Westcot v. Bradford

29 F. Cas. 736, 4 Wash. C. C. 492
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 15, 1824
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 29 F. Cas. 736 (Westcot v. Bradford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westcot v. Bradford, 29 F. Cas. 736, 4 Wash. C. C. 492 (circtdnj 1824).

Opinion

WASHINGTON, Circuit Justice.

This is an appeal from a decree of the district court. The appellee filed in that court five several petitions, claiming a right to one fourth of the proceeds of the sales of the sloop Boxer, the sloop Tonkin, ten hogsheads of rum, and two barrels of oil, three hogsheads of rum. and the penalty of the coasting license bond of the Tonkin; which sloops, rum. and oil. had been seized, condemned, and sold, for a violation of the revenue laws of the United States, in pursuance, as the petitions allege, of information given to the collector by the petitioner, and the proceeds paid into the hands of the clerk of the court; and which penalty had been recovered in pursuance of like information, and the amount collected by the marshal and paid into court. The petitions were separately applicable to these four separate forfeitures and the penalty, and prayed to be paid out of each fund one fourth of the same, after the costs and charges were deducted. To the three petitions which claimed one fourth of the proceeds of the sloop Tonkin, the two parcels of rum and the oil. the appellant, the collector who made the seizures, filed separate answers, in which he denied that Bradford was the informer, insisted that if he ever had any claim as such to a part of the proceeds, the same was forfeited by his misconduct in conspiring with the owners of the rum to destroy it, during the time that he was charged with the custody of it by the appointment of the collector, for the purpose of destroying all evidence of the illegal importation of that article, and of defrauding the revenue of the United States. And lastly, that subsequent to the condemnation, and to the filing of these petitions, viz. on the 4th of May, 1822, the petitioner had, for a valuable consideration paid to him, released to the respondent all his claim, as informer, to any part of the forfeitures of those articles. The answer to the petition respecting the Boxer. [737]*737denies that the petitioner was the informer, and insists upon the release stated in the other answer, which included his claim to a part of the forfeiture of this vessel. To the petition concerning the penalty of the license bond, the collector pleaded the same matters as are set forth in his answer to the petitions respecting the Tonkin, the rum, and the oil.

To these answers and plea the petitioner replied, that, on the 14th of February, 1822, he did, for a valuable consideration paid to him by Peter Cambloss, by an instrument under his hand and seal, assign to said Cambloss, all his right and title in and to all moneys which he was or might be entitled to from the sales of the said sloops, rum and oil, as informer against the same; and also to all moneys and penalties due, or to grow due, and to be recovered by reason of his said information given to the collector.

A number of depositions having been taken, the district court decreed in substance as follows: That Bradford was originally entitled, as informer, to one fourth of the sales of the sloops Boxer and Tonkin, the thirteen hogsheads of rum, and two barrels of oil, after expenses deducted; and also to one fourth of the penalty of the coasting license bond of the Tonkin. That having, by an instrument dated in Ifebruary, 1822, assigned all his said interest to Peter Cambloss, he, the said assignee, is entitled to the same. That the sum of $250, then remaining in the hands of the clerk of the court, which had, by the order of the court, been detained out of the proceeds of the two sloops, the rum and the oil; and also the sum of $500 in his hands, arising from the suit of the United States against the obligors in the said license bond, after legal fees deducted, be paid to -Elmer, the then collector, to be by him disposed of as follows: viz. that he shall consider the five several prosecutions in the petitions mentioned as one connected transaction; that the proceeds of the sloops, rum, and oil, amounting to $2.037.34 cents, out of which Westcot received for the parties concerned, the sum of $1,787.34 cents, of which the United States was entitled to $1,018.67 cents, and said Westcot to $509.33 cents, and Cambloss, as assignee aforesaid, to $509.33 cents; and that said Westcot had in his hands, after paying himself and the United States, the sum of $259.33 cents, belonging to Cambloss, assignee as aforesaid. It was therefore decreed, that the said Elmer pay the said sum of $250. remaining in the hands of the clerk, on the sales of the sloops, rum. and oil, when the same shall be paid over to him by the clerk, io Cambloss, in part of his proportion of said sales; and that he pay to the United States one half of the sum paid over to him by the clerk in the suit of the United States on the license bond; and to Cambloss, as assignee, one fourth of the last mentioned sum; and the remaining fourth, being the proportion due to the said Westcot, as collector, be also paid to said Cambloss, in part of the sum due him on the sales of the sloops, rum and oil, and which has been received by said Westcot. And that the said West-cot pay to Cambloss the balance, which will, after the payments aforesaid, remain due to .him on the net proceeds of-the sloops, rum, and oil. Each party to pay his own costs.

The first question which I have to consider is one raised by the counsel for the appellee, in which is involved an objection to the jurisdiction of this court, upon the ground that these petitions were not in the nature of original suits, but were merely appendages to the suits which brought the funds in question into court, and that as no appeals were taken from the decrees in these suits, none will lie from the present decree, which was merely incidental, and dependent upon the discretion of the court below. That the decree made in these cases is final, was not in direct terms, controverted by the counsel, nor could it be with the slightest plausibility. The whole fund remaining in court, which formed the subject of these petitions, is finally disposed of by the decree, as concerns all the parties interested in it: the United States; the collector who made the seizure; and the assignee of the informer. Final judgment, in personam, is rendered against Westcot for the balance still due to Cambloss. Nothing remained to be done but to execute the sentence of the court.

The whole strength of the objection to the jurisdiction was rested by the counsel upon another ground; it was, that the petitions were not original suits, but that they were merely incidents, to be decided upon according to the discretion of that court; in like manner' as that court would take cognizance of the manner in which its process to enforce its decree had been executed. But how can these petitions be considered as appendages, or incidents, to the original suits? They were totally unconnected with them; were instituted by a third person against the collector, for the purpose of controverting his right to the fund in court, the fruit of certain suits brought by the United States, to a proportion of which the petitioner claimed a right. They formed no part of the original suits, which were terminated by the fruits of them being brought into court; but were original suits to recover a part of those fruits; as much so, as a suit by petition or otherwise, in the admiralty, by material men. to be paid out of a surplus remaining in the registry, which had been brought there upon a libel to enforce a lien on the ship; which is unquestionably an original suit, from a final decree in which an appeal will lie.

This is quite unlike the case of The Hollen [Case No.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 736, 4 Wash. C. C. 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westcot-v-bradford-circtdnj-1824.