The Enterprise

8 F. Cas. 732, 1 Paine 32
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for New York
DecidedSeptember 15, 1810
DocketCase No. 4,499
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 8 F. Cas. 732 (The Enterprise) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Enterprise, 8 F. Cas. 732, 1 Paine 32 (circtny 1810).

Opinion

LIVINGSTON, Circuit Justice.

Although the libel in this case contains a variety of articles, it is agreed that if any violation of law have been committed, it consists in lading of certain merchandise, of the value of more than four hundred dollars, on board of the schooner Enterprise in the night, without a license or permit from the collector and naval officer, and without the inspection of any officer of the revenue. This allegation being fully proved, it only remains to decide whether this act worked a forfeiture of vessel and cargo. The law, which is supposed to attach these consequences to conduct of this kind, is the supplementary embargo act which passed the 25th of April, 1808. Of tills law, reliance is placed on the second section, which declares — “That during the continuance of the act laying an embargo, no ship or vessel of the character of the Enterprise shall receive a clearance, unless the lading shall be made under the inspection of the proper revenue officers, subject to the same restrictions, regulations, penalties, and forfeitures, as are provided by law for the inspection of merchandise imported into the United States, upon which duties are imposed, any law to the contrary notwithstanding.” This section, it is conceived, implicates a vessel loaded in this manner, and its cargo, in the same penalties which are imposed by the 50th section of the collection law on the landing of goods imported contrary to its ■directions; which are, “that no goods brought from a foreign port shall be unladen but in open day, between the rising and setting of the sun, except by special license from the collector and naval officer of the port, nor at any time without their permit” The penalties for an infraction of either of these directions are, a forfeiture by the master, and every other person knowingly concerned, or aiding therein, of the sum of four hundred dollars; a disability from holding any office of trust or profit under the United States, for a term not exceeding seven years, with an advertisement of their names by the collector in one of the public newspapers. The goods so landed are also declared to be forfeited, in which fate the vessel is likewise involved, if their value at the port where landed, shall amount to four hundred dollars.

On the argument much aid was attempted to be derived by each party from the rules which have been applied to the construction of penal statutes, and although the counsel differed greatly in their understanding of these rules, the common law has not left us in the dark on this subject The act, and particularly that part of it under which a forfeiture is claimed, is highly penal, and must therefore be construed as such laws always have been and ever should be. But while it is said that penal statutes are to receive a strict construction, nothing more is meant than that they shall not, by what may be thought their spirit or equity, be extended to offences othér than those which are specially and clearly described and provided for. A court is not. therefore, as the appellant supposes, precluded from inquiring into the intention of the legislature. However clearly a law be expressed, this must ever, more or less, be a matter of inquiry. A court is not however permitted to arrive at this intention by mere conjecture, but it is to collect it from the object which the legislature had in view and the expressions used, which should be competent and proper to apprize the community at large of the rule which it is intended to prescribe for their government. For although ignorance of the existence of a law be no excuse for its violation, yet if this ignorance be the consequence of an ambiguous or obscure phraseology, some indulgence is due to it It should be a principle of every criminal code, and certainly belongs to ours, that no person be adjudged guilty of an offence unless it be created and promulgated in terms which leave no reasonable doubt of their meaning. If it be the duty of a jury to acquit where such doubts exist concerning a fact, it is equally incumbent on a judge not to apply the law to a case where ne labours under the same uncertainty as to the meaning of the legislature. If this be involved in considerable difficulty from the use of language not perfectly intelligible, unusual circumspection becomes necessary — especially if the consequences be so penal as scarcely to admit of aggravation. When the sense of a penal statute is obvious, consequences are to be disregarded; but if doubtful, they are to have their weight in its interpretation, it will at once be conceded that no man should be [735]*735stripped of a very valuable property, perhaps of his all, — he disfranchised, and consigned to public ignominy and reproach, unless it be very clear that such high penalties have been annexed by law to the act which he has committed. If these principles be correct, as they are deemed ,to be, a court has no option where any considerable ambiguity arises on a penal statute, but is bound to decide in favour of the party accused. “It is more consonant to the principle of lib-Ierty,” says an eminent English judge, “that a court should acquit when the legislature intended to punish, than that it should punish, when it was intended to discharge with impunity.” Some of these principles have been overlooked altogether, or but little attended to in the argument of the cause. They are, therefore, now brought into view, and will govern the court in deciding on the, present appeal.

The attention of the court has been called to a history of the progress of the several laws relating to the embargo, and to the mis-chiefs which were unprovided for, at the time of the passage of the one under consideration, in order to show what was intended by the legislature. Almost every possible evasion, it is said, had been previously guarded against by adequate sanctions, except that of loading clandestinely or by night,, and then watching an opportunity of going to sea without a clearance, or giving bonds— which was the evil to which it was intended to apply a remedy. Be it so. This may have been in the contemplation of congress, but we are not bound to conclude that they have <lone what was intended, unless fit words be used for the purpose.

In examining the act, the first difficulty which occurs, is that no words of prohibition are to be found in this section. There Is no interdiction to load at any time, nor without the intervention of the revenue officers. Penal laws generally first prescribe what shall or shall not be done, and then de-sdare the forfeiture. This course is pursued in all the other offences created by this statute, and very generally by all the other penal laws of the United States. The court will not say that an offence can be created in no other way, but when we perceive such a departure from one almost universal, and from other parts of the same law, it suggests •strong doubts whether the legislature intended to prevent in any other way than by the withholding of a clearance what it is supposed they had so much at heart The word “subject,” it is presumed, supplies this deficiency, and is sufficient to inflict a penalty. This may be the case when it follows a prohibition not to do a particular act If it had been declared that no vessel should be loaded but in a certain way, subject to certain consequences, such form of expression might be liable to no objection. But the •embarrassment is, what meaning to assign 4o this word, as it is here used.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. Cas. 732, 1 Paine 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-enterprise-circtny-1810.