If a citizen of the United States establishes his domicile in a
foreign country between which and the United States hostilities
afterwards break out, any property shipped by such citizen before
knowledge of the war and captured by an American cruiser after the
declaration of war must be condemned as lawful prize.
Upon a shipment of goods to be sold on joint account of the
consignee and shipper or of the latter alone, at the option of the
consignee, the right of property does not vest in the consignee
until he has made his election under the option given him.
If two partners own jointly a commercial house in, New York, and
one of them obtains an American register for a ship by swearing
that he, together with his partner, of the City of New York,
merchant, are the only owners of the vessel for which the register
is obtained, when in fact his partner is domiciled in England, the
vessel is liable to forfeiture under the Act of Congress of
December 31, 1792.
The following were the facts of the case, as stated by
WASHINGTON, J. in delivering the opinion of the Court:
This is the case of a vessel which sailed from Great Britain
with a cargo belonging to the respective claimants, as was
contended, before the declaration of war by the United States
against Great Britain was or could have been known by the shippers.
She sailed from Liverpool on 4 July, 1812, under a British license,
for the port of New York and was captured on 6 August, 1812, by the
American privateer
Dolphin and sent into the District of
Massachusetts, where the vessel and cargo were libeled in the
district court.
The ship, 100 casks of white lead, 150 crates of earthen ware,
35 cases and 3 casks of copper, 9 pieces of cotton bagging, and a
quantity of coal, were claimed by Lenox & Maitland.
198 packages of merchandise and 25 pieces of cotton bagging were
claimed by Jonathan Amory as the joint property of James Lenox,
William Maitland, and Alexander
Page 12 U. S. 254
McGregor, not distinguishing the proportions of each, but the 25
pieces of cotton bagging were afterwards claimed for McGregor as
his sole property, and also 5 trunks of merchandise.
21 trunks of merchandise were claimed by James Magee, of New
York, as the joint property of himself and John S. Jones, residing
in Great Britain.
The district court, on the preparatory evidence, decreed
restitution to Magee & Jones, and also to Lenox & Maitland,
except as to the 100 casks of white lead, as to which and as to the
claim of McGregor further proof was ordered.
From this decree, so far as it ordered restitution of the
merchandise to Magee & Jones and to Maitland and of the ship to
Lenox & Maitland, the captors appealed to the circuit court,
where the decree was affirmed
pro forma, and an appeal was
taken to this Court.
In April, 1813, the cause was heard of further proof in the
district court, and in August the claim of McGregor was rejected,
as well as that of Lenox & Maitland to the white lead. But at
another day, on a further hearing, the court ordered restitution to
McGregor of one-fourth of the property claimed by him, and
condemned the other three-fourths as belonging to his partners,
being British subjects. Both parties appealed, as did also Lenox
& Maitland in relation to the white lead. A
pro forma
decree of affirmance was made, from which an appeal was taken to
this Court.
Maitland, McGregor and Jones were native British subjects, who
came to the United States many years prior to the present war, and,
after the regular period of residence, were admitted to the rights
of naturalization. Sometime after this, but long prior to the
declaration of war, they returned to Great Britain, settled
themselves there, and engaged in the trade of that country, where
they were found carrying on their commercial business at the time
these shipments were made and at the time of the capture. Maitland
is yet
Page 12 U. S. 255
in Great Britain, but has, since he heard of the capture,
expressed his anxiety to return to the United States, but has been
prevented from doing so by various causes set forth in his
affidavit. McGregor actually returned to the United States sometime
in May last; Jones is still in England.
Page 12 U. S. 273
WASHINGTON, J. after stating the facts of the case, delivered
the opinion of the majority of the Court as follows:
The claims of Maitland, McGregor and Jones are resisted
in
toto upon an objection to the national character of the
claimants. The general question affecting
Page 12 U. S. 274
these parties will, for the present, be postponed in order to
dispose of particular objections which are made to all the claims,
either in whole or in part, and which will depend on the particular
circumstances applying to those cases.
1. The first claim that will be considered will be that of Lenox
& Maitland to the 100 casks of white lead, which it is
contended, is the property of Thos. Holloway, an acknowledged
British subject, but shipped in June, 1812, by Wm. Maitland &
Co. (a house established in Liverpool and composed of Wm. Maitland
and James Lenox) to Lenox & Maitland, a house established at
New York, and composed of the same parties. To establish the fact
of property in Thos. Holloway, the captor relies upon the following
evidence:
The original bill of parcels, enclosed in a letter under date of
3 July, 1812, from Wm. Maitland & Co. to Lenox & Maitland,
which is headed thus, "Thos. Holloway bought of Thomas Walker &
Co., lead merchants," dated June 2, 1812. In corroboration of this
prima facie evidence of property in Holloway, the freight
and primage of this lead is cast in the margin of the bill of
lading, but not so upon the acknowledged property of Lenox &
Maitland, the owners of the ship, and included in the same bill of
lading, from which circumstance it is argued that this article did
not belong to Lenox & Maitland, since, if it did, no freight
could have been charged on it, any more than upon the other parts
of the cargo claimed by them. In addition to this, in a list of
goods shipped by Wm. Maitland & Co. by this vessel on account
of and consigned to Lenox & Maitland, and enclosed in a letter
of 22 August, 1812, from the former to the latter, by the Lady
Gallatin, all the goods claimed by that house separately, and also
by them and McGregor jointly, are enumerated, except this parcel of
white lead. This evidence is certainly very strong to fix a hostile
character on this property, and is rendered conclusive by the
omission of Maitland, in his affidavit made under the order for
further proof, to say anything in relation to the white lead,
although he is very particular as to all the other property claimed
by Lenox & Maitland, and by that house jointly with McGregor.
This Court is
Page 12 U. S. 275
therefore of opinion that the court below did right in rejecting
this claim.
2. The next claim to be considered is that of Magee & Jones
to a part of the cargo on board of this vessel. Magee is a citizen
of the United States, settled in New York and connected with Jones
in a house of trade. It is urged by the captors that the whole of
this property ought to have been condemned as the sale property of
Jones. The bill of lading of these goods expresses them to be
shipped by McGregor & Co. unto and on account of James Magee
& Co. of New York. The invoice is signed by Jones, at
Manchester, in England, and describes them as goods to be shipped
on board the
Venus, and to be consigned to James Magee
& Co. of New York, but it does not specify on whose account and
risk. In a letter from Jones to Magee dated 1 July, 1812, covering
an invoice of these goods, he says "they are to be sold on joint
account, or on mine at your option." The whole question as to the
exclusive property of Jones in these goods is rested by the captors
upon the above expressions giving an option to Magee to be jointly
concerned or not in the shipment. The question of law is in whom
the right of property was at the time of capture? To effect a
change of property as between seller and buyer, it is essential
that there should be a contract of sale agreed to by both parties,
and if the thing agreed to be sold is to be sent by the vendor to
the vendee, it is necessary to the perfection of the contract that
it should be delivered to the purchaser or to his agent, which the
master, to many purposes, is considered to be. The only evidence of
a contract such as is now set up appears in the affidavit of Magee,
who states that in 1810, he was in England, and agreed with Jones
that the latter should ship goods on joint account when the
intercourse between the two countries should be opened, and that in
consequence of this agreement the present shipment was made. Now
admit that such an agreement was made, yet the delivery of the
goods to the master of the vessel was not for the use of Magee
& Jones, any more than it was for the use of the shipper
solely, and consequently it amounted to nothing so as to divest the
property out of the shipper until Magee should elect to take them
on joint account, or
Page 12 U. S. 276
to act as the agent of Jones. Until this election was made, the
goods were at the risk of the shipper, which is conclusive as to
the right of property.
3. The next claim is that of Lenox & Maitland to the ship.
The facts in relation to this subject are that James Lenox, as
joint owner with W. Maitland of this ship, obtained, in November,
1811, a register for her, which was granted upon his oath, that he,
together with W. Maitland, of the City of New York, merchant, were
the only owners. At this time, Maitland was domiciled in Great
Britain, and it is contended that the statement that Maitland was
of New York was untrue, and subjected the vessel to forfeiture,
under the Act of Congress of 31 December, 1792, and that although
no claim is interposed for the United States, still the forfeiture
produced by the misconduct of Lenox, is sufficient to turn him out
of court, whatever disposition may ultimately be made of the
property. The rule of the prize court is correctly stated in this
argument, and the only question is whether a forfeiture did accrue
to the United States. The act of Congress directs that the owner
who takes the oath, in case there are more than one owner, shall,
in his oath, specify the names and places of abode of such owners,
and that they are citizens of the United States, if such be the
fact, and if one or more of them resides abroad as a partner or
partners in a co-partnership consisting of citizens, and carrying
on trade with the United States, that such is the case. The law
then proceeds to declare that if any of the matters of fact in the
said oath alleged, within the knowledge of the party swearing,
shall not be true, the ship shall be forfeited to the United
States. It cannot be denied that at the time this oath was taken,
W. Maitland was a resident merchant of Great Britain, carrying on
trade with the United States -- a fact totally inconsistent with
that alleged in the oath that he was of the City of New York. It is
probable, and the Court is willing to believe, that this statement
was innocently made under a misconception of the real character
which the foreign domicile of Maitland had impressed upon him. But
still the law required explicitness on this point and marked the
distinction between a person residing abroad and one residing
within the United States. It must be admitted in point of law
Page 12 U. S. 277
that the fact sworn to by Lenox was not true, and the
consequence is a forfeiture of the ship to the United States. The
claim, therefore, of Lenox & Maitland to this vessel must be
rejected. What order shall be made as to the ultimate disposition
of the property must depend upon the opinion which this Court may
give in some other cases touching this subject.
