The New York, 16 U.S. 27 (1818)
The New York, 16 U.S. 27 (1818)
The New York, 16 U.S. 27 (1818)
59
4 L.Ed. 333
3 Wheat. 59
Feb. 5th.
THIS cause was argued by Mr. D. B. Ogden, for the appellant and
claimant, and by Mr. Hopkinson and Mr. Baldwin, for the United States. *
Feb. 10th.
Mr. Justice LIVINGSTON delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from the circuit court for the Southern District of New-York.
This ship was libelled for taking on board, at the Island of Jamaica, with the
knowledge of the master, 51 punisheons of rum, 23 barrels of limes, and 20
barrels of pimento, with intention to import the same into the United States,
contrary to the provisions of an act of Congress interdicting commercial
intercourse between Great Britain and the United States, passed the 1st of
March, 1809, and the cargo was libelled for an importation into the United
States, in violation of the provisions of the same law.
On board the vessel were two manifests of the cargo, both of which stated the
cargo to have been laden on board at Montego bay, in Jamaica; but one of them
declared her destination to be Amelia Island, and the other New-York. The
latter was delivered to an officer of the customs, and a certificate by him
endorsed thereon, stating that fact, dated the 14th October, 1811. The other
manifest was exhibited at the custom-house in New-York, on the 25th October,
1811, at which time the master took the oath usual on such occasions, stating
that the said manifest contained a true account of all the goods on board, and
that there were not any goods on board, the importation of which into the
United States, was prohibited by law.
John Davison, the master, deposed, that ne was with the said ship at Jamaica, in
August, 1811. That his orders from the claimant were not to take on board at
Jamaica any West India produce for the United States. That the consignee of
the said ship, the Northern Liberties, (evidently a mistake for the New-York,)
insisted upon it that he should take a cargo of West-India produce on board,
stating it, as his opinion, that the non-intercourse law would probably be
repealed before he could arrive at New-York, and that, at any rate, he could
stand off and on Sandy Hook until he should receive the orders of his owner
how to proceed. That he was thus induced to take the said cargo on board, with
which he sailed with orders from the consignee, and with intention to obey
them, not to attempt to come into the port of New-York unless he received from
the owner directions off Sandy Hook so to do; that on the 6th of October, in the
same year, while on the voyage from Jamaica, they had a severe gale of wind
from the south-west, varying to the southward and eastward, accompanied with
a very heavy sea, which continued nearly twenty hours, in the course of which
they split the foresail and carried away the rudder. That on the 11th day of
October, they made soundings about 40 miles to the southward of Sandy Hook,
where he received a letter from the owner by a pilot-boat, the contents of which
he communicated to the crew, and told them he should wait off the Hook until
he received farther orders from the owner; but they declared that the rudder was
in such a state that it was unsafe to remain in her at sea, and that they would
leave the ship in the pilot boat unless he would bring her into port. That, in his
opinion, it would have been dangerous and very unsafe to continue at sea with
the said ship in the condition in which the rudder then was, and he, therefore,
consented to bring her into New-York, believing that it was necessary to do so
for the preservation of the cargo and the lives of the people on board; that he
was towed into New-York, by a pilot-boat, as the pilot would not take charge
of the ship unless she was towed.
The letter of the owner, referred to in the master's testimony, is dated in NewYork, the third of October, 1811, and is addressed to him as follows:
'Not knowing if you have rum in, I take this precaution by every boat; if you
have rum, you are to stand off immediately at least four leagues, and keep your
ship in as good a situation as you can, either for bad weather or to come in if
ordered; you must get the pilot to bring up all the letters for me, &c. also, a
letter from yourself, stating the state of your ship, provisions, &c. and bring
them to town as soon as possible; give me your opinion of your crew, if you
think they can be depended on if we find it necessary to alter our port of
departure. If you have rum in, I expect the ship must go to Amelia Island, or
some other port, as they seize all that comes here. You may expect to see or
hear from me in a day or two after your being off, you keeping the Highlands
N. W. of you I think will be a good birth. If you are within three leagues of the
land you are liable to seizure by any armed vessel.'
On the 18th of October, 1811, a survey was made' of the New-York, by the
board of wardens, which stated the rudder gone, the stern post and counter
plank injured, the oakum worked out, the main cap split and settled, foretopsailyards sprung, pallpits broken; fore-topsail sheet bill, started and broken.
This injury was stated by the master to the wardens to have happened in a gale,
in lat. 2730" N. and long. 80 W. The wardens gave it as their opinion, that the
said vessel ought to be unloaded andhove out to repair her damages before she
could proceed to sea in safety.
