The Manila Prize Cases

188 U.S. 254, 23 S. Ct. 415, 47 L. Ed. 463, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1279
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 23, 1903
DocketNos. 309, 310, 311
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 188 U.S. 254 (The Manila Prize Cases) 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 Manila Prize Cases, 188 U.S. 254, 23 S. Ct. 415, 47 L. Ed. 463, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1279 (1903).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

Captures in war enure to the Government and can become private property only by its grant. The right of the citizen to demand condemnation of vessels or property as .prize for his benefit must be derived from acts of Congress, and their scope is not to be enlarged in his favor by construction. The Siren, 13 Wall. 389. Although in matters of detail, where there is no controversy in respect of the existence of the grant, a more liberal construction may be applied in carrying the intention of Congress into effect.

The correctness of the decree so far as it related to Spanish seagoing vessels with their equipment and the property found *259 on board of them, captured at the battle or soon afterward, and not restored to their owners, is conceded.

1. The first question to be determined is whether the Don Juan de Austria, the Isla de Cuba, and the Isla de Luzon were properly adjudicated as prize for the benefit of captors in view of their condition immediately after the engagement, and their being subsequently raised, reconstructed, and commissioned in the Navy.

In the consideration of that question we assume that “ capture” and “prize” are not convertible, terms, and that for the subject of capture to be made prize for the benefit of the captors the taking must meet the conditions imposed by the statutes.

The statutory provisions bearing on the case are to be found in chapter LIY of the Revised Statutes, entitled “ Prize,” embracing sections 4613 to 4652 inclusive, some of which are given below, together with certain of the “ Instructions to Blockading Vessels and Cruisers,” issued by General Order, June 20,1898. 1

*260 Ordinarily the property must be brought in for adjudication, as the question is one of title, which does not vest until condemnation, but it will be seen that by section 4615, if the captured vessel, or any part of the captured property, is not in condition to be sent in for adjudication, a survey and appraisement shall be had, the property sold, and the proceeds deposited subject to the order of the court; and by sections 4624 and 4625, captured vessels and property may be appropriated to the use of the United States, and the money value stand in place of the prize. And proceedings may be had where property which might have been brought in has been entirely lost or destroyed. Adjudication is contemplated in all cases.

By section 4635, a bounty is given for each person, on board a vessel of the enemy which is “ sunk or otherwise destroyed ” in an engagement, of $100 if the hostile fleet is of inferior, and of $200 if of equal or superior, force; and $50 for every person on board at the time of such capture, where the vessels *261 taken are immediately destroyed in the public interest but not in consequence of injuries received in action.

' This bounty is to be divided in the same manner as prize money, and the prize money in the one -case and the bounty in the other cover the entire results of success.

We agree with counsel for libellant that the words “sunk or otherwise destroyed ’? are equivalent to “ destroyed by sinking or otherwise.” There are two general classes then under the statute, vessels destroyed, and vessels captured and condemned, or appropriated.

The facts before us are somewhat peculiar and serve to illustrate the variant circumstances that may occur in naval engagements, and create modifications of the general classification. These vessels were run ashore and sunk by their own commanders, with the result that they were only temporarily disabled, and the commanding officer of our. fleet, in the public interest, as the engagement closed, directed their destruction to be com *262 pleted by burning. In the report of the action, dated May 4, ■1898, they were included among the vessels reported as burnt, but they were not included in the appraisement made by the board of appraisal and survey ordered in accordance with section 4624; and following, of the Revised Statutes, to survey, appraise and take a careful inventory of “enemy’s property captured and appropriated for the uses of the United States Government.” After ' hostilities were suspended an examination of the wrecks of the Don Juan de Austria, the Isla de Cuba and the Isla de Luzon was made, and subsequently the vessels were raised, under a contract entered into by the commander-in-chief for the Government, and reconstructed. If the vessels had not been raised and saved, they would, have remained abandoned as destroyed, but as they were saved and appropriated by the Government, they cannot be said in fact to fall within that category. We. attach no importance to the official reports referring to the vessels as destroyed, which was true in the *263 sense in which the word was then used, for the question really is whether, when salvage had been effected, the Government can maintain that the captors did not take them, but that they were destroyed so that they could not be treated as prize.

.The position of the Government is that as these vessels were sunk, and destroyed to such an extent that libellant’s naval force was powerless to salve them by its own resources, their subsequent reconstruction and appropriation by the Government had no effect on their legal status, which had been determined immediately after the battle.

It is insisted that if not prize then they could not be prize afterwards, and yet it is not denied that when the question of title is settled by deci’ee it takes effect by relation as of the date of the capture. And because this is so the fact that hostilities had ceased before the vessels were raised becomes immaterial.

The contention is that if a vessel lies on the bottom in shallow water, but in such a condition that she cannot be floated *264 by- any of the means ordinarily, possessed by a naval force, such vessel must be‘regarded as “sunk” within the meaning of the statute, even though she has received no structural injury ; or if a vessel, though not sunk, be so structurally injured as to destroy her power of floating and she cannot be repaired by any means possessed by the naval forces in the place where she lies, such vessel -must be regarded as structurally destroyed ” within the meaning of the statute.

And it is said that a close analogy is furnished by the cases of constructive .total loss of a vessel, such as justifies an abandonment to the underwriters. Nevertheless counsel argues that there are differences between those cases and cases under section 4635. Thus, while it is admitted that in the former the owner need not abandon unless he see fit to do so, the right of election on the part of. captors as to whether the vessel should be treated as destroyed or as a prize is denied in the latter; and another difference suggested is that the owner of a submerged or stranded vessel could contract with a third party to

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Bluebook (online)
188 U.S. 254, 23 S. Ct. 415, 47 L. Ed. 463, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-manila-prize-cases-scotus-1903.