1. In a judicial proceeding to confiscate stocks in a railroad
company under the Acts of Congress of August 6, 1861, and July 17,
1862, the person whose property has been seized, may sue out a writ
of error though not a claimant in the court below. (
McVeigh v.
United States, supra, 78
U. S. 259, affirmed)
2. Seizure of such stocks may be made by giving notice of
seizure to the president or vice-president of the railroad company,
and a seizure thus made by the marshal in obedience to a warrant
and monition is sufficient to give the district court
jurisdiction.
3. Stocks and credits are attachable in admiralty and revenue
cases by means of the simple service of a notice, without the aid
of any statute.
4. In admiralty and revenue cases, when a default has been duly
entered to a monition founded on an information averring the facts
necessary to a condemnation, it has substantially the effect of a
default to a summons in a court of common law. It establishes the
fact pleaded and justifies a decree of condemnation.
5. Where a court having jurisdiction of the case and of the
parties enters a judgment, there is a presumption that all the
facts necessary to warrant the judgment have been found if they are
sufficiently averred in the pleadings.
6. A trial by jury in cases of seizure upon land is not
necessary when there are no issues of fact to be determined.
7. The confiscation acts of August 6, 1861, and July 17, 1862,
are constitutional. Excepting the first four sections of the latter
act they are an exercise of the war powers of the government, and
not an exercise of its sovereignty or municipal power. Consequently
they are not in conflict with the restrictions of the 5th and 6th
amendments of the Constitution.
8. In the war of the rebellion, the United States had
belligerent as well as sovereign rights. They had, therefore, a
right to confiscate the property of public enemies wherever found,
and also a right to punish offenses against their sovereignty.
9. The right of confiscation exists as fully in case of a civil
war as it does when the war is foreign, and rebels in arms against
the lawful government or persons inhabiting the territory
exclusively within the control of the rebel belligerent may be
treated as public enemies. So
Page 78 U. S. 269
may adherents or aiders and abettors of such a belligerent,
though not resident in such enemy's territory.
10. It is within the power of Congress to determine what
property of public enemies shall be confiscated, and the fact that
by the statutes of 1861 and 1862, only the property of certain
classes of enemies is directed to be seized and confiscated does
not show that they were intended to be an exercise of mere
municipal power, rather than an exertion of belligerent rights.
This was a proceeding begun originally in the district court for
the district just named to forfeit certain personal property
belonging to one Samuel Miller, now deceased, in his lifetime,
under the Act of Congress of August 6, 1861, entitled "An act to
confiscate property used for insurrectionary purposes" [
Footnote 1] and the Act of July 17,
1862, entitled "An act to suppress insurrection, to punish treason
and rebellion, to seize and confiscate the property of rebels, and
for other purposes." [
Footnote
2]
The Act of August 6, 1861, provides that during the then
existing or any future insurrection against the government of the
United States, after the President shall have declared by his
proclamation that the laws of the United States are opposed, and
the execution thereof is obstructed by combinations too powerful to
be suppressed by the ordinary course of judicial proceedings or by
the power vested in the marshals by law, property of any kind,
purchased or acquired, sold or given with intent to use or
employ the same or to suffer the same to be used or employed in
aiding, abetting, or promoting such insurrection, and also any
property which the owners shall knowingly use or employ, or consent
to be used or employed for that purpose, shall be lawful subjects
of capture and prize wherever found, and that it shall be the duty
of the President to cause the same to be seized, confiscated, and
condemned.
* The Act of July 17, 1862, contains fourteen sections. The
first prescribes the punishment for treason, punishing
Page 78 U. S. 270
it with death, or in the discretion of the court with
imprisonment and fine, and liberating the offender's slaves.
The second provides for the punishment of the offense of
inciting, setting on foot, or engaging in any rebellion or
insurrection against the authority of the United States or the laws
thereof or engaging in or giving aid and comfort to the rebellion
then existing.
The third declares that parties guilty of either of the offenses
thus described shall be forever incapable and disqualified to hold
any office under the United States.
The fourth provides that the act shall not affect the
prosecution, conviction, or punishment of persons guilty of treason
before the passage of the act unless such persons are convicted
under the act itself.
The fifth section enacts:
"That to insure the speedy termination of the present rebellion,
it shall be the duty of the president of the United States to cause
the seizure of all the estate and property, money, stocks, credits,
and effects of the persons hereinafter named in this section, and
to apply and use the same, and the proceeds thereof, for the
support of the army of the United States, that is to say:"
"
First. Of any person hereafter acting as an officer of
the army or navy of the rebels, in arms against the government of
the United States."
"
Secondly. Of any person hereafter acting as President,
Vice-President, member of Congress, judge of any court, cabinet
officer, foreign minister, commissioner, or consul of the so-called
Confederate States of America."
"
Thirdly. Of any person acting as governor of a state,
member of a convention or legislature, or judge of any court of any
of the so-called Confederate States of America."
"
Fourthly. Of any person who having held an office of
honor, trust, or profit in the United States, shall hereafter hold
an office in the so-called Confederate States of America."
"
Fifthly. Of any person hereafter holding any office or
agency under the government of the so-called Confederate States of
America, or under any of the several states of the said
Confederacy, or the laws thereof, whether such office or agency
be
Page 78 U. S. 271
national, state, or municipal in its name or character:
provided that the persons, thirdly, fourthly, and fifthly,
above described shall have accepted their appointment or election
since the date of the pretended ordinance of secession of the
state, or shall have taken an oath of allegiance to, or to support
the constitution of the so-called Confederate States."
"
Sixthly. Of any person who, owning property in any
loyal state or territory of the United States or in the District of
Columbia shall hereafter assist and give aid and comfort to such
rebellion, and all sales, transfers, or conveyances of any such
property, shall be null and void; and it shall be a sufficient bar
to any suit brought by such person for the possession or the use of
such property, or any of it, to allege and prove that he is one of
the persons described in this section."
The 6th section makes it the duty of the President to seize and
use as aforesaid all the estate, property, moneys, stocks, and
credits of persons within any state or territory of the United
States, other than those named in the 5th section, who, being
engaged in armed rebellion or aiding and abetting the same shall
not, within sixty days after public warning and proclamation duly
made by the President of the United States, cease to aid,
countenance, and abet such rebellion and return to their allegiance
to the United States.
The 7th section provides:
"That to secure the condemnation and sale of any of such
property
after the same shall have been seized, so that it
may be made available for the purpose aforesaid, proceedings
in
rem shall be instituted in the name of the United States in
any district court thereof, or in any territorial court, or in the
United States District Court for the District of Columbia, within
which the property above described, or any part thereof, may be
found or into which the same, if movable, may first be brought,
which proceedings shall conform
as nearly as may be to
proceedings in admiralty or revenue cases, and
if
said property, whether real or personal,
shall be found to
have belonged to a person engaged in rebellion or who has given aid
or comfort thereto, the same shall be condemned
as enemy's
property and become the property of the United States, and may
be disposed of as the court
Page 78 U. S. 272
shall decree, and the proceeds thereof paid into the Treasury of
the United States for the purposes aforesaid."
The 8th section authorizes the said courts to make such orders,
and establish such forms of decrees of sale, and direct such deeds
and conveyances to be executed, where real estate shall be the
subject of sale, as shall fitly and efficiently effect the purposes
of the act, and vest in the purchasers of the property good and
valid titles.
The 9th, 10th, and 11th sections relate to slaves. They declare
that all slaves of persons engaged in rebellion against the
government of the United States, or who should in any way give aid
and comfort thereto, escaping within our lines, or captured from
such persons, or deserted by them should be deemed captives of war,
and forever free; that escaping slaves of such owners should not be
delivered up, and that no person engaged in the military or naval
service should, under any pretense whatever, surrender slaves to
claimants. They provide also for the employment of persons of
African descent in the suppression of the rebellion.
The 13th section authorizes the President, at any time
thereafter, by proclamation, to extend to persons who may have
participated in the existing rebellion, pardon and amnesty, with
such exceptions, and at such time and on such conditions, as he may
deem expedient.
The 14th section gives the courts aforesaid full power to
institute proceedings, make orders and decrees, issue process, and
do all other things to carry the act into effect.
Whilst this Act of July 17, 1862, was pending before the
President for consideration, it was understood that he was of
opinion that it was unconstitutional in some particulars, and that
he intended to veto it. His objections having been communicated to
members of the House of Representatives, where the act originated,
a joint resolution explanatory of the act was introduced and passed
by that body, to obviate his objections, which were that the act
disregarded the Constitution, which, while ordaining that the
Congress shall have power to declare the punishment of treason,
ordains
Page 78 U. S. 273
also [
Footnote 3] that "no
attainder of treason shall work corruption of blood or forfeiture
except during the life of the person attainted." This latter clause
was considered by the President as a restriction upon the power of
Congress to prescribe as a punishment for treason the forfeiture of
the real property of the offender beyond his natural life. The
Senate, being also informed of the objections of the President,
concurred in the resolution. It was then sent to the President, and
was received by him before the expiration of the ten days allowed
him for its consideration. He returned the act and resolution
together to the House with a message in which he stated that
considering the act and the resolution explanatory of the act as
substantially one, he had approved and signed both. He stated also
that he had prepared the draft of a message stating his objections
to the act becoming a law, a copy of which draft he transmitted.
The following is a copy of the joint resolution: [
Footnote 4]
"
Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States, in Congress assembled that the provisions of
the third clause of the fifth section of 'An act to suppress
insurrection, to punish treason and rebellion, to seize and
confiscate the property of rebels, and for other purposes' shall be
so construed as not to apply to any act or acts done prior to the
passage thereof; nor to include any member of a state legislature
or judge of any state court who has not, in accepting or entering
upon his office, taken an oath to support the Constitution of the
so-called Confederate States of America, nor shall any punishment
or proceedings under said act be so construed as to work a
forfeiture of the real estate of the
offender
beyond his natural life."
** In order to carry out these Acts of August 6, 1861, and July
17, 1862, the President charged the Attorney General with the
superintendence and direction of all proceedings under them, and
authorized and required him to give to the district attorneys and
marshals such instructions and directions
Page 78 U. S. 274
as he might find needful and convenient, touching all seizures,
proceedings, and condemnations under them. Accordingly, on the 8th
of January, 1863, the Attorney General issued general instructions
on the subject to district attorneys and marshals. Among these
instructions the following were given with regard to the seizure of
property:
"All seizures will be made by the marshal of the proper
district, under written authority to be given him by the
district attorney, specifying with reasonable certainty
the property to be seized, and the owner whose right is sought to
be confiscated."
"When the marshal has seized any property under such authority,
he will, without any unnecessary delay, make a true return thereof
in writing
to the district attorney."
