Tucker v. Alexandroff

183 U.S. 424, 22 S. Ct. 195, 46 L. Ed. 264, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 724
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 6, 1902
Docket303
StatusPublished
Cited by111 cases

This text of 183 U.S. 424 (Tucker v. Alexandroff) 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
Tucker v. Alexandroff, 183 U.S. 424, 22 S. Ct. 195, 46 L. Ed. 264, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 724 (1902).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Brown,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

Upon the facts of this case, the District Court and Court of [428]*428Appeals were agreed in the opinion that neither under terms of the treaty of 1832 with Russia nor upon principles of international comity could the relator be delivered over to the master of the Yariag as a deserter.

In committing him to the Philadelphia County Prison, the commissioner acted in pursuance of Rev. Stat. sec. 5280, which provides as follows : “ Sec. 5280. On application of a consul or vice-consul of any foreign government having -a treaty with the United States stipulating for the restoration of seamen deserting, made in writing, stating that the person therein named-has deserted from a vessel of any such government, while in any port of the United States, and on proof by the exhibition .of the register of the vessel, ship’s roll, or other official document, that the person named belonged, at the time of desertion, to the crew of such vessel, it shall be the' duty of any court, judge, commissioner of any Circuit Court, justice, or other magistrate, having competent power, to issue warrants to cause such person to be arrested for examination.” The procedure is then set forth.

The facts were, in substance, that Alexandroff entéred the Russian naval service as a conscript, in 1896, at the age of seventeen, 'and was assigned to the duties of an assistant physician. Some time in October, 1899, an officer and a detail of fifty-three men, among, whom was Alexandroff, were sent from Russia to Philadelphia to take possession of and man the Yariag, then' under construction by the firm of Cramp & Sons, in that city. The Yariag was still upon the stocks when the men arrived in Philadelphia. She was, however, launched in October or November, 1899, and at the time Alexandroff .deserted was lying in the stream still under construction, not yet having been accepted by the Russian government. Alexandroff left Philadelphia without leave April 20,1899, went to New York, and there renounced his allegiance to the Emperor of Russia, declaring his intentions of becoming a citizen of the United States. He was -subsequently arrested upon the written request of the Russian vice-consul, andón June 1, 1900, was' committed upon a mit-timus stating, that he had been charged with desertion from the Imperial Russian crusier Yariag,-upon the complaint of the [429]*429captain, in accordance with the terms of the treaty between the United States and Russia.

The vice-consul, who prosecutes this appeal on behalf of the Russian government, relies chiefly upon Art. IX of the treaty of December, 1832, which reads as follows (8 Stat. 444): “ The said Consuls, Yice-Consuls and Commercial Agents are authorized to require the assistance of the local authorities, for the search, arrest, detention and imprisonment of the deserters from the ships of war and merchant vessels of their country. For this purpose they shall apply to the competent tribunals, judges and officers, and shall in writing demand said deserters, proving by the exhibition of the registers of the vessels, the rolls of the crews, or by other official documents, that such individuals formed part of the crews; and, this reclamation being thus substantiated, the surrender shall not be refused.” Sections VIII and IX of the treaty, which cover the whole subject of deserting seamen, are reproduced' in the margin.1

[430]*430While desertion is not a crime provided for by any of our numerous extradition treaties with foreign nations, the arrest and return to their ships of deserting seamen is no novelty either in treaties, legislation or general international jurisprudence. The ninth article of the treaty with the government of France, entered into November 14, 1788, before the adoption of the Constitution, contained a stipulation that “the Consuls and Yice-Consuls may cause to be arrested the captains, officers, mariners, sailors and all other persons, being part of the crews of the vessels of their respective nations, who shall have deserted from the said vessels, in order to send them back and -•transport them out of the country,” specifying the procedure. 8 Stat. 106, 112. The same provision was contained in subsequent treaties with France, of June 24, 1822, and February 23, 1853, and it was to carry these and similar treaties into effect .that the act of 1829, reproduced in Rev. Stat. sec. 5280, was adopted. Similar conventions were entered into with Brazil in 1828, Mexico in 1831, Chili in 1832, Greece in 1837, Bolivia in 1.858, Austria in 3870, Belgium in 1880, and at different times with some seventeen or eighteen other powers, and finally .by a special treaty with Great Britain,/ratified June 3, 1892. In short, it maybe said that with the exception of China,.the Argentine Republic, and possibly a few others, there is not a maritime nation in the world with which we have not entered into a convention for the arrest ánd delivery over of deserting seamen. The multitude of these conventions is such as to indicate a'pressing necessity that masters of vessels, should have some recourse to local laws to' prevent thejr being entirely stripped of their crews in ’foreign ports.

A like provision for the arrest and delivery over of seamen deserting from domestic vessels, adopted by the first Congress [431]*431in 1790,1 Stat. 131, 134, was sustained by this court in Robertson v. Baldwin, 165 U. S. 275, and remained upon the statute books for over a hundred years, when it was finally repealed in 1898. 30 Stat. 755, 764.

We are cited to no case holding that courts have the power, in the absence of treaty stipulations, to order the arrest and return of seamen deserting from foreign ships; and it would appear there was no such power in this country, inasmuch as sec. 5280, under which the commissioner is bound to proceed, limits his jurisdiction to applications by a consul or vice-consul of a foreign government “hewing a treaty with the United States ” for that purpose.

In Moore on Extradition, (sec. 408,) it is laid down as a general proposition that, in the absence of a treaty, the surrender of deserting seamen cannot be granted by the authorities of the.' United States; and an opinion of Attorney General Cushing, (6 Op. 148,) is cited upon that point. There is also another to the same effect. (6 Op. 209.) It is believed that in all the instances Avhich arose between the United' States and Great Britain prior to the treaty of 1892 for the reclamation of deserting seamen, both powers have taken the position that in the absence of a treaty there can be no reclamation. Several instances of this kind are cited by Mr. Moore in his treatise... ,

In the case of the United States v. Rauscher, 119 U. S. 407, it was held that, apart from the provisions of treaties upon thé subject, there was no well-defined obligation on the part of one country to deliver up fugitives from justice to another, “apd though such delivery was often made, it-was upon the principie of comity, and within the discretion of the government whose action was invoked, and it has never been recognized as among, those obligations of one government towards another which rest upon established principles of international law.”

The only case in our reports even indirectly considering such a.

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Bluebook (online)
183 U.S. 424, 22 S. Ct. 195, 46 L. Ed. 264, 1902 U.S. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-alexandroff-scotus-1902.