SUPREME COURT OF
UNITED STATES
The Antelope.
The Vice-Consuls of Spain and Portugal, Libellants.
18.03.1825
APPEAL
from the Circuit Court of Georgia.
These
cases were allegations filed by the Vice-Consuls of Spain and Portugal,
claiming certain Africans as the property of subjects of their nation. The
material facts were as follows: A privateer, called the Colombia, sailing under
a Venezuelean commission, entered the port of Baltimore in the year 1819;
clandestinely shipped a crew of thirty or forty men; proceeded to sea, and
hoisted the Artegan flag, assuming the name of the Arraganta, and prosecuted a
voyage along the coast of Africa; her officers and the greater part of her crew
being citizens of the United States. Off the coast of Africa she captured an
American vessel, from Bristol, in Rhode Island, from which she took twenty-five
Africans; she captured several Portuguese vessels, from which she also took
Africans; and she captured a Spanish vessel, called the Antelope, in which she also
took a considerable number of Africans. The two vessels then sailed in company
to the coast of Brazil, where the Arraganta was wrecked, and her master,
Metcalf, and a great part of his crew, made prisoners; the rest of the crew,
with the armament of the Arraganta, were transferred to the Antelope, which,
thus armed, assumed the name of the General Ramirez, under the command of John
Smith, a citizen of the United States; and on board this vessel were all the
Africans, which had been captured by the privateer in the course of her voyage.
This vessel, thus freighted, was found hovering near the coast of the United
States, by the revenue cutter, Dallas, under the command of Captain Jackson,
and finally brought into the port of Savannah for adjudication. The Africans,
at the time of her capture, amounted to upwards of two hundred and eighty. On
their arrival, the vessel, and the Africans, were libelled, and claimed by the
Portuguese and Spanish Vice-Consuls reciprocally. They were also claimed by
John Smith, as captured jure belli. They were claimed by the United
States, as having been transported from foreign parts by American citizens, in
contravention to the laws of the United States, and as entitled to their
freedom by those laws, and by the law of nations. Captain Jackson, the master
of the revenue cutter, filed an alternative claim for the bounty given by law,
if the Africans should be adjudged to the United States; or to salvage, if the
whole subject should be adjudged to the Portuguese and Spanish Consuls.
The
Court dismissed the libel and claim of John Smith. They dismissed the claim of
the United States, except as to that portion of the Africans which had been
taken from the American vessel. The residue was divided between the Spanish and
Portuguese claimants.
No
evidence was offered to show which of the Africans were taken from the American
vessel, and which from the Spanish and Portuguese; and the Court below decreed,
that, as about one third of them died, the loss should be averaged among these
three different classes; and that sixteen should be designated, by lot, from
the whole number, and delivered over to the Marshal, according to the law of
the United States, as being the fair proportion of the twenty-five, proved to
have been taken from an American vessel.
Feb. 26th, 28th, and 29th.
The Attorney
General, for the appellants, stated, that the cases of the respective
allegations of the Spanish and Portuguese Consuls, upon which distinct appeals
had been taken, which had been separately docketed in this Court,a
were so blended together,
that it was thought most proper to bring on the hearing in both cases at the
same time.
Mr. Chief Justice MARSHALL stated,
that the appellants, in the argument of No. 12, might refer to the evidence in
No. 13; they might invoke it into this cause, so far as it was necessary for
their purpose, and the Court would take notice
The Spanish case as No. 12, and the
Portuguese as No. 13. of the facts which appeared in the other transcript; but
that the two causes must come on separately, and in their order. But it has
been thought most expedient to report the two arguments together.
Vide Appendix, Note I. (A.) owner.
But these are men, of whom it cannot
be affirmed, that they have universally and necessarily an owne. In some
particular and excepted cases, depending upon the local law and usage, they may
be the subjects of property and ownership; but by the law of nature all men are
free. The presumption that even black men and Africans are slaves, is not a
universal presumption. It would be manifestly unjust, to throw the onus probandi upon them to prove
their birthright. Whatever may have once been the condition of Africa, and of
the African slave trade, the authentic information on this subject will show,
that it is now impossible to determine, by the fact of possession, whether the
party has been lawfully acquired or not. There must be an overwhelming probability
of the lawfulness of such acquisition, to raise such a presumption. This is
instanced by the different presumptions allowed in different parts of our own
country, in respect to this description of persons. In the southern States,
there is the highest degree of probability, from universal practice and well
known law, that such persons are slaves. But in the northern States, the
probability is just the contrary, and the presumption is reversed. And in the
present state of the slave trade, Africans, in a slave ship on the high seas,
are in no such circumstances as to raise a presumption that they are lawfully
held in slavery. For if there be a permitted slave trade, there is also a prohibited slave trade; and the prohibition is much more extensive than the permission.
The claimants must, consequently, show something more than mere possession.
They must show a law, making such persons property, and that they acquired them
under such law. In order to maintain their title, they show the municipal law
of Spain; but the operation of that law can only extend throughout the
territory of Spain, and to Spanish vessels on the high seas. These persons are
now within the jurisdiction of our conflicting law; and they are brought here
without any violation of the sovereign rights of Spain. Our own law, which is
in force here, must prevail over the law of Spain, which cannot have an
extra-territorial operation. There is no reason of comity, or policy, or
justice, which requires us to give effect to a foreign law conflicting with our
own law on the same subject. Besides, the Spanish law is not only contrary to
ours, but is inconsistent with the law of nature, which is a sufficient reason
for maintaining the supremacy of our own code. If this municipal law of Spain
were allowed to prevail against our law, in our own territory, and before our
own Courts, the same effect must be given to the law of every other country,
under the same circumstances. If, instead of these Africans, there had been
taken by the same illegal capture, Shanish slaves, from an Algerine corsair,
and afterwards brought in the same manner into our ports, they might, upon the
same principle, be reclaimed by the representative of Algiers, who could easily
show, that, by the law prevailing among the Barbary states, they were slaves.
Vide Appendix, Note L. (B.) p.
32. time must come when it will cease to have a legal existence by the
universal concurrence of nations. In the mean time, the question must be
discussed, as it arises under various circumstances, until we reach the desired
period, when the universal sentiment of the wise and the good shall become the
rule of conduct sanctioned by authority capable of enforcing it. All the
modifications and improvements in the modern law of nations have been gradually
introduced. The writers upon that law explain the manner in which these changes
have been made and sanctioned.d The documents to be laid before the Court will show the present state of
the world's opinion and practice upon this subject, and will prove that the
time is at hand, if it has not already arrived, when the slave trade is not
only forbidden by the concurrent voice of most nations, but is denounced and
punished as a crime of the deepest die. This is shown by the declarations
contained in the treaties of Paris and Ghent; by the acts and conferences at
the Congresses of Vienna, London, and Aix la Chapelle; by the treaties between
Great Britain, and Spain, and Portugal; by the negotiations between the United
States and Great Britain; and by the reports of the committees of the House of
Commons, and the House of Representatives in Congress. We contend, then, that
whatever was once the fact, this trade is now condemned by the general consent
of nations, who have publicly
Vattel, Droit des Gens, Chap. Prelim. §
25-27. 56. liv. 1. ch. 23. § 293. Burlam. 165. Martens, l. 9. § 5. l. 11. §
1. and solemnly declared it to be unjust, inhuman, and illegal. We insist, that
absolute unanimity on this subject is unnecessary; that, as it was introduced,
so it may be abolished, by general concurrence. This general concurrence may
not authorize a Court of justice to pronounce it a crime against all nations,
so as to make it the duty of all to seek out and punish offenders, as in the
case of piracy. No decision has yet gone that length, nor is it necessary in
this case to contend for such a principle. But in a case where the Africans are
lawfully brought before a Court of the law of nations, and are claimed as
property, by those who must be considered as actors in the cause, and who must, consequently, prove their
title as alleged; the fair abstract question arises, and their claim may well
be repudiated as founded in injustice and illegality.
The reasons assigned in the
appellants' case, for reversing the decrees of the Court below, were as
follows:
1st. That the possession of these
Africans by the claimants, before the capture by the privateer, affords no
presumption that they were their property; that they must show a law entitling
them to hold them as property.
2. That if these Africans are to be
considered as having been in a state of slavery, when in the Spanish and
Portuguese vessels from which they were taken, and if the Court shall consider
itself bound to restore them to the condition from which they were taken, this
can be done only by placing them in the hands of those who shall prove themselves
to have been the owners; and that this purpose cannot be answered by restoring
them to the Consuls of Spain and Portugal.
3. That if some of these Africans were
the property of the claimants, yet some were not; and failing to prove which
were theirs, the decree is erroneous, in determining by lot, a matter which the
claimants were bound to establish by proof.
Mr. Key, for the appellants,
argued, that the facts of the case presented the question to be considered in a
point of view, peculiarly favourable to the appellants. A piratical vessel was
found hovering near our coast, apparently meditating a violation of our laws.
It was brought, with the persons on board, into the custody of the Court, by an
act of seizure, not only lawful, but meritorious towards the claimants, since
it rescued what they claim as their property, from the grasp of pirates. If the
claimants had not interposed, the course of the Court would have been obvious.
The illegal and piratical capture by our citizens, gave them no rights;
and even if it did, they instantly forfeited them under our laws, which they intended
to violate. But the claimants demand restitution of the Africans found on board
this vessel, alleging them to be their property, lawfully acquired on the coast
of Africa, and piratically taken from them by the Arraganta. This demand is
resisted by the government of the United States, upon the ground that the
persons in question are not by our laws to be considered as slaves, but as
freemen. These laws the Court must administer, and not the laws of Spain. Our
national policy, perhaps our safety, requires, that there should be no increase
of this species of population within our territory. The acts of Congress
provide that, however brought here, they shall be set free, and sent back to
their own native country. The Spanish and Portuguese claimants demand them as
their property. We repel the claim, by asserting their right to liberty. The
demand of restitution is inconsistent with our policy, as declared in our
statutes and otherpublic acts.b These declarations gave fair warning
to those engaged in the slave trade, that though we did not intend to interfere
with them on the high seas, yet, if their victims should come within the reach
of our laws, we should protect them. These acts constitute a solemn pledge to
all nations interested in the suppression of this inhuman traffic, and to
Africa herself, that if the objects of it should seek our protection, where
they may lawfully receive it, within our territorial jurisdiction, and at the
feet of our tribunals of justice, they should be entitled to that protection.