The great question involved in this and many other of the prize
cases which have been argued is whether the property of these
claimants who were settled in Great Britain and engaged in the
commerce of that country, shipped before they had a knowledge of
the war but which was captured after the declaration of war by an
American cruiser ought to be condemned as lawful prize. It is
contended by the captors that as these claimants had gained a
domicile in Great Britain, and continued to enjoy it up to the time
when war was declared, and when these captures were made, they must
be considered as British subjects, in reference to this property,
and consequently that it may legally be seized as prize of war in
like manner as if it had belonged to real British subjects. But if
not so, it is then insisted that these claimants having, after
their naturalization in the United States, returned to Great
Britain, the country of their birth, and there resettled
themselves, they became reintegrated British subjects and ought to
be considered by this Court in the same light as if they had never
emigrated. On the other side it is argued that American citizens
settled in the country of the enemy, as these persons were, at the
time war was declared were entitled to a reasonable time to elect,
after they knew of the war, to remain there or to return to the
United States, and that until such election was
bona fide
made, the courts of this country are bound to consider them as
American citizens and their property shipped before they had an
opportunity to make this election as being protected against
American capture.
There being no dispute as to the facts upon which the domicile
of these claimants is asserted, the questions of law alone remain
to be considered. They are two -- first, by what means and to what
extent a national character may be impressed upon a person
different
Page 12 U. S. 278
from that which permanent allegiance gives him, and secondly,
what are the legal consequences to which this acquired character
may expose him in the event of a war taking place between the
country of his residence and that of his birth or in which he had
been naturalized?
1. The writers upon the law of nations distinguish between a
temporary residence in a foreign country for a special purpose and
a residence accompanied with an intention to make it a permanent
place of abode. The latter is styled by Vattel "domicile," which he
defines to be, "a habitation fixed in any place, with an intention
of always staying there." Such a person, says this author, becomes
a member of the new society, at least as a permanent inhabitant,
and is a kind of citizen of an inferior order from the native
citizens, but is nevertheless united and subject to the society
without participating in all its advantages. This right of
domicile, he continues, is not established unless the person makes
sufficiently known his intention of fixing there, either tacitly or
by an express declaration. Vatt. 92-93. Grotius nowhere uses the
word "domicile," but he also distinguishes between those who stay
in a foreign country by the necessity of their affairs or from any
other temporary cause and those who reside there from a permanent
cause. The former he denominates "strangers" and the latter
"subjects," and it will presently be seen by a reference to the
same author what different consequences these two characters draw
after them.
The doctrine of the prize courts as well as of the courts of
common law in England which, it was hinted, if not asserted, in
argument, had no authority of universal law to stand upon is the
same with what is stated by the above writers, except that it is
less general and confines the consequences resulting from this
acquired character to the property of those persons engaged in the
commerce of the country in which they reside.
It is decided by those courts that whilst an Englishman or a
neutral, resides in a hostile country, he is a subject of that
country, and is to be considered (even
Page 12 U. S. 279
by his own or native country in the former case) as having a
hostile character impressed upon him.
In deciding whether a person has obtained the right of an
acquired domicile, it is not to be expected that much if any
assistance should be derived from mere elementary writers on the
law of nations. They can only lay down the general principles of
law, and it becomes the duty of courts to establish rules for the
proper application of those principles. The question whether the
person to be affected by the right of domicile had sufficiently
made known his intention of fixing himself permanently in the
foreign country must depend upon all the circumstances of the case.
If he had made no express declaration on the subject and his secret
intention is to be discovered, his acts must be attended to as
affording the most satisfactory evidence of his intention. On this
ground it is that the courts of England have decided that a person
who removes to a foreign country, settles himself there, and
engages in the trade of the country furnishes by these acts such
evidence of an intention permanently to reside there, as to stamp
him with the national character of the state where he resides. In
questions on this subject, the chief point to be considered is the
animus manendi, and courts are to devise such reasonable
rules of evidence as may establish the fact of intention. If it
sufficiently appear that the intention of removing was to make a
permanent settlement, or for an indefinite time, the right of
domicile is acquired by a residence even of a few days. This is one
of the rules of the British courts, and it appears to be perfectly
reasonable. Another is that a neutral or subject, found residing in
a foreign country is presumed to be there
animo manendi,
and if a state of war should bring his national character into
question, it lies upon him to explain the circumstances of his
residence.
The Bernon, 1 Rob. 86, 102. As to some other
rules of the prize courts of England, particularly those which fix
a national character upon a person on the ground of constructive
residence, or the peculiar nature of his trade, the Court is not
called upon to give an opinion at this time, because in this case
it is admitted that the claimants had acquired a right of domicile
in Great
Page 12 U. S. 280
Britain, at the time of the breaking out of the war between that
country and the United States.
2. The next question is what are the consequences to which this
acquired domicile may legally expose the person entitled to it in
the event of a war taking place between the government under which
he resides and that to which he owes a permanent allegiance? A
neutral in his situation, if he should engage in open hostilities
with the other belligerent, would be considered and treated as an
enemy. A citizen of the other belligerent could not be so
considered, because he could not by any act of hostility render
himself, strictly speaking, an enemy, contrary to his permanent
allegiance. But although he cannot be considered an enemy in the
strict sense of the word, yet he is deemed such with reference to
the seizure of so much of his property concerned in the trade of
the enemy, as is connected with his residence. It is found adhering
to the enemy. He is himself adhering to the enemy, although not
criminally so, unless he engages in acts of hostility against his
native country, or probably refuses, when required by his country,
to return. The same rule as to property engaged in the commerce of
the enemy applies to neutrals; and for the same reason. The
converse of this rule inevitably applies to the subject of a
belligerent state domiciled in a neutral country; he is deemed a
neutral by both belligerents, with reference to the trade which he
carries on which the adverse belligerent, and with all the rest of
the world.
But this national character which a man acquires by residence,
may be thrown off at pleasure, by a return to his native country,
or even by turning his back on the country in which he has resided,
on his way to another. To use the language of Sir W. Scott, it is
an adventitious character gained by residence, and which ceases by
nonresidence. It no longer adheres to the party from the moment he
puts himself in motion
bona fide to quit the country
sine animo revertendi. 3 Rob. 17, 12,
The Indian
Chief. The reasonableness of this rule can hardly be disputed.
Having once acquired a national character by residence in a foreign
country, he ought to be bound by all the consequences of it until
he has thrown it off either by an actual return to his
Page 12 U. S. 281
native country or to that where he was naturalized or by
commencing his removal,
bona fide and without an intention
of returning. If anything short of actual removal be admitted to
work a change in the national character acquired by residence, it
seems perfectly reasonable that the evidence of a
bona
fide intention to remove should be such as to leave no doubt
of its sincerity. Mere declarations of such an intention ought
never to be relied upon when contradicted, or at least rendered
doubtful, by a continuance of that residence which impressed the
character. They may have been made to deceive, or if sincerely
made, they may never be executed. Even the party himself ought not
to be bound by them, because he may afterwards find reason to
change his determination, and ought to be permitted to do so.
But when he accompanies those declarations by acts which speak a
language not to be mistaken, and can hardly fail to be consummated
by actual removal, the strongest evidence is afforded which the
nature of such a case can furnish. And is it not proper that the
courts of a belligerent nation should deny to any person the right
to use a character so equivocal as to put it in his power to claim
which ever may best suit his purpose when it is called in question?
If his property be taken trading with the enemy, shall he be
allowed to shield it from confiscation by alleging that he had
intended to remove from the country of the enemy to his own, then
neutral, and, therefore that, as a neutral, the trade was lawful?
If war exist between the country of his residence and his native
country, and his property be seized by the former or by the latter,
shall he be heard to say in the former case that he was a domiciled
subject of the country of the captor, and in the latter that he was
a native subject of the country of that captor also, because he had
declared an intention to resume his native character, and thus to
parry the belligerent rights of both? It is to guard against such
inconsistencies and against the frauds which such pretensions, if
tolerated, would sanction that the rule above mentioned has been
adopted. Upon what sound principle can a distinction be framed
between the case of a neutral and the subject of one belligerent
domiciled in the country of the other at the breaking out of the
war? The property of each, found engaged in the commerce of their
adopted country, belonging to them
Page 12 U. S. 282
before the war in their character of subjects of that country,
so long as they continued to retain their domicile, and when a
state of war takes place between that country and any other by
which the two nations and all their subjects become enemies to each
other, it follows that the property, which was once the property of
a friend, belongs now, in reference to that property, to an enemy.
This doctrine of the common law and prize courts of England is
founded, like that mentioned under the first head, upon national
law, and it is believed to be strongly supported by reason and
justice. It is laid down by Grotius, p. 563,
"That all the subjects of the enemy who are such from a
permanent cause -- that is to say, settled in the country -- are
liable to the law of reprisals, whether they be natives or
foreigners, but not so if they are only trading or sojourning for a
little time."
And why, it may be confidently asked, should not the property of
such subjects be exposed to the law of reprisals and of war so long
as the owner retains his acquired domicile or, in the words of
Grotius, continues a permanent residence in the country of the
enemy? They were before, and continue after the war, bound by such
residence to the society of which they are members, subject to the
laws of the state, and owing a qualified allegiance thereto; they
are obliged to defend it (with an exception in favor of such a
subject, in relation to his native country) in return for the
protection it affords them and the privileges which the laws bestow
upon them as subjects. The property of such persons, equally with
that of the native subjects in their totality, is to be considered
as the goods of the nation in regard to other states. It belongs in
some sort to the state from the right which she has over the goods
of its citizens which make a part of the sum total of its riches
and augment its power. Vatt. 147, and also B. 1, c. 14, § 182. In
reprisals, continues the same author, we seize on the property of
the subject, just as we would that of the sovereign; everything
that belongs to the nation is subject to reprisals, wherever it can
be seized, with the exception of a deposit entrusted to the public
faith. B. 2, c. 18, § 344.
