United States v. The Active

24 F. Cas. 755, 5 Hall, Law J. 543
CourtDistrict Court, D. Mississippi
DecidedDecember 15, 1814
StatusPublished

This text of 24 F. Cas. 755 (United States v. The Active) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. The Active, 24 F. Cas. 755, 5 Hall, Law J. 543 (missd 1814).

Opinion

TOULMAN, J.

This is the case of a vessel and cargo belonging to the enemy taken in sight of the fort at Mobile Point, by the troops stationed at that place under the command of Major Wm. Lawrence. It appeal's from the testimony of two of the persons who boarded the vessel, that a boat with six men was sent out by the commanding officer to examine a vessel which, on approaching. they found to be British; that after being fired upon by the fort, she was boarded and taken without opposition, at the distance of about a mile, or perhaps more, as one of them says, or about two miles, as the other thinks; that she was under British colors; that the persons on board acknowledged themselves to be British subjects, and said they were detached from the Sea Horse to bring the schooner Active and cargo (consisting of flour captured at Alexandria) to Pensacola; and that the crew, consisting of six men, were armed with muskets, cutlasses and pistols. The log book shows her to be British. The libel prays the condemnation of the vessel and cargo as good and lawful prize to the United States. A plea, however, is filed by Lewis Judson, (in the character of consignee and agent for the captors.) to the jurisdiction of the court, on the ground that as this court has jurisdiction only in cases in which the United States are parties, it cannot legally entertain a suit in which the private captors (as it is alleged) are the only parties who have a right to claim the captured property. The said plea farther alleges that the “schooner Active and cargo were captured by Wm. Lawrence and others on the high seas, and not in the enemy’s forts, camps, or barracks, and, therefore. by the usages of the laws of nations and the laws of war, as enemy’s property, become forfeited to the said private captors.”

No question has been made as to the regularity (see Teasdale v. The Rambler [Case No. 13,815]) of the plea, nor as to the legitimacy of the conclusion, that the government is in no sense to be regarded as a party, if the proceeds of a capture are suffered to go to the troops engaged in making the capture; but the whole has been liberally left by the attorney (Mr. Haines) prosecuting on behalf of the United States, to depend on the simple question whether the troops of the United States thus making a prize are entitled by law to the benefit of it? The general belief that they are so entitled, the want [756]*756of a knowledge of correspondent cases, and the little attention which, in this part of the country, we have had occasion to give to inquiries of this nature, have apparently created doubts even in the mind of the attorney acting for the United States, and have rendered both parties desirous that the question should' be judicially settled. The most satisfactory mode probably of coming to a conclusion on this subject will be to have recourse to general principles.

“1. What is war? It is a contest,” says Bynkershoek, “carried on between independent persons for the sake of asserting their rights.” Where society does not exist,— where there is no such institution as that which we call government, — there individuals, being strictly independent persons, may carry on war against each other. JBut whenever men are formed into a social body, war cannot exist between individuals. . The use of force among them is not war, but a trespass, cognizable by the municipal law. Bynk. War, p. 128. If war, then, be the act of the nation, whatever is done in the prosecution of it, must either expressly or implicitly be under the national authority. Whatever private benefits result from it must be from a national grant. “War,” says Yattel (page 368), “is that state in which a nation prosecutes its right by force.” The right of making war belongs alone to the sovereign power. Individuals cannot control the operations of war, nor commit any hostility, (except in self defence,) without the sovereign’s order. The generals, (adds that writer,) the officers, the soldiers, the partizans, and those who fit out private ships of war, having all commissions from the sovereign, make war by virtue of a particular order. And the necessity of a particular order is so thoroughly established, that even after a declaration of war between two nations, if the peasants themselves commit any hostilities, the enemy, instead of sparing them, bangs them up as so many robbers or banditti. This is the case with private ships of war. It is only in virtue of a commission granted by the sovereign or his admiralty, that they are entitled to be treated like prisoners taken in a formal war. Vatt. Law Nat. pp. 365, 366. If, then, on the general principles of civil society, the whole operations of war, depend upon the will and authority of the government, surely the appropriation and distribution of the property acquired in consequence of those operations must equally be subject to the control of the government, and depend on those regulations which it may establish.

2. What indeed is the object of war? Is it to aggrandize individuals, or is it to maintain the rights of the pation? “The just and lawful scope of every war,” observes Vattel (page 280), “is to revenge or prevent injury. If, to accomplish this object, it be expedient to encourage individual warfare, by granting all the profits arising from it to the parties engaged,' the nation has a right to promise this encouragement; but until this encouragement be actually offered, it must follow that every thing which is required by individuals, whether acting as private persons or as a part of the public force, must belong to the nation under whose authority they act.”

3. What rights are acquired by a state of war? “A nation,” says Bynkershoek (page 4), “who has injured another is considered, with every thing that belongs to it, as being confiscated to the nation which receives the injury.” The rights accruing, therefore, are national altogether. They are not individual rights. The case seems analogous to that of the internal administration of justice. " A civil society — a nation — has the right of punishing chose who aré guilty of violating the public laws. Though the guilty be members of their own community, they may forfeit their property or their lives. But the right of the body politic does not attach itself to the individual members of it. The nation, indeed, might authorize individuals to take the lives or the property of known offenders; but, without an authority delegated by the nation, individuals have no such right. A right in private persons to avenge violations of the law does not follow as a natural consequence from the circumstance of their being members of the great political body. On the contrary; the very same act which would be retributive justice when emanating from' the sovereign power would become murder or robbery in the individual. Why should it be otherwise, as it regards our intercourse with other nations? Why should a nation be less jealous of its rights with regard to hostile nations than with regard to hostile individuals? Why less jealous when they are encroached upon on a large scale than when they are encroached upon on a scale truly small and insignificant? And even admitting that in the one case the public authority permits an individual to execute the sentence of the law, and in the other to attack and vanquish the public enemy, it will not follow that in either case the property’ of the enemy is to become the property of the individual by whom the national will is carried into execution. This, it should seem, must depend on express stipulations made in behalf of the nation. Agreeably to these principles, the celebrated M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 755, 5 Hall, Law J. 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-the-active-missd-1814.