"Where the state law directs the method of seizure, it should be
conformed to as nearly as may be consistently with the objects of
the acts of Congress. If the thing to be seized be
personal property, it ought to be
actually seized and
safely kept; if real estate, the marshal ought to seize all
the right, title, interest, and estate of the accused party, giving
notice in writing of the seizure to the tenants in possession, if
any;
if stocks or other intangible property, the marshal ought
(if there be no specific method prescribed by the state law) to
describe the property as plainly as he can in his return, and leave
the court to determine the sufficiency of the seizure."
*** On the 24th of November, 1863, the District Attorney for the
Eastern District of Michigan issued the following order to the
marshal of that district:
"OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY OF THE UNITED STATES"
"FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN"
"DETROIT, November 24, 1863"
"TO CHARLES DICKEY, ESQ.,"
"Marshal of the United States for Eastern District of
Michigan"
"You are hereby directed, under and by virtue of the Acts of
Congress of August 6, 1861, and July 17, 1862, commonly called the
Confiscation Acts, to seize all those 200 shares of common stock in
the Michigan Southern and Northern Indiana Railroad Company, a
corporation created under and by virtue
Page 78 U. S. 275
of the laws of the State of Michigan and represented by one
certificate for 50 shares, numbered 2767, and dated January 8,
1861, and by one certificate for 150 shares, numbered 3678, and
dated May 25, 1861. And all that stock in the Detroit, Monroe &
Toledo Railroad Company, a corporation created under and by virtue
of the laws of the state of Michigan, to-wit:"
Stock certificate, No. 113, dated March 5, 1857, for 100
shares
Stock certificate, No. 120, dated March 12, 1857, for 100
shares
Stock certificate, No. 129, dated April 7, 1857, for 100
shares
Stock certificate, No. 187, dated Sept. 1, 1860, for 20
shares
Stock certificate, No. 193, dated Nov. 1, 1860, for 23
shares
---
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . 343 shares
"Making in all 200 shares common stock of Michigan Southern
& Northern Indiana Railroad Company and 343 shares stock
Detroit, Monroe & Toledo Railroad Company and all bonds and the
coupons thereto attached, issued by said companies, and all
dividends declared by said companies, and all interest and other
moneys due upon said stock, bonds, coupons, and dividends belonging
to Samuel Miller, of the County of Amherst, in the State of
Virginia. And you are further ordered to leave a copy of the said
seizure, certified by you, with the clerk, treasurer, or cashier of
the companies, if there be any such officer, and if not then with
any officer or person who has at the time the custody of the books
and papers of the corporations, and to require a certificate of the
amount of interest held by said Miller in said coupons. And you are
further directed to make true return to me in writing of your
doings under this order."
"ALFRED RUSSELL"
"United States District Attorney, Eastern District of
Michigan"
On the 6th of February, 1864, the marshal returned to the
district attorney that he had seized the shares, bonds, and coupons
attached, pursuant to his direction, stating the shares and the
dates of the certificates as in the order of the district attorney.
And he concluded his return as follows:
"I do further return, that I seized said stock
by serving a
notice of said seizure personally upon M. L. Sykes, Jr.,
Vice-President of the Michigan Southern & Northern Indiana
Railroad Company,
Page 78 U. S. 276
and President of the Detroit, Monroe and Toledo Railroad
Company."
By a stipulation of counsel, the instructions of the Attorney
General, the order of the district attorney to the marshal, and the
return of the marshal were made part of the record in the
cause.
On the 27th of February, 1864, the district attorney filed a
libel of information in the District Court for the Eastern District
of Michigan against the property. This libel stated that the
district attorney prosecuted the proceeding on behalf of the United
States and of the informer subsequently mentioned -- one Browning
-- against 200 shares of common stock in the Michigan Southern
& Northern Indiana Railroad Company; and 343 shares of the
Detroit, Monroe & Toledo Railroad Company, and all bonds and
coupons attached (describing them as in the order of the district
attorney to the marshal),
"the same being the property of Samuel Miller, of Virginia, a
rebel citizen, and inhabitant of the United States, who, being the
owner of said property, has knowingly used and employed, and has
consented to the use and employment of the same in aiding,
abetting, and promoting the existing insurrection against the
government of the United States and who, owning property in a loyal
state, has assisted and given aid and comfort to the present
rebellion against the authority of the United States."
The libel then proceeded to allege:
"1st. That the marshal
seized the property on the 5th
of February, 1864."
"2d. That on the 16th of August, 1861, the President by his
proclamation declared that insurrection existed in the States of
Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas;
that during the said insurrection,
after the President had
declared by proclamation that the laws of the United States were
opposed, and the execution thereof obstructed by combinations too
powerful to be suppressed by the ordinary course of judicial
proceedings or by the power vested in the marshals by law; and
after August 6, 1861, the said Samuel Miller purchased and
acquired
Page 78 U. S. 277
the said stocks, and the same were sold and given to him, with
intent to use and employ the same, and to suffer the same to be
used and employed in aiding, abetting, and promoting such
insurrection; and that being owner of the said property, he did
knowingly use and employ, and did knowingly consent to the use and
employment of the same in aiding, and abetting, and promoting the
said insurrection."
The libel then proceeded to state, that in November, 1863, one
Browning, residing in the City of New York, filed with the district
attorney information concerning the property and the facts above
described, and in consequence the proceedings were for the use of
such informer and the United States, in equal parts.
The libel then proceeded to make the following charges against
Miller.
1st. That at various times since July 17, 1862, he had acted as
an officer of the army, and also as an officer of the navy of the
rebels, in arms against the government of the United States.
2d. That since that period he had acted as a member of Congress,
also as a judge of a court, and also as a commissioner of the
so-called Confederate States of America.
3d. That at various times since that period he had acted as a
member of a convention, and also as a member of the legislature,
and also as a judge of a court of the State of Virginia, and also
of other states of the so-called Confederate States.
4th. That at various times since that period, having previously
held an office of honor, trust, and profit in the United States, he
had held an office in the Confederate States.
5th. That at various times since that period he had held offices
and agencies under the government of the Confederate States, and
under the State of Virginia, and under other states of the
confederacy.
6th. That at various times since that period he had given aid
and comfort to the rebellion, by procuring persons to enlist and
join the army of the rebels, and by inducing others
Page 78 U. S. 278
to assist in arming, equipping, transporting, and maintaining
such recruits.
The libel then further alleged the issue of a proclamation by
the President, July 25, 1862, warning all persons to cease
participating in the rebellion and to return to their allegiance to
the United States, and that Miller being engaged in armed rebellion
against the government, and in aiding and abetting it, did not
within sixty days after the proclamation cease to give aid and
countenance to the rebellion and return to his allegiance.
It alleged further that the property was situated within the
jurisdiction of the court and that the libellants were entitled to
have it condemned as confiscated and forfeited to the United
States, and concluded with a prayer for the usual process and
monition, and that a decree of condemnation be made of the property
to be disposed of to the use of the informer and the United States
in equal parts.
Upon this libel, process of the court was issued directed to the
marshal, commanding him "to hold the said stock -- the same having
been by you duly seized" until the further order of the court
touching the same and directing him to publish citation to all
persons interested in a newspaper in Detroit.
On the 5th of April, 1864, the marshal returned the process,
with his endorsement thus:
"I hereby certify and return that I have seized and
now
hold all the property described in the within writ, and
now hold the same subject to the future order of the said
court, and have given notice to all persons interested therein by
publication, as required in the within writ."
There was no personal service upon Miller nor on anyone
professing to represent him. No one appeared on his behalf or in
defense of the proceeding. On the 5th of April, 1864, on the day of
the return by the marshal of the warrant, after the default of all
persons had been entered and after reading the proof which had been
taken on the
Page 78 U. S. 279
part of the United States, a decree was entered condemning and
forfeiting the property to the United States, the record not
showing, however, a decree that the libel be taken
pro
confesso. By the decree a sale was ordered and the two
corporations were directed to cancel the old certificates of stock
and issue new certificates to the purchasers at such sale. It was
also decreed that after the payment of costs, the proceeds of the
sale should be divided between the United States and the
informer.
The proof produced at the hearing consisted of an
ex
parte deposition of one Thatcher, taken in New York. This
deposition was thus:
"I reside in New York city. I know Samuel Miller; he resides
three and a half miles south of Lynchburg, in the State of
Virginia. I do not know of any agent or attorney that he has in the
City of New York, nor do I believe that he has any in the Northern
states. I saw him about the 1st of July, 1863, at his home near
Lynchburg, Virginia. I had a conversation with him there at that
time. He told me that he was the owner of about $109,000 registered
Indiana state bonds. He also said no interest had been paid on them
since the 1st day of January, 1862, and when interest was demanded
of the agent in New York, he declined to pay it, saying the bonds
and interest had by the acts of Congress been forfeited to the
government of the United States. He also said to me in that
conversation that he approved of the acts of the Confederate
government, and that their ultimate success was as certain as it
was for the sun to rise in the morning, although the sacrifices he
knew would be great, and that he would be very willing to bear the
sacrifices with them; and that he was then giving one-tenth of all
his income for the support of the army of the Confederate
government, and was also contributing, independently of the
foregoing, a large amount to support the wives and children of the
soldiers in arms, and other contributions of almost daily
occurrence that were needed to keep matters moving. He said he was
giving as much for the wives and children of the soldiers as all
the rest of the county put together."
Subsequently application was made to the district court
Page 78 U. S. 280
to open the decree upon affidavits, which it was asserted showed
the loyalty of Miller, but the district court denied the
application, and on error to the circuit court, the decree was
affirmed. The case was brought to this Court on writ of error to
the circuit court.
Page 78 U. S. 292
MR. JUSTICE STRONG delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a proceeding under the Acts of Congress of August 6,
1861, and July 17, 1862, to confiscate shares of stock in two
corporations created by the State of Michigan. The stock had been
seized by the marshal of the district, acting indirectly under
orders of the President of the United States. The marshal made
return to the district attorney that he had seized it, with all
dividends, interest, and moneys due thereon, specifying in his
return the stock certificates by which it was represented and
describing the mode of seizure to have been serving a notice
thereof personally upon the vice-president of one company and upon
the president of the other. An information was then filed in the
district court, in the nature of a proceeding
in rem,
against the stock, averring it to be the property of Samuel Miller,
of Amherst County, Virginia, a rebel citizen and inhabitant of the
United States. The information further averred that the said Miller
was one of the persons described in the several clauses of the 5th
section of the act of 1862, and also that within the States of
Virginia and South Carolina, after the passage of the act, being
engaged in armed rebellion against the government of the United
States, and being engaged in aiding and abetting such armed
rebellion, he did not, within sixty days after the proclamation
(mentioned in the 6th section) had been made by the President,
cease to
Page 78 U. S. 293
aid, countenance, and abet said rebellion and did not and would
not return to his allegiance to the United States. Upon the
information thus filed, a warrant and monition were issued
commanding the marshal to hold the stocks and property thus
described, the same having been by him duly seized, until the
further order of the court touching the same, and to give notice,
as prescribed, that all persons having any interest in said
property or having anything to say why the same should not be
condemned as enemy's property and sold according to the prayer of
the libel might appear before the court at a time designated
therein and make their allegations in that behalf. To this writ or
monition the marshal returned as follows:
"I hereby certify and return that I have seized and now hold all
the property described in the within writ [the stocks aforesaid],
and now hold the same subject to the future order of said court,
and have given notice to all persons interested therein by
publication, as required in the within writ."
