The Santissima Trinidad.

20 U.S. 283, 5 L. Ed. 454, 7 Wheat. 283, 1822 U.S. LEXIS 265
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 12, 1822
StatusPublished
Cited by137 cases

This text of 20 U.S. 283 (The Santissima Trinidad.) 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 Santissima Trinidad., 20 U.S. 283, 5 L. Ed. 454, 7 Wheat. 283, 1822 U.S. LEXIS 265 (1822).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Story

delivered the opinion of the the Court.

Upon the argument at the bar several questions have arisen, which have been deliberately considered by the Court; and its judgment will now be pronounced. The first in the order, in which we think it most convenient to consider the cause, is, whether the Independencia is in point of fact- a public ship, belonging to the government of Buenos Ayres. The history of this vessel, so far as is necessary for the disposal of this point, is briefly this : She was originally built and equipped at Baltimore as a privateer during the late war with Great Britain, and was then rigged as a schooner, and called the Mammoth, and cruized.against the enemy. After the peace she was rigged as a brig, and sold by her original owners. In January, 1816, she was loaded with a cargo of munitions of war, by her new owners, (who are inhabitants of Baltimore, and being armed with twelve, guns, constituting a part of her original armament, she was despatched from that port, under the command of the claimant, on a voyage, ostensibly to the Northwest Coast, but in reality to Buenos Ayres. *335 By the written instructions given to the supercargo on this voyage, he was authorized to sell the vessel to the government of Buenos Ayres, if he could obtain a suitable price. She duly arrived at Buenos Ayres, having exercised no act of hostility, but sailed under the protection of the American flag, during the voyage. At Buenos Ayres the vessel was sold to Captain Chaytor and two other persons ; and soon after-wards she assumed the flag and eharacterof a public ship, and was understood by the crew to have been sold to the government of Buenos Ayres; and Captain Chaytor made known these facts to the crew, and asserted-that he had become a citizen of Buenos Ayres ; and had received a commission to command the vessel as a national ship ; and invited the crew to enlist in the service ; and the greater part of them accordingly enlisted. From this period, which was in May, 1816, the public functionaries of our own and other foreign governments.at that port, considered the vessel as a public ship of war, and such was her avowed character and reputation. No bill of sale of the vessel to the government of Buenos Ayres is produced, and a question has been made' principally from this defect in the evidence, whether her character as a public ship is established. It is not understood that any doubt is expressed as to the genuineness of Captain Chaytor’s commission, nor as to the competency of the other proofs in the cause introduced, to corroborate it. The only point is, whether supposing them true, they afford satisfactory evidence of her public character. We are of opinion that they do. In general the commission of a public ship, signed *336 by the proper authorities of the nation to which she belongs, is complete proof of her national character, A bill of sale is not necessary to be produced. Nor will the Courts of a foreign country inquire into the means by'which , the title to the .property has been acquired. It would be to eXert the right of examiti- . ing into the validity of the acts of the foreign sovereign, and to sit in judgment upon them in caseá where he has not conceded the jurisdiction, and where it would be inconsistent with his own supremacy. The commission, therefore, of a public ship, when duly authenticated, so far at least as foreign courts are concerned, imports absolute verity, and the title is not examinable. The property must be taken to be duly acquired, and cannot be controverted. This has been the settled practice between nations ; and it is a rule founded in public convenience and policy, and cannot be broken in upon, witliont endangering the peace and repose, as well of neutral as of belligerent sovereigns. The commission in the present case is not expressed in the most unequivocal terms; but its fair purport and interpretation must be deemed to apply to a public ship of the government. If we add to this the.corroborative testimony of our own and the British Consul at Buenos Ayres, as well as that of private citizens, to the notoriety of her claim of a public character; and her admission into our own ports as a public ship, with the immunities and privileges belonging to such a ship, with the express approbation of our own government, it does not seem too much to assert, whatever may he the private suspicion of a lurking American *337 interest, that she must be judicially held to be a pub-lie ship of the country whose commission she bears.

There is another objection urged, against the admission of this vessel, to the privileges and immunities of a public ship, which may as well be disposed of in connexion with the question already considered. It is, that Buenos Ayres has not yet been acknowledged as a sovereign, independent government by the executive or legislature of the United States, and, therefore, is not entitled to have her ships of war recognized by our Courts as national ships. We have, in former cases, had occasion to express our opinion on this point. The government of the Uni ted States has recognized the existence of a civil ~ . . . , . . , war between Spam and her colonies, and has avow? . . , ed a determination to remain neutral between the parties, and to allow to each the same rights of asylum and hospitality and intercourse. Each party is, therefore, deemed by us a belligerent nation, having, so far as concerns us, the sovereign rights of war, and entitled to be respected in the exercise of those rights. We cannot interfere to the prejudice of either belligerent without making ourselves a. party to the contest, and departing from the posture of neutrality. All captures made by each must be considered as having the same validity, and all the immunities which may be claimed by public ships in our ports under the law of nations must be considered- as equally the right of each ; and as such must be recognized by our Courts of justice, until Congress shall prescribe a different rule. This is the *338 doctrine heretofore asserted by this Court, and we see no reason to depart from it

The next question growing out of this record, is w hether the property in controversy was captured in violation of our neutrality, so that restitution ought, by the law of nations, to be decreed to the libellants. Two grounds are relied upon to justify restitution : First, that the Independencia and Altravida were originally equipped, armed, and manned as vessels of war in our ports ; Secondly, that there was an illegal augmentation of the force of the Independencia within our ports. Are these grounds, or either of them, sustained by the evidence ?

If the cause stood solely upon the testimony of the witnesses who have been examined on behalf of the libellants, we should have great hesitation in admitting the conclusions which have been drawn from it. The witnesses, indeed, speak directly and uniformly either to the point of illegal equipment, or illegal augmentation of force within our ports. But their testimony is much shaken by the manifest contradictions which it involves, and by declarations of facts, the falsity of which was entirely within their knowledge, and has been completely established in proof.

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Bluebook (online)
20 U.S. 283, 5 L. Ed. 454, 7 Wheat. 283, 1822 U.S. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-santissima-trinidad-scotus-1822.