Therefore, admitting the facts as alleged by the claimants, what they claim as
justice in a matter of property, cannot be done to them, without disregarding
our own policy, endangering our own safety, infringing our own laws, and
violating the plighted faith of the country.
But supposing they have a right to
insist on restitution of their property, what proof ought to be required, and
what proof do they give, of their proprietary interest? It is material, also,
here to consider, that those human beings, who are claimed as property, come
into the jurisdiction of the Court, not by any wrongful act of ours, but
lawfully, providentially; and are to be treated just as if they were thrown
upon our shore by a storm. The Spanish owners show, as proof of property, their
previous possession; and the possessor of goods, it is said, is to be presumed
the lawful owner. This is true as to goods, because they have
universally and necessarily an
The municipal law of Spain, then, is
insufficient to maintain the title set up by the claimants. They are driven to the
necessity of invoking the aid of the law of nations, as sanctioning their
asserted right to property in these human beings. But if the law of nations is
silent upon this subject; if it neither sanctions nor forbids the traffic in
African slaves; if it is municipal law alone which determines in what manner
private property is acquired and lost, then the claimants have no law to stand
upon in asserting their claim. Supposing, however, this idea not to be correct,
it is incumbent on the claimants to show, positively, that the slave trade, as
now practised, has the sanction of the law of nations, as now understood by the
civilized and Christian nations of the world. That it once had that sanction,
may, perhaps, be admitted; but, it must also be admitted, that there was once a
time when it had not that sanction. The permission began by general assent and
usage. The King of Spain, in the preamble to his edict of 1817, admits that it
was incorporated into the code of nations as an exception to the general principles
on which that code is founded.c When the practice was adopted by the general,
not universal assent, of civilized nations, it became a part of the law
of nations. In the same manner, a general, and not a universal,
denunciation of the practice, is sufficient to make it cease to be a part of
the law of nations. In the great moral and legal revolution which is now going
on in the world respecting this trade, the
The learned counsel here commented
upon the different cases in England and this country, with the view of
reconciling them, and showing that they were all consistent with the principle
he maintained. In the cases of the Amedie,e the Fortuna,f
and the Donna Marianna,g the ship and persons on board were
lawfully brought into the custody of the Court, either as being captured jure
belli, or taken under circumstances which warranted a seizure as for a
municipal offence. The claims were accordingly rejected, upon the ground of the
unlawfulness of the trade. In the subsequent cases of the Louis,h
and of Madrazo
Acton's Rep. 240.
1 Dodson's Rep. 81.
Id. 91.
2 Dodson's Rep. v. Willes,i
*the original seizure was held to be unjustifiable, and consequently
restitution was decreed. But none of the important principles settled in the
other cases, are overruled in these cases, which turn exclusively upon the
point, that the wrong first done in the unlawful seizure must be redressed. In
the case of La Jeune Eugenie,j the claim of a French subject was
rejected, as being founded in a breach of the municipal law of his own country,
and the subject matter in controversy was delivered up, with the consent of the
executive government of this country, to the sovereign of France, to be dealt
with as he should think fit. All these latter cases show, that where the Court
has rightfully obtained possession of human beings, who are claimed as slaves,
it will not restore them to their alleged proprietors, although it may not go
so far as to punish those who are engaged in the trade, by the confiscation of
the vehicle in which it is carried on.
But another view may be taken of this
subject. The King of Spain, in his edict of 1817, (before referred to,) informs
us, that the slave trade originated in motives of humanity, and was intended to
avoid the greater evils growing out of the barbarous state of the African
continent. Suppose this to be a just representation, and that the trade
formerly consisted merely in the transportation of persons who were slaves in Africa,
to be slaves elsewhere; it is at last discovered, by the
3 B. & Ald. 353,(a)
2 Mason's
Rep. evidence taken before the British House of Commons in 1790, by the
investigations of the African Institution, and by the reports of the British
and American naval officers, to have entirely changed its character. Slaves are
no longer acquired merely by capture in war, or by trade; but free persons are
seized and carried off by the traders and their agents. Wars are instigated by
them, for the mere purpose of making slaves. The persons thus enslaved are
clandestinely brought away, under circumstances of extreme cruelty, aggravated
by the necessity of concealment, and smuggled into every country where the
cupidity of avarice creates a demand for these unhappy victims. May it not be
asked, is this trade? Is it lawful? Has it not so changed its nature as to have
become prohibited?
Again:
supposing the slave trade not yet to have become generally illegal; still it
has become so to the subjects of those countries who have issued declarations
against the trade. To such the argumentum ad hominem may be fairly
applied, as Sir W. Scott says in the Louis. Spain and Portugal are among
the countries who have issued the most formal declarations against this trade,
although they have not yet taken the most effectual measures to suppress it. By
the treaties between these powers and Great Britain, they have stipulated the
entire abolition of the slave trade north of the equator. But their authentic
declarations pronounce it to be unlawful and inhuman, wherever carried on; and
the permission to continue it south of the line can only affect them, and their
subjects, and the powers with whom they have made such treaties. Their subjects
cannot avail themselves of the permission, so far as other nations are
concerned. Those nations have a right to look to the declarations as authentic
evidence of the understanding of the Spanish and Portuguese governments, as to
the law of nations.
But
suppose they can avail themselves of the permission to trade in slaves within
the limits prescribed by the treaties. The onus probandi is thrown upon
them to bring themselves within those limits. This they have failed to do by
satisfactory evidence.
And
even if the law was in their favour, and they had shown the trade in which they
were engaged to be within the limits permitted by the treaties, such a general
claim could not be given in by the Consules of Spain and Portugal for their
fellow subjects. The Court has a right to the oath of the individual owners, as
to their proprietary interest, and to explain the other circumstances of the
case. As to the Portuguese claim, the owners are still unknown, and it is
impossible that restitution can be made to the Consul, or even to his
government, merely upon evidence that the Africans were taken from a vessel
sailing under the Portuguese flag and papers, without any specific proof of the
individual proprietary interest.
Lastly:
if some of these Africans were the property of the claimants, some were not;
and, failing to identify their own, they are not entitled to restitution of any
as slaves, since among them may be included some who are entitled to their
freedom. The proof, by lot, which was substituted by the Court below for
ordinary legal proof, is not satisfactory, especially where a claim to freedom
conflicts with a claim to property.
Mr. Berrien,
for the respondents, stated, that a reference to the transcript would show,
that of all the parties to this cause in the Court below, the United States,
and the Spanish and Portuguese Vice-Consuls, are alone before this Court; and
that the United States, acquiescing in all the residue of the decree, have
appealed from only so much as directs restitution to the Spanish and Portuguese
Vice-Consuls.
The
allowance of these claims is resisted on various grounds.
One prominent
proposition pervades the whole of the opposite argument. Unless we can meet and
resist it, we must submit to be its victims. It asserts, that the United States
have acquired the possession of these negroes lawfully, without wrong; that
with the possession so acquired, they have incurred the obligation to protect
them; that all presumptions are in favorem libertatis; and, whatever the
laws of other countries may tolerate or ordain, having ourselves declared the
slave trade to be contrary to the principles of humanity and justice, we are
bound, prima facie, to hold that there can be no property in a human
being.
This
proposition suggests the following inquiries:
1.
Was the possession lawfully acquired?
2. If
so, does the right which is asserted necessarily follow?
3.
With a view to their own peculiar condition, can the United States exercise
such a power?
1.
The lawfulness of the possession will be determined by considering the capacity
of the seizing officer to make the seizure, in connexion with the liability of
the thing seized.
The
seizure was made by John Jackson, commander of the revenue cutter Dallas,
belonging to the District of Georgia; and was made off the coast of Florida,
while that was yet a province of Spain. The right of Captain Jackson must have
resulted from the authority given by his commission, and the laws of the United
States.k
It did not result from the act of
1799, providing for the establishment of revenue cutters; for this only
authorizes them to board vessels on the coasts of their respective Districts,
or within four leagues thereof; nor from the acts forbidding the slave trade,
for these are directed only against vessels of the United States, or foreign
vesselsintending to violate our laws by introducing negroes into the United
States. The President is, indeed, authorized to employ the armed vessels of the
United States, to cruise on the coasts of the United States, or territories
thoreof, or of
The Louis, 2 Dodson's Rep. 238.
Africa, or elsewhere, and to instruct them to bring in all vessels found contravening
those acts. But the laws of the United States can operate only on American
vessels, on American citizens on board of foreign vessels, or on such vessels
within the limits and jurisdiction of the United States. Besides, it is not
pretended, that the revenue cutter Dallas had been selected as a cruising
vessel under these acts, or that Captain Jackson had received any instructions
from the President of the United States. Neither can the seizor derive any aid
from the acts to preserve the neutral relations of the United States; for
although the Courts of the United States will restore property taken in
violation of these acts, when it is found within their jurisdiction, yet they
do not authorize the cruisers of the United States to rove the ocean in search
of objects on which that jurisdiction may be exercised.
So far, then, as it depends on the
official character of the seizor, the act was lawless.
The thing seized was a Spanish vessel,
in the possession of persons, some of whom were American citizens, who had
captured it jure belli, under the flag of Artegas, or of Venezuela, and in
a vessel which had been fitted out, or whose armament had been increased, in
the United States.
