The Dos Hermanos

15 U.S. 76, 4 L. Ed. 189, 2 Wheat. 76, 1817 U.S. LEXIS 386
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1817
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 15 U.S. 76 (The Dos Hermanos) 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 Dos Hermanos, 15 U.S. 76, 4 L. Ed. 189, 2 Wheat. 76, 1817 U.S. LEXIS 386 (1817).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Story

delivered the opinion of the court.

Before we consider the merits of this claim it may not be unfit to advert to some of the principles applicable to proceedings in prize causes, which seem to have been wholly neglected in the progress of this cause.

It is the established rule in courts of prize, that the evidence to acquit or condemn must, in the first instance, come from the papers and cj-ew of the captured ship. On this account it is the. duty of the captors, as soon as practicable, to bring the ship’s papers into the registry of the , district court, and to have the examinations of the principal officers and *80 seamen of the captured ship taken before the district judge, or commissioners appointed by him, upon the standing interrogatories, it is exclusively upon thfese papers and the examinations, taken in preparatorio, that the cause is to be heard before the district court. If, from the whole evidence, the property clearly appear to be hostile, or neutral, condemnation or acquittal immediately follows. If, on the other hand, the property appear doubtful, or the case be clouded with suspicions or inconsistencies, it then becomes a case of farther proof, which the court will direct or deny, according to the rules which govern its legal discretion on this subject. Farther proof iswiot a matter of course. It is granted in cases of honest mistake or ignorance, or to clear away any doubts or defects consistent with good faith. But if the parties have been guilty of gross fraud or misconduct, ot illegality, farther proof is not allowed? fend under such circumstances, the parties are visited with all the fatal consequences of an original hostile character. It is essential, therefore, to the correct administration of prize law, that the regular modes of proceeding should be observed with the utmost strictness 5 and it is a great mistake to allow common Jaw notions in respect to evidence or practice, to prevail in proceedings which have very little analogy to those at common law.

These remarks have been drawn forth by an examination of the present record. The court could not but observe with regret that great irregularities had attended the cause in the court below. Neither were the ship’s papers produced by the captors, nor *81 the captured crew examined upon the standing interrogatories. Witnesses were produced by the libellants and the claimant indiscriminately at the trial, and their testimony was taken in open court upon any and all points to which the parties chose to interrogate them, and upon this testimony and the documentary proofs offered by the witnesses, the cause was heard and finally adjudged. In fact there was nothing to distinguish the cause from an ordinary proceeding in a mere revenue cause in rem.

This court cannot but watch with considerable solicitude irregularities, which so materially impair -the simplicity of prize proceedings, and the rights and duties of the parties. Some apology for them may be found in the fact, that from our having been long at peace, no opportunity was afforded to learn the correct practice in prize causes. But that apology ho Iftnger exists ¿ and if such irregularities should hereafter occur it may be proper to adopt a more rigorous courbe, and to withhold condemnation in the clearest cases,, unless such irregularities are avoided or explained. In the present case the first fault was that of the captors 5 and of the claimant had süffered any prejudice from it this court would certainly rer store to him every practicable benefit.. But in fact no such prejudice has arisen. The claimant... has had, in the court below, the indulgence and benefit of farther proojf ahd of collateral aids to verify the truth of his claim 5 and he stands at least üpon as favourable a ground to sustain it as if the cause had been conducted with the most scrupulous form.

Two questions have been argued at the bar, First, *82 whether Mr. Basil Green, the asserted owner, has established his proprietary interest in the goods in question; and secondly, supposing this point decided in his favour, whether he has proved himself a. neutral merchant, entitled by his domicil and national character to a restitution of the property.

It appears by the evidence in the case that Mr. Green was born in Maryland, and resided in that state, and principally at Baltimore, until the year 1809, when he went abroad. In 1811 he resided in Carthagena; and in the spring of 1813, he came to Nevr-Orleans from Carthagena, in a schooner under Cárthagenian colours, and being unable to sell her, lie determined, in connexion with Messrs. John F.. Miller, Lewis & Lee, and others, inhabitants of New-Orleans, who became jointly interested with him, to fit her out as an American privateer, he pordingly, on or about the 13th of March, 1813, Mr.Green applied to the collector of the customs at New-Orleans for a commission ; and in his petition he der scribed her as the private armed schooner Hornet, of New-Orleans, owned by Basil Green. The Gommision was granted, and soon afterwards Mr. Green sailed in the privateer, pin her destined cruise. In June, 1813, he was, as he. alleges, compelled by a mutiny of the crew to gp to. Carthagena, where they deserted, and the cruise was broken up, and the prw vateer was finally sold; of all which he gave information to the other owners at New-Orleans, and promised to remit their proportions of the proceeds. While at New-Orleans in April, 1813, Mr. Green executed a letter of attorney, appointing Messrs. Lewis *83 & Lee of that city, his general attornies and agents and in this power he described himself, as “ Basil Green, of Baltimore, merchant;” He does not appear since that period, to have returned to the United States. In July, 1814, he was a resident at Carthagena, and is described by one other witness, as having a house and store there. Such are the most material facts respecting Mr. Green’s domicil apparent on. the record.

In respect to the proprietary interest in the goods claimed by him, the evidence is more complicated* The whole adventure was conducted by Mr. John F. Miller, of New-Orleans, (one of the proprietors of the Hornet,) from whose testimony it appears, that the owners of the Hornet, resident at .New-Orleans, having received information of her,sale, and being desirous of receiving their funds, he, Miller, on. his own account, and as their agent, determined to make a voyage to Carthagena for this purpose. He accordingly in June, 1814, went from New-Orleans to St. Jago de Cuba, and from thence to Jamaica, (as the only practicable route,) and from thence to Carthagena. When he left New-Orleans he took a draft from Messrs. Lewis & Lee on Mr. Green, for 2,500 dollars, and a letter from the same gentlemen to Messrs. O‘Hara & Offley, merchants at Jamaica authorizing them to pay him the balance of their accounts, whatever it might be. At Carthagena, in August, 1814, he received from Mr. Green, the sum of 1,500 dollars and 50 cents, in part of the. draft of Messrs, Lewis & Lee. He also received from Mr. Green the whole of the nett pro *84 ceeds of the sale of the Hornet, amounting to the sum of 11,636 dollars, of which his oWn share amounted to 1,500 dollars, and that of Mr.

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15 U.S. 76, 4 L. Ed. 189, 2 Wheat. 76, 1817 U.S. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-dos-hermanos-scotus-1817.