Now if a permanent residence constitutes the person a subject of
the country where he is settled, so long as he continues to reside
there, and subjects his property to the law of reprisals, as a part
of the property of the
Page 12 U. S. 283
nation, it would seem difficult to maintain that the same
consequences would not follow in the case of an open and public
war, whether between the adopted and native countries of persons so
domiciled or between the former and any other nation. If, then,
nothing but an actual removal or a
bona fide beginning to
remove can change a national character acquired by domicile, and
if, at the time of the inception of the voyage as well as at the
time of capture, the property belonged to such domiciled person in
his character of a subject, what is there that does or ought to
exempt it from capture by the privateers of his native country if,
at the time of capture, he continues to reside in the country of
the adverse belligerent? It is contended that a native or
naturalized subject of one country who is surprised in the country
where he was domiciled by a declaration of war ought to have time
to make his election to continue there or to remove to the country
to which he owes a permanent allegiance, and that until such
election is made, his property ought to be protected from capture
by the cruisers of the latter. This doctrine is believed to be as
unfounded in reason and justice as it clearly is in law. In the
first place, it is founded upon a presumption that the person will
certainly remove, before it can possibly be known whether he may
elect to do so or not. It is said that this presumption ought to be
made because, upon receiving information of the war, it will be his
duty to return home. This position is denied. It is his duty to
commit no acts of hostility against his native country, and to
return to her assistance when required to do so; nor will any just
nation, regarding the mild principles of the law of nations,
require him to take arms against his native country or refuse her
permission to him to withdraw whenever he wishes to do so unless
under peculiar circumstances which, by such removal at a critical
period, might endanger the public safety. The conventional law of
nations is in conformity with these principles. It is not uncommon
to stipulate in treaties that the subjects of each shall be allowed
to remove with their property or to remain unmolested. Such a
stipulation does not coerce those subjects either to remove or to
remain. They are left free to choose for themselves, and when they
have made their election, they claim the right of enjoying
Page 12 U. S. 284
it under the treaty. But until the election is made, their
former character continues unchanged.
Until this election is made, if his property found upon the high
seas, engaged in the commerce of his adopted country, should be
permitted, by the cruisers of the other belligerent, to pass free
under the notion that he may elect to remove, upon notice of the
war, and should arrive safe, what is to be done in case the owner
of it should afterwards elect to remain where he is? Or, if
captured and brought immediately to adjudication, it must, upon
this doctrine, be acquitted until the election to remain is made
and known. In short, the point contended for would apply the
doctrine of relation to cases where the party claiming the benefit
of it may gain all, and can lose nothing. If he, after the capture,
should find it his interest to remain where he is domiciled, his
property embarked before his election was made is safe, and if he
finds it best to return, it is safe of course. It is safe whether
he goes or stays. This doctrine, producing such contradictory
consequences, is not only unsupported by any authority, but it
would violate principles long and well established in the prize
courts of England, and which ought not, without strong reasons
which may render them inapplicable to this country, to be
disregarded by this Court. The rule there is that the character of
property during war cannot be changed
in transitu by any
act of the party subsequent to the capture. The rule indeed goes
further, as to the correctness of which in its greatest extension
no opinion need now be given, but it may safely be affirmed that
this change cannot and ought not to be effected by an election of
the owner and shipper of it made subsequent to the capture, and
more especially after a knowledge of the capture is obtained by the
owner. Observe the consequences which would result from it. The
capture is made and known. The owner is allowed to deliberate
whether it is his interest to remain a subject of his adopted, or
of his native country. If the capture be made by the former, then
he elects to be a subject of that country; if by the latter, then a
subject of that. Can such a privileged situation be tolerated by
either belligerent? Can any system of law be correct which places
an individual who adheres to one belligerent, and, to the period of
his election to remove,
Page 12 U. S. 285
contributes to increase her wealth in so anomalous a situation
as to be clothed with the privileges of a neutral as to both
belligerents? This notion about a temporary state of neutrality
impressed upon a subject of one of the belligerents, and the
consequent exemption of his property from capture by either until
he has had notice of the war and made his election, is altogether a
novel theory, and seems, from the course of the argument, to owe
its origin to a supposed hardship to which the contrary doctrine
exposes him. But if the reasoning employed on this subject be
correct, no such hardship can exist. For if, before the election is
made, his property on the ocean is liable to capture by the
cruisers of his native and deserted country, it is not only free
from capture by those of his adopted country, but is under its
protection. The privilege is supposed to be equal to the
disadvantage, and is therefore just. The double privilege claimed
seems too unreasonable to be granted.
It will be observed that in the foregoing opinion respecting the
nature and consequences of domicile, very few cases have been
referred to. It was thought best not to interrupt the chain of
argument by stopping to examine cases, but faithfully to present
the essential principles to be extracted from those which were
cited at the bar or which have otherwise come under the view of the
court and which applied to the subject. With what success this has
been executed is not for me to decide. But there are two or three
cases which seem to be so applicable, and at the same time so
conclusive on the great points of this question, that it may not be
improper briefly to notice them. In support of the general
principles that the national character of the owner at the time of
capture must decide his right to claim and that a subject is
condemned by it, even in the courts of his native country, without
time's being allowed to him to elect to remove, the following cases
may be referred to. In
The Boedes Lust, 5 Rob. 247, it was
decided that the property of a resident of Demarara, shipped before
hostilities of any kind had occurred between Holland and Great
Britain, but which was captured under an embargo declared by
England upon Dutch property as preparatory to war which ensued soon
after the seizure, was, by the retroactive effect of the war
applied to property so seized, to be considered
Page 12 U. S. 286
as the property of an enemy taken in war. In this case, Sir W.
Scott lays it down that where property is taken in a state of
hostility, the universal practice has ever been to hold it subject
to condemnation although the claimants may have become friends and
subjects prior to the adjudication. This case is somewhat stronger
than the present in the circumstance that in that, the state of
hostility alleged to have existed at the time of capture was made
out by considering the subsequent declaration of war as relating
back to the time of seizure under the embargo, by which reference
it was decided to be a hostile embargo, and of course tantamount to
an actual state of war. But this case also proves not only that the
hostile character of the property at the time of capture
establishes the legality of it, but that no future circumstance
changing the hostile character of the claimant to that of a friend
or subject can entitle him to restitution. Whether the claimant in
this case was a neutral or a British subject does not appear. But
if the former, it will not, it is presumed, be contended that he
is, upon the principles of national law, less to be favored in the
courts of the belligerent than a subject of that nation domiciled
in the country of the adverse belligerent.
Whitehill's
Case, however, referred to frequently in Robinson's reports,
comes fully up to the present, because he was a British subject,
who had settled but a few days in the hostile country, but before
he knew or could have known of the declaration of war; yet, as he
went there with an intention to settle, this, connected with his
residence, short as it was, fixed his national character and
identified him with the enemy of the country he had so recently
quitted. The want of notice and of an opportunity to extricate
himself from a situation to which he had so recently and so
innocently exposed himself could not prevail to protect his
property against the belligerent rights of his own country and to
save it from confiscation. There are many other strong cases upon
these points which I forbear to notice particularly from an
unwillingness to swell this opinion, already too long.
The sentence of the court is as follows:
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record,
and was argued by counsel, on consideration whereof it is decreed
and ordered that the sentence of
Page 12 U. S. 287
the Circuit Court of Massachusetts condemning the one hundred
casks of white lead claimed by Lenox & Maitland be, and the
same is hereby affirmed with costs. And that the sentence of the
said circuit court as to the claim of Magee & Jones to
twenty-one trunks of merchandise be and the same is hereby reversed
and annulled, and that the said twenty-one trunks of merchandise be
condemned to the captors, and that the sentence of the said circuit
court as to the ship
Venus claimed by Lenox & Maitland
be and the same is hereby reversed, and that the said ship
Venus be condemned, the one-half thereof to the captors,
the other half to the United States, under the order of the said
circuit court. That the sentence of the said circuit court as to
the claim of Wm. Maitland to one-half of one hundred and fifty
crates of earthenware, thirty-five cases and three casks of copper,
nine pieces of cotton bagging and twenty and four-twentieths tons
of coal, be and the same is hereby reversed, and that the same be
condemned to the captors, and that the sentence of the said circuit
court as to the claim of Alexander McGregor to one-half of one
hundred and ninety-eight packages of merchandise as the joint
property of himself and Lenox & Maitland, and of the claim of
Wm. Maitland for one-fourth of the same goods, and of the claim of
Alexander McGregor to twenty-five pieces of cotton bagging and five
trunks of merchandise be and the same is hereby reversed and
annulled, and that the same he condemned to the captors, and that
the said cause be remanded to the said circuit court for further
proceedings to be had therein.
JOHNSON, J. declined giving an opinion.
STORY, J.
I do not sit in this cause, but the great question involved in
it respecting the effect of domicile on national character, forms
the leading point in many cases before the Court. Those cases have
been ably and fully argued, and I have listened with great
solicitude and attention to the discussion. On so important a
question, where a difference of opinion has been expressed on the
bench, I do not feel at liberty to withdraw myself from the
responsibility which the law imposes on me. The parties in the
other cases have a right to my opinion, and, however painful it is,
in the embarrassing
Page 12 U. S. 288
situation in which I stand, to declare it, I shall not shrink
from what I deem a peremptory duty. The question is not new to me.
It has been repeatedly before me in the circuit court, and has been
applied sometimes to relieve and sometimes to condemn the claimant.
