United States v.

24 F. Cas. 739, 1 Brock. 195
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia
DecidedNovember 15, 1811
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 24 F. Cas. 739 (United States v.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v., 24 F. Cas. 739, 1 Brock. 195 (circtdva 1811).

Opinion

MARSHALL, Circuit Justice.

This is a writ of error to a judgment rendered in the district court, in favour of the defendant, on a bond taken to the United States, under the act laying an embargo. It is such a bond as was declared void, in the case of United States v. Dixon [Case No. 3,934], and is now brought up for the purpose of revising that decision. It is unquestionably the duty of everj’ court, to review its own judgments with the same impartiality, with which it reviews the judgments of other tribunals; and if this court fails in the performance of that duty, the failure is unknown to itself. Previous to his entering on his argument, the attorney for the United States called the attention of the court to an inconsistency in .the different parts of the opinion, rendered in the case of U. S. v. Dixon [supra]. In that ease, as in this, the condition of the bond was in part unauthorized by law, and a condition was omitted, which the law was supposed to require. In its [740]*740reasoning, the conrt inclined to the opinion, that the surplusage did not vitiate the bond; but determined that it was vitiated by the omission of a material condition required by law. The reason for determining the two objections differently, is this. The court supposed itself competent to say, on a bond containing every thing required by law, and something more, that the ■ surplusage might be considered as an absolute nullity, and the bond construed as if such surplus and void matter was not contained in it. This is not a novel principle. There are many cases in which surplus matter is rejected. By rejecting it in this case, the bond conforms to law, and it is an effort to give validity to the instrument. It is possible, the effort may not be defensible. But where an essential circumstance required by law, is omitted in the bond, the court does not believe itself competent to supply the omission, and to make the bond conform to the statute. No analogous case is known, in which a court of law exercises such a power. The court may reason erroneously, in supposing itself competent to reject surplus matter, stated in a statutory obligation, which contains every thing required by law, and incompetent to insert in such obligation, matter which it does not contain; or it may apply the principles improperly in the case. But the inconsistency of the two opinions is not perceived. If there be hostility between them, if there be any irreconcilable opposition, between the two positions, that a court may reject surplus matter in an instrument, but cannot aid the want of substance, that hostility,' that opposition, is not yet discovered.

Passing by this supposed' inconsistency, on the existence or non-existence of which the cause certainly does not depend, the court will proceed to consider the arguments urged to show, that the judgment below’ is erroneous. The first position to- be examined is this: It is contended that the law does not require the words “dangers of the seas excepted,” to be inserted in the bond. 2 The statute itself must decide bow far this position is correct. The words are, “the master, &c., of such vessel shall first give bond, &c.” If no more was intended by this position, than to say that the very words in which the obligation should be expressed are not prescribed in the statute, the position would be true in itself, but the court would be at a loss to discern its application to this ease. On a statute which prescribes, not the words, but the substance of a bond, the force of that argument is not perceived, which contends, that because the precise form is not given, the substance which is given may be disregarded. If it was intended to say that the statute does not require the exception in some form to appear in the bond, the correctness of the construction cannot be admitted. The statute directs that no registered vessel, having a cargo on board, shall be allowed to depart from one port of the United States for another, unless the owner, &c.. shall first give bond. &c. The bond is certain ly directed by the statute. The sum in which it shall be taken is directed. The purpose for which it shall be taken, is certainly directed by the statute. It is not supposed that this law will be so construed by the attorney for the United States, as to be satisfied with a bond of any description which the caprice of the officer taking it might suggest. All, it is presumed, will admit that a penal sum must appear in the bond as being double the value of the vessel and cargo. But is this obligation to stand single and unconditional, as a positive debt due to the United States, on the execution of the bond? Certainly not. The law does not consider an immediate debt as existing, and if the bond were to bear that form, its appearance would be in precise opposition to its real nature, and to the effect the law means to give it. It would be, too, in opposition, as, the court conceives, to the very words of the act. The bond is, by the statute, to be taken in double the value, “that the goods, wares, and merchandise, shall be relauded in some port of the United States.” The bond is certainly to secure the relanding of the goods; and how are the words, “that the goods, &c., shall be re-landed in some port of the United States,” to be satisfied, otherwise than by inserting those, or equivalent words, in the bond? To me it seems, that by the language of the statute, they are peremptorily required. If this be correct, then the exception also must form a part of the condition. It is impossible to distinguish between the necessity of inserting one and inserting the other. They are completely identified in this respect. They are equally required in the same sentence and the same words. I understand the statute, then, as requiring, that the exception shall appear in the obligation. On this point, its mandate is positive. This point will, if possible, be made more clear, by comparing the language of the original embargo act, which prescribes the bond, with a sentence in the additional act. which directs that such bonds shall be put in 'suit. It is obvious that “other unavoidable accidents”3 are to form no part of the bond.

The establishment of the construction which has been considered, was, in some degree necessary to the operation of the next argument urged against the judgment of the district court. It was. that the insertion of the. exception was perfectly useless, since without its insertion, the defence would be precisely the same, because (1) being in the law, the exception would avail the defendant [741]*741though not in the bond; (2) the common law exception is as broad as the statutory exception.

First. I am, certainly, not prepared to say, that on a suit instituted on a bond given under the act, the obligor might not avail himself of this defence, though the exception should not appear in the instrument, and the instrument should be deemed valid. Neither am I absolutely prepared to assert the affirmative of this proposition. I speak of the act as standing alone. There is no penalty affixed to the failure to reland the goods except the bond, no duty except what appears in the condition, no excuse for the non-performance of that duty, but what appears in the exception. The law does not declare that loss by sea shall excuse the failure to reland the goods in .the United States, but declares that such exception shall appear in the condition. If, without such exception, the bond could be declared valid as a statutory obligation. then the defence must be made by. pleading an extrinsic matter, which is no otherwise stated to be a sufficient defence than by being required as a part of the condition.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 739, 1 Brock. 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-circtdva-1811.