United States v. Elliot

25 F. Cas. 1000, 25 Int. Rev. Rec. 319, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 2194
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 8, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 25 F. Cas. 1000 (United States v. Elliot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Elliot, 25 F. Cas. 1000, 25 Int. Rev. Rec. 319, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 2194 (circtdma 1879).

Opinion

LOWELL, Circuit Judge.

It is well settled that when pecuniary penalties are affixed by statute to an act or a neglect, and there is no imprisonment provided for, or other reason to suppose that a mere punishment is intended, and no special remedy is pointed out in the statute, a civil action (formerly always “debt”) will lie for their recovery, although the penalties are for the sole use of the sovereign. Rolle, Abr. 598, pi. 18, 19; Jacob v. U. S. [Case No. 7,157]. When the practice of the courts of the United States first adopted that of the several states, penalties could be so recovered in Massachusetts. When the sovereign was interested in the penalty, it might be recovered, in England, by information in the nature of debt, which, in revenue cases, was brought in the exchequer, but in others in any of. the king’s courts. If an informer was interested, his rights were established by the decree. See Attorney General v. Hines, Parker. Exch. 182; U. S. v. Lyman [Case No. 15,647], per Story, J.; Rook’s Case, Hardr. 20; Roe v. Roe, Id. 185; Rex v. Clark, 2 Cowp. 610; Butler v. Butler, 1 East, 338. In the vice admiralty court at Boston, in January, 1728, the advocate general exhibited an information in behalf of the king, the governor of the province, and John Jekyl, Esq., collector of the port of Boston, against Abisbai Ffolgier, of Nantucket, master of the sloop Raven, for breach of the acts of trade, for that the said Ffolgier, on the 21st of December last, made report of his arrival from Nantucket with oil and whalebone, etc., but refused to give to said John Jekyl a manifest, and for certain other acts in connection with another vessel; and the decree was that the defendant pay one hundred pounds,—one third to his majesty, one-third to- his excellency, the governor, and one-third to John Jekyl, the informer. Rex v. Ffolgier, 1 Vice-Adm. Records, Mass. 56. In 1831 a similar information was filed in the district court for this district against a master for not delivering his manifest, demanding a penalty of not exceeding $500. After hearing, Judge Davis awarded $5 and costs. Records, vol. 18, p. 27. There are other informations on file for pecuniary penalties. I assume, therefore, that where [1001]*1001debt will lie, the United States may have an information, unless the' recent practice act has changed the rule,—a’ point to be considered hereafter.

In looking over the recent admirable collection of the province laws of Massachusetts, edited by Messrs. Ames and Goodell, I have found a great many acts imposing pecuniary penalties and forfeitures. In many of them- no remedy is specifically given. In many others it is enacted that they may be recovered by “bill, plaint, or information.” • These words were probably used to meet the English law that a qui tam action could not be by “bill,” but must be by “original” or by information. In others there is added after these words, “or by- the presentment of a grand jury.” In February, 1794, a statute provided that all pecuniary fines and forfeitures made, or that may be made, recoverable by bill, plaint, or information, or by any of these modes of prosecution, or where no mode of recovery is prescribed, shall and may be sued for and recovered by action of debt; saving, however,' all remedies specifically given by any statute. This means, I suppose, that when the statute gave a right to file an information, or to obtain a presentment, these additional remedies should be preserved. St. 1793, c. 43, § 4. In 1801 a statute gave an alternative remedy by indictment whenever the penalty was wholly or in part for the use of the commonwealth. St. 1800, c. 57, § 4. It has remained the law of -this state since 1801 that the commonwealth may have a civil action or an indictment at its election, though the form of the action is now tort. Rev. St. c. 133, § 14, and e. 118, § 42; Gen. St. c. 176, | 2.

It is in my opinion, the law of this country that debt will lie, though the amount of the penalty is uncertain. See the able judgment of Washington, 3., in U. S. v. Colt [Case No. 14,839], the reasoning of which was adopted- and enforced by the supreme court, though not in a case upon a statute. Hughes v. Union Ins. Co., 8 Wheat. [21 U. S.] 294; Rockwell v. State, 11 Ohio, 130; U. S. v. Allen [Case No. 14,431]. In Dane’s Abr. c. 148, art. 9, § 5, it is said that for the many penalties and forfeitures enacted by congress, of not less than so much, or more than so much, debt is generally the proper remedy. In 1795 an action of debt was sustained in Massachusetts for an uncertain penalty, and the court assessed the amount. Eddy v. Oliver, 5 Dane, Abr. c. 148, art. 11, § 3. In the case of Com. v. Stevens, 15 Mass. 195, a similar action was sustained. The statute is not cited, but it must have been St. 1809, c. 108, § 34, art. 21, which imposes a penalty of not less than five nor more than twenty dollars for each offence.

Most of the foregoing cases were cited in argument, and it was urged by the defendant that they came under statutes which expressly mentioned an action of debt. This is true, and is the ground of decision in U. S. v. Allen [supra]; but the other-cases do not rest upon that basis alone, but seem to me to establish, as Mr. Justice-Washington. asserts, a general rule that debt will lie for a penalty imposed by statute, as well as for one reserved in a bond, and that the declaration may be for the largest, or for any definite, sum, under which the penalty is to be chancered or assessed as the case máy be. Our practice is now assimilated, as nearly as may be, to that of the several states at the time of suit brought (Rev. St. § 914); and an action of tort will lie in the district of Massachusetts to recover-a penalty, where no other remedy is expressly or impliedly given by congress.

There is nothing in the section on which this information is brought which indicates that the exclusive remedy is a criminal proceeding. The language is, “liable to a penalty.” The word “conviction” is used in. the section, but this is often applied-to civil prosecutions, and the context shows that the master who has been so convicted is to recover the amount of the penalty and the-costs incurred by him from the owner;, which seems to point to a civil action. In the many statutes and cases which I have-examined I find words of a quasi criminal character constantly applied to civil actions for penalties. It is probable that in-formations for penalties were originally criminal. And.it was always held in England that “not guilty” was a good plea to-an action of debt for a penalty. See St. 21 Jac. I. c. 4, § 4; Wortley v. Herpingham,. Cro. Eliz. 766; Attorney General v. Hines, Parker, Excb. 182; Atcheson v. Everitt, 1 Cowp. 382; Rex v. Clark, Id. 610. This plea, was said by Parsons, C. J., to be of doubtful propriety in Stilson v. Tobey, 2 Mass. 521, 522; but the statute of James expressly authorizes it, and it was used in the cases-above cited from Parker, Croke, and Cowper, Dane’s Abridgement, and Com. v. Stevens, 15 Mass. 195. A striking example of the application of language imparting a criminal proceeding to a civil action for penalties is found in Adams v. Woods, 2 Cranch. [6 U. S.] 336. It may be added that many parts of our Revised Statutes clearly showthat a civil action is understood to be the-usual form for recovering these penalties. Rev. St. §§ 732, 919, 942, 1041, 2124, 3087,. 3213. Both parties agree that Rev. St. 4610, which purports to instruct us how the penalties and forfeitures of the title may be recovered, is so drawn that it is impossible-to reconcile its language with either mode of proceeding exclusively. The rule that a civil action will lie is so general, and.

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Related

Stilson v. Tobey
2 Mass. 521 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1807)
Commonwealth v. Stevens
15 Mass. 195 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1818)

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. Cas. 1000, 25 Int. Rev. Rec. 319, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 2194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-elliot-circtdma-1879.