The Tenyu Maru

4 Alaska 129
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedJune 30, 1910
DocketNo. 399A
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Alaska 129 (The Tenyu Maru) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Tenyu Maru, 4 Alaska 129 (D. Alaska 1910).

Opinion

OVERFIERD, District Judge.

This case presents a new question with respect to the right of the United States to protect the fur seals within the territory of Alaska: First, as to the limits and extent of the jurisdiction of a United States court on the waters adjacent and surrounding the Pribilof Islands in the Bering Sea in enforcing a violation of the statutes above referred to as against citizens and subjects of Japan: and, second, can a schooner belonging to a Japanese company, sailing under the flag and license of the Mikado, be libeled and forfeited to the United States under the statutes above mentioned, in the event one or more of her small boats are captured within the three-mile limit, illegally sealing, but the schooner is found without the said prohibited zone ?

To the first question we find numerous adjudicated cases arising under the same statutes here in question and connected with the United States revenue cutters capturing boats and crews alleged to have been found illegally sealing within the territorial waters of Alaska; but in no case, so far as I am aware, have similar facts been before a court wherein a foreign vessel has been captured at a distance more than the marine league from the American shores and libeled for violation of a statute of the United States, committed by or through its small boats within the said limit.

[132]*132A case arose under the same statutes here in question in the waters surrounding and adjacent to the Pribilof Islands, in United States v. Jane Gray (D. C.) 77 Fed. 908, but the vessel there condemned and forfeited was an American licensed schooner. The trial court found the evidence conflicting as to whether the vessel itself was within the marine league when captured or had been, but said Judge Morrow:

“Nor would it make any difference in law whether, at the time of the killing, the schooner were Just outside the prohibited area while her boats were inside. If the boats were alone inside, and killed seals therein, the schooner, her tackle, apparel, furniture, and cargo are, in law, just as much subject to condemnation and forfeiture. Otherwise it would result that the statute would prove impractical in its operation, and the protection to fur seals a delusion,”

This decision, among others, seems to admit the jurisdiction might be extraterritorial with reference to the enforcement of a violation of sections 173 and 178, Pen. Code, in the waters of Bering Sea in Alaska, against an American vessel, where the violation took place within three miles of the shores of the island belonging to the United States in Bering Sea. The United States has so well defined its position as to its territorial jurisdiction over the waters of Bering Sea within the territory of Alaska, concerning the protection of fur seals and fisheries, that a short review will, I think, be not inappropriate.

When the act of March 2, 1889 (25 Stat. 1009, c. 415) amendatory of section 1956, was before Congress and still in committee, an amendment to the proposed amendatory act was drafted by the House Committee to have the said act with relation to salmon fisheries to include and apply to* all waters of Bering Sea in Alaska, embraced within the boundary lines mentioned and described in the treaty with Russia March 30, 1867 (15 Stat. 539), by which treaty Alaska became the property of the United States. The committee on foreign affairs, however, reported the said proposed amendment, but with a recommendation that it be disagreed to. The committee of conference accordingly inserted in place of this amendment the following:

“Hereby declared to include and ajiply to all dominions of the United States in the waters of Behring Sea.”

[133]*133Thus the question was intentionally left open. However, it could not, and did not, long remain so. At that time, as well as previously, constant trouble was being experienced by the United States in attempting to guard and protect the fur seals in Alaska. As a result of this disputed and unsettled territorial jurisdiction in Alaskan waters, a convention between the United States and Great Britain was effected, at which these governments agreed to submit to arbitrators certain questions, five in number, regarding the rights of the United States to protect, and its property in, fur seals within the waters of Alaska. President’s Proclamation Feb. 29, 1892, 27 Stat. 947. The answers to these questions were received and subsequently ratified by acts of Congress, including a treaty between the United States and Great Britain, fixing, as between these two governments, a 60-mile limit around the Pribilof Islands in Bering Sea, Alaska. Act April 6, 1894, c. 57, 28 Stat. 52 (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3004).

The conclusion reached by the arbitrators to one of the above-mentioned five questions, as to the extent of the territorial jurisdiction of the United States over seals in the waters in and about the islands and shores of Alaska, was that the United States obtained by the treaty of 1867, and should enjoy, with respect to the waters of Alaska, all the rights possessed and theretofore enjoyed by Russia. However, they held that the territorial limit of 100 Italian miles from the shores of all the Russian territory in Bering Sea, claimed by Russia by ukase of 1821, did not obtain after the treaty between Russia and the United States April 5-17, 1824 (8 Stat. 302), and a similar treaty between Russia and Great Britain 1825, under which treaty Russia restricted her territorial jurisdiction in Alaskan waters to the distance of a cannon shot from the shore; and the arbitrators further found that the United States had no right of protection or property in fur seals frequenting the islands of the United States in Bering Sea waters outside the three-mile limit. International law has fixed or limited the distance of a cannon shot to one marine league from the shore, and it is well recognized by all nations.

Likewise three miles from shore is the limit fixed and ac[134]*134knowledged by all sovereigns of territorial jurisdictions to enforce its penal laws, except where otherwise extended by treaty between the contracting parties, with but few exceptions. While each state or sovereign may provide for the punishment of its citizens for acts committed by them outside its territory, whether felonies or misdemeanors, simply makes the penal law a personal statute, and a matter with which no other country or government may interfere; but to say that the penal laws of our country can bind foreigners and regulate their conduct, either in their own country or in any other foreign country, is to attempt to assert a jurisdiction over such countries and to impair independence. Such is the view on this subject of penal laws by Germany, Denmark, Great Britain, Portugal, France, Spain, Switzerland, Belgium, and the Netherlands; Russia and Greece alone being exceptions. Sweden and Norway are exceptions only where the king orders a prosecution of a felony. Moore’s International Law.

Since Japan was not a party to the arbitration and subsequent treaty between the United States and Great Britain of 1894, and has not since been a contracting party thereto, it might be contended that as to Japan the United States is not bound by the arbitrators’ decision of 1892, so limiting the jurisdiction of the United States over fur seals in the waters of Bering Sea to three miles from its shores.

In La Ninfa, 75 Fed. 513, 21 C. C. A. 434, a case arising over the same subject-matter under the same statutes, Mr.

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