The record then shows that on the day designated in the
monition, after default of all persons had been duly entered and
after reading the depositions which had been taken on behalf of the
United States, the shares of stock were condemned as forfeited and
a writ of
venditioni exponas was ordered, under which they
were sold. After this, Miller applied by petition to the district
court, praying that the decree of condemnation might be opened and
set aside, but the prayer of the petition was denied. The case was
then removed to the circuit court by writ of error, and the decree
having been affirmed, the record has been brought into this Court
for review.
We notice at the outset an objection urged against the
competency of the plaintiff in error to sue out the writ which
brings the case here on the ground that he was not a claimant in
the district court, only to say that it is set at rest by the
decision made in
McVeigh v. United States, a case decided
at this term. [
Footnote 5]
Assuming, then, that the case is properly in this Court
Page 78 U. S. 294
and that the plaintiff in error has a right to be heard, we
proceed to notice the errors assigned.
The first is that there was no such seizure of the stocks as
gave the court jurisdiction to condemn them as forfeited and to
order their sale.
This was a fatal error if the fact was as claimed. In revenue
and admiralty cases, a seizure is undoubtedly necessary to confer
upon the court jurisdiction over the thing when the proceeding is
in rem. In most such cases, the
res is movable
personal property, capable of actual manucaption. Unless taken into
actual possession by an officer of the court, it might be eloigned
before a decree of condemnation could be made, and thus the decree
would be ineffectual. It might come into the possession of another
court, and thus there might arise a conflict of jurisdiction and
decision, if actual seizure and retention of possession were not
necessary to confer jurisdiction over the subject. But how can it
be maintained there was no sufficient seizure in this case? The
record shows one. The marshal returned to the warrant that he had
seized the property, and that he then held it subject to the
further order of the court. Why is not this conclusive? Can a
sheriff's or marshal's return to a writ be contradicted by a
plaintiff in error? It is true the return did not describe the mode
of seizure, but neither the writ nor the law required that more
than the fact should be stated. The return met all the exigencies
of the writ. It cannot be presumed, in the face of the record, that
an illegal seizure was made or that some act was done that did not
amount to a seizure. But it is said the warrant with monition did
not require the marshal to seize; that it only commanded him to
hold the stock,
the same having been by him duly
seized, until the further order of the court. Whether this was
not an order to seize as well as to hold after seizure we need not
determine. Confessedly the object of the writ was to bring the
property under the control of the court and keep it there, as well
as to give notice to the world. These objects would have been fully
accomplished if its direction had been nothing more than to hold
the property subject to
Page 78 U. S. 295
the order of the court, and to give notice. The marshal had
already seized the stock, and it remained in his possession. An
order to seize property already in his hands would have been
superfluous. All that was needed was that, having the property, he
should hold it subject to the order of the court. Thus held by its
officer, the jurisdiction was complete. But the writ was larger. It
commanded him to hold the property,
it having been duly
seized, and he returned a seizure. The act of Congress does
not require that proceedings in confiscation shall conform
precisely to those in admiralty or revenue cases, but only "as near
as may be." They must be adapted to the peculiarities of the case,
following proceedings in admiralty and revenue so nearly as may be,
consistently with the objects Congress had in view. Yet even in
admiralty it cannot be doubted, if a warrant with a monition should
command a marshal to hold goods already in his possession until the
further order of the court touching the same, and he should return
that he had seized them, and that he held them as required, the
jurisdiction of the court over them would be complete. To hold
otherwise would be to sacrifice the spirit to the letter of form,
the substance to the shadow.
It is insisted, however, that inasmuch as the return to the
warrant is silent respecting the mode of seizure, we may look to
the seizure made by the marshal under the executive order before
the information was filed. That was made by direction of the
district attorney, acting under authority of the President, and the
marshal, in reporting his action, returned that he seized the stock
"by serving a notice of said seizure personally upon the
vice-president of one company, and upon the president of the
other." It is assumed that the judicial seizure made under the
judicial warrant was made in the same way, or that it was the same
seizure, and it is argued that the action of the marshal did not
amount to a seizure effectual to bring the property within the
jurisdiction of the court. The first observation we have to make in
regard to this is that the plaintiff in error has no right to make
any such assumption. It is justified by
Page 78 U. S. 296
nothing in the record. True, a seizure under order of the
President was necessary to warrant the institution of judicial
proceedings for confiscation, and it may be, therefore, a proper
inquiry whether what the marshal did under the executive order
amounted to such a seizure. But the marshal's return to the
judicial warrant, and his report to the district attorney, speak of
distinct transactions, occurring at different times and under
different directions. Waiving this, however, and assuming that the
manner of seizure spoken of in the return to the warrant and
monition was the same as that described in the report to the
district attorney, we are of opinion the seizure was good and
effective, sufficient to give the court jurisdiction over the
property.
The Act of Congress of July 17, 1862, made it the duty of the
President to cause the seizure of all the estate, property, money,
stocks, credits, and effects of the persons described, and
in order to secure the condemnation and sale of such property,
after its seizure, directed judicial proceedings
in rem to
be instituted. It contemplated that every kind of property
mentioned could be seized effectually in some mode. It had in view
not only tangible property, but that which is in action. It named
stocks and credits, but it gave no directions respecting the mode
of seizure. It is therefore a fair conclusion that the mode was
intended to be such as is adapted to the nature of the property
directed to be seized and in use in courts of revenue and
admiralty. The modes of seizure must vary. Lands cannot be seized
as movable chattels may. Actual manucaption cannot be taken of
stocks and credits. But it does not follow from this that they are
incapable of being seized within the meaning of the act of
Congress. Seizure may be either actual or constructive. It does not
always involve taking into manual possession. Even in case of
chattels movable, taking part of the goods in a house under a
fi. fa. in the name of the whole, is a good seizure of
all. [
Footnote 6] An assertion
of control, with a present power and intent to exercise it, is
sufficient.
Page 78 U. S. 297
We are told there is no statute in Michigan that authorizes the
service of mesne process upon a corporation for the attachment of
its stock. Be it so. That does not show that stocks cannot be
seized or attached when Congress orders a seizure. Federal officers
and federal courts are not dependent upon state legislation for
power to lay hold of property. Can it be that the government may
seize credits and corporation stocks of public enemies in those
states where provision is made by state legislation for modes of
seizure of such property, but may not seize similar property of the
same enemies in other states where there are no such statutes?
There is, however, such a thing as seizure of corporation stocks in
Michigan on final process, effected by service of a copy of the
writ on an officer of the corporation, and similar modes of seizure
are in use in most, if not in all, the states. Garnishment almost
everywhere exists. What is that but substantial attachment? It
arrests the property in the hands of the garnishee, interferes with
the owner's or creditor's control over it, subjects it to the
judgment of the court, and therefore has the effect of a seizure.
In all cases where the garnishee is a debtor or where the
garnishment is of stocks, it is effected by serving notice upon the
debtor or corporation. A corporation holds its stock as a
quasi-trustee for its stockholders. The service of an
attachment, though it is but a notice, binds the debt or the stock
in the hands of the garnishee from the time of the service, and
thenceforward it is potentially in
"gremio legis." The
statute declares that proceedings to confiscate shall conform as
nearly as may be to proceedings in admiralty or revenue cases. Now
it is legitimate in certain proceedings in courts of admiralty to
attach credits and effects of such an intangible nature that they
cannot be taken into actual possession by the marshal, and the mode
of attachment is by notice, dependent upon no statutory enactment.
See Manro v. Almeida. [
Footnote 7] In that case, reference was made approvingly
to Clerke's Praxis, [
Footnote
8] where it appears that it is consistent with
Page 78 U. S. 298
the practice of the admiralty, in cases where there is no
property which the officer can attach by manucaption, to attach
goods or credits in the hands of third persons
by means of the
simple service of a notice. The language of this Court was
that,
"as goods
and credits in the hands of a third person,
wherever situated, may be attached
by notice, there cannot
be a reason assigned why the goods themselves, if accessible,
should not be actually attached, and although it is very clear that
the process of attaching by notice seems given as the alternative
when the officer cannot have access to the goods themselves, yet
all this may be confided to the discretion of the judge who orders
the process. [
Footnote 9]"
These are indeed proceedings to compel appearance, but they are
nevertheless attachments or seizures, bringing the subject seized
within the control of the court, and what is of primary importance,
they show that in admiralty practice, rights in action, things
intangible, as stocks and credits, are attached by notice to the
debtor or holder without the aid of any statute.
It was in this mode, known to the courts and dependent on no
statute, that the marshal seized the stock of the plaintiff in
error. It is impossible for us to hold that his act was no
sufficient seizure.
A single observation more upon this part of the case. The eighth
and the fourteenth sections of the act of 1862 empowered the courts
to make orders and decrees, to issue process, and do all other
things necessary to fitly and efficiently carry out the purposes of
the act, which were to seize and confiscate
(inter alia)
stocks and credits. Under this authority, the court might have made
an order, had it been necessary, prescribing as the mode of seizure
precisely what the marshal did. And if so it would be difficult to
maintain that in proceeding to adjudicate upon the stocks there was
not a recognition of the marshal's action as a valid seizure
equivalent to an antecedent order thus to seize. The decree
expressly declared that the stocks had been seized.
Page 78 U. S. 299
The second assignment of error is that there was no such hearing
and proof in the case as was necessary to a valid decree of
condemnation. Whether this assignment is well made must be
determined by the record. That shows an information containing
averments of all facts necessary to warrant a decree of
condemnation. It shown a warrant and monition, return of seizure
and publication of notice, and a decree setting forth that, the
warrant of confiscation and monition having been duly made and the
default of all persons having been duly entered, it was thereupon,
on motion of the district attorney and on reading and filing the
depositions taken on behalf of the United States, ordered,
sentenced, and decreed by the court that the shares of stock
standing in the name of Samuel Miller on the books of the companies
and belonging to him which had been before seized by the marshal in
this proceeding be condemned as forfeited to the United States.
Thus it appears a default was duly entered to a monition founded on
an information averring all necessary facts; that the decree was
entered on motion, after default and after reading depositions
taken on behalf of the United States.
But it is insisted the district court did not find that the
stocks belonged to a person engaged in the rebellion or who had
given aid or comfort thereto, which, it is said, are made necessary
findings by the seventh section of the act before a decree of
condemnation can be entered.
This is not an objection to the jurisdiction of the court. We
have already shown that was complete. It is an objection to the
regularity of proceeding, and it assumes that the record must show
affirmatively there was no irregularity. It presumes, therefore,
against the record. The general rule, however, is that in courts of
record, all things are presumed to have been rightly done.
