The Pedro

175 U.S. 354, 20 S. Ct. 138, 44 L. Ed. 195, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1570
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 11, 1899
Docket115
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 175 U.S. 354 (The Pedro) 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 Pedro, 175 U.S. 354, 20 S. Ct. 138, 44 L. Ed. 195, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1570 (1899).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller

delivered the opinion of the court.

When, on the twenty-second day of April, this Spanish steamer sailed from Havana, the United States and Spain were at war. Congress had adopted a resolution, April 20, demanding “ that the Government of Spain at once relinquish its authority and government in the Island of Cuba and withdraw its land and naval forces from. Cuba and Cuban waters,” and directing and empowering the President “to use the entire land and naval forces of the United States, and to call into the actual service of the U nited States the militia of the several States, to such extent as may be necessary to carry these resolutions into effect.” Time was given by the Execu- ■ tive until April 23 for Spain to signify compliance with, the demand, but the Spanish Government at once, on April 21, recognized the resolution-as “an evident declaration of war,” and diplomatic relations were broken off. Blockade had been proclaimed April 22, and put into effective operation at Havana, and, immediately thereupon, elsewhere, under the proclamation. And by the act of Congress of April 25, it was declared that war had existed since the twenty-first day of April.

Being an enemy’s vessel, the Pedro was liable to capture as lawful prize unless exempted therefrom by the terms of the proclamation of April 26. If that document in its bearing on this case could be regarded as ambiguous, a liberal construction might be indulged in, and it is urged that such liberality should in any event be accorded in view, of the traditional policy of this Government in respect of the exemption of private property at sea during war.

In The Phoenix, 1 Spinks Eccl. & Adm. Rep. 306, 310; Spinks’ Prize Cases, 1, 6, Dr. Lushington said in reference to the relaxation of belligerent rights by official action : “ If the words of the document' are capable of two constructions, then *364 I am clearly of opinion that the one most favorable to the belligerent party, in whose favor the document is issued, ought, to be adopted; but the court must bear in mind that its province is not jus dare, but jus dicere ; and I must again refer to the principle which I have often enunciated in this court, verhis píeme expressis omnmo standum est.”

As applicable here, the meaning of the language used appears to us plain, and the proclamation not open to interpretation, since none is needed; nor are we justified in expanding executive action by construction because of the diplomatic attitude of this Government in respect of the exemption of all property, not contraband, of citizens and subjects of nations at war with each other, an exemption which has not as yet been adopted into the law of nations.

It may be that the hardships incident to the contrary view will finally be found so destitute of corresponding advantage as to lead to the general acceptance of the doctrine so long unsuccessfully advocated by our statesmen and publicists, in diminution of the evils of war, but we must apply the law as it is, and not the law as they have contended it should be.

The Pedro did not come within the fourth article of the proclamation, for she was in Havana, a port of the enemy, on April 21, and. not “ in any port or place within the United States.” She sailed from Havana for Santiago, another port of the enemy, on April 22, was captured that day, and reached Key West on April 23 as a' prize of Avar.' The suggestion that she. was thus brought Avithin the exemption requires no remark.

Nor did the fifth article of the proclamation exempt the Pedro. That article provided that “any Spanish merchant vessel which, prior to April 21, 1898, shall have sailed from any foreign port bound for any port or place in the United States; shall be permitted to enter such port or place and to discharge her cargo, and afterwards forthwith to depart without molestation.”

The Pedro remained in the harbor of Havana from the 17th until the 22d of April. We think it must be assumed that she was advised of the strained relations between the United States and Spain, and the imminency of hostilities. At all events, *365 she did not leave Havana until the day after that designated by Congress and the President as the day on which war actually began, and which was also so regarded by the Government of Spain. She had no cargo to be discharged at any port or place in the United States, but had cargo for Santiago and Cienfuegos, Cuban ports held by the Spanish forces, and she cleared, not for Pensacola, but for Santiago. She was not within the letter of the proclamation, nor within the reasons usually assigned for the exemption as pointed out in the opinion of the District Judge, 87 Fed. Rep. 927. She had not left a foreign port in ignorance of the perilous condition of affairs, and innocently taking á course which would subject her to our power by entering one of. our ports. Neither was she bringing cargo to this country for the increase of our resources, or the convenience of our citizens. On the contrary, she was sailing from one port to another port of the enemy, and all the cargo she had on board was destined for the enemy’s ports. Not only this, but she took on cargo at Havana for Santiago, and was captured while thus actually trading from one enemy port to another enemy port, being herself an enemy vessel. In these circumstances the fact that the Pedro was under contract to ultimately proceed, after concluding her visits to the Spanish ports, to a port of the United States, to there load for Europe, did not bring her within the exemption of the proclamation.

The doctrine as to continuity of voyage as laid down by this court in the cases cited by appellant has no application.

In The Circassian, 2 Wall. 135, it was ruled that the intent to violate a blockade, found as a fact, was not disproved by evidence of a purpose to call at a neutral port, not reached at tifne of capture, with ulterior destination to the blockaded port. In The Bermuda, 3 Wall. 514, the- actual destination to a belligerent port, whether ulterior or direct, was held to determine, the character of .the transaction as a whole; that transhipment could not change the effect of the pursuit of a common object by a common plan ; and that if- the cargo was contraband its condemnation was justified, whether the voyage was to ports blockaded or to ports not blockaded; and so *366 as to the vessel in the former case. And in The Springbok, 5 Wall. 1, it was held that an intention to tranship cargo at a neutral port did not save it when destined for a blockaded port; that as to cargo, both in law and intent, the voyage from London to the blockaded port Avas one voyage, and that the liability attached from the time of sailing if captured during any part of that voyage. The solution of the question under consideration is not particularly aided by these and like decisions relating to blockade running and the transportation of contraband.

In The Joseph, 8 Cranch, 451, the American brig Joseph sailed from Boston with a cargo on freight April 6, 1812, on a voyage to Liverpool, and the north of Europe, and thence directly or indirectly to the United States.

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Bluebook (online)
175 U.S. 354, 20 S. Ct. 138, 44 L. Ed. 195, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-pedro-scotus-1899.