On the 7th of November, of the same year, after the New-York was unloaded,
the wardens again surveyed her, and reported, the middle rudder brace broken,
the crown of the lower brace gone. Some of the sheathing fore and aft gone, the
rudder badly chafed, and so much injured, as not to be fit to be repaired.
10
11
If the articles in question were taken on board with the intention of importing
the same into the United States, and with the owners or master's knowledge, a
forfeiture of the vessel must be the consequence, whether she were forced in by
stress of weather or not; and even if no such intention existed at the time of
loading at Jamaica, the same consequence will attach to the goods, if it shall
appear that the coming in of the vessel was voluntary on the part of the master.
12
The claimant has first endeavoured to clear the transaction of all illegality in its
inception, and thinks he has offered testimony sufficient to satisfy the court that
there was no intention at the time of loading at Jamaica, to import the cargo
into the United States.
13
When an act takes place, which an itself, and unexplained, is a violation of law,
and the inducements to such infraction are great, it will not be thought
unreasonable in a court, to expect from a party who seeks relief against its
consequences, the most satisfactory proofs of innocence, especially, as such
proof will generally be within his reach. If then, any papers, which in the
course of such a transaction must have existed, are not produced, or if any
others which come to light, do not correspond with the master's relation; and
especially, if all the witnesses who are in the power, and many of them in the
interest, and under the influence of the party, are omitted to be examined, when
it is impossible that they should not be intimately acquainted with the most
material circumstances; and instead of this, the chief, if not only reliance of the
claimant, is placed on the evidence of a party, who, if the allegations of the
libel be true, is himself liable to a very heavy penalty; when such a case occurs,
a court must be expected to look at the proofs before it, with more than
ordinary suspicion and distrust.
14
In this case, there was an importation which, prima facie, was against law, and
was in the same degree evidence of an original intention to import; the burthen
then, of showing the absence of such an intention, was thrown upon and
assumed by the claimant. In doing this, he satisfies himself with the
examination of the master; who states, that he had orders from his owner, not to
take on board at Jamaica any West India produce for the United States. What is
become of these orders? Does a master sail on a foreign voyage with verbal
instructions only? This is not the common course of business. Instructions to a
master of a vessel are generally in writing; and for the owners greater security,
there is always left with him, a copy certified or acknowledged by the former. If
so, why are they not produced? They would speak for themselves, and be
entitled to more credit than the declarations of a person so deeply interested to
misrepresent the transaction, as this witness is. The court, therefore, might well
throw out of the case the little that is said of these instruction, so long as they
are not produced; and it is not pretended that they were not reduced to writing,
or if they were, that they are lost; which, indeed, is not a very supposable event,
if the ordinary precautions on this occasion have been observed. But
notwithstanding these very positive orders, the master, in direct violation of
them, and at the hazard of the most serious consequences to himself, takes on
board a cargo expressly prohibited by his owner, in compliance with the
directions and opinion of a consignee, whose name is also withheld, and who
does not appear to have had any right to interfere in this way. So great a
responsibility would have attached upon such a palpable breach of orders, that
it is a good reason for doubting whether they ever existed. Nor is this part of
the master's testimony verified by the claim, which observes a profound silence
in relation to these or any other orders, that may have been given. If no written
instructions were delivered to the master, which we are at liberty to believe, as
none are produced, a better mode could hardly have been devised to avoid
detection. It has been said in argument, that the intention of the master's coming
to the United States was altogether contingent, and depended on a repeal of the
non-intercourse act, and that he, accordingly, did not mean to come in if that act
were still in force. But how does this appear? Nothing of the kind is stated in
his deposition; on the contrary, his coming in, according to his own account,
depended not on the repeal of this law, but on the orders of his owner; he came,
he says, on this coast, with intention to obey the orders of the consignee, not to
attempt to come into port unless he received orders from the owner, off Sandy
Hook, so to do. If, therefore, he had found those laws yet in force, which he
probably had heard was the case, soon after his coming on the American coast,
and long before he fell in with the pilot boat which carried down the letter of
his owner, he still intended to have come in, if his owner had ordered him so to
do. His intention, therefore, as taken from his own relation, is not altogether of
that innocent nature which it has been represented to be. When the vessel sailed
from Jamaica, does not exactly appear; all we know from the master's account
is, that she was there in August, and met with a gale on the 6th of October
following. It is probable, however, from these dates, that she had been long
enough at sea to meet with one or more vessels from the United States, from
which information might have been received of the actual state of things in this
country in relation to this law. Whether any such vessel were met with, we
know not; but might have known if any of the crew or of the passengers had
been examined, or the log-book produced. If such information were received on
the coast, and the master of the New-York had persisted afterwards in keeping
the sea until he could hear from his owner, it would amount to strong proof of
an original design to come here. The opinion which has already been intimated