I shall not pretend to go over the grounds of argument, but content
myself with declaring my entire concurrence in the opinion
expressed by Judge Washington on this point.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL.
I entirely concur in so much of the opinion delivered in this
case as attaches a hostile character to the property of an American
citizen continuing, after the declaration of war, to reside and
trade in the country of the enemy, and I subscribe implicitly to
the reasoning urged in its support. But from so much of that
opinion as subjects to confiscation the property of a citizen
shipped before a knowledge of the war, and which disallows the
defense founded on an intention to change his domicile and to
return to the United States, manifested in a sufficient manner, and
within a reasonable time after knowledge of the war, although it be
subsequent to the capture, I feel myself compelled to dissent.
The question is undoubtedly complex and intricate. It is
difficult to draw a line of discrimination which shall be at the
same time precise and equitable. But the difficulty does not appear
to me to be sufficient to deter courts from making the attempt.
A merchant residing abroad for commercial purposes may certainly
intend to continue in the foreign country so long as peace shall
exist, provided his commercial objects shall detain him so long,
but to leave it the instant war shall break out between that
country and his own. This intention it is not necessary to manifest
during peace, and when war shall commence, the belligerent cruiser
may find his property on the ocean and may capture it before he
knows that war exists. The question whether this be enemy property
or not depends, in my judgment, not exclusively on the residence of
the owner at the time, but on his residence taken in connection
with his national character as a citizen, and with his intention to
continue or to discontinue his commercial domicile in the event of
war.
Page 12 U. S. 289
The evidence of this intention will rarely, if ever, be given
during peace. It must therefore be furnished, if at all, after the
war shall be known to him, and that knowledge may be preceded by
the capture of his goods. It appears to me, then, to be a case in
which, as in many others, justice requires that subsequent
testimony shall be received to prove a preexisting fact. Measures
taken for removal immediately after a war may prove a previous
intention to remove in the event of war, and may prove that the
captured property, although
prima facie belonging to an
enemy, does in fact belong to a friend. In such case, the citizen,
in my opinion, has a right, in the nature of the
jus
postliminii, to claim restitution.
As this question is not only decisive of many claims now
depending before this Court, but is also of vast importance to our
merchants generally, I may be excused for stating at some length
the reasons on which my opinion is founded.
The whole system of decisions applicable to this subject rests
on the law of nations as its base. It is therefore of some
importance to inquire how far the writers on that law consider the
subjects of one power residing within the territory of another, as
retaining their original character or partaking of the character of
the nation in which they reside.
Vattel, who, though not very full to this point, is more
explicit and more satisfactory on it than any other whose work has
fallen into my hands, says
"The citizens are the members of the civil society; bound to
this society by certain duties, and subject to its authority, they
equally participate in its advantages. The natives or indigenes are
those born in the country of parents who are citizens. Society not
being able to subsist and to perpetuate itself but by the children
of the citizens, those children naturally follow the condition of
their fathers, and succeed to all their rights."
"The inhabitants, as distinguished from citizens, are strangers
who are permitted to settle and stay in the country. Bound by their
residence to the society, they are subject to the laws of the state
while they reside there, and they are obliged to defend it because
it grants
Page 12 U. S. 290
them protection, though they do not participate in all the
rights of citizens. They enjoy only the advantages which the laws
or custom gives them. The perpetual inhabitants are those who have
received the right of perpetual residence. These are a kind of
citizens of an inferior order, and are united and subject to the
society, without participating in all its advantages."
"The domicile is the habitation fixed in any place with an
intention of always staying there. A man does not, then, establish
his domicile in any place unless he makes sufficiently known his
intention of fixing there, either tacitly or by an express
declaration. However, this declaration is no reason why, if he
afterwards changes his mind, he may not remove his domicile
elsewhere. In this sense, he who stops, even for a long time, in a
place for the management of his affairs has only a simple
habitation there, but has no domicile."
A domicile, then, in the sense in which this term is used by
Vattel, requires not only actual residence in a foreign country,
but "an intention of always staying there." Actual residence
without this intention amounts to no more than "simple
habitation."
Although this intention may be implied without being expressed,
it ought not, I think, to be implied, to the injury of the
individual, from acts entirely equivocal. If the stranger has not
the power of making his residence perpetual, if circumstances,
after his arrival in a country, so change as to make his
continuance there disadvantageous to himself, and his power to
continue doubtful, "an intention always to stay there" ought not, I
think, to be fixed upon him in consequence of an unexplained
residence previous to that change of circumstances. Mere residence
under particular circumstances would seem to me, at most, to prove
only an intention to remain so long as those circumstances continue
the same or equally advantageous. This does not give a domicile.
The intention which gives a domicile is an unconditional intention
"to stay always."
The right of the citizens or subjects of one country to remain
in another depends on the will of the sovereign
Page 12 U. S. 291
of that other, and if that will be not expressed otherwise than
by that general hospitality which receives and affords security to
strangers, it is supposed to terminate with the relations of peace
between the two countries. When war breaks out, the subjects of one
belligerent in the country of the other are considered as enemies,
and have no right to remain there.
Vattel says,
"Enemies continue such wherever they happen to be. The place of
abode is of no account here. It is the political ties which
determine the quality. While a man remains a citizen of his own
country, he remains the enemy of all those with whom his nation is
at war."
It would seem to me to require very strong evidence of an
intention to become the permanent inhabitant of a foreign country
to justify a court in presuming such intention to continue when
that residence must expose the person to the inconvenience of being
considered and treated as an enemy. The intention to be inferred
solely from the fact of residence during peace, for commercial
purposes, is, in my judgment, necessarily conditional and dependent
on the continuance of the relations of peace between the two
countries.
So far is the law of nations from considering residence in a
foreign country in time of peace as evidence of an intention
"always to stay there," even in time of war, that the very contrary
is expressed. Vattel says
"The sovereign declaring war can neither detain those subjects
of the enemy who are within his dominions at the time of the
declaration, nor their effects. They came into his country on the
public faith. By permitting them to enter his territory and to
continue there, he tacitly promised them liberty and security for
their return. He is therefore to allow them a reasonable time for
withdrawing with their effects, and if they stay beyond the time
prescribed, he has a right to treat them as enemies, though as
enemies disarmed."
The stranger merely residing in a country during peace, however
long his stay and whatever his employment, provided it be such as
strangers may engage in cannot, on the principles of national law,
be considered
Page 12 U. S. 292
as incorporated into that society so as immediately on a
declaration of war to become the enemy of his own. "His property,"
says Vattel,
"is still a part of the totality of the wealth of his nation. .
. . The citizen or subject of a state who absents himself for a
time without any intention to abandon the society of which he is a
member does not lose his privilege by his absence; he preserves his
rights and remains bound by the same obligations. Being received in
a foreign country in virtue of the natural society, the
communication and commerce which nations are obliged to cultivate
with each other, he ought to be considered there as a member of his
own nation, and treated as such."
The subject of one power inhabiting the country of another ought
not to be considered as a member of the nation in which he resides,
even by foreigners; nor ought he, on the first commencement of
hostilities, to be treated as an enemy by the enemies of that
nation.
Burlamaqui says
"As to strangers, those who settle in the enemy's country after
a war is begun of which they had previous notice, may justly be
looked upon as enemies and treated as such. But in regard to such
as went thither before the war, justice and humanity require that
we should give them a reasonable time to retire, and if they
neglect that opportunity, they are accounted enemies."
If this rule be obligatory on foreign nations, much more ought
it to bind that of which the individual is a member.
I think I cannot be mistaken when I say that, in all the views
taken of this subject by the most approved writers on the law of
nations, the citizen of one country residing in another is not
considered as incorporated in that other, but is still considered
as belonging to that society of which he was originally a member.
And if war break out between the two nations, he is to be permitted
and is expected to return to his own. I do not perceive in those
writers any exception with regard to merchants.
It must, however, be acknowledged that the great extension
Page 12 U. S. 293
of commerce has had considerable influence on national law.
Rules have been adopted, perhaps by general consent, principles
have been engrafted on the original stalk of public law, by which
merchants, while belonging politically to one society are
considered commercially as the members of another. For commercial
purposes, the merchant is considered as a member of that society in
which he has his domicile, and less conclusive evidence than would
seem to be required in general cases by the law of nations, has
been allowed to fix the domicile for commercial purposes. But I
cannot admit that the original meaning of the term is to be
entirely disregarded or the true nature of this domicile to be
overlooked. The effects of the rule ought to be regulated by the
motives which are presumed to have induced its establishment, and
by the convenience it was intended to promote.
The policy of commercial nations receives foreign merchants into
their bosom and permits their own citizens to reside abroad for the
purposes of trade without injury to their rights or character as
citizens. This free intercommunication must certainly be believed
by the nations who allow it to be promotive of their interests. Nor
is this opinion ill founded. Nothing can be more obvious than that
the affairs of a commercial company will be transacted to most
advantage by being conducted as it respects both purchase and sale,
under the eye of a person interested in the result. The nation
which takes an interest in the prosperity of its commerce can feel
no inclination to restrain its citizens from residence abroad for
the purposes of commerce, nor will it hastily construe such
residence into a change of national character, to the injury of the
individual. It is not the policy of such a nation, nor can it be
its wish, to restrain its citizens from pursuing abroad a business
which tends to enrich itself. It ought not, then, to consider them
as enemies in consequence of their having engaged in such pursuit
in the country of a friend who, before their removal, becomes an
enemy.
