United States v. Two Hundred & Sixty-Nine

28 F. Cas. 302, 25 Law Rep. 451
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1868
StatusPublished

This text of 28 F. Cas. 302 (United States v. Two Hundred & Sixty-Nine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Two Hundred & Sixty-Nine, 28 F. Cas. 302, 25 Law Rep. 451 (circtdmo 1868).

Opinion

MILLER, Circuit Justice.

This is an appeal "from the decree of the district court for the Eastern district of Missouri, dismissing the libel upon exceptions taken to its sufficiency. In the prayer for an appeal, the case is alleged to be one of prize of war. The counsel state •distinctly that they so understand it; and that the district court, in hearing it, was sitting as a prize court in admiralty. No claim is made under any of the acts concerning confiscation or forfeiture of the property of rebels in the present war, nor under any act prohibiting trade or intercourse with the enemy. The proceeding against the property in question is based solely on the ground that it is •captured jure belli; and application is now made to this court for condemnation of its proceeds as prize of war.

But very few lawyers of the present day have any experience in prize courts; and it is no reflection upon the general professional •character of the learned counsel who drew the libel in this case to say, that though perhaps more nearly a prize libel than anything else, it is not, as such, aptly framed. In substance the statement of facts in the libel, on which the condemnation of the cotton is asked, is as follows: On the 26th day of September, 1862, Captain William Sands, an officer of the United States army, embarked at Helena on the boats, Jatan and Conway, with a battalion of the 10th regiment of Illinois cavalry, said “vessels being vessels of the United States, and in the service of the government thereof.” It was a scouting expedition or reconnaissance into a certain district in the state of Mississippi, then held and controlled by the enemy. The detachment, proceeding by the river and by land, penetrated into the district just mentioned, and there came upon, and by force of arms overpowered, a body of the enemy’s troops. They took prisoner a lieutenant in command, and from the possession of the force under him took the 269% bales of cotton herein libelled. These were marked “C. S. A.,” and were seized as prize of war. The soldiers conveyed the cotton to the river; thence it was taken to the state of Arkansas, and it was finally brought to this city. It is averred that it is now the property of the United States, and is forfeited and confiscated. It is then alleged that the Mississippi river is within the admiralty jurisdiction of the courts of the United States; that the capture was made by the joint action of the vessels aforesaid and the soldiers, and that it could not have been made without the co-operation of the vessels.

There are many irregularities in the proceedings, as disclosed by the record. Thus, the captors are not parties to this proceeding, and did not bring the prize into any court for adjudication. Moreover, as appears from the certificate of the clerk, the property has been sold, and the proceeds cannot be remitted to this court, because they are held to answer to other libels, filed before the present one. on ■the instance side of the district court. But these irregularities are not fatal to the pro--ceeding. Great laxity is tolerated in, prize courts. This is stated with his customary fulness and learning by Mr. Justice Story in The Emulous [Case No. 4,479]. And if this case shall be found, in its substantial elements, to constitute prize of war, the libel may be reformed, and the proceedings corrected.

The first point which is pressed upon the attention of the court is, that on the waters of the Mississippi, remote from the ocean, and from any territory belonging to foreign or independent nations, there can be no captures that call for the interposition of a prize court. I confess that, previous to the argument of the case, and the investigation which I have made in consequence, I was strongly inclined to that opinion. There are certain reasons, founded upon the general principles of international law, why every capture upon the high seas, jure belli, shall be carried before a prize court. The oceans and seas are the great highways of the world. Free transit over them is the common right of all nations; exclusive jurisdiction or control is possessed by none. Civilized states also claim and exercise the right of trading and mooring their ships in each other’s ports; and, subject to such restrictions as each government may impose for its own security, or the protection of its own trade, this is conceded by the rules of international law. And when nations go to war, [305]*305when hostile fleets encounter, and ports are "blockaded, the law of nations, where for peace it has established these privileges and limitations. calls into operation, as a recognized part of itself, the laws of war. There must "be a jurisdiction administering those laws, and this is found alone in the prize courts. These courts decide questions of the existence of such a war as confers belligerent rights; of tbe validity of blockades; of the lawfulness of captures; and various other matters which no other court can reach, and which, affecting as they do the rights of neutrals and enemies, who are not subject to the jurisdiction otherwise than by the international laws applicable to a state of war, can be determined only by those laws.

It is urged, with great force, that none of these- principles are necessary, or can properly be applied, on a river wholly within the boundaries of one government; that all captures made thereon should be subject alone to the law of the country which has the sovereignty, to the exclusion of those rules of the law of nations which govern the common highways of the world. However conclusive this argument might have • been fifty years ago, if taken in the admiralty court of Great Britain, there are many reasons why it should not, in more modem times, in an American court, and during the present war, have the same force.

The supreme court of the United States; in The Prize Cases, 2 Black [67 U. S.] 635, at the last) term, decided that between the government' of the United States and the rebels a war exists, which confers upon our government at least, the rights of war; that the success of the rebels has enabled them to establish military lines, south of which is enemy’s territory and property. This must apply as well to the waters within those lines, as to the land; and it would seem necessarily to bring the laws of war into action as to captures made on those waters. While it was tbe well settled doctrine of the admiralty court •of England, that its jurisdiction as an instance court did not extend beyond tide water, and even in tide water was excluded from all places in the body of a county, as from havens, and within reaches between headlands, no such restrictions were placed upon the jurisdiction of the prize courts.

In the case of Lindo v. Rodney, reported in 2 Doug. 613, note, Lord Mansfield said: “As to a matter done in the ports, havens; or rivers within the body of a county of the realm, the hdmiralty is excluded. But the prize court has uniformly, without objection, tried all captures in ports, havens, &c., within the realm. It happens often. We all know of such eases.”

In the case of The Genesee Chief, 12 How. [53 U. S.] 443, the supreme court of the United States says that thé reason why the English courts of admiralty hold tide water to be the limit of their jurisdiction, is that the rivers of England are navigable only as far as the tide ebbs and flows; and tide water and navigable water being thus. rendered synonymous and interchangeable terms, the former has been substituted for the latter as more convenient and easily determinated. Of the lakes in the interior of this continent, in the same decision, it is said: “These lakes are in truth inland seas.

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Bluebook (online)
28 F. Cas. 302, 25 Law Rep. 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-two-hundred-sixty-nine-circtdmo-1868.