on this part of the case, which depends on the intention with which the cargo
was loaded, will be much strengthened by proceeding to consider the plea of
necessity on which the coming in is justified, and the facts relied on, in support
of this plea. The necessity must be urgent, and proceed from such a state of
things as may be supposed to produce on the mind of a skilful mariner, a well
grounded apprehension of the loss of vessel and cargo, or of the lives of the
crew. It is not every injury that may be received in a storm, as the splitting of a
sail, the springing of a yard, or a trifling leak, which will excuse the violation of
the laws of trade. Such accidents happen in every voyage; and the commere of
no country could be subject to any regulations, if they might be avodied by the
setting up of such trivial accidents as these. It ought also to be very apparent,
that the injury, whatever it may be, has not been in any degree produced, as was
too often the case, during the restrictive system, by the agency of the master,
and some of the crew. Does then the testimony in this case, carry with it that
full conviction of the vis major which ought to be made out to avoid the effects
of an illicit importation? It will not be right or proper for the court, in
considering this part of the case, to devest itself of those suspicions which were
so strongly excited in the first stage of this transaction; for if it were not very
clearly made out that the lading of these goods on board was innocent, it will be
some excuse for the incredulity which the court may discover respecting the
tale of subsequent distress. On this point, also, the claimant is satisfied with the
testimony of the master. Not a single mariner, not one of the passengers,
although several were on board, is brought forward in support of his relation.
Of the wardens' survey, notice will presently be taken. Now, admitting the
master's story to be true, with those qualifications, however, which are
inevitable, he has made out as weak a case of necessity as was ever offered to a
curot, in the many instances of this kind which occurred during the existence of
the restrictive system. A gale of less than twenty hours continuance was all the
bad weather that was encountered, in which it is said the rudder was carried
away and the foresail split; the rudder may have been injured, but it could not
have been carried away, if it be true, as from the master's own account must
have been the case, that the vessel after this accident made at least one
thousand miles in the course of the first five days, immediately after. But it is
said that is no evidence as to the place where the accident happened. Of this
fact the survey producced by the claimant himself is conclusive. It was taken
from the mouth of the captain himself, and if he or the wardens committed a
mistake in this important particular, why was it not corrected by an examination
of the master, or a production of the log-book? Nor has it escaped the attention
of the court, that if the New-York were disabled in lat. 27, 30 north, long. 80
west, she might have reached Amelia Island, her pretended port of destination,
with much more ease, and in much less time than she employed in sailing more
than ten degrees to the north, and taking her station off Sandy Hook; for she
was, on the 6th of October, much nearer to that island, and the wind was as fair
as could be desired to carry her there.
15
The plea of distress, therefore, is contradicted by a fact which could not have
existed, if it had been as great as is now pretended; nor can it be believed, if any
great danger had been produced by the gale of the 6th of October, that either
the crew or the passengers would have submitted, not only to come so many
degrees to the north, but continue hovering on the coast until the owner could
be heard from. No leak appears to have been the consequence of the storm, no
mast was lost, nor any part of the cargo thrown overboard; and if she steered
and sailed as well as it seems she did, without a rudder, even a loss so very
essential and serious to other vessels, must be allowed to have worked little or
The alleged opposition of the crew to wait for further orders, and their threats
to come up in the pilot-boat, have not been overlooked. This allegation depends
altogether on the credit due to the master, and is a circumstance not very
probable in itself. No pilot, in the then condition of the New-York, could have
been so ignorant, and so regardless of his duty, as to take from her, without the
master's consent, any part, much less the whole, of her crew. If the threat,
therefore, were really made, the master ought not to have been alarmed at it,
and probably would have treated it with contempt, if it had not been suggested
by himself, or had not suited his then purpose; at any rate, if by remaining
18
It is the opinion, threefore, of a majority of the judges, that the sentence of the
court be affirmed, with costs.
19
20
This is a libel against the cargo of the ship New-York. The vessel herself was
libelled for lading a cargo with intent to violate the laws of the United States;
but the cargo in this case is libelled as forfeited, for having been imported into
the city of New-York contrary to law. The intent with which it was laden on
board becomes immaterial as to the cargo, except so far as it might operate to
cast a shade of suspicion over the act of coming into port. The defence set up is,
that the ship sailed with the alternative destination to go into New-York if legal,
and if not, to bear away for Amelia Island. That she was ordered to call of the
port of New-York for information; and in her voyage thither she encountered a
storm, from which she sustained such damages as to oblige her to put into NewYork for the safety of the lives of the passengers and crew. That a vessel under
such circumstances has a right to call off a port for information has been
decided in various cases; and it has, also, been decided, and is not now
questioned, that if in the prosecution of that voyage, she sustains such damage
as renders it unsafe to keep the sea, she might innocently enter the ports of the
United States to repair, and resume her voyage. The laws of the United States
make provision in such cases for securing the cargo to prevent an evasion of
our trade-laws.