[
Footnote 10] In courts of
limited jurisdiction, indeed, there is a presumption against
jurisdiction, but when that appears, they are entitled to the same
presumptions in favor of their action as other courts are.
Page 78 U. S. 300
The district and circuit courts are of limited jurisdiction, but
they are not inferior courts, and they are therefore entitled to
the same presumptions in their favor. Those presumptions are that
the court, having jurisdiction, and having entered a judgment, did
everything that was necessary to warrant its entry of the judgment.
Undoubtedly the contrary may be shown in a court of error, but the
burden of showing it is upon him who alleges error. The legal
intendment is against him. This doctrine is abundantly sustained by
the authorities. Thus, in
Railroad Company v. Stimpson,
[
Footnote 11] which was a
patent case, Judge Story said, "It is a presumption of law that all
public officers perform their official duties until the contrary is
proved. And when," said he,
"an act is to be done or patent granted upon evidence and proofs
to be laid before a public officer, upon which he is to decide, the
fact that he has done the act or granted the patent is
prima
facie evidence that the proofs have been regularly made and
were satisfactory. It is not then necessary for the patent to
contain any recitals that the prerequisites to the grant of it have
been duly complied with, for the law makes the presumption."
And in
Grignon's Lessee v. Astor, [
Footnote 12] which related to a proceeding
in rem, and where the order of sale did not set out the
facts which, under the law, must have existed before a sale could
be decreed, Mr. Justice Baldwin said,
"The record of the county court shows that there was a petition
representing some facts by the administrator, who prayed an order
of sale; that the court took those facts which were alleged in the
petition into consideration, and for these and divers other good
reasons ordered that he be empowered to sell. It did then appear to
the court that there were facts and reasons before them that
brought their power into action, and that it was exercised by
granting the prayer of the petitioner, and the decree of the court
does not specify the facts and reasons or refer to the evidence on
which they were made to appear to the judicial eye; they must have
been, and the law presumes
Page 78 U. S. 301
that they were, such as to justify this action."
So, in
Erwin v. Lowry, [
Footnote 13] Mr. Justice Catron, in delivering the
judgment of the Court, said,
"We hold that wherever a judgment is given by a court having
jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matter, the exercise
of jurisdiction warrants the presumption in favor of a purchaser
that the facts, which were necessary to be proved to confer
jurisdiction were found."
It is not, however, necessary to invoke the maxim
omnia
presumunter rite acta esse in support of this record. It
appears affirmatively that all the facts were found or established
which, under the act of Congress, were essential to justify the
judgment. It has been observed the information set out that the
stocks belonged to Samuel Miller, and that he was a person engaged
in the rebellion who had given aid or comfort thereto; that
monition was duly made, and that there was default of all persons
to appear and claim or show cause why the property should not be
condemned as enemy's property. The default appears to have been
duly entered. Were this, then, a proceeding according to the forms
of a common law action, the facts averred by the information would
be considered as established or confessed, and everything found
necessary for a judgment. The effect of a default to appear in an
admiralty or a revenue proceeding is ordinarily the same as in
other actions at law. It is a virtual confession. In Benedict's
Admiralty, [
Footnote 14] the
practice in proceedings
in rem is stated to be if no one
appears in response to the proclamation for all persons having
anything to say why the property should not be condemned to come
forward and make their allegations in that behalf, that on motion
of the libellant's proctor, the defaults are entered and a decree
of condemnation and sale is made on a brief statement by the
proctor of the cause of action. When the libellant's claim may not
cover the whole value of the property, there is a subsequent
hearing to ascertain the amount to which the libellant is entitled,
but the decree of condemnation and sale is entered on the default
alone. So the same
Page 78 U. S. 302
author says, [
Footnote
15]
"In cases of seizure, when no one appears, the decree of
condemnation is absolute, the only question being whether the
property be forfeited or not. In such cases, it is usual for the
district attorney, on his motion for condemnation, to state briefly
the substance of the libel and the cause of forfeiture."
In
United States v. Schooner Lion, [
Footnote 16] Judge Sprague admitted that in
some cases condemnation followed default of necessity without a
hearing, though, in the case then before him, he held that some
hearing was necessary because the act of Congress under which the
forfeiture was then sought (that of fishing vessels for violations
of law in obtaining fishing bounties) provided that after default,
the court should proceed to hear and determine the cause according
to law. The act under which these proceedings have been taken makes
no such requisition, and even in
United States v. Lion,
Judge Sprague said to what extent there must be a hearing must
depend upon the circumstances of the case. The court, said he, will
at least examine the allegations of the libel to see if they are
sufficient in law, and the return of the marshal, and such
affidavit or affidavits as the district attorney shall submit. He
added that a willful omission by the owners to answer might of
itself satisfy the court that a forfeiture should be decreed. This
in a case where the statute required a hearing after default. In
the present case, though governed by no such requirement, the court
did examine the depositions, and then, on motion of the district
attorney, condemned the property. We have said the acts of 1861 and
1862 do not require any hearing after a default has been duly
entered, as did the acts relative to forfeitures for violations of
law respecting fishing bounties. It has been suggested, however,
the act of 1789 directs that in admiralty proceedings there shall
be a hearing after default. But there is no warrant for the
suggestion. The act of 1789 contains no such provision. Neither the
19th section nor any other part of the act can be construed as
making any such requirement. No change is made in the usual course
of admiralty proceedings.
Page 78 U. S. 303
There is no essential difference between the forms of proceeding
or the practice in revenue cases and those in admiralty, except
where there are disputed facts. The former are described in
Manning's Exchequer Practice. [
Footnote 17] There, it appears that though generally
there is one proclamation to call in claimants, then an
appraisement, and a second proclamation inviting bidders for more
than the appraisement, many condemnations appear in the old records
upon a single proclamation. Default to the first is a default of
claimants; default to the second is a default of bidders. [
Footnote 18] Throughout the chapter,
condemnation by default is treated as in accordance with the
practice of the courts in such cases. In
Attorney General v.
Lade [
Footnote 19] may
be found an entire record of a revenue proceeding
in rem
to forfeit gold and silver coin seized for attempted exportation
out of the realm contrary to acts of Parliament. The record, after
reciting the information, seizure &c., proceeds as follows:
"Whereupon, proclamation being made for his said Majesty, as the
custom is, that if anyone would inform the Court here why the said
several pieces of gold and silver coin of this realm, and also the
said several pieces of foreign gold coin, should not, for the
reasons aforesaid, remain forfeited, he might come and he should be
heard, and no one appearing to do this, it is adjudged by the
barons here that the said several pieces of gold and silver coin of
this realm, and also the said several pieces of foreign gold coin,
do, for the reasons aforesaid, remain forfeited."
This judgment, on review, was held to be regular after the court
had ordered precedents to be searched. It thus appears that in
revenue cases, as in admiralty, default entered establishes the
facts averred in the libel or information as effectively as they
can be established on hearing, and warrants a decree of
condemnation if the information contains the necessary averments.
The second assignment of error cannot, therefore, be sustained.
The third assignment is that as the proceedings related
Page 78 U. S. 304
to seizure on land, the case was one of common law jurisdiction,
and there should have been a trial by jury; and we are referred to
Union Insurance Company v. United States, [
Footnote 20]
Armstrong's Foundry,
[
Footnote 21] and other
kindred cases. But in this cause there was a default. After the
default, there was no fact to be ascertained. The province of a
jury in suits at common law is to decide issues of fact. When there
are no such issues, there can be nothing for a jury to try. This
assignment is therefore without merit. None of the cases cited go
further than to hold that issues of fact, on the demand of either
party, must be tried by jury.
It remains to consider the objection urged on behalf of the
plaintiff in error that the acts of Congress under which these
proceedings to confiscate the stock have been taken are not
warranted by the Constitution, and that they are in conflict with
some of its provisions. The objection starts with the assumption
that the purpose of the acts was to punish offenses against the
sovereignty of the United States, and that they are merely statutes
against crimes. If this were a correct assumption -- if the act of
1861 and the fifth, sixth, and seventh sections of the act of July
17, 1862, were municipal regulations only -- there would be force
in the objection that Congress has disregarded the restrictions of
the Fifth and Sixth Amendments of the Constitution. Those
restrictions, so far as material to the argument, are that no
person shall be held to answer for a capital or otherwise infamous
crime unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, that
no person shall be deprived of his property without due process of
law, and that in all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy
the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury of the
state and district wherein the crime shall have been committed. But
if the assumption of the plaintiff in error is not well made, if
the statutes were not enacted under the municipal power of Congress
to legislate for the punishment of crimes against the sovereignty
of the United States, if, on the contrary, they are an exercise
of
Page 78 U. S. 305
the war powers of the government, it is clear they are not
affected by the restrictions imposed by the Fifth and Sixth
Amendments. This we understand to have been conceded in the
argument. The question therefore is whether the action of Congress
was a legitimate exercise of the war power. The Constitution
confers upon Congress expressly power to declare war, grant letters
of marque and reprisal, and make rules respecting captures on land
and water. Upon the exercise of these powers no restrictions are
imposed. Of course the power to declare war involves the power to
prosecute it by all means and in any manner in which war may be
legitimately prosecuted. It therefore includes the right to seize
and confiscate all property of an enemy and to dispose of it at the
will of the captor. This is and always has been an undoubted
belligerent right. If there were any uncertainty respecting the
existence of such a right it would be set at rest by the express
grant of power to make rules respecting captures on land and water.
It is argued that though there are no express constitutional
restrictions upon the power of Congress to declare and prosecute
war, or to make rules respecting captures on land and water, there
are restrictions implied in the nature of the powers themselves.
Hence it is said the power to prosecute war is only a power to
prosecute it according to the law of nations, and a power to make
rules respecting captures is a power to make such rules only as are
within the laws of nations. Whether this is so or not we do not
care to inquire, for it is not necessary to the present case. It is
sufficient that the right to confiscate the property of all public
enemies is a conceded right. Now what is that right, and why is it
allowed? It may be remarked that it has no reference whatever to
the personal guilt of the owner of confiscated property, and the
act of confiscation is not a proceeding against him. The
confiscation is not because of crime, but because of the relation
of the property to the opposing belligerent, a relation in which it
has been brought in consequence of its ownership. It is immaterial
to it whether the owner be an alien or a friend, or even a citizen
or subject of the power that attempts to
Page 78 U. S. 306
appropriate the property. [
Footnote 22] In either case, the property may be liable
to confiscation under the rules of war. It is certainly enough to
warrant the exercise of this belligerent right that the owner be a
resident of the enemy's country, no matter what his nationality.
The whole doctrine of confiscation is built upon the foundation
that it is an instrument of coercion, which, by depriving an enemy
of property within reach of his power, whether within his territory
or without it, impairs his ability to resist the confiscating
government, while at the same time it furnishes to that government
means for carrying on the war. Hence any property which the enemy
can use, either by actual appropriation or by the exercise of
control over its owner, or which the adherents of the enemy have
the power of devoting to the enemy's use, is a proper subject of
confiscation.