The right to seize for a violation of
the acts to preserve the neutral relations of the United States, has been
already spoken of; but the adverse argument considers these captors as pirates,
and asserts the right of every individual to war against them as enemies
of the human race. The answer is,
(1.) The seizure by Captain Jackson
was not made on that ground. The libel alleges the seizure to have been made
for a violation of the act of 1818, prohibiting the slave trade.
(2.) The Courts of the United States
have declined to decide, that such an act would amount to piracy.
(3.) To put himself in a situation to
make this seizure, Captain Jackson abandoned the duty enjoined upon him by his
commission, and the laws of the United States, by leaving the limits intrusted
to his vigilance. If he had lost his vessel, could he have justified himself
before a Court Martial?
(4.) But if these men were pirates,
and lawfully brought in, then the Spanish property was, from the moment of its
introduction, under the protection of the ninth article of the treaty of San
Lorenzo el Real.
Neither have the United States
acquired any rights to enforce against these foreigners their own speculative
notions on this subject, in consequence of their being actors. All
parties are actors in a Court of admiralty, and these parties only became so
after their property had been taken into the custody of the Marshal, and at the
suit of the United States. But they were entitled, under the treaty, to have restitution
of their property, without being put to other proof, than that it was found in
their possession.
2. If the possession had been lawfully
acquired, could the Court refuse restitution on the ground suggested?
The great case on this subject, is
that of the Louis,l our adversaries agree to refer the
question to its decision.
It is a singular mistake, to suppose
that Sir W. Scott directed restitution solely on the ground of the
unlawfulness of the seizure; and thence to infer, that if the seizure had been
lawful, he would have condemned. On the contrary, admitting the lawfulness of
the seizure, he decides expressly that restitution must notwithstanding be
awarded.
3. With a view to their own peculiar
situation, could the United States maintain the doctrines contended for? It is
said, that, having promulgated our policy in relation to this subject, we have thereby
given a warning to slave traders, which they are bound to respect;—a pledge
to the rest of the world which we are bound to redeem. But what is this
policy, which we have thus notified to the world? It is to be found in our
laws, inhibiting the slave trade. The penalties of these are denounced against
our own vessels, and our own citizens, who shall engage in this traffic any
where; and against foreigners and their vessels, who pursue it for the purpose
of introducing negroes into the United States. There is no warning to the
subjects of Spain and Portugal, quietly pursuing this traffic under the
sanction of their own laws.
2 Dodson's Rep. 243. 249. 264.
The notion of the pledge is
equally visionary. I find it difficult to form a conception of a pledge, which
the party making it can at any time capriciously recall; and yet no one doubts
that an act of the American Congress can, at any moment, throw open the slave
trade.
These considerations apart, would it
become the United States to assume to themselves the character of censors of
the morals of the world on this subject?—to realize the lofty conception of
the adverse counsel, and consider themselves as the ministers of heaven, called
to wipe out from among the nations the stain of this iniquity? Might not the
foreign claimant thus rebuke them, in the strong language of truth? For more
than thirty years you were slave traders; you are still extensively
slave owners. If the slave trade be robbery, you were robbers,
and are yet clinging to your plunder. For more than twenty years this
traffic was protected by your constitution, exempted from the whole force of
your legislative power; its fruits yet lay at the foundation of that compact.
The principle by which you continue to enjoy them, is protected by that
constitution, forms a basis for your representatives, is infused into your
laws, and mingles itself with all the sources of authority. Relieve yourselves
from these absurdities, before you assume the right of sitting in judgment on
the morality of other nations. But this you cannot do. Paradoxical as it may
appear, they constitute the very bond of your union. The shield of your
constitution protects them from your touch.
We have no pretence, then, to enforce
against others our own peculiar notions of morality. The standard of morality,
by which Courts of justice must be guided, is that which the law prescribes.m
The learned counsel here proceeded to
examine the evidence of proprietary interest, and insisted that (besides the
other testimony) the official interposition of the Portuguese government
supplied the place of proof of individual interest, and established the
legality of the traffic.n
The objection to the decree of the
Circuit Court, on the ground that the distribution of the negroes was directed
to be made by lot, was answered by the following considerations:
1. It appearing that the negroes found
on board the Antelope consisted of three distinct parcels, taken from American,
Spanish, and Portuguese vessels, the obligation to protect the former, was
equal to, and not greater than, that which required the restoration of the
latter. The capture by Smith being considered, as in the argument of our
adversaries it is considered, as piratical, the right of the Spanish
claimant to restoration under the treaty, was the primary right, as
founded on the treaty, which is the supreme law; and in the fair
construction of that treaty, it extended to every thing found on board the
Spanish vessel. Then the proof which should diminish that right, was to be
furnished by those who sought to diminish it.
2. It being ascertained that these
negroes were property, they were liable to distribution as other
property; and, notwithstanding the assertion to the contrary, the lot is often
and legally resorted to, to separate undivided interests.
3. As between the Spanish and
Portuguese claimants, no question on this point can arise here, because they
have not appealed.
4. The United States cannot question
this part of the decree, because they have not only not appealed from it, but
have actually proceeded to enforce it ex parte, and have received
restitution by lot of the negroes taken from the American vessel.
The United States have, then, derived
no right to refuse restitution, from the manner in which they have acquired
possession.
They are not entitled, by law, or the
stipulations of treaty, to apply their speculative notions of morality to the
subjects of Spain and Portugal.
They have ill-grounded pretensions in
reference to this ill-fated subject, to set themselves up as the moral censors
of the civilized world. Here is evidence of a proprietary interest to satisfy
the mind beyond a reasonable doubt, and it is wholly uncontradicted; and the
passport of the King of Spain, and the interposition of the government of
Portugal, show, if there be any necessity for it, the legality of the traffic,
as to their respective subjects.
On what ground, then, is restitution
refused?It is said, the slave trade is unlawful, contrary to the principles of
justice and humanity; and that no right can be derived from so nefarious a
traffic.
Our inquiry is, by what law, which
this Court is competent to enforce, is it inhibited?
1. Is it contrary to the law of
nations?
2. Is it contrary to the laws of the
sovereigns of the claimants; and can this Court refuse restitution for that
cause?
3. Is it contrary to the laws of the
United States; and can those laws be enforced against these claimants?
1. What is the slave trade, considered
as a subject on which the law of nations can operate. Slavery exists, and has
from all time existed, in Africa, and in many other countries. Where it exists,
there will, of course, be an interior traffic in slaves, which the law of
nations cannot touch. It is only on the transportation of negroes between two
countries mutually tolerating slavery, that this operation is contended for.
But this transportation is but an incident to the original sin of
slavery. If humanity nerves the arm of the law, why is its force spent on the
incident? Why is it powerless in relation to the principal wrong?
If the traffic in slaves be considered
as increasing the number of victims, by affording a market for them, what is it
then but an aggression by the subjects of one nation on the rights of another?
If the nation forbids it, the offender is punished by the municipal law; if the
nation permits it, she herself becomes the aggressor. In either case, how does
it concern other nations?
The law of nations may be defined to
be a collection of rules deduced from natural reason, as that is interpreted by
those who adopt them, and resting in usage, or established by compact, for
regulating the intercourse of nations with each other.
Rights and obligations are interior
between sovereign and people, and are regulated by the municipal law; or
exterior, between nations considered as moral persons; and these are regulated
by the law of nations.
Now the slave trade is not contrary to
the natural law of nations, because, until recently, it was universally
tolerated and encouraged. It is not contrary to the positive law of nations;
because there is no general compact inhibiting it; and nothing is more certain,
than that the usage, or compact, even of a majority of nations, cannot produce
rights or obligations among others. To what other evidences of the law of
nations can we resort, except those of usage and compact; the former
interpreting the rules of natural reason, the latter stipulating those of
positive institution?
From this general view it would seem,
that the slave trade is untouched by the law of nations. Let us render our
inquiries more particular.
Is this traffic considered to be
contrary to the law of nations, by the statesmen and jurists of Europe and
America?We are all aware of the conferences of the European powers on this
subject, at Vienna, at Aix la Chapelle, and at London. But all the efforts of
Great Britain to have it so denounced, were ineffectual. The marginal
references point to the answers of the several powers respectively, and to the
note and the answer of Lord Castlereagh; and all of them distinctly
show, that the inhibiting of this traffic finds no place in the code of
international law.o
The reports of various committees of
Congress in the United States, also clearly prove, that, in the view of
American statesmen, this traffic is not inhibited by the law of nations, since
the object of them all is to devise means by which it may be so inhibited.p
After all, these conferences are only
valuable as evidence of opinion, since they could not effect any change in the
law of nations. On this subject the opinion of Sir W. Scott is
distinctly expressed, in the case of the Louis.q
Among jurists, we find the judges of
the K. B. in England, denying that the slave trade is contrary to the law of
nations.r
And the same doctrine is announced by
Sir W. Scott, after the most elaborate investigation, in the case of the
Louis.
The only opposing cases are those of
the Amediet and La Jeune Eugenie.u
And, first, of the Amedie. It
is most obvious, that this case has not been considered by the statesmen of
Europe as establishing the doctrine contended for. The conferences to which we
have just referred, look to a general compact among nations, as the only mode
by which this traffic can be inhibited, and propose, by general suffrage, to
declare it piracy, admitting, at the same time, that their views may be
defeated by the refusal of any one state. But if the British ministry had so
considered this case, they would most surely have availed themselves of it in
these conferences. That it was not so viewed by Sir W. Scott is most
certain; or, bound as his judicial conscience was by the decision of the Court
of Appeals, he could not have pronounced the opinion given in the case of the Louis.
