United States v. Lane

75 U.S. 185, 19 L. Ed. 445, 8 Wall. 185, 1868 U.S. LEXIS 1093
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 29, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 75 U.S. 185 (United States v. Lane) 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
United States v. Lane, 75 U.S. 185, 19 L. Ed. 445, 8 Wall. 185, 1868 U.S. LEXIS 1093 (1869).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DAVIS

delivered tifie opinion of the court.

In the view we take of this case it is unnecessary, to discuss the question — conceding the contract to be lawful— whether the actiob of the naval authorities could -be a ground of claim for damages far a bréac[i of this contract against the *195 United States, because, in.our opinion, the'contract was unauthorized, and had no power to bind the government.

•It appears, .by the findings of the Court of Claims, that Chowan River, in North Carolina, the ’place where the cotton was purchased, was within the lines held by the insurrectionary forces, and that the military safe-conduct protected as well the return as the outward voyage, for Lane was permitted to- take out an outward cargo, under the supervision of a person, styled in the record a sub-agent of the purchasing agent at Norfolk, whose duty it was to retain possession of the cargo until he should have received from Lane on board the vessel, three times its value in cotton.

At the time this contract purports to have been made, this country was engaged in war with a formidable enemy, and by a universally recognized principle of public law, commercial intercourse between states at war with each other, is interdicted.' It needs no special declaration on the part of the sovereign to accomplish this result, for it follows from the very nature of war that trading between the belligerents should cease. If commercial intercourse were allowable, it would oftentimes be used as a color for intercourse of an entirely different character; and in such a case the mischievous consequences that would ensue can be readily foreseen. But the rigidity of this rule can be relaxed by-the sovereign, and the laws of war so far suspended as to permit trade with the enemy. Each state settles for itself its own policy, and determines whether its true interests are better promoted by granting or withholding licenses to trade with the enemy. It being the rule, therefore, that business, intercourse with the enemy is unlawful unless directly sanctioned, the inquiry arises, whether -there was any law of Congress in force at the time that .sanctioned this transaction.

At an early period in the history of the war, Congress legislated on this subject. By an act passed on the 13th of July, 1861,. all commercial intercourse between citizens of States in insurrection and citizens of the rest of the United States was declared unlawful; but liberty was given to the President, in his discretion, to license trade with.the enemy *196 if he thought it would conduce to the public interests to do so. In so far, however, as it was licensed by him, the manner of conducting it was left to be regulated by the Secretary of the Treasury. In the administration of this law, we do not find any regulation prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury allowing commercial intercourse within the rebel lines. On the contrary, the trade regulations which were issued by him on the 31st of March, 1863, and the 12th of September of the same year, expressly say that commercial intercourse with those parts, of the insurrectionary States within the control of the rebels is absolutely forbidden. Has this policy since then been changed ? It certainly has, if this proceeding was authorized; for-if Risley in his capacity of treasury agent, could lawfully contract with Lane, a citizen of a State not in rebellion, to purchase from him cotton in the country of the public enemy, which he did not own or control, but must procure after he got there, and had the power to assist him in this enterprise, by allowing him to take out a cargo of goods to facilitate the purchase of the cotton, and to furnish for his protection a sub-agent and a "military safe-conduct, then it is clear the door was left open for general trading with the enemy. If one citizen of a State, not in insurrection, could lawfully obtain from a treasury agent the right to transport goods to a place under tfie control of the insurgents, where he could exchange them for cotton or other products of the country, and could also have safe-conduct to take his property there, and to bring out the property he should buy, with the promise on the part of the agent to protect and purchase it,,%o could any other citizen —for in this matter equality niust-be the rule — and in this way it is easy to see a free commercial intercourse with the enemy would'be opened, and a radical change effected in the manner of conducting the war. ■ Was this result contemplated by Congress in the act of July 2d, 1864 ?

It is contended that the 8th section of this act, which says that it shall be lawful for the Secretary of the Treasury, with the approval of the President, to authorize ageuts.to purchase for the United States any products of States declared in in *197 -surrection,-conferred the power to license trading within the military lines of the enemy.

If this were so, and it was the intention of Congress to allow- this trading, providing it was done on government account, why was it not manifested by a specific provision in the law ? Why leave such an important change of policy to be inferred from the general words of the act, and the absence of express words of limitation ?

That the Secretary of the Treasury, who, it is natural to suppose, having the administratioñ of the law in his hands was, before it was passed, consulted about it, did not give this interpi’etation to it, is very clear, for, within a short time after the passage of the act, he adopted, with the approval of the President, a new series of rules regulating commercial intercourse, which were intended to supersede all others, and the third rule absolutely prohibits all intercourse beyond our military lines, and declares further, “ that no permit will be granted for. the transportation of any property to any place under the control of the insurgents.” (See Treasury Regulations,.and Rules for Commercial Intercourse, of July 29th, 1864.)

It is argued, as the regulations which were issued on the 24th of September following, for the express purpose of enforcing that provision of the act reláting to the purchase for the United States of the products of insurrectionary States, do not, in terms, readopt this prohibition against non-intercourse, that therefore it was abandoned. But this does not follow, for there is nothing in these regulations inconsistent with its continuance, and if not expressly revoked, it remained in force. Aside, however, from the construction adopted by the Secretary of the Treasury, we are able to see, by reference to other provisions of the same act, that Congress did not mean to change, by the 8th section, the non-intercourse policy which had prevailed. By the 4th section of this act the prohibitions of the act of July 13th, 1861, were extended even to commercial intercourse -by and 'between persons residing, or being within the lines of National military occupation in districts declared in insurrection, “ with *198

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Bluebook (online)
75 U.S. 185, 19 L. Ed. 445, 8 Wall. 185, 1868 U.S. LEXIS 1093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lane-scotus-1869.