It is also to be observed that when the acts of 1861 and 1862
were passed, there was a state of war existing between the United
States and the rebellious portions of the country. Whether its
beginning was on the 27th or the 30th of April, 1861, or whether it
was not until the Act of Congress of July 13 of that year, is
unimportant to this case, for both acts were passed after the
existence of war was alike an actual and a recognized fact.
[
Footnote 23] War existing,
the United States were invested with belligerent rights in addition
to the sovereign powers previously held. Congress had then full
power to provide for the seizure and confiscation of any property
which the enemy or adherents of the enemy could use for the purpose
of maintaining the war against the government. It is true the war
was not between two independent nations. But because a civil war,
the government was not shorn of any of those rights that belong to
belligerency. Mr. Wheaton, in his work on international law,
[
Footnote 24] asserts the
doctrine to be that
"the general usage of nations regards such a war as entitling
both the contending parties to all the rights of war as against
each other, and even as it respects neutral nations."
It would be absurd to hold that
Page 78 U. S. 307
while in a foreign war, enemy's property may be captured and
confiscated as a means of bringing the struggle to a successful
completion, in a civil war of equal dimensions, requiring quite as
urgently the employment of all means to weaken the belligerent in
arms against the government, the right to confiscate the property
that may strengthen such belligerent does not exist. There is no
such distinction to be made. Every reason for the allowance of a
right to confiscate in case of foreign wars exists in full force
when the war is domestic or civil. It is, however, unnecessary to
pursue this branch of the subject farther. In the
Amy
Warwick [
Footnote 25]
and in the
Prize Cases, [
Footnote 26] it was decided that in the war of the
rebellion the United States sustained the double character of a
belligerent and a sovereign, and had the rights of both. [
Footnote 27]
We come then directly to the question whether the act of 1861
and the fifth, sixth, and seventh sections of the act of 1862 were
an exercise of this war power, the power of confiscation, or
whether they must be regarded as mere municipal regulations for the
punishment of crime. The answer to this question must be found in
the nature of the statutes and of the proceedings directed under
them. In the case of
Rose v. Himely, [
Footnote 28] Chief Justice Marshall, in
delivering the opinion of the Court, said:
"But admitting a sovereign, who is endeavoring to reduce his
revolted subjects to obedience, to possess both sovereign and
belligerent rights and to be capable of acting in either character,
the manner in which he acts must determine the character of the
act. If, as a legislator, he publishes a law ordaining punishment
for certain offenses, which law is to be applied by courts, the
nature of the law and of the proceedings under it will decide
whether it is an exercise of belligerent rights or exclusively of
his sovereign power, and whether
Page 78 U. S. 308
the court, in applying this law to particular cases, acts as a
prize court or as a court enforcing municipal regulations."
Apply this test to the present case.
It is hardly contended that the act of 1861 was enacted in
virtue of the sovereign rights of the government. It defined no
crime. It imposed no penalty. It declared nothing unlawful. It was
aimed exclusively at the seizure and confiscation of property used
or intended to be used to aid, abet, or promote the rebellion, then
a war, or to maintain the war against the government. It treated
the property as the guilty subject. It cannot be maintained that
there is no power to seize property actually employed in furthering
a war against the government or intended to be thus employed. It is
the act of 1862 the constitutionality of which has been principally
assailed. That act had several purposes, as indicated in its title.
As described, it was "An act to suppress insurrection, to punish
treason and rebellion,
to seize and confiscate the property of
rebels, and for other purposes." The first four sections
provided for the punishment of treason, inciting or engaging in
rebellion or insurrection, or giving aid and comfort thereto. They
are aimed at individual offenders, and they were undoubtedly an
exercise of the sovereign, not the belligerent, rights of the
government. But when we come to the fifth and the following
sections, we find another purpose avowed -- not punishing treason
and rebellion, as described in the title, but that other purpose,
described in the title, as "seizing and confiscating the property
of rebels." The language is
"That to insure the speedy termination of the present rebellion,
it shall be the duty of the President of the United States to cause
the seizure of all the estate and property, money, stocks, credits,
and effects of the persons hereinafter named in this section, and
to apply and use the same, and the proceeds thereof, for the
support of the army of the United States."
Then follows a description of six classes of persons, those
referred to as the persons whose property should be liable to
seizure. The sixth section describes still another class. Now the
avowed purpose of all this was not to
Page 78 U. S. 309
reach any criminal personally, but "to insure the speedy
termination of the rebellion" then present, which was a war which
Congress had recognized as a war and which this Court has decided
was then a war. The purpose avowed then was legitimate, such as
Congress, in the situation of the country, might constitutionally
entertain, and the provisions made to carry out the purpose,
viz., confiscation, were legitimate unless applied to
others than enemies. It is argued, however, that the enactments
were for the confiscation of property of rebels, designated as
such, and that the law of nations allows confiscation only of
enemy's property. But the argument overlooks the fact that the
rebellion then existing was a war. And if so, those engaged in it
were public enemies. The statute referred exclusively to the
rebellion then in progress. Whatever may be true in regard to a
rebellion which does not rise to the magnitude of a war, it must be
that when it has become a recognized war, those who are engaged in
it are to be regarded as enemies. And they are not the less such
because they are also rebels. They are equally well designated as
rebels or enemies. Regarded as
descriptio personarum, the
words "rebels" and "enemies," in such a state of things, are
synonymous. And, if this is true, it is evident the statute, in
denominating the war rebellion and the persons whose property it
attempts to confiscate rebels, may at least have intended to speak
of a war and of public enemies. Were this all that could be said,
it would be enough, for when a statute will bear two constructions,
one of which would be within the constitutional power of Congress
to enforce and the other a transgression of the power, that must be
adopted which is consistent with the Constitution. It is always a
presumption that the legislature acts within the scope of its
authority. But there is much more in this case. It is impossible to
read the entire act without observing a clear distinction between
the first four sections, which look to the punishment of individual
crime and which were therefore enacted in virtue of the sovereign
power, and the subsequent sections, which have in view a state of
public war and which direct
Page 78 U. S. 310
the seizure of the property of those who were in fact enemies
for the support of the armies of the country. The ninth, tenth, and
eleventh sections are in this view significant. They declared that
all slaves of persons engaged in rebellion against the government
of the United States, or who should in any way give aid and comfort
thereto, escaping within our lines or captured from such persons or
deserted by them, should be deemed captives of war, and forever
free; that escaping slaves of such owners should not be delivered
up, and that no person engaged in the military or naval service
should under any pretense whatever surrender slaves to claimants.
The act then goes on to provide for the employment of persons of
African descent in the suppression of the rebellion. Can it be that
all this was municipal legislation, that it had no reference to the
war power of the government, that it was not an attempt to enforce
belligerent rights? We do not think so. We are not to strain the
construction of an act of Congress in order to hold it
unconstitutional.
It has been argued, however, that the provisions of the act for
confiscation are not confined in their operation to the property of
enemies, but that they are applicable to the property of persons
not enemies within the laws of nations. If by this is meant that
they direct the seizure and confiscation of property not
confiscable under the laws of war, we cannot yield to it our
assent. It may be conceded that the laws of war do not justify the
seizure and confiscation of any private property except that of
enemies. But who are to be regarded as enemies in a domestic or
civil war? In case of a foreign war, all who are inhabitants of the
enemy's country, with rare exceptions, are enemies whose property
is subject to confiscation, and it seems to have been taken for
granted in this case that only those who during the war were
inhabitants of the Confederate States were liable to have their
property confiscated. Such a proposition cannot be maintained. It
is not true even in case of a foreign war. It is ever a presumption
that inhabitants of an enemy's territory are enemies, even though
they are not participants in
Page 78 U. S. 311
the war, though they are subjects of neutral states, or even
subjects or citizens of the government prosecuting the war against
the state within which they reside. But even in foreign wars,
persons may be enemies who are not inhabitants of the enemy's
territory. The laws of nations nowhere declare the contrary. And it
would be strange if they did, for those not inhabitants of a
foreign state may be more potent and dangerous foes than if they
were actually residents of that state. By uniting themselves to the
cause of a foreign enemy, they cast in their lot with his, and they
cannot be permitted to claim exemptions which the subjects of the
enemy do not possess. Depriving them of their property is a blow
against the hostile power quite as effective, and tending quite as
directly to weaken the belligerent with whom they act, as would be
confiscating the property of a noncombatant resident. Clearly,
therefore, those must be considered as public enemies, and amenable
to the laws of war as such, who, though subjects of a state in
amity with the United States, are in the service of a state at war
with them, and this not because they are inhabitants of such a
state, but because of their hostile acts in the war. Even under
municipal law this doctrine is recognized. Thus, in
Vaughan's
Case, [
Footnote 29]
Lord Holt laid down the doctrines,
"If the states (Dutch) be in alliance, and the French at war
with us, and certain Dutchmen turn rebels to the states, and fight
under the command of the French King, they are enemies to us, for
the French subjection makes them French subjects in respect of all
nations but their own."
So "if an Englishman assist the French, and fight against the
King of Spain, our ally, this is an adherence to the King's
enemies."
Still less is it true that the laws of nations have defined who,
in the case of a civil war, are to be regarded and may be treated
as enemies. Clearly, however, those must be considered such who,
though subjects or citizens of the lawful government, are residents
of the territory under the
Page 78 U. S. 312
power or control of the party resisting that government. Thus
much may be gathered from the
Prize Cases. And why are not
all who act with that party? Have they not voluntarily subjected
themselves to that party; identified themselves with it? And is it
not as important to take from them the sinews of war, their
property, as it is to confiscate the property of rebel enemies
resident within the rebel territory? It is hard to conceive of any
reason for confiscating the property of one class that does not
equally justify confiscating the property of the other. We have
already said that no recognized usage of nations excludes from the
category of enemies those who act with, or aid or abet and give
comfort to enemies, whether foreign or domestic, though they may
not be residents of enemy's territory. It is not without weight
that when the Constitution was formed its framers had fresh in view
what had been done during the Revolutionary war. Similar statutes
for the confiscation of property of domestic enemies, of those who
adhered to the British government, though not residents of Great
Britain, were enacted in many of the states, and they have been
judicially determined to have been justified by the laws of war.
They show what was then understood to be confiscable property, and
who were public enemies. At least they show the general
understanding that aiders and abettors of the public enemy were
themselves enemies, and hence that their property might lawfully be
confiscated. It was with these facts fresh in memory, and with a
full knowledge that such legislation had been common -- almost
universal -- that the Constitution was adopted. It did prohibit
ex post facto laws. It did prohibit bills of attainder.
