The Circassian

69 U.S. 135, 17 L. Ed. 796, 2 Wall. 135, 1864 U.S. LEXIS 417
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 30, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 69 U.S. 135 (The Circassian) 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 Circassian, 69 U.S. 135, 17 L. Ed. 796, 2 Wall. 135, 1864 U.S. LEXIS 417 (1865).

Opinions

The CHIEF JUSTICE

delivered the. opinion of the court.

That the rebellion against the national Government, which, in April, 1861, took the form of assault on Fort Sumter, had, before the end of July, assumed the character and proportions of civil war; and that the blockade, established under the President’s proclamation, affected all neutral commerce, from that time, at least, with- its obligations and liabilities, are propositions which, in this court, are no longer open to question. They were not more explicitly affirmed by the judges who concurred in the judgment pronounced in the prize cases at the December Term, 1862, than by the judges who dissented from it.

The Government of the United States, involved in civil war, claimed the right to close, against all commerce, its own ports seized by the rebels, as a just and proper-exercise of ..power for the suppression of attempted revolution. It insisted, and yet insists, that no one could "justly complain if that power should be decisively and peremptorily exerted. In deference, however, to the .views of the principal commercial nations, this right was waived, and a commercial blockade established. It-was, expected that this blockade, effectively maintained, ^wohld he scrupulously respected by nations and individuals who declared themselves neutral.

[149]*149Of the various propositions asserted and controverted in the discussion of the cause now under consideration, two only need be examined in order to a correct understanding of its merits. It is insisted for the captors,

1. That on the 4th of May, 1862, the port of New Orleans was under blockade.;

2. That the Circassian, with a cargo destined for New Orleans, was then sailing with intent to violate that blockade, and therefore liable to capture as naval prize.

Both propositions are denied by the claimants. We shall consider them in their order.

First, then, was the port of New Orleans under blockade at the time of the capture ?

The city of. New Orleans, and the forts commanding its approaches from the Gulf, w,ere captured during the last days of April, 1862, and military possession of the city was taken on the 1st of May. Did this capture of the forts and military occupation of the city terminate the blockade of the port ?

' The object of blockade is to destroy the commerce of the enemy, and cripple his resources by arresting the import of supplies and the export of products. It may be made effectual by batteries ashore as well as by ships afloat. In the case of an inland port, the. most effective blockade would be maintained by batteries commanding the river or inlet by which it may be approached,- supported by a naval force sufficient to warn off innocent, and capture offending vessels attempting to enter.

The capture of the forts, then, did not terminate the blockade of New Orleans, but, -on the contrary, made it more complete and absolute.

Was it terminated by the military occupation of the city?

The blockade of the ports of the insurgent States was declared from the first by the American Government to be a blockade of the whole coast, and so it has been understood by all governments. The blockade of New Orleans was a part of this general blockade. It applied not to the city alone, but controlled the- port, which includes the whole [150]*150parish of Orleans, and lies on both sides of the Mississippi, and all the ports on that river and on the lakes east of the city.

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. Even the city had been occupied only three days.. It was yet hostile; the rebel army was in the neighborhood; the occupation, limited and recent, was subject to ah the vicissitudes of war: Such an occupation could not at once, of itself, supersede or suspend the blockade. It might ripen into a possession which would have that effect, and it did; but at the time of the capture it operated only in 'aid and completion of the naval investment.

[There is 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 uot 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 hound 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 fo protec themselves from the penalties of attempted violation. The blockade of the rebel ports was and is of the latter sort. It was legally established and regularly notified by the American' Government to the neutral governments. Of such blockade, it was well observed by Sir William Scott: “ It must be conceived to exist till the revocation of it is actually nótified.” The blockade of the rebel ports, therefore, must be presumed to have continued until notification of discontinuance.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

The Adula
176 U.S. 361 (Supreme Court, 1900)
The Pedro
175 U.S. 354 (Supreme Court, 1899)
The Newfoundland
89 F. 99 (D. South Carolina, 1898)
The Adula
89 F. 351 (S.D. Georgia, 1898)
Fitzsimmons v. Newport Insurance
8 U.S. 185 (Supreme Court, 1808)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 U.S. 135, 17 L. Ed. 796, 2 Wall. 135, 1864 U.S. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-circassian-scotus-1865.