Thompson v. The Catharina
This text of 23 F. Cas. 1028 (Thompson v. The Catharina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The laws of the Rhodians were followed and adopted by the Romans, in their most prosperous state of commerce and power. Those in the celebrated Consolato del Mare,3 prevailing in the Mediterranean, and established, in concert with other trading states and countries, by the Venetians and Genoese, in the periods of their naval power and commercial prosperity, are collections of, and improvements on, more ancient customs and laws. Of these, the Amalfitan Code (the first and most respected of what are called, as they relate in point of time to those of the Rhodians and Romans, “Modern Sea Laws,”) furnished the predominant and most generally received principles.
I shall not contend with those who say, we ought to have a maritime code of our own, about the binding force of all these laws on us. By the general laws of nations we certainly are bound. These apply, most frequently, in the prize court; but there are many eases of salvage, wreck, &c. on the instance or civil side of the court, which necessarily must bo determined under the general law. The wisdom and experience, evidenced in the particular maritime institutions of other commercial countries, ought at least to be greatly respected. If they serve only as faithful guides, and tried and long established rules of decision, in similar cases, they are of high and exemplary importance. It must be granted, that it is safer to follow them, than to trust entirely to the varying and crooked line of discretion.7
Where a reciprocity of decision, in certain cases, is necessary, the court of one country is often guided by the customs, laws, and decisions of the tribunals of another, in similar cases. But the change in the form of our government has not abrogated all the laws, customs and principles of jurisprudence, we inherited from our ancestors, and possessed at the period of our becoming an independent nation. The people of these states, both individually and collectively, have the common law,8 in all cases, consistent with the [1031]*1031change oí our government, and the principles on which it is founded. They possess, in like manner, the maritime law, which is part of the common law, existing at the same period; and this is peculiarly within the cognizance of courts, invested with maritime jurisdiction; although it is referred to, in all our courts on maritime questions. It is, then, not to be disputed, on sound principles, that this court must be governed in its decisions, by the Maritime Code we possessed at the period before stated; as well as by the particular laws since established by our own government, or which may hereafter be enacted. These laws and the decisions under them, must be received as authorities, in this, and other courts of our country “in all cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction,” to which, by the constitution, it is declared “the judicial power of the United States shall extend.” Nor shall I think myself warranted to exclude more modern expositions, or adjudged cases from being produced here. Whatever may, in strictness, be thought of their binding authority, I shall always be ready to hear the opinions of the learned and wise jurispru-dents or judicial characters of any country. On subjects agitated in this court, often deeply affecting the property and reputation of the suitors, I am not so confident in my own judgment, as not to wish for all the lights and information, it may be in my power to obtain, from any respectable sources. If, in any instance, the laws or the decisions under them, shall be found or deemed severe, or not suited to a particular exigency or course of trade, parties may mould their contracts at their will, according to circumstances, by mutual agreement and consent. Let the law be what it may, “modus et con-ventio vincunt legem,” in all contracts, not radically against common justice, moral and political obligations, and those principles which the law will not suffer to be destroyed or perverted for private purposes.9 If under a contract, by a casualty, a particular inconvenience arises from the general principles of the maritime law, the party must submit. He must consider what he loses or pays as a contribution to the great and general interests of commerce, or the predominant policy and advantage of his country.10
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23 F. Cas. 1028, 1 Pet. Adm. 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-the-catharina-pennsylvaniad-1795.