The argument in the case of the Amedie, is founded entirely on the
effect of the British act of parliament. Before the passing of that act, the
learned Judge declares, that no Court in England could have pronounced the
slave trade to be illegal; since, it is prima facie illegal every where,
and on principles of universal law a claimant is not entitled to be heard in
any Court. We inquire,
1. If, before the enactment of the
British act of parliament, the slave trade was not forbidden, how that act
could have changed the universal
1 Action's Rep. 240.
2 Mason's Rep. 409. law? It is
said, that that act, proprio vigore, rendered it, prima facie,
illegal every where, incapable abstractly of having a legal existence. Are
these not mere caballistic terms, too occult for the apprehension of a legal
mind?
Consider the operation ascribed to
this act of parliament. Jurisdiction, derived from place, is confined to
the territory of the sovereign, from the person, to his own subjects;
but here is an act of the British parliament, which, according to Sir Wm.
Grant, operates locally throughout all space, and personally over every
individual in the various communities of nations. Sir W. Scott holds a
doctrine directly opposite to this, in the case so often cited.v
It did not arise from the locality of the tribunal, for it was solemnly held,
in the case of the Maria,w (the Swedish convoy,) that this could
not influence its decisions.
2. By what rule, other than that of sic
volo sic iubeo, did not Master of the Rolls throw the burthen of proof on
the claimants? It is said, because the slave trade is illegal, contrary to
justice and humanity, that human beings are not the subjects of property. The
obvious answer is, this is a petitio principii. It assumes the very
question in controversy. The case admits, and so the fact was, that up to the
time when this act was passed, with the exception of America, this traffic was
every where lawful; that property
2 Dodson's Rep. 239.
1 Rob. Rep. 350. was acquired
by it. If at that time it had become otherwise, the change must have been
effected by some positive act. The assertion that such an act existed, was an
affirmative proposition. He who made it was bound to prove it. Such is the
opinion of Sir W. Scott,x and of Sir J. M'Intosh, Nay,
in the case of La Jeune Eugenie, it is admitted, that a prohibitory act
of the country of which the claimant is a subject, must concur with the general
law of nations, to authorize the forfeiture. Now, if the onus be on the
claimant, it is certainly not necessary for the libellant to show a prohibitory
act; all that in such case is essential is, that the claimant should fail to
prove a permissive one. The opinion of Sir W. Scott, in relation to this
case, will be found in The Fortuna, The Diana, and The Louis.y
3. How can even the rigid rule laid
down by that Court be availed of? The Court expressly decline to decide what
will be the effect of the proof, if made, declaring that a claimant, under such
circumstances, is not entitled to be heard in any Court.z
Of what avail, then, is the proof?
4. I find a difficulty in
understanding what principles of the law of nations are not general in their
operation, and yet the inhibition of the slave trade is said not to be one of
the general principles of that law.
5. The argument seems to me to be
self-destructive. It admits, that this novel principle cannot be enforced
against the subjects of those nations whose municipal regulations permit it.
One of two things seems to follow. Either the slave trade is not contrary to
the law of nations, or the municipal law may permit what the law of nations
forbids. Can any single nation control the universal law? strike piracy from
the law of nations? or deprive a belligerent of the rights of contraband, or of
blockade? The learned Judge, in the case of La Jeune Eugenie, thus
solves this difficulty. If a nation permits this traffic, the wrong is confined
to the nation injured; and other nations are neither bound nor permitted to
interfere. But the question recurs, what is the consequence, if a nation
inhibit it? The offence must be against the power inhibiting, not, surely,
against other nations, who, ex concessis, had no power either to
inhibit, or to permit. On this point, also, we are fortified by the opinion of
Sir W. Scott.1
The case of the Amedie may,
then, we think, be considered as an experiment; a trial of the legal
intelligence of Europe and America, and affords no safe guide for the decisions
of this tribunal.
It is obvious to remark, that the case
of La Jeune Eugenie is referred to by our adversaries under
circumstances of some singularity. The principles advanced by the learned
Judge, in delivering his opinion in that case, are maintained by our opponents,
while they revolt from the conclusion to which those principles conducted him.
What we ask in this case, is precisely what was done in the case of La Jeune
Eugenie, that the property should be restored to the consular agents of
Spain and Portugal; and yet that very case is relied upon as an authority
against this concession.
The proposition, that the slave trade
is inconsistent with the law of nations, is maintained on the following, among
other grounds, in the case of La Jeune Eugenie:
1. Its accumulated wrongs, and
consequent inconsistency with that code.
'It is of this traffic, in the
aggregate of its accumulated wrongs, that I would ask,' (says the learned
Judge,) 'if it can be consistent with the law of nations?'
To us, the inquiry seems to be vain
and nugatory. The gravamen of the question is equally applicable to any
other act of atrocity, and to any other code of laws. Murder, robbery, &c.
&c. are attended with accumulated wrong. They, too, are inconsistent with
the principles of justice and humanity, which lay at the foundation of international
law. Do the laws which forbid these crimes, therefore, form part of that
universal law? are they governed by it, or punished by it?
2. Again it is said, the law of nations
is deduced from the general principles of right and justice; that whatever can
be deduced from these principles as applicable to nations, and to the nature of
moral obligation, exists theoretically in the law of nations, and may be
enforced.
It seems to us, that nothing is gained
by the first of these propositions. The principles of right and justice, it is
most certain, are capable of being applied equally, to the law of nations, and
to the municipal law; to nations and to individuals. But the question here is,
whether, in their application to the concerns of individuals, by the act of one
or more nations, or of any number less than the whole, they do not rather constitute
a part of the municipal law of the nations applying them, than of the general
law of nations?
The second proposition appears to us
to be too broad. Without doubt, it is the right and duty of every nation to
prohibit crimes, and among others this crime. It is entirely consistent with
moral obligation that they should do so. What then? Is the act of a single
nation, fulfilling this duty, less simply municipal, because the morality of
the act which it performs is of universal obligation, equally affecting all
nations?
3. It is urged, moreover, that the
slave trade is in violation of some of the first principles which ought to
govern nations. The assertion is unquestionable. But may not the same thing be
said of many acts, which are confessed y the objects of municipal regulations
alone? Smuggling often begins in perjury. It is prosecuted in violation
of the duty of the citizen. Its tendency is to corrupt the morals of the
community. It sometimes eventuates in murder. Is it an offence cognizable by
the law of nations as an infraction of that law?
For these reasons, we submit to the
Court, that restitution cannot be refused on the ground that the slave trade is
contrary to the law of nations.
(2.) Is the traffic contrary to the
laws of Spain and Portugal; and can the Court enforce those laws by refusing
restitution?
1. The preceding argument, the
decision in the Louis, and even that of La Jeune Eugenie, are
referred to, to prove that, as to this point, the burthen of proof is on the
appellants. They must show a prohibitory act.
2. If the burthen of proof be with us,
we have furnished the evidence. The royal passport, and the order of the
Portuguese government, are decisive on this point. The sanction of the colonial
Governor was considered sufficient in the case of the Diana.2
3. The laws of Spai and Portugal are
merely municipal, and, from the very nature of their provisions, incapable of
enforcement by the Courts of the United States.3
4. Each sovereign has a right to the
forfeiture, from the time of the commission of the act. He has the right of
remission, and of pardon. Especially he has a right to decide, in his own
tribunals, on the conduct of his own subjects, in relation to his own laws.4 A
monarch, or a nation, stripped of these necessary attributes of sovereignty,
would cease to be sovereign. The attempt by the United States to enforce these
laws would be a usurpation.
(3.) Can this Court apply the laws of
the United States to this claim of foreign subjects?
1. The question has been answered in
the preceding argument. The laws of the United States are strictly municipal,
confined to citizens of the United States, to persons committing offences on
board vessels of the United States, to foreigners seeking to introduce negroes
into the United States. The claimants are not within these provisions.
2. Though the law of the United States
has made this traffic piracy, it has not, therefore, made it an offence against
the law of nations. The jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of the United States
is exclusive for the punishment of this offence. Besides, no particular nation
can increase or diminish the list of offences punishable by the law of nations.5
Such, in the opinion of the Judge of
the High Court of Admiralty in England, is the only legitimate operation of the
British act of parliament on this subject.6 Such, in the opinion of Congress, is
the necessary limitation of ours.7
Mr. C. J. Ingersoll, on the
same side, insisted, that there was no evidence in the cause which sustained
the allegation, that this vessel was found hovering on the coasts of the United
States when she was seized; and if it were so, that would furnish no sufficient
reason for refusing restitution to the Spanish and Portuguese claimants, who
were unaffected by the misconduct of the piratical captors of their property.8
Here the capturing vessel was illegally equipped in our ports, and the
libellants have established their claim to the property in question under the
laws of their own country. The original capture was not only made in violation
of our neutrality, but was an act of piracy, and the duty of making restitution
becomes imperative under the treaty with Spain. It appears from the treaties
and edicts which have been referred to, that the slave trade was then tolerated
by Spain and Portugal south of the equator; and, consequently, the presumption
is, that Africans, obtained within the permitted limits, are legitimately held
as slaves. This presumption is as strong as that which prevails in those States
of the Union where slavery exists. None of the judicial decisions cited have
gone the length of asserting, that the nations who have prohibited the slave
trade can compel others to join in that prohibition. The case of the Amedie
itself, as explained by Sir W. Scott in the Diana,9
does not extend the principle by which the general prohibition is to be
enforced in the Courts of another country, to the case of claimants engaged in
the trade permitted by the law of their own country.
Is, then, the slave trade contrary to
the law of nations?
That law is a body of political ethics
applied to nations. Not being reduced to a written code, we must seek for it in
the elementary writings of publicists; in judicial precedents; and in general
usage and practice.10 Sir W. Scott adds to these ample
sources the more limited and appropriate standard of ancient and admitted
practice, not only by treaties, but by the laws, ordinances, and formal
transactions of civilized States.11 The great men who drew up the report
upon the Silesia loan, declare the law of nations to be 'founded on justice,
equity, convenience, and the reason of the thing, and confirmed by long usage.'
