The George

15 U.S. 278, 4 L. Ed. 239, 2 Wheat. 278, 1817 U.S. LEXIS 403
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 15, 1817
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 15 U.S. 278 (The George) 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 George, 15 U.S. 278, 4 L. Ed. 239, 2 Wheat. 278, 1817 U.S. LEXIS 403 (1817).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Johnson

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is one of those cases which too often occur in courts exercising admiralty jurisdiction, in which the, court is left to decide between the most positive testimony on the one hand, and the most obstinate circumstances on the other.

The privateer Fly had captured the schooner George, and carried her into the province of Maine. But various circumstances having excited a suspicion that the capture was collusive, a claim was filed' in behalf of the United States, and she was adjudged to the government, in opposition to the right set up by the captor.

In all the courts through which this case has passed, the most ample opportunities have been given for the production of testimony. But, unfortunately, this indulgence has only served to thicken the difficulties of the case.

We have now before us the most positive depositions of the supercargo and the shippers of the George, (men whose veractify stands unimpeached,) denying, in every point, the collusion, and contradicting, in almost every material point, the evidence upon which the adjudications took place in the courts below. On the other hand, the characters of Thomas and Rodick, who swear, to positive coe.fessions or the subject of the fraud, are-amply sup-r *280 ported by the most respectable testimony, whilst the veracity of Wasgate and Stan wood, who testify to the same point, stands wholly unimpeached.

It is painful to a court ever to express an opinion that results in an imputation of wilful perjury, and, as much as it is possible in this case, we will put out of view the clashing testimony of individuals, and consider the cáse upon those facts concerning the truth of which the evidence leaves no doubt.

It is a notorious fact, and is expressly and repeatedly sworn to in this case, that during the restrictive system and the late war, English manufactures, in immense quantities, were accumulated in the small ports on the west coast of Nova Scotia, and it is a melancholy tru th, which this court has had but too, inüch cause to know, that many unprincipled individuals were actively engaged in introducing those goods into the United States, under innumerable artifices, and to an immense amount. The protection of the British government was openly given to this intercourse, and there were found but too many in our Country who countenanced ánd encouraged it. Hence this illicit intercourse was actively carried on, and naturally casts a suspicion on such shipments made in that quarter. On the other hand, although an effort has been made to show, that a trade in. the same articles was Carried on between those provinces aud the Havanna, but- one instanoe can be shown of such a. shipment. All the witnesses agree, that the exports from St., Johns to the Havanna. consisted °of fish and lumber. Indeed, from the-course of trade at that time, it is notorious ¿hat the Havanna *281 as Well as other Spanish ports to the.soiithward, were crowded with British manufactures, for the same unprincipled trade carried on at Amelia island. The .shipment, then, in the first instance., is a suspicious one, and leads to the opinion that the dry goods were intended for thtí United States, whilst'thp fish and lumber were to be used only as the cover under which they Were to be introduced. But this reasoning may be:consistent with the idea of a destination to any port of the United States, as Well as the ports in that vicinity with which this privateer appears to have been connected. Let us, then, examine if the George was equipped for a voyage of any duration. And here the évidence is irresistible to show that she was not. She had no dunna ge, platform, for the purpose of preserving the goods from damage by water, and nothing was stowed o.r packed in'such a manner as to indicate preparation for a. protracted voyage. Her sails and rigging were old, worn, and deficient in, quantity, and her mainsail" too lárge both for mast and ’boom. Her wood, and water, and provisions very scanty; and her drew, before the mast, not more thaii one half of What were necessary for a long and a winter’s voyage. Add to this, that her captain, is proved to have been a very young man, scarcely twenty-one years of age, altogether unknown to the shippers and engaged only four days before the vessel’s sailing. It cannot be believed that so valuable a cargo could have been destined for so long a 'voyage with such defective equipments -, no court, upon such evidence, would *282 have hesitated to avoid a policy on either vessel or cargo.

We, therefore, think,' that her real destination must have been to some port in the vicinity of that at which her voyage commenced. How, then, was the cargo to be introduced ?

Here I regret that it is necessary to notice a part of the testimony of Gregory Vanhorne, which certainly casts a shade upon all the rest of his testimony. The George, it appears, had actually sailed under convoy of the Beaver as far as Etang Harbour. There the vessel lay in a secure port, under the protection of the Martin sloop of war, and at a place occasionally assigned as a place of rendezvous to vessels that were to sail under convoy. Yet Van-, liorne swears that he heard the .commander of the Martin expressly order, the captain of the George to depart for the place where she was captured, an open road, without protection, only fifteen miles from Etang Harbourf and there to wait the indefinite arrival of some unascertained convoying vessel. This cannot be true; For, independently of the fact, which appears to be satisfactorily established, that Long Island Harbour, in the island of Grand Mag-nan, when this vessel was captured, had never been, uséd as a place of rendezvous, for a convoy, it is very clear that such, an order would not have been obeyed by a vessel that feared exposure to capture; for it is proved to have been a place often visited by American privateérs.

We, therefore, consider the vessel’s departure from Etang Harbour to the place where , she was. *283 captured as voluntary, and her patient stay at that place as manifesting.that she did not fearexpoaurc to American capture. Yet it does not follow necessarily, that it was the Fly privateer that she was waiting for, nor that she expected to be captured at all. The cargo intended .for the. American market may, by possibility, have been intended to be. introduced into the United States, by being transhipped into some smuggling vessel. So far every thing comports perfectly, with the innocence of this Capture.

But the privateer Fly also draws suspicion upon herself in the very inception of her voyage. Wr¡ find, what we pronounce absolutely unprecedented, notwithstanding every effort to prove the contrary, that the captain, Dekoven, is sole owner of the privateer, and every man under him, from the lieutenant down, is engaged on wages. In the case o the Washington privateer it was a circumstance of great weight with this court that nine out of fifteen of the ship’s company were joint owners, and it was. thought improbable that such a transaction, if there was fraud in it, would have been confided to so many witnesses. b

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Bluebook (online)
15 U.S. 278, 4 L. Ed. 239, 2 Wheat. 278, 1817 U.S. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-george-scotus-1817.