Torlade D'Azambuja v. Barrozo Pereira

1 Miles 366

This text of 1 Miles 366 (Torlade D'Azambuja v. Barrozo Pereira) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Torlade D'Azambuja v. Barrozo Pereira, 1 Miles 366 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1830).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court

(Barnes, President; Hallowell, J.; and Coxe, J.)

was delivered by

Coxe, J.

A rule upon the plaintiff to show cause of action, and why tite defendant, claiming privilege as charge d’affaires of the kingdom Portugal, should not be discharged from the process issued against him, having been allowed, after a hearing before a single judge, the defendant was discharged on common bail, and the remainder of the rule reserved for the determination of the court in bank. The reasons for the discharge of the defendant on common bail were expressed by the judge at the time it was ruled, and being altogether unconnected with, the question of privilege, it will be unnecessary for the court here to advert to them. The single question now to be determined is, Has the defendant established his claim of privilege as charge d’affaires of the kingdom of Portugal, so as to entitle him to be discharged from the process issued against him 1

That foreign ambassadors and other public ministers, including the grade of charge d’affaires, are invested with an inviolability of character, immunities and privileges, exempting their persons and their property from the jurisdiction and authority of the slate near which they reside, by the laws of nations and the statutes of our country, cannot be a subject of debate. Under ordinary circumstances it would appear that we have rather to determine a question of fact, viz. : is the defendant invested with the diplomatic character he alleges ; and not, whether, being charge d’affaires of a foreign government, he is privileged from arrest and suit. Many objections have been made to the claim of privilege, and we shall notice such of them as a fair discussion of the case may seem to require.

Before entering upon the consideration of the testimony, it is to be remarked, that facts and papers have been referred to during the argument which the court do not consider legal evidence ; and points of law relating to evidence have been raised, which we are not called upon to determine. The constitution of the United States having [377]*377made it iba duty of the president “ to receive foreign ambassadors and other public ministers,” it would appear, and it has been judicially determined, that it has necessarily bestowed upon the executive branch of the federal government the exclusive right to judge of the credentials of the ministers so received, and (hat the other branches of the government are bound to regard them as ministers, so long as the president continues to treat them as such. United States v. Ortega, 4 Wash. C. C. Rep. 336.

The power of receiving foreign ministers, delegated by the constitution to the president, might be in clanger of being interfered with by the judicial branch of the government, and unhappy collisions between the state and federal governments might arise, if the law were otherwise. Foreign ministers might in vain appeal to the laws of nations to protect them in the enjoyment of their privileges and immunities, if, after being received and recognised by the highest constitutional authority, the president of the United States, they were to be obliged to submit the legality of these credentials, thus sanctioned, to every tribunal in the country, before which they might be brought by process. In conformity with these principles, it was decided in the case of the United States v. Liddell, cited by Judge Washington in Ortega’s Case, that the certificate of the secretary of state of the United States that the person claiming to be charge d’af-faires was received and recognised as such by the executive of this government, was the best evidence which could be given of that fact ; that the only proper inquiry in cases of this sort is, Has the person claiming to be a foreign minister been received and recognised as such by. the executive ¶ Governed by these principles, we consider the facts and documents certified by Mr Van Burén, as secretary ofstate, as the only evidence before the court that the defendant was received and recognised as charge d’affaires of the kingdom of Portugal, and of the continuance or termination of his official and privileged character.

[His honour here gave a statement of the facts detailed in the certificate of the secretary of state, and then proceeded as follows :]

When the commission of an ambassador is at an end, when he has finished the business on which he came, is recalled, dismissed, or is obliged to go away on any account whatever, his functions cease, but. his privileges and rights do not expire at the same time; he retains them till he returns to his principal, to whom be is to make a report of his embassy. Vattel's L. N., b. 4, ch. 9, sect. 125. [378]*378It is as a returning minister only that the defendant can claim privilege. That claim of privilege appears to be resisted, substantially, on the following grounds.

1st. That he had no credentials from Don Pedro IV.; his last credentials being from Donna Isabel Maria, the regent.

2d. That if the defendant was lawfully accredited, received, and recognised, until the 18th of July 1828, Ids communication of that date, notifying our government that he ceased his diplomatic functions, connected with his subsequent declaration of the 3d of October that he continued to exercise his consular functions, deprived him of his diplomatic character from that time; and that he is not entitled to the privileges of a returning minister.

3d. That if entitled to the privileges of a returning minister from the 18th of July 1828, the delay to depart from that time until his arrest, on the 30th of October 1829, was more than necessary, was an unreasonable time, and he is not now entitled to privilege as such minister.

4th. That Don Miguel I. is the constituent of the defendant; that he is setting up his privilege against his constituent contrary to the principle on which it is founded ; that at all events the institution of this suit is a waiver of the defendant’s privilege, by the existing charge d’affaires of Portugal, which he had a right to make, if the defendant were otherwise entitled to the inviolability of a foreign minister.

This is an action of trover, brought by the plaintiff in Iris recog-nised character of charge d’affaires of the kingdom of Portugal, against (lie defendant, who, in the language of his passport, “ has long resided near the government of the United States in the character of chargé d’affaires of Portugaland it appears, by the plaintiff’s affidavit of his cause of action, dated the 30th of October 1829, to have been instituted for the recovery of the archives of the diplomatic mission, and other documents of great importance to the interests of the king of Portugal and certain of his subjects, which the plaintiff asserts of right belong to him in his official capacity, and which the defendant retains in his possession, and refused, on demand, to deliver to the plaintiff.

The difficulty existing between the respectable individuals who are parties to this action, grows out of the unhappy differences which have heretofore disturbed the Portuguese nation, and divided its royal family. It bas occasioned a discussion involving the rights of public [379]

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Bluebook (online)
1 Miles 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torlade-dazambuja-v-barrozo-pereira-pactcomplphilad-1830.