As to the judicial precedents, they
neutralize each other, if, indeed, the authority of the original case of the Amedie
be not entirely subverted by that of Madrazo v. Willes, and the
admirable judgment of Sir W. Scott in the Louis. To the new conventional
law which is now attempted to be established in the world, the United States
have not yet become parties. We cannot enforce the treaties between other
powers, by which the African slave trade is denounced as contrary to humanity
and justice, and is prohibited to their subjects. No jurist has been cited,
from the earliest to the most recent, who has pronounced the trade contrary to
the positive law of nations. So that the Court is left entirely to the light of
reason in determining the question whether it be contrary to the law of nature,
as properly applied to the conduct of nations and states.
If this prohibition be a part of the
law of nations, it must be of the modern law of European nations. Are the
United States parties to that law? And if they are, can they enforce its penal
sanctions against other nations not parties to it?
Many principles have been at various
periods asserted by confederacies of nations, which have ultimately failed to
obtain a place in the general code of nations. The principles of the armed
neutrality of 1780, were maintained by nearly all the powers of Europe against
Great Britain alone; and yet her doctrines have not ceased to regulate the
conduct of nations engaged in war. It is, at least, doubtful which is the true
law of nations. The supposed inconsistency of the slave trade with the law of
nature, will not alone condemn it in the view of a Court of justice, so as to
authorize all nations to treat it as a crime, or to enforce its prohibition by
the confiscation of the property of those engaged in it. It becomes all
reflecting men to think seriously, and speak cautionsly, on the subject of the
illegality of a trade, which was once universally participated in by the
civilized nations of Europe and America. This fact is avowed by all the
speakers on both sides of the abolition question, in the British parliament. It
is matter of notorious history, that both in ancient and modern Europe, the
condition of slavery, and the commerce in slaves, were sanctioned by the universal
practice, and law of nations.12 The very definition of slavery in the
civil law, which has been copied by writers on public law, shows, that it was
an institution established by positive law, against the law of nature: Servitus
est constitutio juris gentium, qua quis dominio alieno contra naturam
subjicitur.13 The old common law writers are full
of the subject of villeinage, which, it is well known, was not abolished in
England until after the period when the African slave trade commenced. The
offence of vagrancy was punished with slavery by the statute, 1 Edw. VI.
c. 3.14 The first case relating to the African slave trade, is
that of Butts v. Pen, determined in the 29th of Charles
II., being trover for negroes. The special verdict found, that they were
usually bought and sold in India.15 In a subsequent case, trover was
brought for a negro in England. Holt, C. J. said, that trespass was the
kind of action, but that trover would lie, 'if the sale was in
Virginia.' Other cases turn upon questions as to the form of action, but they
all concur in establishing the right to this species of property.16
In 1689, all the Judges of England, with the eminent men who then filled the
offices of Attorney and Solicitor General, concurred in opinion, that negroes
were 'merchandise,' within the general terms of the Navigation Act.17
The famous case of Somerset,18 whilst it determined that negroes
could not be held as slaves in England, recognised the existence of slavery in
the colonies, as does the whole legal policy, both of that country and of
France.19 The slave trade was long the subject of negotiations,
treaties, and wars, between different European States, all of which consider it
as a lawful commerce. The very declarations in the recent European Congresses,
and the negotiations between Great Britain and the United States, all show that
the slave trade has not yet been prohibited by any thing like the unanimous
consent of nations, so as to make it absolutely unlawful in the view of a Court
of the law of nations.
The United States have done all in
their power, consistently with their constitution, to abolish the trade. But they have
sought to abolish it by municipal means only. They have prohibited it to their
own citizens, not only by the ordinary penal sanctions of revenue and trade
laws; but they have made it a criminal offence, and punished it as piracy. No
treaty has yet been ratified with any foreign power, by which they engage to
co-operate with the United States in the prohibition; and yet the Court is
called on to anticipate, by judicial legislation, the exercise of the treaty
making power, and to refuse restitution to the subjects of Spainand Portugal,
of that which they claim as their property, under the laws of their own
country. This property has been brought into our jurisdiction in consequence of
its having been taken from the possession of the original owners, by armaments
fitted out in our ports in violation of our neutrality. The duty of restitution
is therefore plain, under the laws and treaties of the Union, and the uniform
decisions of this Court.
The learned counsel also entered into
a minute and elaborate examination of the proofs of proprietary interest, and
reiterated many of the grounds of argument insisted on by his associate. But as
they have been already fully stated in the report of Mr. Berrien's argument, it
has not been thought necessary to repeat them.
The Attorney General, for the
appellants, in reply, answered the objection, that the only question presented
by the pleadings, on the part of the United States, was, whether this was a
trade in breach of the Slave Trade Acts? He insisted, that as the libels filed
by the Spanish and Portuguese Consuls, demanded restitution upon the ground of
the illegal armament in our ports, and the claim, or defensive allegation,
given in by the United States, resisted that demand upon two specific grounds:
1st. That the Africans were taken on board with intent to import the same,
&c.; and, 2dly. That the vessel was found hovering on the coast with the
same persons on board; if the testimony disclosed a case on which it would be
proper for the United States to interpose, which was not reached by the
pleadings, the consequence would be, not that the decrees should be affirmed,
but that the cause would be remanded, with directions to amend. And, supposing
the United States to have made no case by their pleadings, the question was,
have the libellants made a case which justifies the decree? The Africans are
parties to the cause, at least such of them as are free; and even if the other
parties had colluded to make a case for restitution, they would still have been
entitled to the protection of the Court.
As to the seizure by the revenue
cutter, he insisted that it was justifiable under the Slave Trade Act of the 2d
of March, 1807, s. 7. which forfeits 'any ship or vessel found hovering on
the coast of the United States, having on board any negro, mulatto, or
person of colour, for the purpose of selling them as slaves, or with intent to
land the same in any port or place within the jurisdiction of the United
States.' This act made no distinction as to the national character of the ship,
whether it belonged to citizens or foreigners. So, also, the act of the 15th of
May, 1820, c. 113. s. 5. makes the slave trade piracy, where it is carried on
by citizens of the United States. So that, whether we regard the predicament of
the vessel, or of the persons engaged in the transaction, the
seizure was fully warranted by the laws applicable to the case. Captain Jackson
performed only an act of duty in capturing and bringing in the vessel for
adjudication.
The question, then, recurs, what was
the condition of the Africans thus brought in, as defined by our laws; which
must be the rule to guide the determination of the Court. They are placed under
the protection of those laws, and are, prima facie, free. On whom, then,
is the onus probandi thrown? Being here rightfully, they are under the
protection of our laws and Courts of justice. No person can claim a right to
take them from the custody of the Court, and carry them away into slavery, but
those who can prove them to be slaves; who can prove it, by such evidence as
ought alone to be held sufficient in a question of freedom or slavery. This
view of the case settles the question of the burthen of proof. He who would
seek to disturb the apparently rightful condition of things, assumes the
burthen of proving his own right. This is the ordinary doctrine of the Court of
Admiralty, if the seizure has been rightful, and the case is, prima facie,
a case for condemnation. The onus probandi is thrown upon the claimant
to prove his property, and his right to restitution. But, in the present case,
the rule is peculiarly applicable, and the clearness and fulness of the proof ought
to be in proportion to the importance of the matter in controversy. The case is
one of human liberty. The Africans stand before the Court as if brought up
before it upon a habeas corpus. Suppose them here, on such a process,
asserting their freedom, and claiming your protection; what kind of proof would
you exact from those who claim to hold them in slavery? Most certainly you
would not demand inferior evidence to that which you require in a case of life
or death. The witnesses must present themselves fairly before you. Their
statements must be clear and consistent, and such as to command the confidence
of the Court. They must be sustained by the documentary evidence; and, where
any doubt is left, the decision should be in favorem libertatis.
The claimants wish the Court to
consider this as a question exclusively between Spain on one side, and the
United States on the other, in which these persons are to be considered as 'effects,'
and 'merchandise,' taken by pirates, and as such liable to restitution under
the stipulations of the treaty of 1795. But is the Court at liberty so to
consider them, under the laws of our own country? Some of them are confessedly
free, because the decree has established the fact. Which of them are slaves, it
is impossible to determine by any rule of evidence known to our practice. The
claimants must prove their property; and this involves the necessity of proving
that these persons are property. They must prove that they are property,
and that they are their property. Possession may be a sufficient indicium
of property, in those places where the local law makes a particular subject
property. The local laws of some of the States, generally make persons of
colour, prima facie, slaves, and throw the burthen of proof upon them to
show the contrary. But even in those States, the possession of a newly imported
African would not be evidence of property. The question, therefore, recurs, is
it enough to justify the Court in delivering up these persons to the parties
for whom they are claimed, to show a possession on the high seas? Is the mere
possession of such persons a sufficient evidence of their slavery to justify it
in restoring them as claimed? The question is not whether the cruisers of the
United States have a right to seize a Spanish slave ship upon the high seas,
bring her in for adjudication, and throw the burthen of proof of proprietary
interest upon the claimants. Any such right of interference with foreign
states, their subjects, or people, is disclaimed. But these people are here, in
the custody of the Court, without any invasion of the sovereignty of foreign
nations on our part; for the piratical vessel, which took them out of other
vessels sailing under Spanish and Portuguese colours, was not acting under the
authority, or upon the responsibility of the United States. They are brought
here by a seizure authorized by our own laws, and perfectly consistent with the
sovereignty and independence of Spain and Portugal. The laws, under which they
were seized and brought in, declare them to be entitled to their freedom. Can
the Court surrender them as slaves upon no other proof than mere naked
possession? Is the possession of Africans, on the coast of Africa, sufficient
evidence of title, per se, without connecting that possession with any
law, international or municipal, to justify the Court in taking an active part
in consigning to slavery these persons, thus placed under its protection?
