United States v. One Hempen Cable & One Hempen Hawser

27 F. Cas. 264, 1831 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 24, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 F. Cas. 264 (United States v. One Hempen Cable & One Hempen Hawser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. 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. One Hempen Cable & One Hempen Hawser, 27 F. Cas. 264, 1831 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7 (D. Mass. 1831).

Opinion

DAVIS, District Judge.

These articles, brought into the port of Boston, in the brig Moscow, from Cronstadt, were seized on the 14th of September last by the collector of the district of Boston and Charlestown, on the ground, as the libel alleges, that they belonged to. or were consigned to the master, mate or crew of that vessel, and were not described or included in the manifest or manifests of the cargo, by which, and by force of the statute of the United States in such case made and provided, it is alleged that they have become forfeited to the uses specified in the statute.

The claimants in their answer on oath declare that they are the lawful owners of the brig Moscow; that she arrived at Boston on the 5th of September last, from Cronstadt, having in her outward voyage, first proceeded to Matanzas, in the Island of Cuba, the said John Norris, one of the’joint owners, being the master; that, on the passage to Matanzas, by a casualty which they particularly describe, part of the stream cable—about twenty-five fathoms—was necessarily cut away and lost, with the anchor to which it was attached, and that, from this circumstance, as well as from the age, long-continued use and decay of that cable, it became necessary to procure a substitute, which was accordingly done by the master of the brig, at Cronstadt, for the necessary use of the vessel, and for no other purpose; that, in like manner, a substitute was there provided for the hawser, belonging to the brig—the old hawser, it is averred, being strained, weak and unfit for use; that said new stream cable and hawser were taken on board said brig at Cronstadt, as part of her ground tackle and equipment, and solely for the purpose of being used as such; that they were purchased in the ordinary manner for immediate use, were stowed in that part of the vessel, where the stream cable and hawser, in actual service, are always stowed and kept; that during the passage from Cron-stadt to Boston there was no other stream cable nor hawser on board of said vessel, used or intended to be used, as a part of her ground tackle, or equipment, nor kept nor stowed in the place where such cable and hawser are or ought to be stowed and kept, and that in all particulars the same were intended to be, and were kept to be used, as being the ordinary tackle and furniture of the vessel; the stream cable and hawser, thus purchased, intended and applied, they aver to be the same that are mentioned in the libel; they deny that those articles belonged to, or were consigned to the master, mate or crew of the vessel, saving the interest of the master as part owner, or that they were brought or imported in said vessel as merchandise, or contrary to law; and in answer to an interrogatory propounded with the libel, the respondents further declare, that said cable and hawser were purchased by said Norris, in his capacity as master and part owner of said brig, on the 14th of June last, at Cronstadt, and that they belonged to the claimants, as owners of that vessel, being. as they aver, part of her necessary tackle and equipment.

Numerous witnesses were examined, at the hearing, as to that portion of the claimants’ averments respecting the insufficiency of the old stream cable and hawser, and as to the necessity or expediency of procuring new substitutes for the proper use of the vessel in the accomplishment of her voyage; and I am fully satisfied, from that examination, and from the testimony of the máte, contained in his deposition, that the claimants’ aver-ments in their defence are true. The loss of so considerable a portion of the stream cable would alone, in my opinion, justify the [265]*265purchase of a Dew one, and entitle snch substitute to be considered as part of the tackle and furniture of the vessel, and as such, free of duties, and the decided testimony given of the condition of the hawser, leaves no doubt of the propriety of procuring a substitute for that article also. The articles libelled being of this character, truly and fairly part of the ship’s furniture or equipment, it was not requisite to insert them in the manifest, ft is argued, on the part of the government, that, in the true construction of the statute, those articles would come under the denomination of sea stores. This would appear to me a strained interpretation of the statute, and the uniform practice, from the earliest date of our maritime and fiscal regulations, gives no support to such construction. “Vessel and cabin stores,” is the expression in the 23d section of the collection law; in the 45th section, it is, “sea stores of a ship or vessel.” These expressions are understood to mean, and naturally do mean the stores or provisions laid in for cabin or steerage, for officers, passengers or crews, or if further extended, can only be applicable to articles of consumption, perishing in the using, and not to the tackle and apparel of the ship, the sails, rigging, cables or anchors. These are to be considered as attached to the ship, and. so belonging to the ship that it is no more necessary to include them in the manifest than the ship itself. The sails and tackle, says Lord Holt, in the case of Ed-monson v. Walker, are part of the ship— and under the circumstances of that case, were so considered, though they were on the shore. T Show. 177. It may be remarked, that if the articles, in question in this libel, are to be considered as falling under the denomination of vessel’s stores, the prosecution could not properly be founded on the 24th section of the collection law which it recites, but on the 45th section. It being satisfactorily proved, that these articles were purchased and intended for the vessel, by the master, they became thereby the property of the owners: and even if they constitute an unnecessary supply, under the circumstances in which the vessel was placed, and so to be considered as merchandise imported, still, being the claimants’ property, they would not be liable to forfeiture by the section of the act. unless it were for the master’s proportion, he being likewise a part owner of the vessel, it is unnecessary, in this case, to express or form an opinion. On other distinct ground, already expressed, from the suitable and proper connection of the stream cable and hawser with the vessel, as part of her tackle and apparel, I have no hesitation in decreeing that they be restored to the claimants.

It remains to be considered whether the certificate of reasonable cause shall be entered for the collector’s protection, who may be otherwise exposed to a prosecution for an exercise of official duty. There- were, it appears, some circumstances attending this transaction, producing a degree of excitement which had not entirely subsided in the interval between the seizure and the hearing; and counsel for the claimants has made a strong appeal to the court, urging a denial of the certificate; at the same time, the generous eulogy which he bestows on the collector, in which he is understood to express the prevailing sentiment of the commercial community, would seem to render the apprehension of unworthy or improper motive in this seizure, improbable, and not to be imputed to the collector without the fullest evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 F. Cas. 264, 1831 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-one-hempen-cable-one-hempen-hawser-mad-1831.