If, indeed, it be the real intention of the citizen permanently
to change his national character, if it be his choice to remain in
the country of the enemy during
Page 12 U. S. 294
war, there can be no harshness -- no injustice in treating him
as an enemy. But if, while prosecuting his business in a foreign
country, he contemplates a return to his own; if, in the
prosecution of that business, he is promoting rather than
counteracting the interests and policy of the country of which he
is a member, it would seem to me to be pressing the principle too
far, and to be drawing conclusions which the premises will not
warrant, to infer, conclusively, an intention to continue in a
country which has become hostile, from a residence and trading in
that country while it was friendly, and to punish him by the
confiscation of his goods, as if he was fully convicted of that
intention.
It is admitted to be a general rule that, while the state of
things remains unaltered, while the motives which carried the
citizen abroad continue, while he still prosecutes a business of
uncertain duration, his capacity to prosecute which is not
impaired, his mercantile character is confounded with that of the
country in which he resides, and his trade is considered as the
trade of that country.
It will require but a slight examination of the subject to
perceive the reason of this rule, and that, to a certain extent, it
is convenient without being unjust.
In times of universal peace, the question of national character
can arise only when some privilege or some disability is attached
to it, or in cases of insurance. A particular trade may be allowed
or be prohibited to the merchants of a particular nation, or
property may be warranted to be of a particular nation. If in such
cases the residence of the individual be received as evidence of
his national mercantile character, the subjects of inquiry are
simplified, the questions are reduced to a plain one, and the
various complex inquiries, which might otherwise arise, are
avoided. There is, therefore, much convenience in adopting this
principle in such a state of things, and it is not perceived that
any injustice can grow out of it, since the individual to whom the
rule is applied is not surprised by any new or unlooked for
event.
So if war exists between two nations. Each belligerent
Page 12 U. S. 295
having a right to capture the property of the other found on the
ocean, each being intent on destroying the commerce of the other,
and on depriving it of every cover under which it may seek to
shelter itself, will certainly not allow the advantages of
neutrality to a merchant residing in the country of his enemy. Were
this permitted, the whole trade of the enemy could assume, and
would assume, a neutral garb.
There is in general no reason for supposing that a merchant
residing in a foreign country and carrying on trade means to
withdraw from it on its engaging in war with any other country to
which he is bound by no obligation. By continuing, during war, the
domicile acquired in peace, he violates no duty, offends against no
generally acknowledged principle, and retains all his rights of
residence and commerce. The war, then, furnishes no motive for
presuming that he is about to change his situation and to resume
his original national character.
These reasons appear to me to require the rule as a general one,
and to justify its application to general cases. But they do not,
in my opinion, justify its application to the case of a merchant
whom war finds engaged in trade in a country which becomes the
enemy of his own. His country ought not, I think, to bind him by
his residence during peace, nor to consider him as precluded by it
from showing an intention that it should terminate with the
relations of peace.
When it is considered that his right to remain and prosecute
that trade in which he had been engaged during peace, is forfeited;
that his duty, and most probably his inclinations, call him home;
that he has become the enemy of the country in which he resides;
that his continuance in it exposes him to many and serious
inconveniences; that his person and property are in danger; it is
not, I think, going too far to say that this change in his
situation may be considered as changing his intention on the
subject of residence, and as affording a presumption of intending
to return.
Let it be remembered that according to the law of nations,
domicile depends on the intention to reside permanently
Page 12 U. S. 296
in the country to which the individual has removed, and that a
change of this intention is, at any time, allowable. If, upon
grounds of general policy and general convenience, while the
circumstances under which the residence commenced, continue the
same, residence and employment in permanent trade be considered as
evidence of an intention to continue permanently in the country,
and as giving a commercial national character, may not a total
change in circumstances -- a loss of the capacity to carry on the
trade, be received, in the absence of all conflicting proof, as
presumptive evidence of an intention to leave the country, and as
extricating the trade, carried on in the time of supposed peace,
from the national character, so far as to protect it from the
perils of war? At any rate, do not reason and justice require that
this change of circumstances should leave the question open to be
decided on such other evidence as the war must produce?
The great object for which an American merchant fixes himself in
a foreign country, is, most generally, to carry on trade between
that country and his own. In almost every case of this description
before the court, the claimant is a member of a house established
in the United States, and his business abroad is subservient to the
business at home. This trade is annihilated by the war.
If, while peace subsists between the United States and Great
Britain, while the American merchant possesses there all the
commercial rights allowed to the citizens of a friendly nation, and
may carry on uninterruptedly his trade to his own country, he is
presumed, his intentions being unexplained, to intend remaining
there always, and may, for general convenience, be clothed with the
commercial character of the nation in which he resides, ought this
presumption to be extended, by his own government, beyond the facts
out of which it grows, if the interest of the individual be
materially affected by that extension? Do not reason and justice
require that we should consider his original intention as being
only coextensive with the causes which carried him to and detained
him in the country, as being, in its nature, conditional, and
dependent on the continuance of those causes?
Page 12 U. S. 297
If such a person were required, on his arrival in a foreign
country, to declare his real intentions on the subject of
residence, he would, most probably, say, if he spoke honestly,
"I come for the purpose of trade: I shall remain while the
situation of the two countries permits me to carry on my trade
lawfully, securely, and advantageously; when that situation so
changes as to deprive me of these rights, I shall return."
His intention, then, to reside in the country, his domicile in
it, and, consequently, his commercial character, unless he
continued his trade after war, would be clearly limited by the
duration of peace. It would not, I think, be unreasonable to say
that the intention, to be implied from his conduct, ought to have
the same limitation.
To me it seems that a mere commercial domicile acquired in time
of peace necessarily expires at the commencement of hostilities.
Domicile supposes rights incompatible with a state of war. If the
foreign merchant be not compelled to abandon the country, it is not
because his commercial character confers on him a legal right to
stay, but because he is specially permitted to stay. If in this I
am correct, it would seem to follow, that, if all the legal
consequences of a residence in time of peace do not absolutely
terminate with the peace, yet the national commercial character
which that residence has attached to the individual, is not so
conclusively fixed upon him as to disqualify him from showing that,
within a reasonable time after the commencement of hostilities, he
made arrangements for returning to his own country. If a residence
and trading after the war be not indispensably necessary to give
the citizen merchant or his property a hostile character, yet
removal, or measures showing a determination to remove, within a
reasonable time after the war, may retroact upon property shipped
before a knowledge of the war, and rescue that property from the
hostile character attached to the property of the nation in which
the individual resided.
The law of nations is a law founded on the great and immutable
principles of equity and natural justice. To draw an inference
against all probability, whereby a citizen, for the purpose of
confiscating his goods, is clothed, against his inclination, with
the character of an enemy, in consequence of an act which, when
committed,
Page 12 U. S. 298
was innocent in itself, was entirely compatible with his
political character as a citizen, and with the political views of
his government, would seem to me to subvert those principles. The
rule which, for obvious reasons, applies to the merchant in time of
peace or in time of war, the national commercial character of the
country in which he resides, cannot, in my opinion, without
subverting those principles, apply a hostile character to his trade
carried on during peace, so conclusively as to prevent his
protecting it by changing that character within a reasonable time
after a knowledge of the war.
My opinion, then, is that a mere commercial domicile acquired by
an American citizen in time of peace, especially if he be a member
of an American house, and is carrying on trade auxiliary to his
trade with his own country, ought not to be considered positively
as continuing longer than the state of peace. The declaration of
war is a fact which removes the causes that induced his residence
in the foreign country. They no longer operate upon him. When they
cease, their effects ought to cease. An intention which they
produced, ought not to be supposed to continue. The character of
his property shipped before a knowledge of the war, ought not to be
decided absolutely by his residence at the time of shipment or
capture, but ought to depend on his continuing to reside and trade
in the enemy country, or on his taking prompt measures for
returning to his own.
This is the conclusion to which my mind would certainly be
conducted, might I permit it to be guided by the lights of reason
and the principles of natural justice. But it is said that a course
of adjudications has settled the law to be otherwise -- that we
cannot without overturning a magnificent system bottomed on the
broad base of national law, and of which the facts are admirably
adjusted to each other, yield to the dictates of humanity on this
particular question. Sir William Scott, it is argued at the bar,
has, by a series of decisions, developed the principles of national
law on this subject, with a perspicuity and precision which mark
plainly the path we ought to tread.
Page 12 U. S. 299
I respect Sir William Scott, as I do every truly great man, and
I respect his decision; nor should I depart from them on light
grounds; but it is impossible to consider them attentively without
perceiving that his mind leans strongly in favor of the captors.
Residence, for example, in a belligerent country, will condemn the
share of a neutral in a house, trading in a neutral country; but
residence in a neutral country will not protect the share of a
belligerent or neutral in a commercial house established in a
belligerent country. In a great maritime country, depending on its
navy for its glory and its safety, the national bias is perhaps so
entirely in this direction, that the judge, without being conscious
of the fact, must feel its influence. However this may be, it is a
fact of which I am fully convinced, and on this account it appears
to me to be the more proper to investigate rigidly the principles
on which his decisions have been made, and not to extend them where
such extension may produce injustice.
While I make this observation, it would betray a want of candor
not to accompany it with the acknowledgement that I perceive in the
opinions of this eminent judge, no disposition to press this
principle with peculiar severity against neutrals. He has certainly
not mitigated it when applying it to British subjects.
With this impression respecting the general character of British
admiralty decisions, I proceed to examine them so far as they bear
on the question of domicile.
The case of the
Vigilantia does not itself involve the
point. But in delivering his opinion, the judge cited two cases of
capture which have been quoted and relied on at bar. In each of
these, the share of the partner residing in the neutral country was
restored, and that of the partner residing in the belligerent
country was condemned. But these are applied to a trade continued
to be carried on during war.
