The Louisa Simpson

15 F. Cas. 953, 2 Sawy. 57, 14 Int. Rev. Rec. 165, 1 Alaska Fed. 50, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 217
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedOctober 7, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 F. Cas. 953 (The Louisa Simpson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Louisa Simpson, 15 F. Cas. 953, 2 Sawy. 57, 14 Int. Rev. Rec. 165, 1 Alaska Fed. 50, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 217 (D. Or. 1871).

Opinion

DEADY, District Judge.

The libel in this case was filed September 19, 1870. On October 10, thereafter, an amended libel was filed, wherein it is alleged that on July 17, 1870, at the port of Kotzebue Sound, in the district of Alaska, in waters navigable from the sea by vessels of ten or more tons burden, J. M. Selden, captain of the U. S. revenue cutter Reliance, did seize the schooner Louisa Simpson and cargo, consisting of liquors, tobacco, powder, guns, caps, knives, lead, cotton cloth, ivory, whale-bone, peltries, etc., and report the same to William Capus, collector of customs for said district, at Alaska, who now holds said schooner and cargo, at the port of Portland, in the district pf Oregon, as forfeited to the United States for the causes following:

1. That on or about April 19, 1870, said schooner, being then owned in whole or in part by American citizens, sailed from the port of San Francisco, California, and that at said date, and upon said voyage, one Henry Ravens, the master of said schooner, exported from said port of San Francisco, within the United States, upon said schooner, and as part of her cargo, a large quantity of distilled spirits, of the value of over four hundred dollars, destined, and intended to be taken and imported into the territory of Alaska, in violation of section 4 of the act of congress entitled, “An act to extend the laws of the United States relating to customs, commerce, and navigation over the territory ceded to the United States by Russia, to establish a collection district therein, and for other purposes;” approved July 27, 1868 (15 Stat. 241); and in violation of the restrictions and prohibitions of the president of the United States, made in pursuance of said act by executive order, February 4, 1870, prohibiting the importation of distilled spirits into or within the territory of Alaska.

[52]*522. For that the said distilled spirits of the value and exported and destined as aforesaid, were, about July 17, 1870, found on board said schooner, at Kotzebue Sound aforesaid, the cargo aforesaid, being also then and there on board said schooner.

3. That on or about July 17, 1870, said distilled spirits of the value, and exported as aforesaid, “were imported into said district of Alaska, were used and attempted to be used and landed from said schooner, at Kotzebue Sound and elsewhere in said territory, and were there found upon said schooner; said schooner, at the same time, having on board the cargo aforesaid, in violation of said section 4 of the act of congress, and the restrictions and prohibitions of the president aforesaid.”

4. That said schooner being of twenty tons or more burden, and owned as aforesaid, was, about July 17, 1870, “found with the cargo or lading aforesaid on board, trading between district and district in the United.States, and between the ports of San Francisco, in the collection district of San Francisco, and in the fourth coasting district and Kotzebue Sound, and other places in the collection district of Alaska and fifth coasting district, in the United States, having on board distilled spirits, other than ship’s stores, without being enrolled and licensed, and without applying for or being furnished by the collector of the port of the United States, at which she took in her said cargo, with a certified manifest containing the marks and numbers of packages, the names of shippers, consignees, and port of delivery, and without receiving a permit, as required and in the manner provided by statute; she, the said schooner, having, upon her said voyage, cleared from the port of San Francisco for the foreign port of Plover Bay, and not for any port or place within the United States.”

5. That part of the cargo aforesaid, consisting of 395 gallons of distilled spirits was, between April 21 and July 17, 1870, drawn from casks duly stamped and gauged, and put into other casks and packages containing not less than ten gallons, and intended for sale, without such last mentioned casks or packages being stamped or marked, as by law provided, and was so found in the district of Alaska on or about July 17, 1870.

[53]*536. That on or about July 17, 1870, the Louisa Simpson was used by the master thereof to convey and transport from off the coast of California, in the Pacific Ocean, to Kotzebue Sound, in the district of Alaska, three empty casks or pipes from which distilled spirits had been drawn, and which were duly stamped and marked, without such stamps or marks being effaced or obliterated, as provided by law.

On October 10, 1870, Henry Ravens, the master of the Louisa Simpson, appeared and filed two separate but similar answers to the libel; one on behalf of the owners of the schooner, and the other on behalf of the owners of the cargo.

The answers admit the allegations of the libel, except as follows:

They deny that the schooner sailed for the district of Alaska, or that the distilled spirits aforesaid, or any part thereof, were intended to be imported into the district of Alaska, or were landed or attempted to be landed or used therein. They allege that the schooner sailed for Plover Bay, in the Arctic Ocean, in the empire of Russia, but about June 11, 1870, while off the river Anadyr, in Asia, was caught “in the ice, and drifted about helplessly” in the Arctic Ocean, until July 1, when she came out of the ice, about twelve miles west of Cape Douglas, in the district of Alaska; that being then short of wood and water, the master attempted to make Port Clarence in said district, for the sole purpose of obtaining a supply of such articles, but being prevented by the ice from so doing, he made for Cape Prince of Wales for the same purpose, when he met a four knot gale and floating ice from N. N. W., to avoid the dangers of which, he put in under the cape, and anchored in two fathoms of water, about four miles from shore; that while lying here at anchor, some Indians came off shore with whom he traded for some wood, but not sufficiently for the voyage, and a sea carried away the windlass, when he proceeded to Kotzebue Sound, the nearest “land-locked harbor,” from necessity, and solely for the purpose of repairing damages to the vessel, and obtaining wood and water for the voyage.

They deny that the schooner, or officers, or crew thereof, were engaged in trading, or did trade between district and district in the United States; they admit the transfer of the distilled spirits from the large to the small packages, as al[54]*54leged in article 5 of the libel, but allege that the same took place on the open sea,.and without the jurisdiction of the United States, and was made for the convenience of trading in the Russian possessions; they admit the conveyance in the schooner of the three empty casks, without having the stamps or marks effaced, as alleged in article 6 of the libel, but allege the schooner brought such casks within the limits of the United States contrary to the intention of the owners and master, by stress of weather, as aforesaid.

Section 4 of the act mentioned in article 1 of the libel, and under which this seizure was made, enacts: “That the president shall have power to restrict and regulate, or to prohibit the importation and .use of firearms, ammunition, and distilled spirits into and within the said territory.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 953, 2 Sawy. 57, 14 Int. Rev. Rec. 165, 1 Alaska Fed. 50, 1871 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-louisa-simpson-ord-1871.