the hail, the Cyane’s boats continued their course, and arriving first at the schooner', boarded and took possession of her. About ten or fifteen minutes afterward, the tug. with the custom-house officers and police officers, came alongside. A search of the vessel and of the persons of the crew was immediately made, and the vessel was towed by the tug to Fort Alcatraz. These proceedings seem to have been conducted under the exclusive direction of the custom-house offi[472]*472cials, who assumed entire control. The Cy-ane's boats returned to the ship, leaving, however, an officer and four men on board the Chapman. On reaching Alcatraz, the prisoners were landed and turned over to Captain Winder. The vessel was then unladen, and was subsequently towed up and anchored under the guns of the Cyane.

At the next term of the circuit court, Indictments against the prisoners were found, and three of the principal offenders were tried, convicted and sentenced. The vessel was also libeled in the district court as forfeited to the United States, under the acts of August 5 and August 6, 1801. No claim was interposed, and she was condemned by default, sold, and her proceeds brought into the registry for distribution. At this stage of the proceeding, the commander of the Cyane, Paul Shirly, intervened, claiming for himself and his officers and men a share of the fund.

Without dwelling on the somewhat peculiar circumstances under which the seizure of the vessel was effected, or on the fact that no proceedings to condemn her or her cargo as a prize of war have been instituted, I proceed to consider the grounds on which the alleged captors base their claim to a moiety of the proceeds. These are: 1. That the vessel and cargo were enemies’ property, and, therefore, good prize of war; and, 2. That the captors are entitled to a moiety of the proceeds under the provisions of section 1 of the act of August 5, 1861, entitled “An act supplementary to an act entitled an act to protect the commerce of the United States and to punish the crime of piracy.”

1. Is the vessel and cargo to be considered enemies’ property? It is not to be questioned; since the recent decisions of the supreme court, that a civil war, with all the consequences to the residents of the seceded states of a public territorial war, or a bel-lum inter gentes has existed in this country since the act of July, 1SC1 [12 Stat. 283], by which its existence was recognized. The minority of the judges dated its commencement from that time, as they deemed an act of congress essential, under the constitution, to create a state of war, and that until the legislature acted, the hostile proceedings were to be regarded as an insurrection, for which the guilty parties alone were to be held personally responsible. The majority of the judges held that civil war was a material fact which the court was bound to notice, and that the proclamations of blockade by the president were a recognition of a state of war as actually existing. But the court was unanimous in regarding the war as existing in a legal sense, with all the consequences of war, both as respects the belligerents and neutrals from the date of the act of congress referred to. In the exercise of the belligerent rights thus created, the United States have established blockades, exercised the right of search, authorized the capture and condemnation of neutrals carrying contraband or attempting to run the blockade, and declared liable to seizure and confiscation the property of the de facto residents of the so-called Confederate States as enemies’ property, irrespective of the personal conduct or sentiments of the owners. The rules of war have also been applied to the conduct of military and naval operations — the prisoners captured have been held as prisoners of war, and a cartel has been agreed on providing for their exchange, and including those taken on regularly commissioned privateers, as well as in the land forces of the enemy.

' But while thus yielding to the inexorable fact, and conceding the rights of belligerents to the insurgents, in this deplorable civil war, it cannot be pretended that they or their adherents have any other or further rights than those of belligerents in an international war or a bellum inter gentes. All persons who voluntarily reside within the dominions of a sovereign and accept the protection of his laws, owe to him an allegiance.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 471, 4 Sawy. 501, 1864 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-chapman-cand-1864.