The Josefa Segunda

23 U.S. 312, 6 L. Ed. 329, 10 Wheat. 312, 1825 U.S. LEXIS 228
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 21, 1825
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 23 U.S. 312 (The Josefa Segunda) 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 Josefa Segunda, 23 U.S. 312, 6 L. Ed. 329, 10 Wheat. 312, 1825 U.S. LEXIS 228 (1825).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Story

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Thé case of the Josefa Segunda, in which the present controversy had its origin, is reported iii the fifth volume of Mr. Wheaton’s Reports. It is only necessary to mention, that after the condemnation of the vessel, in the District Court of Louisiana, and before the intervention of the appeal to this Court, the negroes seized on board of her, in pursuance of the act. of Congress, and the act of Louisiana, which will be hereafter commented on, were delivered by Mr. Chew, (the *320 Collector of the Customs,) to the Sheriff of the parish of New-Orleans, to be sold according to law; and a few days afterwárds a. new libel, claiming the property of the negroes, having been filed, by the Spanish owners, (which was after-wards dismissed; and on appeal, the dismissal confirmed by this Court,) by . consent of all the parties in interest, the negroes were sold by the Sheriff, and the proceeds lodged in the Bank of the United States, subject to the order of the District Court. The question, now in Contestation respects the manner in. which the proceeds of this sale, as well as of the sale of the vessel and effects, are to be distributed, and the parties who are entitled. to them. Mr. Roberts, who is an Inspector of the Customs, claims title as the original seizor or captor; Messrs. Gardner, Meade; and Humphrey, make a like claim under a subsequent military seizure made by them; and Mr. Chew, and the Surveyor and Naval Officer of the port of New-Orleans, a like claim as the true and actual captors and seizors, who made the last and only effectual Seizure', and prosecuted the same to a filial decree of condemnation.

Mr. Chew caused the original libel against the vessel to be brought, arid though his name is accidentally. omitted in. it as the officer through whose, instrumentality the seizure was made, yet it is admitted, and indeed could riot be denied, that he was the sole responsible prosecutor of the suit, until the final condemnation of the vessel, and the final dismissal of the second libel, *321 brought by the original Spanish claimants. The claims of all the other parties, now before the Court, adverse to that of Mr. Chew, have intervened since the final judgmént pronounced in the Supreme Court in the cause.

The Josefa Segunda was finally condemned under the seventh section of the Slave Trade Act, of the 2d of March, 1807, ch. 77. It will be necessary to refer , to the terms of that section at large, because the question here respects as well the distribution of the proceeds of the vessel; (which must be made according to the rules prescribed in that section,) as of the proceeds of the sale of the negroes, who were unlawfully brought into the United States ; and, in the progress of the discussion, it will materially aid us in the decision of the latter, to ascertain who, by the construction of that section, are the captors entitled to the distribution of the former.

The fourth section of the act of 1807 provides, that “ neither the importer, nor any person or persons claiming from or under him, shall hold any right or title whatsoever to any negro, &c. who may be imported or brought within the United States, or territories thereof, in violation of this law; but the same shall remain, subject to any regulations, not contravening the provisions of this act, which the Legislatures of the several States or territories, at any time hereafter may make, for disposing of any such negro,” &c. Accordingly, the Legislature of Louisiana, on the 13th of March, 1818, passed, an act avowedly to meet the exigency Of this section, which act, af *322 ter reciting the substance of the same section, proceeds tot declare, that the Sheriff of the parish of New-Orleans is authorized and required to receive any. negro, &c. delivered to him in virtue of the act o£ Congress, until the proper Court pronounces a decree of condemnation; and after such condemnation, it authorizes him to sell such negro, &.c. as a slave for life; and then declares, th at the proceeds of such sale shall, after deducting all charges, be paid over by the said Sheriff, one moiety for the use of the commanding officer of the capturing vessel, and the other moiety to the treasurer of the Charity Hospital of New-Orleans, for the use and benefit of the sáid hospital.” There is no doubt that this act is not in contravention of the intention of the act of Congress, for the sixth section contains a proviso, recognising the validity of such a sale, When made under the . authority of a State law.

Jurisdiction of the District Court over the present proceedings.

Some objection has been suggested as to the jurisdiction of the District Court of Louisiana, to the present proceedings, upon the ground that the distribution is to be made under this act by the Sheriff of New-Orleans. But upon a full consideration of the act of 1807, we are of opinion, that ;he objection cannot be. maintained. By the judiciary act.of 1789, as well as by the express provisions of the act of 1807, the District Court has jurisdiction over seizures made under the latter act. The principal proceedings are certainly to-be. against the vessel, and the goods and effects found on board. But *323 the negroes are also to be taken, possession of, for the purpose of being delivered over to the State governments, according to the provision of the act; and it is. obvious, that this delivery can-only be after-a condemnation has occurred, since it is only in that event that the State Legislature can acquire any right to dispose of them. The proviso in the seventh section, that the oncers to whom a moiety of the proceeds is given on condemnation, shall be so entitled only in case they safely keep and deliver over the negroes according to the laws of the States, operates by way of .condition to the completion of their title; but does not import any requirement that the delivery shall be ¡Until after the condemnation. On the contrary, as by a decree of restitution of the vessel and effects, the claimants . would be entitled to a restitution of the negroes, the reasonable construction seems to be., that. they remain subject to the order of the District Court, as property in the custody of the law, though in the actual possession of the seizing officers. The possession of the latter is the possession of the Court, as much in respect to the negroes as the vessel and cargo; and it must remain until the Court, by pronouncing a final decree, directs in what manner it is to be surrendered. In the present case, the negroes were sold, and the proceeds substitutéd for them were in the custody of .the» Court. It was, therefore, authorized to deliver them over to the parties who should be entitled, under the State law, lit terms, the State law required the delivery to the *324 Sheriff’ to the use of the parties; but who the parties were to whose use the Sheriff, must hold them, could not be ascertained by him, but must be awarded by the Court, to whom, as an incident to. the principal cause, it exclusively belonged. In what manner could any other Court be authorized to -ascertain who was the commanding officer of the capturing vessel ?

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Bluebook (online)
23 U.S. 312, 6 L. Ed. 329, 10 Wheat. 312, 1825 U.S. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-josefa-segunda-scotus-1825.