It is unnecessary for the United
States to show, that the possession was, prima facie, wrongful. The
opposite parties, who call upon the active aid of the Court to maintain that
possession, must prove that it was rightful.
The real question, then, is, whether
the mere possession, under such circumstances, is sufficient evidence of title,
not as against the United States, but as against these Africans? The Court will
not shut their eyes to what is passing in the world. Such a possession may be
evidence of title in some of the States of this Union, and in the European
colonies. It might have been so formerly on the coast of Africa. But it is not
so now, even under the municipal laws of Spain and Portugal. Both the these
powers have prohibited the slave trade on the coast of Africa to the north of
the line, since 1815. It was prohibited long before by the United States and
Great Britain, on every part of the coast, and of the world. It has been
prohibited by France, Holland, and all the principal maritime states of Europe.
Under these circumstances, it is impossible for the Court to say, that
possession or the coast of Africa is so habitually found in connexion with
right, under the municipal laws of the country to which the vessel belongs, as
to constitute prima facie evidence of property. The presumption ought
rather to be reversed. The natives of Africa, however imperfect may be their
civilization, compose an independent nation. By the general law of nations,
they are as free as the Spaniards, or the Portuguese. Hence, it may be seen,
that the mere possession of an African, claiming him as a slave, by a Spanish
ship, on the coast of Africa, would no more prove the African a slave, than the
possession of a Spaniard, by an African ship on the coast of Spain, would prove
the Spaniard a slave. The actual possessor must, therefore, show some other
right than mere possession. The Spaniard alleges, that it has been the practice
of the civilized and christian nations of Europe, to make slaves of the
Africans for three centuries; and hence, that, by the law of nations, he has a
right to make slaves of them. The African opens the volume of the law of
nations, and shows, that the foundations of that code are laid in justice and
humanity, and that no legitimate right can grow out of a violation of these
principles. If he is answered, that the trade had its origin in humane motives,
he may well upbraid us for such a vindication. Nor does the existence of
slavery in the United States form any excuse or palliation, for perpetuating,
and extending the guilt and misery of the slave trade. Slavery was introduced
among us, during our colonial state, against the solemn remonstrances of our
legislative assemblies. Free America did not introduce it. She led the way in
measures for prohibiting the slave trade. The revolution which made us an
independent nation, found slavery existing among us. It is a calamity entailed
upon us, by the commercial policy of the parent country.20
There is no nation which has a right to reproach us with the supposed
inconsistency of our endeavouring to extirpate the slave trade as carried on
between Africa and America, whilst at the same time we are compelled to
tolerate the existence of domestic slavery under our own municipal laws.
It may well be asked, whether Africa
is without the pale of the law of nations. Are not Africans in their own
country, under the protection of that law? If it be answered, that the
condition of slavery has existed from time immemorial, growing out of the
exercise of the rights of war, as understood and practised in that barbarous
country, it may be replied, that those very wars have been stimulated by the
arts and avarice of the slave traders. This fact is shown by the most
conclusive evidence, in the examinations before the House of Commons in 1791.
It appears also by the more recent reports of the American and British naval
officers, and the agents of the London African Institution, and American
Colonization Society. Unless, therefore, the slave traders can derive a right,
founded upon wrong practised at their instigation, this argument cannot avail
them.
Their possession, then, derives no
support from the law of nations. Supposing that by the municipal law of Spain
these persons are slaves, whilst by your law they are free; being brought into
this country without any trespass on the sovereign rights of Spain, is the
Court bound to restore them from comity? If the general law of nations binds us
to do this, it also binds us to deliver up persons charged with crimes, or even
with political offences. But this is a principle which has been repudiated by
all nations.21 The stipulation in the Spanish treaty, by which we
are bound to restore the ships and effects, or merchandise of Spanish subjects,
when captured within our territorial jurisdiction, or by pirates on the high
seas, does not apply. These Africans are not 'effects,' or 'merchandise.' To
say that they are so, is to beg the whole question in controversy. The opinions
of the twelve Judges of England, and of the law officers of the Crown, in 1689,
which have been cited to show that negroes were considered as merchandise,
within the terms of the Navigation Act, only prove that they were so considered
at that time with reference to the British colonies, into which their
importation was then permitted. Even at that period, negroes in England were
not considered as merchandise, or the objects of traffic, or liable to be held
in servitude. Every thing must depend upon the law prevailing at the time and
place. By the law applicable to this case, these persons are free; they annot,
therefore, be considered as merchandise or effects within the treaty.
March 18th.
Mr. Chief Justice MARSHALL delivered
the opinion of the Court, and, after stating the case, proceeded as follows:
In prosecuting this appeal, the United
States assert no property in themselves. They appear in the character of
guardians, or next friends, of these Africans, who are brought, without any act
of their own, into the bosom of our country, insist on their right to freedom,
and sumit their claim to the laws of the land, and to the tribunals of the
nation.
The Consuls of Spain and Portugal,
respectively, demand these Africans as slaves, who have, in the regular course
of legitimate commerce, been acquired as property by the subjects of their
respective sovereigns, and claim their restitution under the laws of the United
States.
In examining claims of this momentous
importance; claims in which the sacred rights of liberty and of property come
in conflict with each other; which have drawn from the bar a degree of talent
and of eloquence, worthy of the questions that have been discussed; this Court
must not yield to feelings which might seduce it from the path of duty, and
must obey the mandate of the law.
That the course of opinion on the
slave trade should be unsettled, ought to excite no surprise. The Christian and
civilized nations of the world. with whom we have most intercourse, have all
been engaged in it. However abhorrent this traffic may be to a mind whose
original feelings are not blunted by familiarity with the practice, it has been
sanctioned in modern times by the laws of all nations who possess distant
colonies, each of whom has engaged in it as a common commercial business which
no other could rightfully interrupt. It has claimed all the sanction which
could be derived from long usage, and general acquiescence. That trade could
not be considered as contrary to the law of nations which was authorized and
protected by the laws of all commercial nations; the right to carry on which
was claimed by each, and allowed by each.
The course of unexamined opinion,
which was founded on this inveterate usage, received its first check in
America; and, as soon as these States acquired the right of self-government,
the traffic was forbidden by most of them. In the beginning of this century,
several humane and enlightened individuals of Great Britain devoted themselves
to the cause of the Africans; and, by frequent appeals to the nation, in which
the enormity of this commerce was unveiled, and exposed to the public eye, the
general sentiment was at length roused against it, and the feelings of justice
and humanity, regaining their long lost ascendency, prevailed so far in the
British parliament as to obtain an act for its abolition. The utmost efforts of
the British government, as well as of that of the United States, have since
been assiduously employed in its suppression. It has been denounced by both in
terms of great severity, and those concerned in it are subjected to the
heaviest penalties which law can inflict. In addition to these measures
operating on their own people, they have used all their influence to bring
other nations into the same system, and to interdict this trade by the consent
of all.
Public sentiment has, in both
countries, kept pace with the measures of government; and the opinion is
extensively, if not universally entertained, that this unnatural traffic ought
to be suppressed. While its illegality is asserted by some governments, but not
admitted by all; while the detestation in which it is held is growing daily,
and even those nations who tolerate it in fact, almost disavow their own
conduct, and rather connive at, than legalize, the acts of their subjects; it
is not wonderful that public feeling should march somewhat in advance of strict
law, and that opposite opinions should be entertained on the precise cases in
which our own laws may control and limit the practice of others. Indeed, we
ought not to be surprised, if, on this novel series of cases, even Courts of
justice should, in some instances, have carried the principle of suppression
farther than a more deliberate consideration of the subject would justify.
The Amedie, (1 Action's Rep.
240.) which was an American vessel employed in the African trade, was captured
by a British cruiser, and condemned in the Vice Admiralty Court of Tortola. An appeal
was prayed; and Sir William Grant, in delivering the opinion of the Court,
said, that the trade being then declared unjust and unlawful by Great Britain,
'a claimant could have no right, upon principles of universal law, to claim
restitution in a prize Court, of human beings carried as his slaves. He must
show some right that has been violated by the capture, some property of which
he has been dispossessed, and to which he ought to be restored. In this case,
the laws of the claimant's country allow of no right of property such as he
claims. There can, therefore, be no right of restitution. The consequence is,
that the judgment must be affirmed.'
The Fortuna (1 Dodson's Rep.
81.) was condemned on the authority of the Amedie, and the same
principle was again affirmed.
The Diana (1 Dodson's Rep.
95.) was a Swedish vessel, captured with a cargo of slaves, by a British
cruiser, and condemned in the Court of Vice Admiralty at Sierra Leone. This
sentence was reversed on appeal, and Sir William Scott, in pronouncing the
sentence of reversal, said, 'the condemnation also took place on a principle
which this Court cannot in any manner recognise, inasmuch as the sentence
affirms, 'that the slave trade, from motives of humanity, hath been abolished by
most civilized nations, and is not, at the present time, legally authorized
by any.' This appears to me to be an assertion by no means sustainable.'
The ship and cargo were restored, on the principle that the trade was allowed
by the laws of Sweden.
The principle common to these cases
is, that the legality of the capture of a vessel engaged in the slave trade,
depends on the law of the country to which the vessel belongs. If that law
gives its sanction to the trade, restitution will be decreed; if that law
prohibits it, the vessel and cargo will be condemned as good prize.
This whole subject came on afterwards
to be considered in the Louis, (2 Dodson's Rep. 238.) The opinion
of Sir William Scott, in that case, demonstrates the attention he had bestowed
upon it, and gives full assurance that it may be considered as settling the law
in the British Courts of Admiralty as far as it goes.