They had also been passed by the states. But it imposed no
restriction upon the power to prosecute war or confiscate enemy's
property. It seems to be a fair inference from the omission that it
was intended the government should have the power of carrying on
war as it had been carried on during the Revolution, and therefore
should have the right to confiscate as enemy's property not only
the property of foreign enemies, but also that of domestic, and of
the aiders,
Page 78 U. S. 313
abettors, and comforters of a public enemy. The framers of the
Constitution guarded against excesses that had existed during the
Revolutionary struggle. It is incredible that if such confiscations
had not been contemplated as possible and legitimate, they would
not have been expressly prohibited, or at least restricted. We are
therefore of opinion that neither the act of 1861 nor that of 1862
is invalid because other property than that of public enemies is
directed to be confiscated. We do not understand the acts or either
of them to be applicable to any other than the property of enemies.
All the classes of persons described in the fifth and sixth
sections of the act of 1862 were enemies within the laws and usages
of war.
It is further objected on behalf of the plaintiff in error that
under the statute of 1862, the property of all enemies was not made
liable to confiscation. From this it is inferred that whether
persons were within the law or not depended not on their being
enemies, but on certain overt criminal acts described and defined
by the law. The fact asserted -- namely that all enemies were not
within the purview of the enactment -- we may admit, but we dissent
from the inference. Plainly it was competent for Congress to
determine how far it would exert belligerent rights, and it is
quite too large a deduction from the fact that the property only of
certain classes of enemies was directed to be confiscated that it
was not intended to confiscate the property of enemies at all. If
it be true that all the persons described in the fifth, sixth, and
seventh sections were enemies, as we have endeavored to show they
were, it cannot matter by what name they were called or how they
were described. The express declaration of the seventh section was
that their property should be condemned "as enemies' property" and
become the property of the United States, to be disposed of as the
court should decree, the proceeds being paid into the Treasury for
the purposes described, to-wit, the support of the army. It was
therefore as enemies' property, and not as that of offenders
against municipal law, that the statute directed its
confiscation.
Upon the whole, then, we are of opinion the Confiscation
Page 78 U. S. 314
Acts are not unconstitutional, and we discover no error in the
proceedings in this case.
Decree affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
12 Stat. at Large 319.
[
Footnote 2]
Ib., 589.
[
Footnote 3]
Article III.
[
Footnote 4]
12 Stat. at Large 627.
[
Footnote 5]
Supra, 78 U. S.
258.
[
Footnote 6]
Scott v. Scholey, 8 East 474.
[
Footnote 7]
23 U. S. 10
Wheat. 492-493.
[
Footnote 8]
By Hall, tit. 32, p. 70.
[
Footnote 9]
Vide also Conklin's Admiralty Practice 478;
Smith
v. Miln, Abbott's Admiralty 373, and our Admiralty Rules 2 and
37.
[
Footnote 10]
Broome's Legal Maxims 428.
[
Footnote 11]
39 U. S. 14
Pet. 458.
[
Footnote 12]
43 U. S. 2 How.
339.
[
Footnote 13]
48 U. S. 7 How.
181.
[
Footnote 14]
2d edition, ยง 452.
[
Footnote 15]
ยง 454.
[
Footnote 16]
1 Sprague 399.
[
Footnote 17]
Vol. i, chap. 1, Information
in rem.
[
Footnote 18]
Page 149.
[
Footnote 19]
Parker's Reports of Revenue Cases 57.
[
Footnote 20]
73 U. S. 6 Wall.
759.
[
Footnote 21]
73 U. S. 6 Wall.
766.
[
Footnote 22]
The Venus, 8
Cranch 253.
[
Footnote 23]
Prize Cases, 2
Black 635.
[
Footnote 24]
ยง 296.
[
Footnote 25]
Sprague 123.
[
Footnote 26]
67 U. S. 2
Black 673.
[
Footnote 27]
Rose v. Himely,
4 Cranch 241;
Cherriot v. Foussat, 3 Binney 252;
Dobree v. Napier, 3 Scott, 225;
Santissima
Trinidad, 7 Wheat. 283;
United
States v. Palmer, 3 Wheat. 635.
[
Footnote 28]
8 U. S. 4 Cranch
272.
[
Footnote 29]
2 Salkeld 635.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD, with whom concurred Mr. Justice CLIFFORD,
dissenting.
I am unable to agree with the majority of the Court in the
judgment just rendered in this case, and will state with as much
brevity as possible the grounds of my disagreement.
The case was brought for the forfeiture of personal property
belonging to the appellant, and is founded upon what is termed the
Confiscation Act of July 17, 1862. There is, it is true, a count in
the libel upon the Act of August 6, 1861, but no reliance has been
placed upon it to support the forfeiture. The case has proceeded
upon the theory that the stock alleged to have been seized by the
marshal was in Michigan, and had been there since it was issued, a
period anterior to the rebellion, and, of course, to the passage of
the act in question -- a position inconsistent with any claim that
the property had been subsequently purchased to be used, or had
been used, in aiding, abetting, or promoting the rebellion. No
further attention will therefore be given to that act.
I shall direct my attention in the first place to the validity
of the legislation embodied in the Act of July 17, 1862, and then,
assuming that legislation to be valid and in accordance with the
Constitution, shall consider whether the proceedings in the case
are in conformity with its requirements.
The authority for the legislation in question must be found in
what are termed the war powers of the government, which, so far as
they touch upon the present subjects of inquiry, are the power to
declare war, to suppress insurrection, and to make rules concerning
captures on land and water -- or in what is termed the municipal
power of the government to legislate for the punishment of offenses
against the United States.
It has been held that when the late rebellion assumed the
proportions of a territorial civil war, the inhabitants of the
Page 78 U. S. 315
Confederate States and the inhabitants of the loyal states
became reciprocally enemies to each other, and that the inhabitants
of the Confederate States engaged in the rebellion or giving aid
and comfort thereto were at the same time amenable to the municipal
law as rebels. The correctness of this determination is not
disputed. The question is not as to the right of the United States
to adopt either course against the inhabitants of the Confederate
States engaged in the rebellion -- that is, the right to treat them
as public enemies and to apply to them all the harsh measures
justified by the rules of war, or the right to prosecute them in
the ordinary modes of criminal procedure for the punishment of
treason -- but what course has Congress by its legislation
authorized. For it is evident that legislation founded upon the war
powers of the government and directed against the public enemies of
the United States is subject to different considerations and
limitations from those applicable to legislation founded upon the
municipal power of the government and directed against criminals.
Legislation in the former case is subject to no limitations except
such as are imposed by the law of nations in the conduct of war.
Legislation in the latter case is subject to all the limitations
prescribed by the Constitution for the protection of the citizen
against hasty and indiscriminate accusation, and which insure to
him, when accused, a speedy and public trial by a jury of his
peers.
The war powers of the government have no express limitation in
the Constitution, and the only limitation to which their exercise
is subject is the law of nations. That limitation necessarily
exists. When the United States became an independent nation, they
became, to use the language of Chancellor Kent "subject to that
system of rules which reason, morality, and custom had established
among the civilized nations of Europe as their public law."
[
Footnote 2/1] And it is in the
light of that law that the war powers of the government must be
considered. The power to prosecute war
Page 78 U. S. 316
granted by the Constitution, as is well said by counsel, is a
power to prosecute war according to the law of nations, and not in
violation of that law. The power to make rules concerning captures
on land and water is a power to make such rules as Congress may
prescribe, subject to the condition that they are within the law of
nations. There is a limit to the means of destruction which
government, in the prosecution of war, may use, and there is a
limit to the subjects of capture and confiscation, which government
may authorize, imposed by the law of nations, and is no less
binding upon Congress than if the limitation were written in the
Constitution. [
Footnote 2/2] The
plain reason of this is, that the rules and limitations prescribed
by that law were in the contemplation of the parties who framed and
the people who adopted the Constitution.
Whatever any independent civilized nation may do in the
prosecution of war, according to the law of nations, Congress,
under the Constitution, may authorize to be done, and nothing
more.
Now, in
Brown v. United States, [
Footnote 2/3] Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, in delivering
the opinion of the Court, said that it was conceded that "war gives
to the sovereign full right to take the persons and confiscate the
property of the enemy wherever found," and added that
"the mitigations of this rigid rule, which the humane and wise
policy of modern times has introduced into practice, will more or
less affect the exercise of this right, but cannot impair the right
itself. That remains
Page 78 U. S. 317
undiminished, and when the sovereign authority shall choose to
bring it into operation the judicial department must give effect to
its will."
The question presented for consideration in that case was
whether enemy's property, found on land at the commencement of
hostilities with Great Britain in 1812, could be seized and
condemned as a necessary consequence of the declaration of war; and
the decision of the Court was that it could not be condemned
without an act of Congress authorizing its confiscation. The
language of the eminent Chief Justice is perhaps subject to some
qualification, if it was intended to state as a rule of public law
that all property of the enemy, whether on land or water, was
subject to confiscation. Mr. Wheaton, who is authority on all
questions of public law, says that by the modern usage of nations,
which has acquired the force of law,
"private property on land is exempt from confiscation, with the
exception of such as may become booty in special cases, when taken
from enemies in the field or in besieged towns, and of military
contributions levied upon the inhabitants of the hostile
territory,"
and that "this exemption extends even to the case of an absolute
and unqualified conquest of the enemy's country." [
Footnote 2/4]
And Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, in the subsequent case of
United States v. Percheman, [
Footnote 2/5] observed that it was unusual, even in
cases of conquest, for the conqueror to do more than to displace
the sovereign and assume dominion over the country, and that
"the modern usage of nations, which has become law, would be
violated; that sense of justice and right, which is acknowledged
and felt by the whole civilized world, would be outraged if private
property should be generally confiscated, and private rights
annulled."
But assuming the severe rule laid down by the Chief Justice to
be the true rule, it applies only to the property of enemies, and
by enemies is meant permanent inhabitants of the enemy's country.
It is their property alone which is the subject of seizure and
confiscation by authority of Congress, legislating under the war
powers. Their property is
Page 78 U. S. 318
liable, not by reason of any hostile disposition manifested by
them or hostile acts committed, or any violations of the laws of
the United States, but solely from the fact that they are
inhabitants of the hostile country, and thus in law are
enemies.
If we turn now to the Act of July 17, 1862, we find that its
provisions are not directed against enemies at all, but against
persons who have committed certain overt acts of treason. It does
not purport in any part of it to deal with enemies. It declares in
its title that its object is "to suppress insurrection, to punish
treason and rebellion, to seize and confiscate the property of
rebels, and for other purposes." The other purposes relate
principally to slaves, their employment or colonization, and the
power of the President to proclaim amnesty and pardon. They have no
bearing upon the questions under consideration, and need not be
further noticed. The first section of the act prescribes the
punishment for treason thereafter committed. It punishes it with
death, or, in the discretion of the court, with imprisonment for
not less than five years and a fine of not less than ten thousand
dollars; and it provides that the slaves of the party adjudged
guilty, if any he have, shall be declared free. The second section
provides for the punishment of the offense of inciting, setting on
foot, or engaging in any rebellion or insurrection against the
authority of the United States or the laws thereof, or engaging in
or giving aid and comfort to the rebellion then existing. The third
section declares that parties guilty of either of the offenses thus
described shall be forever incapable and disqualified to hold any
office under the United States. The fourth section provides that
the act shall not affect the prosecution, conviction, or punishment
of persons guilty of treason before the passage of the act, unless
such persons are convicted under the act itself.
