The William H. Northrop

29 F. Cas. 1307
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 15, 1862
StatusPublished

This text of 29 F. Cas. 1307 (The William H. Northrop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The William H. Northrop, 29 F. Cas. 1307 (S.D.N.Y. 1862).

Opinion

BETTS, District Judge.

This vessel and her cargo were libelled in this suit January 17, 1862. Both were captured as prize December 25, 1861, at sea. within soundings, sixty or seventy miles off Wilmington, North Carolina, by the United States ship-of-war Fernandina, and were sent to this port for adjudication, and here attached by process of law, returnable and returned in court, duly served, February 4, 1862. Mr. Archibald, the British consul, intervened in the cause, and filed a claim to the vessel and cargo, as the property of British subjects. February IS, 1862, and the cause was brought to hearing on that issue at the present term. The documentary proof of ownership of the vessel consists in the certificate of her registry at Nassau, N. P., August 12, 1861, to Joseph Roberts, of that place. That document states that she was built at Wilmington. North Carolina, in the year 1859. The only written evidences of the employment or destination of the vessel subsequently to that registry are shipping articles executed at Wilmington. North Carolina, between Silliman, master of the vessel, and her crew, for a voyage from Wilmington to one or more ports in the West Indies, for a time not exceeding two months, and back to the port of Wilmington, North Carolina, which agreement was signed by the master and four seamen, at Wilmington, September 18 and 19, 1861, and by two other seamen, at the same place, one on the 27th of September, and the other on the 31st of October thereafter; a manifest of the cargo of the vessel, dated August 12, 1861. stating that it was taken on board at the Bahamas and bound for, under the description of the cargo, on the face of which manifest, signed by Silliman, it is noted in pencil. “Went to Wilmington”; the manifest of the master, dated at Eleuthera, Bahamas, August 24, 1861. stating that the cargo was shipped by Silliman, the spaces on the face of which manifest, marked “To whom consigned,” “Place of consignee's residence,” “Ports of destination,” left to be filled, all remain in blank, and od the face of it, under the description of the cargo, is entered a note, in broad pencil-mark, “Went to Wilmington”; and a memorandum in writing, not dated or signed, as follows: “Mem. scb. Wm. H. Northrop, of Nassau, N. P. Sailed from Currant Cut on the 26th of August, 1861; arrived on the coast of North Carolina on the 31st; saw one large steamship; was not boarded between the edge of the Gulf Stream and Frying Pan shoal; on the first day of September arrived at New Inlet: saw no armed vessel of any description, therefore went in, [1308]*1308and arrived same day at Wilmington, N. C." There is.also connected with these papers a certificate of the British vice-consul, dated at Wilmington, North Carolina, September 19, 1861, authorizing the departure of the vessel from that port on a voyage to the port of Cardenas, Cuba, and asserting that at the date of the arrival of the vessel the port of Wilmington was not blockaded, except by proclamation, by any force of the United States. These are all the papers produced from the ship relating to her voyage after her sale in Nassau, except some accounts current with her and for disbursements for her use in Havana, the last of November, 1861, and a certificate or registry of like date, from the Spanish authorities, of the departure of the vessel, destined, under Captain Silliman, to the port of New York. No log-book was produced from the vessel evidencing her employment and course of trade and navigation subsequent to the alleged sale of her to the British owner, nor any bill of sale of such transfer, or proof of the actual payment of any consideration on such sale. Berkheimer, the American owner of the vessel in 1859, appointed Joseph A. Silliman to be her master before her sale at Wilmington, and he was again appointed her master at Nassau by Roberts, the purchaser on the sale there, and again in August, 1SG1. The vessel, in September, 18G1, went from Nassau to Wilmington with a cargo of salt, coffee, and fruit. She took thence a cargo of rice and lumber to Havana, in November, 1861, and sailed thence with a cargo of coffee, medicines, and acids, for New York, and was captured on that voyage about eighty miles (within soundings) east of Wilmington and off Cape Fear. The cargo was at the time of capture owned jointly by the master and Roberts, the owner of the vessel. The master says that he had heard at Nassau as early as July, from general conversation and the newspapers, of the war and the blockade of North Carolina, but “did not know positively that the coast was blockaded, but presumed it was.” The mate testifies that the master told him the vessel was bound from Havana to New York, but he had a strong impression she was bound to some Southern port: that he thought so because she was so near in shore: and that he and his master knew of the war, and that the whole Southern coast was blockaded by the United States government. A seaman who was examined says that all on board knew of the war and of the blockade of North Carolina.

The intervention of the British consul in the cause is official only. He does not supply any proof, by what is called his test affidavit, of the legal ownership of Roberts, the alleged purchaser of the vessel, and none has been furnished by the latter or by any a sent of his up to this period. The master. Silliman, gives the only evidence offered on that point. He says that Roberts was owner of the vessel, and that he and the witness were joint owners of the cargo captured; that he (the witness) knew from the registry and from conversation with Roberts that the latter was owner of the vessel, and that he (the witness) saw a bill of sale of the vessel some time in August, 1861, at the counting-house of Messrs. Sawyer & Menendez, of Nassau, acting as agents of Henry Berkheimer, of Wilmington, to Mr. Roberts, of Nassau, and has not seen it since. He says that he was not .present when it was made; that he supposes it is now in the custom-house at Nassau; and that he knows of no other engagement concerning the purchase than what appears on the bill of sale. This is a very faint and imperfect support of a paper title to a vessel, made in time of war, by an enemy resident in an enemy country, evidently for the purpose of putting her in trade with an enemy port by a neutral, in evasion of an existing blockade of that port. In the ease of The Bernon, 1 C. Rob. Adm. 102, an enemy vessel was sold and conveyed to a neutral in time of war, and Sir William Scott says, that although such purchases have been allowed to be legal, they are obnoxious to much suspicion, and the court will look into them with great jealousy, even in purchases made for neutrals resident in their own country. The caution embodied in that doctrine is significantly evoked by the incidents intermingled with the present case. And, in respect to a formal bill of sale from the vendor of the vessel. and a note for the payment of the consideration price, with a receipt for its payment, the learned judge held that evidence to be of itself inadequate to establish a lawful purchase, without proof that the purchaser had funds to satisfy the credit, or at least without further verification, by the attesting witnesses, than their mere signatures to the bill of sale, that the transaction was actually fair.

The testimony of Silliman, the master, stands before the court subject to great distrust. He represented to Tibley, the acting mate of the vessel, and to Herring, a seaman on board of the vessel, and during her last voyage, that he hailed from Bordeaux, and was a native of France, while he testifies, on his own examination, that he was born in Philadelphia, and has always lived there, and that he is married, and that his wife lives in that city.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 1307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-william-h-northrop-nysd-1862.