The Louis was a French vessel,
captured on a slaving voyage, before she had purchased any slaves, brought into
Sierra Leone, and condemned by the Vice Admiralty Court at that place. On an
appeal to the Court of Admiralty in England, the sentence was reversed.
In the very full and elaborate opinion
given on this case, Sir William Scott, in explicit terms, lays down the broad
principle, that the right of search is confined to a state of war. It is a
right strictly belligerent in its character, which can never be exercised by a
nation at peace, except against professed pirates, who are the enemies of the
human race. The act of trading in slaves, however detestable, was not, he said,
'the act of freebooters, enemies of the human race, renouncing every country,
and ravaging every country, in its coasts and vessels, indiscriminately.' It
was not piracy.
He also said, that this trade could
not be pronounced contrary to the law of nations. 'A Court, in the
administration of law, cannot attribute criminality to an act where the law
imputes none. It must look to the legal standard of morality; and, upon a
question of this nature, that standard must be found in the law of nations, as
fixed and evidenced by general, and ancient, and admitted practice, by
treaties, and by the general tenor of the laws and ordinances, and the formal
transactions of civilized states; and, looking to those authorities, he found a
difficulty in maintaining that the transaction was legally criminal.'
The right of visitation and search
being strictly a belligerent right, and the slave trade being neither
piratical, nor contrary to the law of nations, the principle is asserted and
maintained with great strength of reasoning, that it cannot be exercised on the
vessels of a foreign power, unless permitted by treaty. France had refused to
assent to the insertion of such an article in her treaty with Great Britain,
and, consequently, the right could not be exercised on the high seas by a
British cruiser on a French vessel.
'It is pressed as a difficulty,' says
the Judge, 'what is to be done, if a French ship, laden with slaves, is brought
in? I answer, without hesitation, restore the possession which has been
unlawfully devested; rescind the illegal act done by your own subject, and leave
the foreigner to the justice of his own country.'
This reasoning goes far in support of
the proposition, that, in the British Courts of admiralty, the vessel even of a
nation which had forbidden the slave trade, but had not conceded the right of
search, must, if wrongfully brought in, be restored to the original owner. But
the Judge goes farther, and shows, that no evidence existed to prove that
France had, by law, forbidden that trade. Consequently, for this reason, as
well as for that previously assigned, the sentence of condemnation was
reversed, and restitution awarded.
In the United States, different
opinions have been entertained in the different Circuits and Districts; and the
subject is now, for the first time, before this Court.
The question, whether the slave trade
is prohibited by the law of nations has been seriously propounded, and both the
affirmative and negative of the proposition have been maintained with equal
earnestness.
That it is contrary to the law of
nature will scarcely be denied. That every man has a natural right to the
fruits of his own labour, is generally admitted; and that no other person can
rightfully deprive him of those fruits, and appropriate them against his will,
seems to be the necessary result of this admission. But from the earliest times
war has existed, and war confers rights in which all have acquiesced. Among the
most enlightened nations of antiquity, one of these was, that the victor might
enslave the vanquished. This, which was the usage of all, could not be
pronounced repugnant to the law of nations, which is certainly to be tried by
the test of neral usage. That which has received the assent of all, must be the
law of all.
Slavery, then, has its origin in
force; but as the world has agreed that it is a legitimate result of force, the
state of things which is thus produced by general consent, cannot be pronounced
unlawful.
Throughout Christendom, this harsh
rule has been exploded, and war is no longer considered as giving a right to
enslave captives. But this triumph of humanity has not been universal. The
parties to the modern law of nations do not propagate their principles by
force; and Africa has not yet adopted them. Throughout the whole extent of that
immense continent, so far as we know its history, it is still the law of
nations that prisoners are slaves. Can those who have themselves renounced this
law, be permitted to participate in its effects by purchasing the beings who
are its victims?
Whatever might be the answer of a
moralist to this question, a jurist must search for its legal solution, in
those principles of action which are sanctioned by the usages, the national
acts, and the general assent, of that portion of the world of which he
considers himself as a part, and to whose law the appeal is made. If we resort
to this standard as the test of international law, the question, as has already
been observed, is decided in favour of the legality of the trade. Both Europe
and America embarked in it; and for nearly two centuries, it was carried on
without opposition, and without censure. A jurist could not say, that a
practice thus supported was illegal, and that those engaged in it might be
punished, either personally, or by deprivation of property.
In this commerce, thus sanctioned by
universal assent, every nation had an equal right to engage. How is this right
to be lost? Each may renounce it for its own people; but can this renunciation
affect others?
No principle of general law is more
universally acknowledged, than the perfect equality of nations. Russia and
Geneva have equal rights. It results from this equality, that no one can
rightfully impose a rule on another. Each legislates for itself, but its
legislation can operate on itself alone. A right, then, which is vested in all
by the consent of all, can be devested only by consent; and this trade, in
which all have participated, must remain lawful to those who cannot be induced
to relinquish it. As no nation can prescribe a rule for others, none can make a
law of nations; and this traffic remains lawful to those whose governments have
not forbidden it.
If it is consistent with the law of
nations, it cannot in itself be piracy. It can be made so only by statute; and
the obligation of the statute cannot transcend the legislative power of the
state which may enact it.
If it be neither repugnant to the law
of nations, nor piracy, it is almost superfluous to say in this Court, that the
right of bringing in for adjudication in time of peace, even where the vessel
belongs to a nation which has prohibited the trade. cannot exist. The Courts of
no country execute the penal laws of another; and the course of the American
government on the subject of visitation and search, would decide any case in
which that right had been exercised by an American cruiser, on the vessel of a
foreign nation, not violating our municipal laws, against the captors.
It follows, that a foreign vessel
engaged in the African slave trade, captured on the high-seas in time of peace,
by an American cruiser, and brought in for adjudication, would be restored.
The general question being disposed
of, it remains to examine the circumstances of the particular case.
The Antelope, a vessel unquestionably
belonging to Spanish subjects, was captured while receiving a cargo of Africans
on the coast of Africa, by the Arraganta, a privateer which was manned in
Baltimore, and is said to have been then under the flag of the Oriental
republic. Some other vessels, said to be Portuguese, engaged in the same
traffic, were previously plundered, and the slaves taken from them, as well as
from another vessel then in the same port, were put on board the Antelope, of
which vessel the Arraganta took possession, landed her crew, and put on board a
prize master and prize crew. Both vessels proceeded to the coast of Brazil,
where the Arraganta was wrecked, and her captain and crew either lost or made
prisoners.
The Antelope, whose name was changed
to the General Ramirez, after an ineffectual attempt to sell the Africans on
board at Surinam, arrived off the coast of Florida, and was hovering on that
coast, near that of the United States, for several days. Supposing her to be a
pirate, or a vessel wishing to smuggle slaves into the United States, Captain
Jackson, of the revenue cutter Dallas, went in quest of her, and finding her
laden with slaves, commanded by officers who were citizens of the United
States, with a crew who spoke English, brought her in for adjudication.
She was libelled by the Vice Consuls
of Spain and Portugal, each of whom claim that portion of the slaves which were
conjectured to belong to the subjects of their respective sovereigns; which
claims are opposed by the United States on behalf of the Africans.
In the argument, the question on whom
the onus probandi is imposed, has been considered as of great
importance, and the testimony adduced by the parties has been critically
examined: It is contended, that the Antelope, having been wrongfully
dispossessed of her slaves by American citizens, and being now, together with
her cargo, in the power of the United States, ought to be restored, without
farther inquiry, to those out of whose possession she was thus wrongfully
taken. No proof of property, it is said, ought to be required. Possession is in
such a case evidence of property.
Conceding this as a general
proposition, the counsel for the United States deny its application to this
case. A distinction is taken between men, who are generally free, and goods,
which are always property. Although, with respect to the last, possession may
constitute the only proof of property which is demandable, something more is
necessary where men are claimed. Some proof should be exhibited that the
possession was legally acquired. A distinction has been also drawn between
Africans unlawfully taken from the subjects of a foreign power by persons
acting under the authority of the United States, and Africans first captured by
a belligerent privateer, or by a pirate, and then brought rightfully into the
United States, under a reasonable apprehension that a violation of their laws
was intended. Being rightfully in the possession of an American Court, that
Court, it is contended, must be governed by the laws of its own country; and
the condition of these Africans must depend on the laws of the United States, not
on the laws of Spain and Portugal.
Had the Arraganta been a regularly
commissioned cruiser, which had committed no infraction of the neutrality of
the United States, her capture of the Antelope must have been considered as
lawful, and no question could have arisen respecting the rights of the original
claimants. The question of prize or no prize belongs solely to the Courts of
the captor. But, having violated the neutrality of the United States, and
having entered our ports, not voluntarily, but under coercion, some difficulty
exists respecting the extent of the obligation to restore, on the more proof of
former possession, which is imposed on this government.
If, as is charged in the libels of
both the Consuls, as well as of the United States, she was a pirate, hovering
on the coast with intent to introduce slaves in violation of the laws of the
United States, our treaty requires that property rescued from pirates shall be
restored to the Spanish owner on his making proof of his property.
Whether the General Ramirez,
originally the Antelope, is to be considered as the prize of a commissioned
belligerent ship of war unlawfully equipped in the United States, or as a
pirate, it seems proper to make some inquiry into the title of the claimants.
In support of the Spanish claim, testimony
is produced, showing the documents under which the Antelope sailed from the
Havana on the voyage on which she was captured; that she was owned by a Spanish
house of trade in that place; that she was employed in the business of
purchasing slaves, and had purchased and taken on board a considerable number,
when she was seized as prize by the Arraganta.