Then follow the clauses which provide for the seizure and
confiscation of the property of certain classes of persons, who may
thereafter be guilty of certain overt acts of treason. They contain
no directions whatever for the seizure of the property
Page 78 U. S. 319
of enemies, but only of persons who may thereafter violate the
provisions of the act. Among the classes designated are included
persons who may thereafter hold any agency under the Confederate
States or under any state composing the Confederacy, and persons
owning property in any loyal state or territory of the United
States or District of Columbia, who shall thereafter assist and
give aid and comfort to the rebellion; persons who may or may not
be enemies in the sense in which the term is used in the law of
nations; that is, permanent inhabitants of the enemy's country. So
through all the provisions of the act, there is not a single clause
which indicates, in the slightest degree, that it was against
public enemies its provisions were directed. They are applicable to
all persons who may do certain acts, whether they be enemies or not
within the meaning of the law of nations.
The only place in the act where the word enemies is used, is in
the clause which provides that if it be found by the courts, before
which proceedings are instituted, that the property seized belonged
to a person engaged in the rebellion or who had given aid or
comfort thereto, it should be condemned as enemies' property; that
is, should be condemned in the same manner as if it were enemies'
property. This clause does not provide that the property shall be
condemned if found to be enemies' property, but that when condemned
it shall be with the like effect as though it were such
property.
It would seem clear, therefore, that the provisions of the act
were not passed in the exercise of the war powers of the
government, but in the exercise of the municipal power of the
government to legislate for the punishment of offenses against the
United States. It is the property of persons guilty of certain
acts, wherever they may reside, in loyal or disloyal states, which
the statute directs to be seized and confiscated. It is also for
acts committed after the passage of the statute, except in one
particular, corrected by the joint resolution of the two houses,
that the forfeiture is to be declared. If it had been the intention
of the statute to confiscate
Page 78 U. S. 320
the property of enemies, its prospective character would have
been entirely unnecessary, for whenever public war exists the right
to order the confiscation of enemies' property, according to Mr.
Chief Justice Marshall, exists with Congress.
That the legislation in question was directed, not against
enemies, but against persons who might be guilty of certain
designated public offenses, and that the forfeiture ordered was
intended as a punishment for the offenses, is made further evident
by what followed the passage of the act of Congress. After the bill
was sent to the President it was ascertained that he was of opinion
that it was unconstitutional in some of its features, and that he
intended to veto it. His objections were that the restriction of
the Constitution concerning forfeitures not extending beyond the
life of the offender had been disregarded. To meet this objection,
which had been communicated to members of the House of
Representatives, where the bill originated, a joint resolution
explanatory of the act was passed by the House and sent to the
Senate. That body, being informed of the objections of the
President, concurred in the joint resolution. It was then sent to
the President and was received by him before the expiration of the
ten days allowed him for the consideration of the original bill. He
returned the bill and resolution together to the House, where they
originated, with a message, in which he stated that, considering
the act and the resolution, explanatory of the act, as being
substantially one, he had approved and signed both. That joint
resolution declares that the provisions of the third clause of the
fifth section of the act shall be so construed as not to apply to
any act or acts done prior to its passage, "nor shall any
punishment or proceedings under said act be so construed as to work
a forfeiture of the real estate of the offender beyond his natural
life."
The terms here used, "forfeiture" of the estate of the
"offender," have no application to the confiscation of enemies'
property under the law of nations. They are, as justly observed by
counsel, strictly and exclusively applicable to punishment
Page 78 U. S. 321
for crime. It was to meet the constitutional requirement that
the punishment by forfeiture should not extend beyond the life of
the offender that the joint resolution was passed. The President
said to Congress, the act is penal, and does not conform to the
requirement of the Constitution in the extent of punishment which
it authorizes, and I cannot, therefore, sign it. Congress accepts
his interpretation, and by its joint resolution directs a
construction of the act in accordance with his views. And this
construction, thus directed, is decisive, as it appears to me, of
the character of the act. [
Footnote
2/6] Indeed it is difficult to conceive of any reason for the
limitation of the forfeiture of an estate to the life of the owner
if such forfeiture was intended to apply only to the property of
public enemies.
The inquiry, then, arises, whether proceedings
in rem
for the confiscation of the property of parties charged to be
guilty of certain overt acts of treason, can be maintained without
their previous conviction for the alleged offenses. Such
proceedings, according to Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, may be had
for the condemnation of enemies' property when authorized by
Congress. The proceedings in such cases are merely to authenticate
the fact upon which, under the law of nations, the confiscation
follows. But here the inquiry is, whether, upon the assumption that
a party is guilty of a particular public offense, his property may
be seized, and upon proof of his guilt, or its assumption, upon his
failure to appear upon publication of citation, condemnation may be
decreed. The inquiry is prompted from the supposed analogy of these
cases to proceedings
in rem for the confiscation of
property for offenses against the revenue laws, or the laws for the
suppression of the slave trade. But in these cases, and in all
cases where proceedings
in rem are authorized for a
disregard of some municipal or public law, the offense constituting
the ground of condemnation inheres, as it were, in the thing
itself. The thing is the instrument
Page 78 U. S. 322
of wrong, and is forfeited by reason of the unlawful use made of
it, or the unlawful condition in which it is placed. And generally
the thing, thus subject to seizure, itself furnishes the evidence
for its own condemnation. Thus, goods found smuggled, not having
been subjected to the inspection of the officers of the customs, or
paid the duties levied by law, prove of themselves nearly all that
is desired to establish the right of the government to demand their
confiscation. A ship entering the mouth of a blockaded port
furnishes by its position evidence of its intention to break the
blockade, and the decree of condemnation follows. A ship captured
whilst engaged in the slave trade furnishes, in the use to which it
was subjected, the material fact to be established for its
forfeiture. In all these cases, the proceeding is against the
offending thing. And it is true that in these cases criminal
proceedings will also lie against the smuggler, or slave trader, if
arrested, and that the proceedings
in rem are wholly
independent of, and unaffected by, the criminal proceedings against
the person. But in the two cases the proof is entirely different.
In the one case, there must be proof that the thing proceeded
against was subjected to some unlawful use, or was found in some
unlawful condition. In the other case, the personal guilt of the
party must be established, and when condemnation is founded upon
such guilt, it must be preceded by due conviction of the offender,
according to the forms prescribed by the Constitution.
"Confiscations of property," says Mr. Justice Sprague in the
Amy Warwick, [
Footnote
2/7]
"not for any use that has been made of it, which go not against
an offending thing, but are inflicted for the personal delinquency
of the owner, are punitive, and punishment should be inflicted only
upon due conviction of personal guilt."
If we examine the cases found in the reports, where proceedings
in rem have been sustained, we shall find the distinction
here stated constantly observed. Indeed, were this not so, and
proceedings
in rem for the confiscation of property
Page 78 U. S. 323
could be sustained, without any reference to the uses to which
the property is applied, or the condition in which it is found, but
whilst, so to speak, it is innocent and passive, and removed at a
distance from the owner and the sphere of his action, on the ground
of the personal guilt of the owner, all the safeguards provided by
the Constitution for the protection of the citizen against
punishment, without previous trial and conviction, and after being
confronted by the witnesses against him, would be broken down and
swept away.
There is no difference in the relation between the owner and his
property and the government when the owner is guilty of treason and
when he is guilty of any other public offense. The same reason
which would sustain the authority of the government to confiscate
the property of a traitor would justify the confiscation of his
property when guilty of any other offense. And it would sound
strange to modern ears to hear that proceedings
in rem to
confiscate the property of the burglar, the highwayman, or the
murderer were authorized, not as a consequence of their conviction
upon regular criminal proceedings, but without such conviction,
upon
ex parte proof of their guilt, or upon the assumption
of their guilt from their failure to appear to a citation,
published in the vicinage of the property, or posted upon the doors
of the adjoining courthouse, and which they may never have seen. It
seems to me that the reasoning, which upholds the proceedings in
this case, works a complete revolution in our criminal
jurisprudence, and establishes the doctrine that proceedings for
the punishment of crime against the person of the offender may be
disregarded, and proceedings for such punishment be taken against
his property alone, or that proceedings may be taken at the same
time both against the person and the property, and thus a double
punishment for the same offense be inflicted.
For these reasons I am of opinion that the legislation upon
which it is sought to uphold the judgment in this case, is not
warranted by the Constitution.
I proceed to consider whether, if that legislation be valid
Page 78 U. S. 324
and constitutional, the proceedings in the case are in
conformity with its requirements.
The act of Congress requires the seizure of the property, the
forfeiture of which is sought, to be made under directions of the
President. This seizure is preliminary to the commencement of
proceedings for the condemnation of the property. "After the same
shall have been seized," says the statute, such proceedings shall
be instituted. This preliminary executive seizure is essential to
authorize the filing of a libel of information, and in that sense
it is essential to give the court jurisdiction to proceed; but it
does not of itself vest in the court jurisdiction over the
property. The President could discharge the property from the
seizure without the permission of the court or invoking its action.
The mere fact that the marshal is employed as the agent in making
the seizure does not alter the case. He does not then act as an
officer of the court under its process. Any other person might be
selected by the President as his agent. In cases under the revenue
laws the seizure is often made by the collector or some officer
other than the marshal, and the same thing might be done here. The
preliminary seizure, if the property be movable, only determines
the court in which judicial proceedings shall be instituted. To
give the court control over the property, something more is
essential. The property must be brought into the custody of the
court, and this can only be done under the process of the court.
The very theory upon which all proceedings
in rem are
sustained is that jurisdiction of the court is acquired by taking
the
res into its custody. It is the seizure under judicial
process, judicial seizure, as distinguished from any preliminary
seizure in any other way, which gives the jurisdiction, and nothing
else ever has been held to confer jurisdiction in this class of
cases.
