United States v. Hall

26 F. Cas. 84, 2 Wash. C. C. 366
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 15, 1809
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 26 F. Cas. 84 (United States v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Hall, 26 F. Cas. 84, 2 Wash. C. C. 366 (circtdpa 1809).

Opinion

WASHINGTON. Circuit Justice

(charging jury). After stating the evidence—the first question is, whether the defendant was prevented, hy a peril of the sea, from relanding his cargo at some port in the United States? What constitutes a peril of the sea. is a question of law. Whether the defendant was prevented by such peril from complying with the condition of his bond, is a fact for you to ‘determine. It is true, the question will sometimes become, in process of time, a point of law, which, depending originally on extraneous evidence, had been submitted to the determination of the jury, as a question of fact. In mercantile transactions, particularly, it has often become necessary, in order to arrive at the real intention of the parties, to inquire into the meaning of certain phrases, used in commercial instruments, perfectly well understood by those who use them, but which are otherwise ambiguous. and sometimes unintelligible. When the meaning of those terms is once ascertained. public convenience requires that they should receive a legal definition, and be considered as immutable. Infinite confusion and uncer-tainry would prevail in legal proceedings, if the construction of commercial any more than of other instruments, should be confided to the jury, who might in one case decide one way. and vary it in some other, so as in truth to afford in none a rule by which men should govern themselves.

What, then, is the meaning of the expression, “perils of the sea?” Without attempting a definition which should include every possible ease, it may safely .be laid down, That the accident, which is attributable to this cause, must happen without any fault or negligence in the master, and must occur at sea; or if on land, it must lie the immediate and necessary consequence of a peril happening at sea; such as tempests, lightning, loss by pirates, injuries sustained •by being run foul of by another vessel, and the like. If a peril of the sea has occurred, but is not the immediate cause of the loss, it cannot be fairly brought within the exception; and in this light I view the order of the government of Porto Rico in relation to this cargo. Adverse winds and severe weather, perils unquestionably of the sea. were the immediate cause of this vessel putting into Porto Rico, in a disabled state; and the order of the government to sell the cargo, was the immediate cause of the defendant’s disability to comply with the condition of his bond. A peril of the sea was the remote cause, by placing her in a situation to sustain this injury by the operation of a new cause, but was not itself the cause. The order of the government, therefore, is not to be considered as within the exception. But nevertheless. the defendant was. independent of this order, prevented by a peril of the sea from relanding his cargo in the United States, if the evidence be believed by the jury; lie-cause, by that evidence, it appears, that by storms and cold weather, the vessel was not only forced into Porto Rico, but arrived there in so disabled a state, that she could not, without danger to the lives of the crew, have returned to the United States. What then was to be done? The answer is plain—The master was bound to repair if he could, because the perils of the sea had interrupted the voyage. He was bound to do all in his power to return with his cargo to the United States, in order to save his bond. This case has, we think, been very correctly likened by the district attorney to that of a bill of lading. In the one, the master obliges himself to land the cargo at a specified port; in the other, at any port in the United States; and the excuse for not doing so, is the same in both. In the one, the master, if forced by stress of weather to seek an intermediate port, must repair his vessel, if he can, in order to carry his cargo safely to the port to which it is destined. This he must do, if he would avoid the claim of the freighter for damages, for a non-compliance with his contract. And if he means to go farther, and entitle himself to his freight, he must carry the goods, though in some other vessel, if it be not in his power to repair his own. The question then is, could the defendant in this ease, have repaired his vessel, to the end of complying with his obligation to the United States? For if after repairing, the government which permitted him to do so, prohibited his departure with the cargo, he was not bound to repair at all in relation to this contract; and without repairing, he could not return with his cargo, in consequence of a peril of the sea. If the law obliges him to do what he can, íd order to excuse himself for a non-compliance with his engagement, it imposes this obligation, for no other reason than that, by doing so, he may comply. But if. after repairing, he is still prevented from performing what alone the contract contemplates, the law would operate most capriciously and unjustly, were it to punish him for a non-compliance. It is true, the defendant cannot plead the prevention of the government, as a peril of the sea; but he may avail himself of it. as an excuse for not removing a disability which a peril of the sea had produced: and. in this point of view, that order furnishes this defendant a complete defence, if his conduct throughout has been fair, and no fault or negligence is imputable to him.

This opinion would seem to render the consideration of the other points made in the cause, unnecessary. But as it is possible' the jury may not think, from the evidence, that this vessel was disabled from returning to the United States without being repaired; —as there may be cases for trial, where no such disability had resulted from the perils of the sea.—and a gentleman concerned in those cases has been heard upon those other [86]*86points; it would be improper in the court not to notice them.

The defendant urges, that although the jury should not think his case to he within the exception of perils of the sea. he is nevertheless permitted, by the act of the 12th of March 180S, to excuse himself, by proving that he was prevented, by unavoidable accident, from relanding his cargo in the United States; and that the conduct of the government of I'orto Rico comes within this description. On the other side, it is contended, that it is not enough, under this law. to prove unavoidable accident, unless it was accompanied by a loss of the property; which did not happen in this case, the defendant having received the full value of his cargo.

The truth is, that the words of the law will bear either construction. It may be read thus: “Judgment shall be rendered, unless proof be made of relauding, or of loss by sea. or of other unavoidable accident.’’ Or thus: “unless proof be made of relanding, or of loss by sea, or by ■ (viz. loss by) other unavoidable accident." In such a case, it is the business of the court to prefer that interpretation ■which is most reasonable, and consistent with the intent of the legislature, so far as it can be collected from the whole system The object of the law. was to prevent the cargoes of vessels destined from one port in the United States to another, from going to foreign ports; and to punish those who should violate this policy. But it was not deemed just to involve in the same fate, those who could, and those who could not, comply with the law. Perils of the sea were therefore admitted as an excuse, by the first law. But this did not comprehend other perils, equally insurmountable, and consequently, equally excusable. This law. therefore, enlarges the ground of excuse, and gives to the obligor an additional defence.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 84, 2 Wash. C. C. 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hall-circtdpa-1809.