Whether, on this proof, Africans
brought into the United States, under the various circumstances belonging to
this case, ought to be restored or not, is a question on which much difficulty
has been felt. It is unnecessary to state the reasons in support of the
affirmative or negative answer to it, because the Court is divided on it, and,
consequently, no principle is settled. So much of the decree of the Circuit
Court as directs restitution to the Spanish claimant of the Africans found on
board the Antelope when she was captured by the Arraganta, is affirmed.
There is some difficulty in
ascertaining their number. The libel claims one hundred and fifty as belonging
to Spanish subjects, and charges that one hundred or more of these were on
board the Antelope. Grondona and Ximenes, Spanish officers of the Antelope
before her capture, both depose positively to the number of one hundred and sixty-six.
Some deduction, however, is to be made from the weight of Grondona's testimony,
because, he says, in one of his depositions, that he did not count the slaves
on the last day when some were brought on board, and adds, that he had lost his
papers, and spoke from memory, and from the information he had received from
others of the crew, after his arrival in the Havana. Such of the crew as were
examined, concur with Grondona and Ximenes as to numbers.
The depositions of the Spanish
witnesses on this point, are opposed by those of John Smith, the Captain of the
General Ramirez, and William Brunton, one of the crew of the Arraganta, who was
transferred to the Antelope.
John Smith deposes, that ninety-three
Africans were found on board the Antelope when captured, which he believes to
have been Spanish property. He also says, that one hundred and eighty-three
were taken out of Portuguese vessels.
William Brunton deposes, that more
slaves were taken out of the Portuguese ship than were in any other, and that
ninety odd were represented by the crew to have been on board the Antelope when
she was captured.
If, to the positive testimony of these
witnesses, we add the inference to be drawn from the statement of the libel,
and the improbability that so large a number of Africans as are claimed could
have been procured, under the circumstances in which the Antelope was placed,
between the 13th, when she was liberated by the first pirate who seized her,
and the 23d, when she was finally captured, we are rather disposed to think the
weight of testimony is in favour of the smaller number. But supposing perfect
equality in this respect, the decision ought, we think, to be against the
claimant.
Whatever doubts may attend the
question whether the Spanish claimants are entitled to restitution of all the
Africans taken out of their possession with the Antelope, we cannot doubt the
propriety of demanding ample proof of the extent of that possession. Every
legal principle which requires the plaintiff to prove his claim in any case,
applies with full force to this point; and no countervailing consideration
exists. The onus probandi, as to the number of Africans which were on
board when the vessel was captured, unquestionably lies on the Spanish
libellants. Their proof is not satisfactory beyond ninety-three. The
individuals who compose this number must be designated to the satisfaction of
the Circuit Court.
We proceed next to consider the libel
of the Vice-Consul of Portugal. It claims one hundred and thirty slaves, or
more, 'all of whom, as the libellant is informed and believes,' are the
property of a subject or subjects of his Most Faithful Majesty; and although
'the rightful owners of such slaves be not at this time individually and
certainly known to the libellant, he hopes and expects soon to discover them.'
John Smith, and William Brunton, whose
depositions have already been noticed, both state, that several Africans were
taken out of Portuguese vessels; but neither of them state the means by which
they ascertained the national character of the vessels they had plundered. It
does not appear that their opinions were founded on any other fact than the
flag under which the vessels sailed. Grondona, also, states the plunder of a
Portuguese vessel, lying in the same port, and engaged in the same traffic with
the Antelope when she was captured; but his testimony is entirely destitute of
all those circumstances which would enable us to say, that he had any knowledge
of the real character of the vessel, other than was derived from her flag. The
cause furnishes no testimony of any description, other than these general
declarations, that the proprietors of the Africans now claimed by the
Vice-Consul of Portugal, were the subjects of his king; nor is there any
allusion to the individuals to whom they belong. These vessels were plundered
in March, 1820, and the libel was filed in August of the same year. From that
time to this, a period of more than five years, no subject of the crown of
Portugal has appeared to assert his title to this property, no individual has
been designated as its probable owner. This inattention to a subject of so much
real interest, this total disregard of a valuable property, is so contrary to
the common course of human action, as to justify serious suspicion that the
real owner dares not avow himself.
That Americans, and others, who cannot
use the flag of their own nation, carry on this criminal and inhuman traffic
under the flags of other countries, is a fact of such general notoriety, that
Courts of admiralty may act upon it. It cannot be necessary to take particular
depositions, to prove a fact which is matter of general and public history.
This long, and otherwise unaccountable absence, of any Portuguese claimant,
furnishes irresistible testimony, that no such claimant exists, and that the
real owner belongs to some other nation, and feels the necessity of concealment.
An attempt has been made to supply
this defect of testimony, by adducing a letter from the secretary to whose
department the foreign relations of Portugal are supposed to be intrusted,
suggesting the means of transporting to Portugal those slaves which may be in
the possession of the Vice-Consul, as the property of his fellow subjects.
Allow to this document all the effect which can be claimed for it, and it can
do no more than supply the want of an express power from the owners of the
slaves to receive them. It cannot be considered as ascertaining the owners, or
as proving their property.
The difficulty, them, is not
diminished by this paper. These Africans still remain unclaimed by the owner,
or by any person professing to know the owner. They are rightfully taken from
American citizens, and placed in possession of the law. No property whatever in
them is shown. It is said, that possession, in a case of this description, is
equivalent to property. Could this be conceded, who had the possession? From
whom were they taken by the Arraganta? It is not alleged that they are the
property of the crown, but of some individual. Who is that individual? No such
person is shown to exist, and his existence, after such a lapse of time, cannot
be presumed.
The libel, which claims them for
persons entirely unknown, alleges a state of things which is prima facie
evidence of an intent to violate the laws of the United States, by the
commission of an act which, according to those laws, entitles these men to
freedom. Nothing whatever can interpose to arrest the course of the law, but
the title of the real proprietor. No such title appears, and every presumption
is against its existence.
We think, then, that all the Africans,
now in possession of the Marshal for the District of Georgia, and under the
control of the Circuit Court of the United States for that District, which were
brought in with the Antelope, otherwise called the General Ramirez, except
those which may be designated as the property of the Spanish claimants, ought
to be delivered up to the United States, to be disposed of according to law. So
much of the sentence of the Circuit Court as is contrary to this opinion, is to
be reversed, and the residue affirmed.
DECREE. This cause came on to be
heard, &c.; On consideration whereof, this Court is of opinion, that there
is error in so much of the sentence and decree of the said Circuit Court, as
directs the restitution to the Spanish claimant of the Africans in the
proceedings mentioned, in the ratio which one hundred and sixty-six bears to
the whole number of those which remained alive at the time of pronouncing the
said decree; and also in so much thereof, as directs restitution to the
Portuguese claimant; and that so much of the said decree ought to be reversed,
and it is hereby reversed and annulled. And this Court, proceeding to give such
decree as the said Circuit Court ought to have given, doth DIRECT and ORDER,
that the restitution to be made to the Spanish claimant, shall be according to
the ratio which ninety-three (instead of one hundred and sixty-six) bears to
the whole number, comprehending as well those originally on board the Antelope,
as those which were put on board that vessel by the Captain of the Arraganta.
After making the apportionment according to this ratio, and deducting from the
number the rateable loss which must fall on the slaves to which the Spanish
claimants were originally entitled, the residue of the said ninety-three are to
be delivered to the Spanish claimant, on the terms in the said decree
mentioned; and all the remaining Africans are to be delivered to the United
States, to be disposed of according to law; and the said decree of the said
Circuit Court is, in all things not contrary to this decree, affirmed.
The Louis, 2 Dodson's Rep. 249.
The Bello Corrunes, 6 Wheat. Rep.
152.
4th Report African Inst; Russia, 20,
21; France, 23, 24; Austria, 26; Prussia, Ibd.; Lord Castlereagh, 19, 20, 31,
32.
Vide Appendix Note I. (A.) p.
1-32.
2 Dodson's Rep. 252, 253.
Madrazo v. Willis, 3 Barnwell and
Ald. 353.
s
2 Dodson's Rep. 210.
2 Dodson's Rep. 242. 27 Eng.
Parl. Deb. 253, 254.
1 Dodson's Rep. 85. 95. 2 Dodson's
Rep. 210. 260.
La Jeune Eug. 2 Mason's Rep.
409.
2 Dodson's Rep. 251.
1 Dodson's Rep. 95.
4th Report Afr. Inst. Abstract,
&c. 26.
2 Dodson's Rep. 256.
Rutherf. 488. 491.
2 Dodson's Rep. 239.
Vide Appendix, Note I.(A.) Report
of Committee of the House of Representatives, 1824, 1825.
The Josefa Segunda, 5 Wheat. Rep.
338.
1 Dodson's Rep. 98, 99.
United States v. Smith, 5 Wheat.
Rep. 160.
Le Louis, 2 Acton's Rep. 249.
4 Hallam's Middle Ages 221; 1 Gibbon's
Decline and Fall 63.
Domat, Loix Civ. Prel. tit. 2. § 2. Wood's Inst. Imp. and Civ. Law,
Introd.
93. Grotius, de J. B. ac P. C.
2. c. 5. § 27. Puffend. b. 3. 2. § 8. 1 Rutherf. b. 1. c. 20. p. 474. Bynk. Quaest. Jur. Pub. l. 1. c. 3. p. 20. Du Ponceau's Transl.
4 Reeve's Hist. Law, 451.
2 Keebl. 785. [1793] EngR 213; 2 Lev. 201.
2 Salk. 666. 1 Lord Raym.
146. 5 Mod. Rep. 185. Carth. 596.
2 Chalmers'
Opinion of Eminent Lawyers, 263.
Cobbett's
State Trials, vol. 20. p. 1.
Valin. Ord. de
la Mar.
liv. 2. tit. 1. du
Capitaine, art. 16.
Hargrave's
Argument, in Somersett's case, 11 State Trials, 346.
Somersett's
Case, 11 State Triale 339, 346.