Now in the case before us there was not in my judgment any
preliminary seizure of the property made by order of the Executive
or through his officers or agents, or any subsequent seizure under
judicial process. The proceeding was instituted for the forfeiture
of 200 shares of the common
Page 78 U. S. 325
stock of the Michigan Southern & Northern Indiana Railroad
Company and 343 shares of the Detroit, Monroe & Toledo Railroad
Company, and the only pretense of seizure consisted in a notice
given by the marshal, previous to the suit, to the vice-president
of the first company and the president of the second company that
he had seized the stock in question. The marshal returned that he
made the alleged seizure by giving notice in this way. Neither the
president of one company or the vice-president of the other company
were in possession of the stock, nor were they the agents of the
owner, nor was any possession ever taken of the property by the
marshal, unless such notice had the power of transmitting the
possession to him. To constitute a valid seizure of property as a
basis for a proceeding
in rem, the party previously in
possession must be dispossessed and unable any longer to exercise
dominion over the property, and such dominion must be transferred
to the officer making the seizure. No other seizure than this will
sustain proceedings
in rem, according to the established
doctrine in admiralty and revenue cases, unless a different mode of
seizure is specially prescribed by statute. No other mode would
conserve the principle of notice to the party whose property was to
be affected, which is essential to the validity of all judicial
proceedings. "It is a principle of natural justice of universal
obligation," says Chief Justice Marshall,
"that before the rights of an individual be bound by judicial
sentence, he shall have notice, either actual or implied, of the
proceedings against him. Where these proceedings are against the
person notice is served personally or by publication; where they
are
in rem, notice is served upon the thing itself. This
is necessary notice to all those who have any interest in the thing
and is reasonable because it is necessary and because it is the
part of common prudence for all those who have any interest in it
to guard that interest by persons who are in a situation to protect
it. [
Footnote 2/8]"
The doctrine that notice to the owner is given by seizure
Page 78 U. S. 326
of the thing, rests upon the presumption that the owners of
property retain possession of it themselves, or place it in the
care and management of persons who will represent them and
communicate to them any proceedings taken against their interest in
relation to it. In this case, this doctrine is entirely
disregarded. The notice given to the president of one company and
the vice-president of the other might, with equal propriety, have
been given to any other strangers to the owner. How the marshal
could get possession of a thing which he did not touch nor handle
nor control, by giving notice to two individuals in Detroit,
themselves having no control or possession of the property, passes
my comprehension. Shares or stock in companies can only be seized
in virtue of statutory provisions, which prescribe a mode of
seizure equivalent to actual taking of possession. No such
provisions existed in the law of Michigan, in which state the
proceedings were had. The Attorney General, in his instructions to
the district attorney for carrying out the act, directed that
stocks should be seized according to the methods prescribed by the
state law. As no such methods were prescribed by the law of
Michigan, or especially prescribed by the court, the case was one
for which no provision was made.
After the libel was filed there was no new attempt to make any
other seizure of the property than the one previously made. The
process of the court directed the marshal to hold the stock which
he had seized, referring, evidently, to the preliminary seizure.
The marshal returned that he had seized and held the property,
referring, as I understand it, to such preliminary seizure.
But further, the act of Congress declares that the proceedings
for the condemnation of the property seized shall conform, as
nearly as may be, to proceedings in admiralty or revenue cases.
Here the proceedings are against property on land, and they must
therefore conform as nearly as possible to proceedings in revenue
cases. Now the act of 1799 prescribes the proceedings in revenue
cases, and provides that after default "the court shall proceed to
hear
Page 78 U. S. 327
and determine the cause according to law." [
Footnote 2/9] And, in the case of
States v.
Schooner Lion, [
Footnote
2/10] Mr. Justice Sprague whose great learning justly adds
weight to his opinions, gave a construction to this clause. A
default had been properly entered, and it was contended by the
district attorney that condemnation followed of necessity, upon
default, without a hearing, but the learned judge, citing the
clause mentioned, said:
"This makes it imperative that there shall be some hearing
before a decree of forfeiture, but to what extent must depend upon
the circumstances of the case. The court will at least examine the
allegations of the libel to see if they are sufficient in law, and
the return of the marshal and such affidavit or affidavits as the
district attorney shall submit. Where it appears that the owners
have had full notice of the proceedings, and ample opportunity to
intervene, and have voluntarily declined to do so, slight
additional evidence will be sufficient. Indeed, a willful omission
by the owners to answer and thereby make disclosure as to material
facts within their knowledge, might, of itself, satisfy the court
that a forfeiture should be decreed.
But the court will require
the prosecutor to introduce full proof of the allegations in the
libel whenever the circumstances shall make it
reasonable."
It will hardly be pretended that the circumstances in this case
did not render it reasonable that such full proof should be had,
and yet no such proof was had. The only proof offered was of a
doubtful admission of the claimant, and consisted of the
ex
parte deposition of a single witness to a conversation which
he alleged he had had with the claimant in 1863 in Virginia.
But this is not all. The act of Congress of 1862 further
provides, in prescribing the proceedings to be taken, that "if" the
property seized "shall
be found to have belonged to a
person engaged in rebellion, or who has given aid or comfort
thereto, the same shall be condemned." Evidently some finding of
the court is here contemplated upon presentation of proofs, and it
appears to me, was intended as
Page 78 U. S. 328
authority for the subsequent decree, as much so as the verdict
of a jury is authority for the subsequent judgment, and that
without such finding the decree cannot stand. The record discloses
that no such finding was made, and that no decree even was entered,
as required by the 29th Admiralty Rule, that the libel be taken
pro confesso, so as to justify the assumption that its
allegations were true.
As the act is highly penal in its nature, it would seem that,
according to well received rules, it should be strictly construed,
and a rigid compliance with its provisions exacted. But the very
opposite course in the construction of the act appears to have been
adopted by the majority of the court.
I am of opinion that the judgment of the court below should be
reversed.
[
Footnote 2/1]
1 Kent's Commentaries 1.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Thus it is forbidden by the law of nations to use poisoned
weapons, or to poison wells, springs, waters, or any kind of food
intended for the enemy. "Any state or general," says Halleck, "who
should resort to such means would be regarded as an enemy to the
human race, and excluded from civilized society." So also it is
forbidden to encourage the assassination of an enemy or his
generals or leaders, or to put to death prisoners of war, except in
case of absolute necessity, or to make slaves of them or to sell
them into slavery; or to take the lives of the aged, disabled, and
infirm, or to maltreat their persons. The United States are not
freed from these prohibitions because they are not inserted in the
Constitution -- Halleck's International Law, chaps. 16 and 18.
[
Footnote 2/3]
12 U. S. 8
Cranch 122.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Law of Nations, Lawrence's ed., p. 596.
[
Footnote 2/5]
32 U. S. 7 Pet.
86.
[
Footnote 2/6]
See Bigelow v.
Forrest, 9 Wall. 350; and
McVeigh v. United
States, supra, 78 U. S.
258.
[
Footnote 2/7]
2 Sprague 150.
[
Footnote 2/8]
The Mary,
9 Cranch 144.
[
Footnote 2/9]
1 Stat. at Large p. 695, ยง 89.
[
Footnote 2/10]
1 Sprague 400.
MR. JUSTICE DAVIS, also dissenting.
I concur in the views taken by the majority of the Court in its
opinion respecting the constitutionality of the acts of Congress
under review, but I dissent from the disposition which is made of
the case, believing there are errors in the record entitling the
plaintiff in error to have the judgment of the court below
reversed. This is a proceeding
in rem, and by the course
of procedure in admiralty and revenue cases, to which it is
assimilated, is conducted differently from suits at common law or
in equity where there is actual service of process on the person.
But all cases in court proceed on the idea of notice to the party
whose property is to be affected. This is a fundamental principle
underlying the whole structure of judicial proceedings, regardless
of the form they may assume in the particular court in which they
may be instituted. In courts of admiralty and for hearing revenue
cases, seizure of the thing is regarded as equivalent to personal
service on the ground that the person whose property is seized has
entrusted it to the care of someone who has the power and whose
duty it is to represent him and assert his claim.
*
Page 78 U. S. 329
It can be readily seen that in case tangible property which is
capable of actual possession is seized, the interests of the owner
will be protected by the person in whose custody it is placed. But
it is different with intangible property, such as stocks in
corporations, which in their very nature are incapable of seizure
as other property. This species of property does not require to be
left in charge of any person for its security and preservation, and
it is evidenced by certificates which are presumptively in the
possession of the owner of the stock, wherever he may be. How then
can it be said that the mere service of notice on the officers of
the corporations in which these stocks were held, either gave
notice to the owner of the property, or brought the res within the
control of the court? In no sense had they the control of the
property, or were they the agents of the owner, or bound to appear
and defend his interests. There certainly did not exist between
them the legal relation, which raises the presumption in other
cases, that the custodian of the property seized, will appear and
defend the owner's interests. In point of fact, it may happen that
the officers of the corporation are in direct hostility to the
interests of the stockholders, and in this particular case it is
fairly to be inferred, that the possible thing did actually occur.
It is therefore very clear that the manner in which these stocks
purport to have been seized, did not satisfy the requisites of a
revenue seizure, nor convey any notice to Miller, or to anyone,
sustaining a fiduciary relation to him, of what was done. Nor was
his condition improved by the publication of notice, because he
lived in an insurgent state, and any attempt to communicate to him
the contents of the publication was forbidden, and would therefore
have been illegal.
But, it may be asked, is there no way in which this species of
property can be made the subject of legal process?
The answer is that it can only be done by statute, which shall
point out the mode of proceeding. In such a case, the principle of
notice is preserved, for the owner is advised that his property can
be condemned, and the manner of its condemnation, and naturally, in
this condition of things, if it
Page 78 U. S. 330
were possible, he would delegate to someone the authority to
look after his interests. But stocks cannot be seized, in the
absence of any statutory provision on the subject, and the law has
failed to make such provision. It is a
casus omissus,
undoubtedly, but it is not the province of this Court to supply the
omission. This difficulty was felt by the Attorney General,
because, in his instructions to the district attorneys, he directs
that stocks shall be seized according to the methods prescribed by
the state laws.
But in Michigan there is no law which authorizes the taking of
stocks on mesne process, and I cannot see how the fact, that they
may be taken on final process in that state, tends to support the
argument that the method pursued in this case to seize the property
in the first instance was proper and legal.
But, apart from this view of the subject, which, in my opinion,
is fatal to the recovery in this case, there is an irregularity in
the proceedings, which should reverse the judgment and send the
case back for a new hearing.
There are two acts of Congress relating to the condemnation of
enemies' property -- one was passed in 1861, and the other in 1862.
They differ materially in regard to the grounds on which
condemnation can be placed. Besides the act of 1861 divides the
proceeds with the informer, which is not the case under the act of
1862. The libel sets forth every ground of condemnation under both
acts, while the decree, in condemning the property, does not find
any fact by reason of which it could be forfeited to the United
States at all. This in itself is sufficient to reverse the decree.
But as the decree divides the proceeds with the informer, the court
must necessarily have found the property confiscable under the act
of 1861, and yet if the evidence in the case, consisting of an
affidavit, made in New York, of one Thatcher (who, in some way not
disclosed in the record, was able to get down to Virginia in 1863,
hunt up Miller, and have a private conversation with him), tends to
prove anything, it is that the property was confiscable under the
act of 1862. As this is a direct proceeding
Page 78 U. S. 331
to reverse the judgment, these irregularities are grounds of
error.
For these reasons, in my opinion, the decree in this case should
be reversed.
*
Mankin v. Chandler, 2 Brockenborough 127;
Rose v.
Himely, 4 Cranch 277;
The
Mary, 9 Cranch 144.