In a subsequent case, the share of the partner residing in the
neutral country also was condemned, and the lords commissioners
said that the principle on which restitution was decreed in each of
the first mentioned cases, was "that they were merely at the
commencement
Page 12 U. S. 300
of a war." They said that
"a person carrying on trade habitually in the country of the
enemy, though not resident there, should have time to withdraw
himself from that commerce; that it would press too heavily on
neutrals to say that, immediately, on the first breaking out of a
war, their goods would become subject to confiscation."
On these cases it is to be observed, that, although the two
first happened at the commencement of the war, yet they happened
during a war; and the partners whose interest was condemned, do not
appear to have discontinued their residence and trading in the
country of the enemy, after war had taken place. The declaration
"that it would press too heavily on neutrals to say that,
immediately on the first breaking out of a war, their goods would
become subject to confiscation," though applied to a neutral not
residing in the belligerent country, clearly discriminates, in a
case of capture, between the rights of parties at the commencement
of a war, and at a subsequent period. But it is sufficient to say
that neither the case itself, nor the cases and opinions cited in
it, apply directly to the question before this Court.
In the case of
The Harmony, the property of Mr. Murray,
an American citizen residing in France, was condemned on account of
that residence. But Mr. Murray had removed to France, during the
war, and had continued there for four years.
The scope of the argument of Sir William Scott goes to show that
the single circumstance of residence in the enemy country, if not
intended to be permanent, will not give the enemy character to the
property of such resident captured in a trade between his own
country and that of the enemy. It is material that the conduct of
Mr. Murray, subsequent to the capture, had great influence in
determining the fate of his property. Had he returned to the United
States immediately after that event, I do not hazard much in saying
that restitution would have been decreed.
In the case of
The Indian Chief, Mr. Johnson, an
American citizen domiciliated in England, had engaged
Page 12 U. S. 301
in a mercantile enterprise to the British East Indies -- a trade
allowed to an American citizen, but prohibited to a British
subject. On its return, the vessel came into Cowes, and was seized
for being concerned in illicit trade. Mr. Johnson had then left
England for the United States. He was considered as not being a
British subject at the time of capture, and restitution was
decreed.
In delivering his opinion in this case, Sir William Scott
said
"Taking it to be clear that the national character of Mr.
Johnson as a British merchant was founded in residence only, that
it was acquired by residence, and rested on that circumstance
alone, it must be held that from the moment he turns his back on
the country where he has resided on his way to his own country, he
was in the act of resuming his original character, and is to be
considered as an American. The character that is gained by
residence, ceases by nonresidence. It is an adventitious character
that no longer adheres to him from the moment that he puts himself
in motion,
bona fide, to quit the country
sine animo
revertendi."
This case undoubtedly proves affirmatively that the national
character gained by residence ceases with that residence, but I
cannot admit it to prove negatively that this national character
can be laid down by no other means. I cannot, for instance, admit
that an American citizen, who had gained a domicile in England
during peace, and was desirous of returning home on the breaking
out of war, but was detained by force, could, under the authority
of this opinion, be treated as a British trader with respect to his
property embarked before a knowledge of the war.
In the case of
La Virginie, the property of a Mr.
Lapierre, who was probably naturalized in the United States but who
had returned to St. Domingo, and had shipped the produce of that
island to France, was condemned. But he was considered as a
Frenchman, was residing at the time in a French colony, and was
engaged in a trade between that colony and the mother country. The
case, the judge observed, might have been otherwise decided had the
shipment been made to the United States.
Page 12 U. S. 302
In the case of
The Jonge Clarissa, Mr. Ravie had a
license to make certain importations as a British subject. He had a
house in Amsterdam, went there in person during the war, and made
the shipment under his own inspection and control. It was
determined that in this transaction, he acted in his character as a
Dutch merchant, and was not protected by his license. This was a
trading during war.
In the case of
The Citto, the property of Mr. Bowden, a
British subject residing in Holland, was condemned. It appeared
that he had settled in Amsterdam, where he had resided, carrying on
trade, for six years. In 1795, when the French troops took
possession of that country, he left it and settled in Guernsey. The
Citto was a Danish vessel captured in April, 1796, on a
voyage from a Spanish port to Guernsey, where Mr. Bowden then
resided. In June, 1796, after the capture of the
Citto, he
returned to Holland. In argument, it was contended that it appeared
that British subjects might reside in Holland without forfeiting
their British character, from the proclamation of 3 September,
1796, which directs the landing of goods, imported under that order
into the united provinces, to be certified by British merchants
resident there.
The judge was desirous of knowing the nature of Mr. Bowden's
residence in Holland -- whether he had confined himself to the
object of withdrawing his property, or had been engaged in the
general traffic of the place. If the former, "he may," said the
judge, "be entitled to restitution; more especially adverting to
the order in council, which is certainly so worded as not to be
very easy to be applied."
The cause stood for further proof.
It is plain that, in this opinion, the residence of the claimant
at the time of capture was not considered as conclusive. H ad it
been so, restitution must have been decreed, because Mr. Bowden was
a British subject, and at that time resided in Guernsey. It is
equally apparent that, had his subsequent residence in the enemy
country been for the sole purpose of withdrawing his property, the
law was not understood to forbid restitution.
Page 12 U. S. 303
The language of Sir William Scott certainly ascribes
considerable influence to the proclamation, but does not rest the
right of the claimant altogether on that fact.
On 17 March, 1800, an affidavit of Mr. Bowden, made 6 August,
1799, was produced, in which he stated his residence in Holland
previous to the invasion by the French. That he quitted Holland and
landed in England, 20 January, 1795, whence he proceeded to
Guernsey, where he resided with his family. That in the month of
June, 1796, he was under the absolute necessity of returning to
Holland, for the purpose of recovering debts due and effects
belonging to the partnership, his partner remaining in
Guernsey.
The affidavit then proceeded to state many instances of his
attachment to his own government, and concluded with averring that
he was still under the necessity of remaining in Holland, for the
purpose of recovering part of the said debts and effects, which
would be impossible were he to leave the country; but that it was
his intention to return to his native country, so soon as his
affairs would permit where his mother and his relations reside.
The court observed that it appeared from the affidavit that Mr.
Bowden was, at that time, in Holland, and added
"it would be a strange act of injustice, if while we are
condemning the goods of persons of all nations resident in Holland,
we were to restore the goods of native British subjects resident
there. An Englishman residing and trading in Holland, is just as
much a Dutch merchant as a Swede or a Dane would be."
This case was decided in 1800. Mr. Bowden had returned to
Holland in 1796, during the war, and had continued in the country
of the enemy. It is not denied that he continued his trade, and the
fact that he did continue it is fairly to be inferred, not only
from his omitting to aver the contrary, but from the language of
Sir William Scott. "An Englishman residing and trading in Holland,"
says that judge, "is just as much a Dutch merchant as a Swede or a
Dane would be." The case of Mr. Bowden, then, is the case of a
British subject who continued to reside and trade in the enemy
country four years after the commencement of hostilities. His
Page 12 U. S. 304
property must have been condemned on one of two principles.
Either the judge must have considered his residence in Guernsey
from January, 1795, to June, 1796, as a temporary interruption of
his permanent residence in Holland, and not as a change of
domicile, since he returned to that country and continued in it as
a trader to the rendition of the final sentence, or he must have
decided that, although Mr. Bowden remained and intended to remain
in fact a British subject, yet the permanent national commercial
character which he acquired after this capture, retroacted on a
trade which, at the time of capture was entirely British, and
subjected the property to confiscation. On whichsoever of these
principles the case was decided, it is clear that the hostile
character attached to the property of Mr. Bowden in consequence of
his residing and trading in the country of the enemy during the
war. This case is, I think, materially variant from one in which
the residence and trading took place during peace, and the capture
was made before a change of residence could be conveniently
effected.
The Diana is also a case of considerable interest which
contains doctrines entitled to attentive consideration.
During the war between Great Britain and Holland which commenced
in 1795, the Island of Demarara surrendered to the British arms. By
the Treaty of Amiens, it was restored to the Dutch. That treaty
contained an article allowing the inhabitants, of whatever country
they might be, a term of three years, to be computed from the
notification of the treaty for the purpose of disposing of their
property acquired and possessed before or during the war, in which
term they may have the full exercise of their religion and
enjoyment of their property.
Previous to the declaration of war against Holland in 1803, the
Diana and several other vessels loaded with colonial
produce were captured on a voyage from Demarara to Holland.
Immediately after the declaration of war, and before the expiration
of three years from the notification of the Treaty of Amiens,
Demarara again surrendered to Great Britain. Claims to the
captured
Page 12 U. S. 305
property were filed by original British subjects, inhabitants of
Demarara, some of whom had settled in the colony while it was in
possession of Great Britain, others before that event. The trial
came on after the island had again become a British colony.
Sir William Scott decreed restitution to these British subjects
who had settled in the colony while in British possession, but
condemned the property of those who had settled there before that
time. He held that their settling in Demarara while belonging to
Great Britain afforded a presumption of their intending to return
if the island should be transferred to a foreign power, which
presumption, recognized in the treaty, relieved those claimants
from the necessity of proving such intention. He thought it highly
reasonable that they should be admitted to their
jus
postliminii, and be held entitled to the protection of British
subjects.
But the property of those claimants who had settled before it
came to the possession of Great Britain, was condemned. "Having
settled without any faith in British possession, it cannot be
supposed," he said,
"that they would have relinquished their residence, because that
possession had ceased. They had passed from one sovereignty to
another with indifference, and if they may be supposed to have
looked again to a connection with this country, they must have
viewed it as a circumstance that was in no degree likely to affect
their intention of continuing there. . . . On the situation of
persons settled there previous to the time of British possession, I
feel myself [said the judge] obliged to pronounce that they must be
considered in the same light as persons resident in Amsterdam. It
must be understood, however, that if there were among these, any
who have been actually removing, and that fact is properly
ascertained, their goods may be capable of restitution. All that I
mean to express is that there must be evidence of an intention to
remove, on the part of those who settled prior to British
possession, the presumption not being in their favor."
