The St. Nicholas

14 U.S. 417, 4 L. Ed. 125, 1 Wheat. 417, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 337
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 21, 1816
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 14 U.S. 417 (The St. Nicholas) 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 St. Nicholas, 14 U.S. 417, 4 L. Ed. 125, 1 Wheat. 417, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 337 (1816).

Opinion

J oiiÑson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court as follows :

This cáse presents itself in this court under a cloud of circumstanc.es unusuálly threatening. There is scarcely wanting in it one of those characteristics by which courts df admiralty are led to the detection of neutral fraud. Whether we consider the persons who conduct the voyage, the original character of the vessel, the time and circumstances of the transfer, the trade she has since been engaged in, the funds with which that trade has been transacted, or the manner in which it has been conducted, wc find all the hopes arvd wishes of the adventure centering *419 in the hostile country. La French, the master, is a native Dane, a naturalized American citizen, a Russian subject, and, finally, domiciled and his family residing in Great Britain, but (as he declares himself) having no particular residence. Smith, the supercargo, is a native Englishman, but a naturalized citizen of the United States. He has resided near 30 years in Baltimore, where/the war finds him. He sails for Lisbon ; from thence to Great Britain; and is almost immediately, without showing any pretensions to such credit, employed by an opulent house of trade to take charge of this adventure, with a ltitude of discretion which could be the result only of long acquaintance, or very strong recommendations'. Such men are the proper instruments of belligerant or neutral fraud; they aré the t avowed panders of the mercantile world; their consciences are in the market. Having no national character or feeling, and but very few qualms of any other kind, their talents and fidelity to their employers, like those of the bravo, are sought out by the projectors of iniquitous adventure. And who are Meyer, and Platzman & Gosler ? , They hre introduced in the bills of the day as very important personages ; the one was the owner of the ship, the other of the cargo; but we find them acting a part jonspicuous only for its insignificance. They cross the.stagehand disappear. It is a circumstance which' scarcély 'admits of explanation, that Meyer never exercised a single áct of ownership over this vessel. He resides at St. Petersburg, she is lying, at Cronstadt. He purchases her, for. aught, we know, withoufjiaviug ev,er seen *420 her, of e, person whom nobody knows, and whom iw thing connects with the vessel; is introduced by a Mr. Nicholas, of Virginia, to the master, leaves him in command, and„from that time to the present, does not give him one order, nor'writes a single letter, to him. If we could suppose it possible, that there was no correspondence between them from the 31st of July, 1812, when the ship w.as purchased, to the 22d December, when she was chartered to Platzman & Gosler, at least he would have written at that time and enclosed the master; a copy of the charter-party, and a letter of instructions to regulate his conduct in the distant and perilous voyage on which, he was about to enter. But we find La French without one scrap of instruction from the supposed owner, and, in all things, yielding implicit obedience to the supposed agent of Platzman & Gosler, whose* interests might; very well have been in many things inconsistent with those of the charterer. And what is not Jess remarkable, although he acknowledges that he must have been eighteen months or two years master of the. same ship prior to the sale to Meyer, we find nothing about him or the ves. °.l by which we can discover who the former owner wa. and when he is asked who executed the bill óf sale lo Meyer, his reply is, he does not know ? thus leading, fairly, to a conclusion, that reasons exist now, and existed formerly, for rendering such a cqrrespondence either unnecessary or unsafe to accompany the ship. As to Platzman & Gosler, the same.observation is strikingly applicable to them. From the moment they launch their bark upon the ocean, she becomes, as to them. *421 a perfect derelict. Not one-anxious inquiry, not one expression of feeling, is communicated by letter to their agent in London.. Such, at least, we have a right to infer from the non-production of any such correspondence upon the order for farther proof. And, upon the supposition of the fairness of this transaction, the existence of letters to prove it fair, was unavoidable; for the letter, of the 22d December, expressly calls for correspondence prior to that date, and having relation to this adventure. Beside that, as difficulties thickened upon the adventure in Pensacola, bills on bills were drawn upon the British house, and ietters on letters sent under cover to them, it would have followed that communications would be .made to the Russian house, and bills drawn for reimbursement. ■ But over all this there rests an ominous silence.

Nor is there any intrinsic skill in the machinery of this transaction. It can neither claim the praise of genius in its invention, nor of skilful execution in the adaptation of its parts. The very inception of it is laid in a bungling artifice that would not cheat a novice in the arts of commercial evasion. It bears, on the face of it, the record of its own conviction, and confesses itself to be, what it was intended to be, nothing but a neutral cloak. The correspondents, Simpson & Co., to whom the letter of the .22d of December is addressed, are expressly instructed -to attach that letter to the invoice and bill of lading, in order to support' the Russian national character. This, of itself, is conclusive to show that this evidence constituted no part of the mercantile transac *422 tion between the parties. For, when was it ever heard of that a letter, which contains in it the: whole evidence upon which a correspondent purchases, advances, and negotiates to. a great amount, is thus to be thrown to the winds, or returned to the hands of him who is interested ip suppressing it ? And every step that we advance in the progress of this transaction, we find new light breaking in.upon us to make manifest its real characteristics. The letter itself, in which the whole adventure originates, bears, on the face of it, obvious symptoms of that over anxiety»which never fails to accompany, a conscience ill at ease. In a letter to a man, to whom sitch facts must , have .been wholly indifferent, it brings together, into one view* a number of facts to which the English merchants (at least) know that courts. of admiralty are in the habit of attaching importance in deciding on questions'of fraud or belligerant rights ; as,-for instance,. to show that the ship had been- previously engaged in neutral trade, they say, “ After the discharge of a cargo of Russian produce at this port.” And that it may-appear that this adventure had not récently originated, they say, “~Our friends, Messrs. A. Glennie, Son & Co., with .whom we have some time corresponded, on . this subject,” .■ &c. This leftter, Which is all-important to the decision of . the cause, calls forth some more remarks.. It contains a* singular congeries of powers, Instructions, and facts. It is the only evidence we have that the vessel ever was chartered for this voyage. The only' article of instructions to Meyer is to be found here; the only evidence-of the right óf A. Glennie & Co. *423 to act for Platzman & Goslef, is contained in.it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 U.S. 417, 4 L. Ed. 125, 1 Wheat. 417, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-st-nicholas-scotus-1816.