21
There are, then, but two questions in the case: 1st Whether her actual state of
distress was such as to make it unsafe for her to keep the seas? 2d. Whether that
state of distress was the effect of design or accident? Admitting that the greatest
frauds that can be imagined had been proven to have been in contemplation, yet
as the libel does not charge a lading with intent to import into the United States,
it is immaterial to this decision to inquire what was intended, if it be made to
appear that the distress, was real, and not pretended or fictitious. Now, as far as
I can judge, the facts in this case are such as leave nothing for the mind to halt
upon. The distress was obvious to the senses, and the nature of it such as could
not have been produced by the ingenuity of man. Without dwelling upon less
important particulars, it appears, from the surveys, that the fore-topsail yards
were sprung; the main cap split and settled; and the rudder carried away, or, in
the words of the survey, gone; and the sternpost, after sheathing, and
counterplank much chafed. These words carried away and gone, mean, in
nautical language, wholly disabled or rendered useless. And that such was the
state of the rudder is evident from the contents of the surveys. For, when the
vessel was hove keel out, it appeared that the middle rudder brace was broken,
and the crown of the lower brace gone; so that it is evident the rudder must
have swung in the chains. And that his was the case appears from several
particulars, also gethered from the surveys: 1st. The impossibility, on any other
supposition, to believe, that the surveyors would on the first survey, before the
vessel was hove-down, report the rudder gone. 2d. The chafed state of the
rudder and-stern post, could only have been produced by the action of the
rudder against the stern-post, when forced to and fro by the waves, and must
have occurred at sea. And, lastly, the same cause naturally produced the injury
reported to have been done to her counter-plank and after sheathing. These
injuries, I repeat, could not have been done by the hand of man, especially
those sustained under water; and although I see neither fraud nor falsehood in
the case, yet I care not though every word of the testimony, besides, be false:
that falsehood could neither have produced these injuries, nor repaired them;
and the evidence is sufficient to show that the safety of the lives of the
passengers and crew required the vessel to put into port, and therefore it was
innocent.
22
23
Decree affirmed.
The latter counsel cited the Eleanor, Edwards, 159, 160. In this case, Sir
William Scott observes, that 'real and irresistible distress must be at all times a
sufficient passport for human beings under any such application of human laws
But if a party is a false mendicant, if he brings into a port a ship or cargo, under
a pretence which does not exist, the holding out of such a false cause fixes him
with a fraudulent purpose. If he did not come in for the only purpose which the
law tolerates, he has really come in for one which it prohibits, that of carrying
on an interdicted commerce in whole or in part. It is, I presume, an universal
rule, that the mere coming into port, though without breaking bulk, is prima
facie evidence of an importation. At the same time, this presumption may be
rebutted; but it lies on the party to assign the other cause, and if the cause
assigned turns out to be false, the first presumption necessarily takes place, and
the fraudulent importation is fastened down upon him. The court put the
question to the counsel, whether it was meant to be argued, that the bringing a
cargo into an interdicted port under a false pretence, was not a fraudulent
importation, and it has not been denied that it is to be so considered.' 'Upon the
fact of importation, therefore, there can be no doubt; and, consequently, the
great point by which the case is reduced, is the distress which is alleged to have
occasioned it. Now, it must be an urgent distress; it must be something of grave
necessity; such as is spoken of in our books, where a ship is said to be driven in
by stress of weather. It is not sufficient to say it was done to avoid a little bad
wheather, or in consequence of foul winds; the danger must be such as to cause
apprehension in the mind of an honest and firm man. I do not mean to say that
there must be an actual physical necessity existing at the moment; a moral
necessity would justify the act; where, for instance, the ship had sustained
previous damage so as to render it dangerous to the lives of the persons on
board to prosecute the voyage: Such a case, though there might be no existing
storm, would be viewed with tenderness; but there must be at least a moral
necessity. Then, again, where the party justifies the act upon the plea of
distress, it must not be a distress which he has created himself, by putting on
board an insufficient quantity of water or of provisions for such a voyage; for
there the distress is only a part of the mechanism of the fraud, and cannot be set
up in excuse for it; and in the next place, the distress must be proved by the
claimantina clear and satisfactory manner. It is evidence which comes from
himself, and from persons subject to his power, and probably involved in the
fraud, if any fraud there be, and is, therefore, liable to be rigidly examined.'