This having been a hostile seizure, though made before the
declaration of war, the property is held equally
Page 12 U. S. 306
liable to condemnation as if captured the instant of that
declaration.
So much of the case as relates to those claimants who had
settled during British possession proves that other circumstances
than an actual getting into motion for the purpose of returning to
his own country may create a presumption of intending to return,
and may put off that hostile commercial character which a British
subject residing and trading in the country of an enemy, is
admitted to acquire. The settlement having been made in a country
which, at the time, was in possession of Great Britain, though held
only by the right of conquest -- a tenure known to be extremely
precarious, and rarely to continue longer than the war in which the
acquisition is made, is sufficient to create this presumption; but
the case does not declare negatively that no other circumstances
would be sufficient.
I am aware that the part of the case which applies to claimants
who had settled previous to British possession will, at first view,
appear to have a strong bearing on the question before the Court.
The shipment was in time of peace, and the seizure was made before
the declaration of war. The trade was one in which a British
subject, in time of peace, might lawfully engage. However strong
his intention might be to return to his native country in the event
of war, he could not be expected to manifest that intention before
the actual existence of war. The reconquest of the island followed
the declaration of war so speedily, as scarcely to leave time for
putting in execution the resolution to return, had one been formed.
Taking these circumstances into view, the condemnation would seem
to be one of extreme severity. Yet even this case, admitting the
decision to be perfectly correct, does not, I think, when
accurately examined, go so far as to justify a condemnation under
such circumstances as belong to some of the cases at bar.
The island having surrendered during war, such of its
inhabitants as were originally British subjects were not allowed to
derive, from this reannexation to the dominions of Great Britain,
the advantages to which a voluntary return to their own country, of
the same
Page 12 U. S. 307
date, would have entitled them. They were considered as if they
had been "residents of Amsterdam."
But Sir William Scott observes that "if there are among these
any who have been actually removing, and that fact is properly
ascertained, their goods may be capable of restitution." "Actually
removing" -- when? Not, surely, before the seizure, for that was
made in time of peace. Not before the declaration of war, when the
original seizure was converted into a belligerent capture, for
until that declaration was known, a person whose intention to
remain or return was dependant on peace or war, would not be
"actually removing." On every principle of equity, then, the time
to which these expressions refer must be the surrender of Demarara,
or a reasonable time after the declaration of war was known there.
The one period or the other would be subsequent to that event which
was deemed equivalent to capture.
It is not unworthy of remark that Sir William Scott adds
explanatory words which qualify and control the words "actually
removing," and show the sense in which he used them. "All," says
the judge,
"that I mean to express is that there must be evidence of an
intention to remove, on the part of those who settled prior to
British possession, the presumption not being in their favor."
It would, then, I think, be rejecting a part, and a material
part, of the opinion to say that an intention to remove clearly
proved, though not accompanied by the fact of removal, would have
been deemed insufficient to support the claim for restitution.
Were there no other circumstances of real importance in this
case -- did it rest solely on the sentiments expressed by the
judge, unconnected with those circumstances -- I should certainly
consider it as leaving open to the claimants before this Court the
right of proving an intention to return within a reasonable time
after the declaration of war, by other overt acts than an actual
removal.
But there are other circumstances which I cannot
Page 12 U. S. 308
deem immaterial, and as the opinions of a judge are always to be
taken with reference to the particular case in which they are
delivered, I must consider these expressions in connection with the
whole case.
The probability is that the claimants were not merely British
merchants. Though the fact is not expressly stated, there is some
reason to believe that they had become proprietors of the soil, and
were completely incorporated with the Dutch colonists. They are not
denominated merchants. They are spoken of through the case not as
residents, but as settlers. "They had passed," said Sir William
Scott, "from one sovereignty to another with indifference." This
made of expression appears to me to indicate a more permanent
interest in the country -- a more intimate connection with it than
is acquired by a merchant removing to a foreign country, and
residing there in time of peace, for the sole purpose of trade. And
in another of the same class of cases, it is said that previous to
the last war, the principal plantations of the island were in
possession of British planters from the other British islands.
The voyage, too, in making which the
Diana was captured
was a direct voyage between the colony and the mother country. The
trade was completely Dutch, and the property of any neutral,
wherever residing, if captured in such a voyage during war, would
be condemned.
But it is still more material that those who settled in Demarara
before British possession, must have settled daring the war which
was terminated by the treaty of Amiens, or if they settled in time
of peace, must have continued there while the colony was Dutch, and
while Holland was at war with Great Britain. Whichever the fact
might be, whether they had settled in an enemy country during war,
or had continued, through the war, a settlement made in time of
peace, they had demonstrated that war made no change in their
residence. In their case, then, it might be correctly said "that
war created no presumption of an intention to return" --"that they
passed from one sovereignty to another with indifference."
Page 12 U. S. 309
I cannot consider claims under these circumstances, as being in
the same equity with claims made by persons who had removed into a
foreign country, in time of peace, for the sole purpose of trade,
and whose trade would be annihilated by war.
The case of the
Boedes Lust differs from the
Diana only in this: the claimants are not alleged to have
been originally British subjects. Restitution was asked because the
property did not belong to an enemy at the time of shipment, nor at
the time of seizure, nor at the time of adjudication. These grounds
were all declared to be insufficient. The original seizure was
provisionally hostile, and the declaration of war consummated the
right to condemn, and vested the property in the Crown as enemy
property. The subsequent change in the character of the claimants,
who became British subjects by the surrender of Demarara, could not
divest it. "Where property is taken in a state of hostility," said
Sir William Scott, "the universal practice has ever been to hold it
subject to condemnation, although the claimants may have become
friends and subjects prior to adjudication." "With as little
effect," he added,
"can it be contended that a
postliminium can be
attributed to these parties. Here to no return to the original
character, on which only a
jus postliminii can be raised.
The original character at the time of seizure, and immediately
prior to the hostility which has intervened, was Dutch. The present
character, which the events of war have produced, is that of
British subjects, and although the British subject might, under
circumstances, acquire the
jus postliminii, upon the
resumption of his native character, it never can be considered that
the same privilege accrues upon the acquisition of a character
totally new and foreign."
This opinion is certainly not decisive, but it appears to me
rather to favor than oppose the idea that a merchant residing
abroad, and taking measures to return on the breaking out of war,
may entitle himself to the
jus postliminii, with respect
to property shipped before a knowledge of the war.
The President was captured on a voyage from the
Page 12 U. S. 310
Cape of Good Hope to Europe. Mr. Elmslie, the claimant, was born
a British subject, but claimed as a citizen of the United States.
He had removed to the Cape of Good Hope during the preceding war,
and still resided there. The property was condemned. In delivering
his opinion, Sir William Scott observed,
"It is said the claimant is entitled to the benefit of an
intention of removing to Philadelphia, in a few months. A mere
intention to remove, has never been held sufficient without some
overt act, being merely an intention residing secretly and
indistinguishably in the breast of the party, and liable to be
revoked every hour. The expressions of the letter in which this
intention is said to be found, are, I observe, very weak and
general, of an intention merely
in futuro. Were they even
much stronger than they are, they would not be sufficient.
Something more than mere verbal declaration, some solid fact
showing that the party is in the act of withdrawing, has always
been held necessary in such cases."
It is to be held in mind that this opinion is delivered in the
case of a person who had fixed his residence in an enemy country
during war, and that he claimed to be the subject of a neutral
state. For both these reasons, the war afforded no presumption of
his intending to return either to his native or adopted country. To
the vague expression of an intention to return at some future
indefinite time no influence can be ascribed. When the judge says
that
"something more than mere verbal declaration, some solid fact
showing that the party is in the act of withdrawing, has always
been held necessary in such cases,"
I do not understand him to say that the person must have put
himself in personal motion to return, must have commenced his
voyage homeward, in order to be considered as in "the act of
withdrawing." Many other overt acts, as selling a commercial
establishment, stopping business, making preparations to return,
accompanied by declarations of the intent, and not opposed by other
circumstances, may in my opinion be considered as acts of
withdrawing.
In the case of
The Ocean, Sir William Scott said
"This claim relates to the situation of British subjects
settled
Page 12 U. S. 311
in a foreign state, in time of amity, and taking early measures
to withdraw themselves, on the breaking out of war. The affidavit
of claim states that this gentleman had been settled as a partner
in a house of trade in Holland, but that he had made arrangements
for the dissolution of the partnership, and was only prevented from
removing personally, by the violent detention of all British
subjects who happened to be within the territories of the enemy, at
the breaking out of the war. It would, I think, under these
circumstances, be going further than the principle of law requires
to conclude this person, by his former occupation and by his
present constrained residence in France, so as not to admit him to
have taken himself out of the effect of supervening hostilities, by
the means which he had used for his removal."
If other means for removal were taken than arrangements for the
dissolution of the partnership, they are not stated, and it is
fairly to be presumed that these arrangements were the most
permanent of them, since that fact is alone selected and
particularly relied upon. In his statement of the case, the
reporter says that the claimant had actually made his escape and
returned to England in July, 1803 (the trial was in January, 1804),
but this must be a mistake or is a fact not adverted to by the
judge, since he says in his opinion that the claimant is at the
time "a constrained resident of France."
I shall notice two other cases which are frequently cited,
though I have seen no full report of either of them.
