United States v. Hipkin

26 F. Cas. 325
CourtDistrict Court, D. Virginia
DecidedDecember 15, 1808
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 F. Cas. 325 (United States v. Hipkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. 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. Hipkin, 26 F. Cas. 325 (vad 1808).

Opinion

This was an action of debt brought to recover the sum of 1200 dollars, the penalty of the bond given by the defendants for the enrollment of the schooner Caroline.

The declaration set out the bond and the conditions, among which was the following; “And if the said schooner Caroline shall not [326]*326proceed on a voyage to any' foreign port or place without being duly licensed according to law for carrying on the cod or whale fishery, and without obtaining a permit to touch and trade at a foreign port or place during such voyage, or without previously surrendering the said certificate of enrolment to the collector of the district from which such foreign voyage shall be proposed to be made then,” &c. This condition it was averred had been broken in this: “That the said schooner Caroline on the - day of -, ISOS, proceeded on a foreign voyage, to wit: on a voyage to Antigua, which was a foreign place, without being duly licensed according to law for carrying on the cod or whale fishery, and without obtaining a permit to touch and trade at a foreign port or place during such voyage, and without previously surrendering the said certificate of enrolment to the collector of the district from which such foreign voyage was proposed to be made, viz. to the collector of the port of Norfolk and Portsmouth;” by reason whereof the said bond was forfeited and its penalty demandable. To this declaration there was a general demurrer, in which the 1'nited States having joined, the cause came on to be argued by Hay, district attorney, for the plaintiffs, and by Taylor & Tazewell, for the defendants.

For the defendants it was contended, that the condition above stated for a breach of which alone this action was brought, was 1st, a condition not authorized by the statute; 2d, a condition contrary to the express provisions of the law which permitted and required the bond; 3d, a condition hostile to the genius and spirit of all our laws upon the subject of navigation and commerce. And if so, that the condition was void, and no action could be maintained for a breach of it.

In support of these propositions it was said.

1st. That the only law. which permitted or required any bond to be given for the en-rolment of a vessel, was the act of congress passed on the IStli of Februaiy, 1793, entitled. "An act for enrolling and licensing ships or vessels to be employed in the coasting trade and fisheries, and for regulating the same.” 2 Laws [Folwell’s Ed.] 168 [1 Stat. 300]. That this statute contained in itself no direction as to the form or contents of a bond to be given for the enrolment of a vessel. and indeed contained no direct declaration that any bond should be given at all. The second section of that law declares, that “in order for the enrolment of any ship or vessel, she shall possess the same qualifications. and the same requisites in all re-sjtects shall be complied with as are made necessary for registering ships or vessels, by the act entitled. ‘An act concerning the registering and recording of ships or vessels," and the same duties and authorities are hereby given and imposed on all officers respectively, in relation to such enrolments, and the same proceedings shall be had in similar cases touching such enrolments.”

This law having directed the same requisites in all respects to be complied with, and the same proceedings to be had in the case of an enrolment, as had been required in the case of a register by the act therein referred to, although the act concerning the enrolling of vessels contained in itself no specific direction requiring a bond to be taken, or prescribing the form of such bond, yet as the act concerning the registering of vessels did make the execution of a bond a requisite to. be complied with and proceeding to be had as in the ¡ease of a register; a similar requisite and proceeding was exacted in the case of an enrolment. Expunge this statute from* our Code and no bond can be required of an enrolled vessel. Admit this statute and the only bond which it requires is a similar bond to that required in the case of a register.

The “act concerning the registering and recording ships or vessels." which is referred to as above, in its seventh section declares by whom, to whom, in what penalty, and with what condition a bond for obtaining a register shall be executed. See 2 Laws [Folwell's Ed.] 137 [1 Star. 287].1

Compare this bond with that section, and you will discover their precise concordance until you come to the condition, which is the foundation of the present action, and which is no where to be found in the law. Nay, it would be strange indeed, if we expected to find any such condition in a bond of registry, remembering, as we must do. that the sole inducement for taking a register, is to qualify the vessel which receives it, to proceed on a foreign voyage. This condition, therefore, is not authorized by law.

4. To support the third position, viz. that such a condition was hostile to the genius [327]*327and spirit of all our laws upon tlie subject of navigation and commerce, the defendant’s counsel entered into a critical and historical examination of all these laws. The characters of the various vessels engaged in the trade of the United States were stated, and they were divided into the following classes, to wit: foreign, recorded, registered, enrolled, and licensed vessels. The privileges and duties enjoyed by, and imposed upon each of these classes of vessels, were also detailed, and supported by a reference to the various statutes imposing duties on tonnage and goods, and regulating the collection of duties. It was then argued, that congress, having distinguished these vessels as above, and having endowed them with different privileges, and imposed upon them different duties, it became necessary to establish some standard whereby the one class might always be distinguished from the other by those who were authorized to exact the performance of these duties, or permitted to giant these privileges. Hence certificates of record, registry, and enrolment were introduced as constituting the sole evidence, and fixing the standard whereby the different characters of vessels were to be ascertained. But as these documents might be missed, and others, not entitled to the privileges which followed their possession, might enjoy such privileges by obtaining the documents themselves; to guard against such frauds, bonds were required to be executed by those who first obtained such documents: the sole object of these bonds being to preserve American documents in American hands, the condition of such bonds attained this object, and none other. A reference to the seventh section of the act, before stated, 2 Laws [Folwell’s Ed.] 137 [1 Stat. 287], would establish this position. There it would lie found, that the only conditions annexed to a bond of register referred to the proper use of her documents, and similar proceedings were directed to be had in the ease of enrolled vessels. These being the only kinds of American vessels which were capable of engaging in foreign trade, and therefore of misusing such documents, the bonds for these referred to this object only., As to licensed vessels, they being under twenty tons, and incapable of engaging in foreign trade, no misuse of their documents could be had to the detriment of the revenue; and therefore, no such bonds were exacted from them as were requested from the others. Frauds against the public revenue by smuggling. being the only mischief which such vessels were capable of committing, the condition of the execution by those concerned in a licensed vessel referred to this object, and to none other.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Thomas Agee Fitzgerald v. Commonwealth of Virginia
Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2025

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hipkin-vad-1808.