The Cherokee

5 F. Cas. 550, 2 Sprague 235
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedDecember 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 F. Cas. 550 (The Cherokee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Cherokee, 5 F. Cas. 550, 2 Sprague 235 (D. Mass. 1863).

Opinion

SPRAGUE, District Judge.

The steamer Cherokee and cargo were captured on the 8th of May last by the United States ship-of-war Canandaigua, and sent into this port. They have both been condemned. The question now arises, how shall the proceeds be distributed ?

It is the duty of this court to determine what ships shall participate in the proceeds of a prize; but it is the province of the secretary of the navy, under the statutes, to ascertain and decide, at least in the first instance, what persons constituted the officers and crews of such ships, and the flag officer of a squadron, and the share which each shall receive. I mention this because communications have been received, founded on the erroneous supposition that this court was to decide upon the claims of individuals-as flag officers or otherwise, and it is desirable that it should be known that such claims must be presented to the navy department.

Applications to be allowed to share in this-prize have been presented in behalf of the following vessels: New Ironsides, Stettin. [551]*551Warnsutía, Flag, Paul Jones, Lodona, Mar-blehead, Huron, Powhatan, and Housatonie. Some of these applications are quite informal. But I shall treat them all as petitions duly presented. Since the decree of condemnation, the (repositions of one or more of the officers of each of the above-mentioned ships have been taken. These have been examined with the other evidence in the case. It appears that the Canandaigua and the petitioning ships composed the blockading squadron off Charleston. All, excepting the Lodona, were stationed at different places immediately off the city, so as to guard the more direct approaches. The Lodona was stationed at Bull’s bay, to guard that channel of communication to Cnarleston, and was about sixteen miles from the rest of the squadron.

On the evening of the 5th of May last, the Cherokee ran out of the port of Charleston. She was first discovered by the steamer Flag, who fired one or more guns at her, as she was passing by, and also threw up a rocket. She was then discovered by the Canandaigua, a steamer lying outside of the Flag, which immediately got under way in pursuit. This was about eleven o’clock at night. The pursuit was continued about three and a half hours, when the Canandaigua, having come within cannon range, fired a gun, and the Cherokee hove to and surrendered. The commencement of the chase was seen by several of the blockading vessels, but no one of them started in pursuit. All remained at their anchorage. Both pursuer and pursued were entirely lost sight of about one hour after the chase began; and the place where the capture was actually made was thirty-five miles from the blockading squadron. No vessel of the squadron was within signal distance of either the Canandaigua or Cherokee at the time of the capture.

All prizes made by our ships-of-war belong primarily to the United States, and any person who claims to participate therein must show a grant from the government. There have been three acts of congress making such grants: that of 1799, c. 24 (1 Stat. 715); that of 1SOO, c. 33 (2 Stat. 52); and that of 1862, c. 204 (12 Stat. 606). The first of these three acts remained in force about a year. Its provisions are so similar to those of subsequent acts that they need not be here recited. The fifth section of the act of 1800 says “that the proceeds of all ships and vessels, and the goods taken on board of them, which shall be adjudged good prize * * * when of inferior force, shall be divided equally between the United States and the officers and men making the capture.” The sixth section provides that “whenever one or more public ships or vessels are in sight at the time any one or more ships are taking a prize or prizes, they shall all share equally in the prize or prizes.” The statute of 1862 (section 2) copies the first of the foregoing provisions verbatim. But it does not preserve the phraseology of the second. In section 3 it says, “When one or more vessels of the navy shall be within signal distance of another making a prize, all shall share in the prize.”

This appears to be a substitute for the corresponding provision in the act of 1800. But it is unnecessary to consider whether it be so or not, it being immaterial in the present case whether the former is superseded by the latter, or whether both may stand and be enforced together. These petitioning vessels do not come within either clause. No one of them was within either sight or signal distance of the Canandaigua when she was taking or making this prize. This is not contended for. They rest their claim wholly upon the fact that they, together with the Canandaigua, composed the blockading squadron. Does that fact bring them within the first provision of the statutes of 1800 and of 1862; which has already been quoted? The question, then, is reduced to this: Are the officers and men who were on board these vessels to be deemed “officers and men making the capture,” within the meaning of the statute? That the capture was actually made by the Canandaigua when and where no other vessel was in sight or in a condition then to render any aid whatever, is certain.

Those on board the other vessels, therefore, were not actual captors. The question is, are they to be deemed captors by construction of law, by reason of their being a part of the blockading squadron? If we look only at our own statutes, the present question might be solved without much difficulty. They manifestly provide for two classes of ships: — First. Those making the capture. Second. Those within signal distance of a vessel making a capture. The second section of the act of 1862 gives one-half to the “officers and men making the capture.” The third section gives a share to any vessel of the navy which “is within signal distance of another making a prize.”

Thus the statute, in the first place, gives half of the prize to those making the capture, and then provides that another class shall share with them; viz., vessels not themselves making the prize, but within signal distance of those that do make it. From this it seems clear that the first class are those who actually make the capture, and that none others can participate except those provided for in the second class. This construction would be adopted without hesitation, were it not for certain English doctrines, which have been supposed by some to have a direct and even controlling application to our law. It becomes necessary to bestow some attention upon the decisions in which those doctrines are to be found.

It must be borne in mind that we are not discussing a question of general jurisprudence, or endeavoring to ascertain a rule of the unwritten law to be determined by judicial precedents or considerations of justice and policy. But we are endeavoring to as[552]*552certain the true meaning and intent of a positive legislative enactment. Of course we do not look to British decisions for any direct exposition of our own statutes, to which they can, at most, have but an indirect application. Those decisions are under the English prize acts; that is, they give construction to their own positive enactments. Now, if the language which describes those who are to share in the prize be the same in our statutes as in the British, then English decisions may have some application.

If such language of the British statutes had received a judicial interpretation, and had thus acquired a settled and well-known meaning, and our legislature had then adopted the same language, it might well be supposed that they intended it should bear the same interpretation.

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Related

The Mangrove Prize Money
188 U.S. 720 (Supreme Court, 1903)
United States v. Steever
113 U.S. 747 (Supreme Court, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 F. Cas. 550, 2 Sprague 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-cherokee-mad-1863.