The first is the case of Mr. Curtissos. This gentleman, who was
a British subject, had gone to Surinam in 1766, and from thence to
St. Eustatius, where he remained till 1776. He then went to Holland
to settle his accounts and with an intention, "as was said," of
returning afterwards to England to take up his final residence. In
December, 1780, orders of reprisal were issued by England against
Holland. On 1 January, 1781, the
Snelle Zeylder was
captured and, on 5 March and 10 April, 1781, the vessel and cargo
were condemned as Dutch property. On
Page 12 U. S. 312
27 April, 1781, Mr. Curtissos returned to England and on an
appeal the sentence of condemnation was reversed by the lords of
appeals and restitution decreed.
Other claims of Mr. Curtissos were brought before the court of
admiralty and, on a full disclosure of these circumstances,
restitution was decreed, before the decree of the lords in the case
of the
Snelle Zeylder was pronounced.
The principle of this decree is said to be that Mr. Curtissos
was
in itinere, and had put himself in motion, and was in
pursuit of his original British character.
I do not mean to find fault with this decision, but certainly it
presents some strong points more unfavorable to the claimant than
will be found in some of the cases now before this Court. Mr.
Curtissos had obtained a commercial domicile in the country of the
enemy. At the time of the sailing, capture and condemnation of the
Snelle Zeylder, he still resided in the country of the
enemy. But it is said he was
in itinere; he was in motion
in pursuit of his original British character. What was this journey
he is said to have been performing in pursuit of his original
character? He had passed from one part of the dominions of the
united provinces to another. He had moved his residence from St.
Eustatius to Holland, where he remained from the year 1776 till
1781 -- a time of sufficient duration for the acquisition of a
domicile had he not previously acquired it. This change of
residence, to make the most of it, is an act too equivocal in
itself to afford a strong presumption that it was made for the
purpose of returning to England. Had his stay in Holland even been
short, a colonial merchant trading to the mother country, may so
frequently be carried there on the business of his trade that the
fact can afford but weak evidence of an intention to discontinue
that trade; but an interval of between four and five years elapsed
between his arrival in Holland and his departure from that country,
during which time he is not stated to have suspended his commercial
pursuits, or to have made any arrangements, such as transferring
his property to England or making an establishment there, which
might indicate,
Page 12 U. S. 313
by overt acts, the intention of returning to his native country.
This journey to Holland, connected with this long residence, would
seem to me to be made as a Dutch merchant for the purpose of
establishing himself there, rather than a preparatory to his return
to England. But it was said that he intended to return to England.
How was this intention shown? If not by his journey to Holland and
his long residence there, it was only shown by his being employed
in the settlement of his accounts while a merchant at St.
Eustatius, a business in which he would of course engage, whatever
his future objects might be. This equivocal act does not appear to
have been explained otherwise than by his own declarations; nor
does it appear that these declarations were made previous to the
capture.
But could I even admit that the journey from St. Eustatius to
Holland was made with a view of passing ultimately from Holland to
England, yet the intention was not to be immediately executed. The
time of carrying it into effect was remote and uncertain, subject
to so many casualties that, had not the war supervened, it might
never have been carried into effect.
But laying aside these circumstances, the case proves only that
being
in itinere, in pursuit of the native character,
divests the enemy character acquired by residence and trading; it
is not insinuated that this character can be divested by no other
means.
Mr. Whitehill's case, though one of great severity, does not, I
think overturn the principle I am endeavoring to sustain. He went
to St. Eustatius but a few days before admiral Rodney and the
British forces made their appearance before that place. But it was
proved that he went for the purpose of making a permanent
settlement there. No intention to return appears to have been
alleged. The recency of his establishment seems to have been the
point on which his claim rested.
This case in principle bears on that before the Court so far
only as it proves that war does not under all circumstances
necessarily furnish a presumption that the foreigner residing in
the enemy country intends to return to his own. The circumstances
of this
Page 12 U. S. 314
case, so far as we understand them, were opposed to the
presumption that war could affect Mr. Whitehill's residence. War
actually existed at the time of his removal, and had that fact been
known to him, there would have been no hardship in his case. He
would have voluntarily taken upon himself the enemy character at
the same time that he took upon himself the Dutch character. There
is reason to believe that the court considered him in equal fault
with a person removing to a country known to be hostile. St.
Eustatius was deeply engaged in the American trade, which, from the
character of the contest, was, at that time, considered by England
as cause of war, and was the fact which drew on that island the
vengeance of Britain. Mr. Whitehill could have fixed himself there
only for the purpose of prosecuting that trade. "He went," says Sir
William Scott, "to a place which had rendered itself particularly
obnoxious by its conduct in that war." This was certainly a
circumstance which could not be disregarded, in deciding on the
probability of his intending to remain in the country in the event
of war.
These are the cases which appear to me to apply most strongly to
the question before this Court. No one of them decides in terms
that the property of a British subject residing abroad in time of
amity, which was shipped before a knowledge of war, and captured by
a British cruiser, shall depend conclusively on the residence of
the claimant at the time of capture or on his having, at that time,
put himself in motion to change his residence. In no case which I
have had an opportunity of inspecting, have I seen a
dictum to this effect. The cases certainly require an
intention on the part of the subject residing and trading abroad to
return to his own country, and that this intention should be
manifested by overt acts, but they do not, according to my
understanding of them, prescribe any particular overt act, as being
exclusively admissible; nor do they render it indispensable that
the overt act should, in all cases, precede the capture. If a
British subject residing abroad for commercial purposes takes
decided measures, on the breaking out of war, for returning to his
native country, and especially if he should actnally return, his
claim for the restitution of property shipped before his knowledge
of
Page 12 U. S. 315
the war would, I think, be favorably received in a British court
of admiralty, although his actual return, or the measures proving
his intention to return, were subsequent to the capture. Thus
understanding the English authorities I do not consider them as
opposing the principle I have laid down.
An American citizen having merely a commercial domicile in a
foreign country is not, I think, under the British authorities,
concluded, by his residence and trading in time of peace, from
averring and proving an intention to change his domicile on the
breaking out of war or from availing himself of that proof in a
court of admiralty. The intrinsic evidence arising from the change
in his situation, produced by war, renders it extremely probable
that in this new state of things, he must intend to return home,
and will aid in the construction of any overt act by which such
intention is manifested. Dissolution of partnership, discontinuance
of trade in the enemy country, a settlement of accounts, and other
arrangements obviously preparatory to a change of residence, are,
in my opinion, such overt acts as may, under circumstances showing
them to be made in good faith, entitle the claimant to
restitution.
I do not perceive the mischief or inconvenience that can result
from the establishment of this principle. Its operation is confined
to property shipped before a knowledge of the war. For if shipped
afterwards, it is clearly liable to condemnation unless it be
protected by the principle that it is merely a withdrawing of
funds. Being confined to shipments made before a knowledge of the
war, the evidence of an intention to change or continue a residence
in the country of the enemy, must be speedily given. A continuance
of trade after the war, unless, perhaps, under very special
circumstances, and for the mere purpose of closing transactions
already commenced, would fix the national character and the
domicile previously acquired. An immediate discontinuance of trade,
and arrangements for removing, followed by actual removal within a
reasonable time, unless detained by causes which might sufficiently
account for not removing, would fix the intention to change the
domicile, and show that the intention to return had never been
abandoned; that the intention to remain always had never
Page 12 U. S. 316
been formed. It is a case in which, if in any that can be
imagined, justice requires that the citizen, having entirely
recovered his national character by his own act, and by an act
which shows that he never intended to part with it finally, should,
by a species of the
jus postliminii, be allowed to aver
the existence of that character at the instant of capture. In the
establishment of such a principle, I repeat, I can perceive no
danger. In its rejection, I think I perceive much injustice. An
individual whose residence abroad is certainly innocent and lawful,
perhaps advantageous to his country, who never intended that
residence to be permanent, or to continue in time of war, finds
himself, against his will, clothed with the character of an enemy
so conclusively that not even a return to his native country can
rescue from that character and from confiscation property shipped
in the time of real or supposed peace. My sense of justice revolts
from such a principle.
In applying this opinion to the claimants before the Court, I
should be regulated by their conduct after a knowledge of the war.
If they continued their residence and trade after that knowledge,
at any rate after knowing that the repeal of the orders in council
was not immediately followed by peace, their claim to restitution
would be clearly unsustainable. If they took immediate measures for
returning to this country, and have since actually returned, or
have assigned sufficient reasons for not returning, their property
I think may be capable of restitution. Some of the claimants would
come within one description, some within the other. It would, under
the opinion given by the court, be equally tedious and useless to
go through their cases.
My reasoning has been applied entirely to the case of native
Americans. This course has been pursued for two reasons. It
presents the argument in what I think its true light, and the
sentence of condemnation makes no discrimination between native and
other citizens.
The claimants are natives of that country with which we are at
war, who have been naturalized in the United States. It is
impossible to deny that many of the strongest arguments urged to
prove the probability that war must determine the native American
citizen to abandon
Page 12 U. S. 317
the country of the enemy and return home are inapplicable, or
apply but feebly, to citizens of this description. Yet I think it
is not for the United States, in such a case as this, to
discriminate between them.
I will not pretend to say what distinctions may or may not exist
between these two classes of citizens, in a contest of a different
description. But in a contest between the United States and the
naturalized citizen, in a claim set up by the United States to
confiscate his property, he may, I think, protect himself by any
defense which would protect a native American. In the prosecution
of such a claim, the United States is, I think, if I may be excused
for borrowing from the common law a term peculiarly appropriate,
estopped from saying that they have not placed this adopted son on
a level with those born in their family.
LIVINGSTON, J. concurred in opinion with THE CHIEF JUSTICE.