The Marianna Flora

24 U.S. 1, 6 L. Ed. 405, 11 Wheat. 1, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 298
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1826
StatusPublished
Cited by91 cases

This text of 24 U.S. 1 (The Marianna Flora) 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 Marianna Flora, 24 U.S. 1, 6 L. Ed. 405, 11 Wheat. 1, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 298 (1826).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Story

delivered the opinion of the

*38 , . Amendment byB addf d'nss new count fire libel.

Court, and after stating the pleadings, proceeded follows:

An objection, which is preliminary in its nature, has been taken to the admissibility of this new count to the libel, filed in the Circuit Court, upon the ground, that the original subiect matte r was exclusively cognizable m the District Court; and to allow this amendment would be to institute an original, and not an appellate inquiry in the Circuit Court. But the objection itself is founded on a mistaken view of the rights and authorities of appellate Courts of admiralty. It is the common usage, and admitted doctrine of such Courts, to permit the parties, upon the appeal, to introduce new allegations-, and new proofs, non allegata allegare, et non probata probare. The Courts of the United States, in the exercise of appellate jurisdiction in admiralty causes, are, by law, authorized to proceed according to the course of proceedings in Admiralty Courts. It has been the constant habit of the Circuit Courts, to allow amendments of this nature in cases where public justice, and the substantial merits, required them ; and this practice has not only been incidentally sanctioned in this Court; but on various occasions in the exercise of its own final appellate jurisdiction, it has remanded causes to the Circuit Court, with directions to allow new counts to be filed. We may, then, dismiss any farther discussion of this objection, and proceed to the main questions in, controversy. [Here the learned judge recapitu *39 lated the facts of the case as they have been before stated.]

In considering the circumstances, the Court has no difficulty in deciding, that this is not a case of a piratical aggression, in the sense of the act of Congress. The Portuguese ship, though armed, was so. for a purely defensive mercantile purpose. She was bound homewards with a valuable cargo on board, and could have no motive to engage in any piratical act or enterprise. It is true, that she made a meditated, and, in a sense, a hostile attack, upon the Alligator, with the avowed intention of repelling her approach, or of crippling or destroying her. But, there is no reason to doubt, that ,this attack was not made with a piratical or felonious intent, or for the purpose of wanton plunder, or malicious destruction of property. It was done upon a mistake of the facts, under the notion of just self-defence, against what the master very imprudently deemed a piratical cruizer. The combat was, therefore, a combat on mutual misapprehension; and it ended without any of those calamitous consequences to life which might have brought very painful considerations before the Court.

Not a case of piratical aggression unber the act of Congress.

It has, indeed, been argued at the bar, that even if this attack had been a piratical aggression, it would not have justified the capture and sending in of the ship for adjudication, because foreign ships are not to be governed by our municipal regulations. But the act of Congress is decisive on this subject. It not only authorizes a. capture, but a condemnation in our Courts, for *40 such aggressions; and whatever may be the resPonsikility incurred by the nation to foreign powers, in executing such laws, there can be no doubt that Courts of justice are bound to obey and administer them.

*39 The act extend to ƒ reign vessels.

*40 Not a case of hostile aggression for which the property taken in delicato is subject to conficasion by the law of nations.

The other, count, which seeks condemnation on the ground of an asserted hostile aggression, of a similar answer. It proceeds upon the principle, that, for gross violations of the of nations on the high seas, the penalty of confiscation maybe properly inflicted upon the offending property. Supposing the general rule to be so in ordinary cases of property taken in delicto, it is not, therefore, to be admitted, that every offence, however small, however done under a mistake of rights, or for purposes wholly defensive, is to be visited with such harsh punishments. Whatever ‘may be the case, where a gross, fraudulent, and unprovoked attack, is made by one vessel upon another upon the sea, which is attended with grievous loss or injury, such effects are not to be attributed to lighter faults, or common negligence. It may be just, in. such cases, to award to the injured party full compensation for his actual loss and damage ; but the infliction of any forfeiture beyond this does not seem to be pressed by any considerations derived from public law.

Pirates may, without doubt, be lawfully captured on the ocean by the public or private ships of every nation; for they are, in truth, the common enemies of all mankind, and, as such, are liable to the extreme rights of war. And apira-. *41 tical aggression by an armed vessel sailing under the regular flag of any nation, may be justly subjected to the penalty of confiscation for such a gross breach of the law of nations. But every hostile attack, in a time of peace, is not necessarily piratical. It maybe by mistake, or in necessary self-defence, or to repel a supposed meditated attack by pirates.. It may be justifiable, and then no blame attaches to the áct; or, it may be without just excuse, and then it carries responsibility in damages. If it proceed farther, if it be an attack from revenge and malignity, from gross abuse of power, and a settled purpose of mischief, it then, assumes the character of a private unauthorized war, and may be punished by all the penalties which the law of nations can properly administer.

These latter ingredients aré entirely wanting in the case before us ; and, therefore, if the question of forfeiture were now in judgment, we should have no doubt, either upon the act of Congress, or the general law, that it ought not to be enforced.

But, in the present posture of this cause, the libellants are no longer plaintiffs. The claimants interpose for damages in their turn, and have assumed the character of actors. They contend that they are entitled to damages, first, because the conduct of Lieutenant Stockton, in the approach and seizuré of the’Marianna Flora, was unjustifiable ; and, secondly, because, at all events, the subsequent sending her in for adjudication was without any reasonable cause,

*42 Rights and duties of armed and other ship, navigating the ocean in time of peace.

In considering these points, it is necessary to ascertain what are the rights and duties of anued, and other ships, navigating the ocean in time of peace. It is admitted, that the right , of visitaan6 search does not, under such circumstances, belong to the public ships of any nation. This right is strictly a bellige.rant right, allowed by the general consent of nations, in time, of war, and limited to those occasions.

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Bluebook (online)
24 U.S. 1, 6 L. Ed. 405, 11 Wheat. 1, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-marianna-flora-scotus-1826.