United States v. Morel

26 F. Cas. 1310
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 1, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 26 F. Cas. 1310 (United States v. Morel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern 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. Morel, 26 F. Cas. 1310 (circtedpa 1834).

Opinion

BY THE COURT.

The indictment charges in the first count that the defendant, on the 26th day of December, A. D. 1832, at the district aforesaid, and within the jurisdiction of this court, on board of a certain vessel, to wit, a sloop called the Charles William, belonging to citizens of the United States, while lying in a place, to wit, Great Harbor, in Long Island, one of the Bahama Islands, within the jurisdiction of a certain foreign sovereign, to wit, the king of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland; the said defendant being a person belonging to the company of said vessel, with force and arms, did then and there feloniously take and carry away, with an intent to steal and purloin, certain personal goods of the said Samuel P. Watkins, to wit (enumerating the articles taken). The second count charges the offense to have been committed “on the high seas, out of the jurisdiction of any particular state, and within the jurisdiction of this court.”

The district attorney having given the evidence on which he relies for the description or designation of the place where the offense was committed, the counsel for the defendant have excepted to the jurisdiction of the court, and the further progress of the trial was suspended until the opinion of the court could be taken on this question of jurisdiction. It has been fully argued, and will now be decided. It depends upon whether the place at which the fact was committed is a place over which the criminal jurisdiction of this court extends, according to the intent and meaning of the acts of congress, by which the jurisdiction is given, and by which it must be governed and limited. By the testimony of Samuel P. Watkins, the captain of the sloop, and owner of the property taken, it appears that, at the time the fact was committed, the sloop was lying at anchor in a place called the Great Harbor of Long Island, one of the Bahama Islands. He called it a locked harbor, which he says is where a vessel cannot get to sea, being land-locked by shoals or reefs. He describes it to be an indentation in the main land; that from the mouth or chops of this indentation to the bottom is about a mile; that it is about half a mile wide at the chops, and continues of the same width; that the sloop was about half a mile within the chops, and about midway between the shores, that is, about one fourth of a mile from the land on each side; that outside of this harbor, at the distance of about two miles, there are reefs and bars, over which the tide does not flow, and upon which the sea or ocean breaks; that the passage from the harbor out is narrow and difficult, and that you do not get to sea for about two miles. Such was the position of the sloop when the defendant took possession of her, and of all on board of her, and committed the fact charged in the indictment. Was it done on the high seas, within the meaning of the act of congress? The indictment is founded on the fifteenth section of the act of April 30, 1790 [1 Stat 116]. This section enacts “that if any person within any of the places under the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, or upon the high seas, shall take and carry away, with an intent to steal and purloin, the personal goods of another,” etc. The taking and carrying away in this indictment is charged to have been done on the high seas; was it so? Was the place where the fact was done the high seas in the general and legal meaning of the term, or as they are used in the act of congress?

Writers of high authority on this subject make a clear distinction between the main sea or the high sea, and roads, harbors, and ports, and we shall see that congress had these distinctions in view in framing the act in question. Lord Hale, in the fourth chapter De Jure Maris, says “that part of the sea which lies not within the body of a country is called the main sea or ocean.” In the second chapter of second part he describes a road to be “an open passage of the sea,’.’ which, “though it lies out at sea, yet in respect of the situation of the land adjacent, and the depth and wideness of the place, is a safe place for the common riding or anchoring of ships.” “A haven is a place of a lai-ge receipt and safe riding of ships, so situate and secured by the lands circumjacent that the vessels thereby ride and anchor safely, and are protected by the adjacent land from dangerous and violent winds.” “A port is a haven, and somewhat more,” that is, for arriving and unlading ships, etc. We see here a clear and reasonable distinction taken between the main sea or ocean, and such parts of its waters as may flow into places so situate and secured by the circumjacent land as to afford a harbor or protection for vessels from the winds, [1312]*1312wliich mate the sea dangerous. The open sea, the high sea, the ocean, is that which is the common highway of nations, the common domain, within the body of no country, and under the particular right or jurisdiction of no sovereign, but open, free; and common to all alike, as a common and equal right. Mr. Webster, in his argument of Be-vans’ Case [Case No. 11.589], says there is a distinction between the meaning of the terms “high sea” and “sea”; that the high seas import the open, unenclosed ocean without the fauces terras, and he is not contradicted by the opposite counsel. Certainly ports and harbors which lie within the body of a country are not part of the high seas according to Lord Hale’s definitions. This learned lawyer further says, and we think with good reason, that “the common and obvious meaning of the expression ‘high seas’ is also its true legal meaning. The expression describes the open ocean where the dominion of the winds and waves prevails without check or control. Ports and harbors, on the contrary, are places of refuge in which protection and shelter are sought, within the enclosures and projections of land.” So are the high seas distinguished from havens. This appears to us to be a just general view, without meaning to adopt the whole extent to which the force of the expressions might carry us.

The act of congress, so far from weakening, gives a strong confirmation to the definitions and distinctions we have alluded to; and the decisions of the supreme court upon this act entirely uphold them. On turning to the act it will be found that in describing the offenses over which jurisdiction is given to the courts of the United States, a material variance occurs in relation to the place at which the fact is committed, nor does this appear to have been the effect of accident, inadvertence, or caprice; at least no court can be justified in assuming that supposition as the ground of its opinion. Thus it is enacted by the eighth section that “if any person shall commit murder upon the high seas, or in any river, haven, basin, or bay out of the jurisdiction of any particular state,” etc. But in providing in the twelfth section for the punishment of manslaughter, in describing the place, the “high seas” only are mentioned, and the words “any river, haven,” etc., are omitted. So by the eighth section, robbing or piratically running away with a vessel is punishable by the courts of the United States, if done on the high seas or in any river, haven, etc.; but in the sixteenth section, which punishes the taking and carrying away the personal goods of another, with intent to steal or purloin them, the places within which the offense or fact must be committed must be “under the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, or upon the high seas,” not a word is said about a river, haven, basin, or bay, out of the jurisdiction of any particular state.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Cas. 1310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-morel-circtedpa-1834.