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Butler, in his autobiography, published in 1892, referring to the phrase "contraband of war," as applied to slaves, says: "The truth is, as a lawyer I was never very proud of it, but as an executive officer I was very much comforted with it as a means of doing my duty."

See "Butler's Book," 256-259.

V. DESTINATION.

1. MUST BE HOSTILE.

§ 1255.

See supra, § 1250.

"In order to constitute contraband of war, it is absolutely essential that two elements should concur-viz. a hostile quality and a hostile destination. If either of these elements is wanting, there can be no such thing as contraband. Innocent goods going to a belligerent port are not contraband. Here there is a hostile destination, but no hostile quality. Hostile goods, such as munitions of war, going to a neutral port are not contraband. Here there is a hostile quality, but no hostile destination."

Historicus on International Law, 191.

A vessel sailed July, 1798, from Dantzig for Amsterdam; but the master having learned, on calling at Elsineur, that Amsterdam was blockaded, he changed his course for Embden, entered his protest to that effect, and was sailing thither when captured. The cargo consisted of small pieces of timber. Sir W. Scott said:

"This is a claim for a ship taken, as it is admitted, at the time of capture sailing for Embden, a neutral port; a destination on which, if it is considered as the real destination, no question of contraband could arise; inasmuch as goods going to a neutral port, can not come under the description of contraband, all goods going there being equally lawful. It is contended, however, that they are of such a nature, as to become contraband, if taken on a destination to a hostile port. On this point, some difference of opinion seems to have been entertained; and the papers which are brought in, may be said to leave this important fact in some doubt. Taking it however, that they are of such a nature as to be liable to be considered as contraband on a hostile destination, I can not fix that character on them in the present voyage. The rule respecting contraband, as I have always understood it, is, that the articles must be taken in delicto, in the actual prosecution of the voyage to an enemy's port. Under the present understanding of the law of nations, you can not generally take

H. Doc. 551-vol 7-45

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the proceeds in the return voyage. From the moment of quitting port on a hostile destination, indeed, the offence is complete, and it is not necessary to wait, till the goods are actually endeavouring to enter the enemy's port; but beyond that, if the goods are not taken in delicto, and in the actual prosecution of such a voyage, the penalty is not now generally held to attach. The master receives information of this fact [the blockade of Amsterdam] at Elsineur, and on con-ultation with the consul of the nation to which the cargo belonged. changed his purpose, and actually shaped his course for Embden, to which place he was sailing at the time of capture. I must ask then. was this property taken under such circumstances as make it subject to the penalty of contraband? Was it taken in delicto, in the prose cution of an intention of landing it at a hostile port? Clearly notBut it is said, that in the understanding and intention of the owner it was going to a hostile port; and that the intention on his part was complete, from the moment when the ship sailed on that destination: had it been taken at any period previous to the actual variation. there could be no question, but that this intention would have been sufficient to subject the property to confiscation; but when the variation had actually taken place, however arising, the fact no longer existed. There is no corpus delicti existing at the time of capture. In this point of view, I think, the case is very distinguishable from some other cases, in which, on the subject of deviation by the master. into a blockaded port, the court did not hold the cargo, to be neces sarily involved in the consequences of that act. It is argued, that as the criminal deviation of the master did not there immediately implicate the cargo; so here, the favourable alteration can not protect it; and that the offence must in both instances, be judged by the act and designs of the owner. But in those cases there was the guilty act, really existing at the time of capture; both the ship and cargo were taken in delicto; and the only question was, to whom the delictum was to be imputed. In the present instance, there is no

existing delictum.

neutral port.

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The cargo is taken on a voyage to a

If the capture had been made a day before,

that is, before the alteration of the course, it might have been different; but however the variation has happened, I am disposed to hold, that the parties are entitled to the benefit of it; and that under that variation the question of contraband does not at all arise. I shall decree restitution; but as it was absolutely incumbent on the captors to bring the cause to adjudication, from the circumstance of the apparent original destination, I think they are fairly entitled to their expences.'

The Imina (Aug. 1, 1800), 3 C. Rob. 167.

A Swedish ship, while on a voyage from Ireland to Spain, with a cargo of corn, shipped under the permission of the British Government for the use of the British forces in Spain, was captured, in April, 1814, by an American privateer. It was contended that the doctrine of contraband could not apply to the case because the cargo was destined to a country which was neutral in the war between Great Britain and the United States. It was held, however, that the cargo was contraband because it was avowedly destined to British military forces. The opinion of the court, which was delivered by Mr. Justice Story, was concurred in by Justices Washington. Todd, and Duvall. Marshall, Chief Justice, with whom concurred Justices Livingston and Johnson, dissented, on the ground that the war in Europe was separable from that in which the United States and Great Britain were engaged, and that, although British troops in every part of the world were legally enemies of the United States, yet the furnishing of supplies to British armies in Spain was not in reality an unneutral act to the prejudice of the United States.

The Commercen (1816), 1 Wheat., 382.

To the inquiry of an importer as to whether the United States would object to the importation of pyrites and phosphate of soda as contraband articles, the following reply was made: "The Department is not informed of the views of the Spanish Government on this subject, but the articles in question are not generally mentioned in the lists of contraband found in treaties. It is also proper to observe that, where articles classed as contraband are destined for this country, it is not our policy to obstruct their importation."

Mr. Moore, Asst. Sec. of State, to Secretary of Treasury, May 7, 1898, 228 MS. Dom. Letters, 341.

2. DOCTRINE OF "CONTINUOUS VOYAGES."

The doctrine of "Continuous voyages" has already (supra, § 1180) been to some extent discussed in connection with the Rule of the War of 1756. It will now be considered under the head of "Contraband.” in connection with which it has had its latest development. In some of the cases in the American civil war it is uncertain whether the doctrine was applied by the court in connection with contraband or with blockade, but, as this question can best be judged by studying the cases as a whole, they are here fully presented under the preponderant topic-that of contraband.

(1.) QUESTION RAISED IN AMERICAN CIVIL WAR.

$1256.

Early in the war the Confederate Government, whose ports were blockaded by the United States, sent abroad agents for the purpose, among others, of obtaining arms and munitions of war and other needful supplies, as well as vessels to transport them, the means of payment to be derived chiefly from the proceeds of the Southern cotton crop. To carry out this plan a firm under the name of Frazer, Trenholm & Co., composed of merchants of Charleston, South Carolina, and constituting a branch of a house in that city, was established in Liverpool. Consignments of cotton were made to this firm, to be drawn against for purchase for the Confederacy. In this way a vast system of blockade running was soon built up, under cover of the neutral flag, but under actual Confederate supervision and control. Commander Bulloch, C. S. X., writing at Liverpool, May 3, 1862, to Mr. Mason, Confederate commissioner in London, stated that he had read to Messrs. Frazer, Trenholm & Co. a part of one of Mr. Mason's letters, and added: "These gentlemen say that their ships are neces sarily sailed under the British flag, and the presence on board of any persons known to have been in the Confederate service would compromise their character, and in this view of the case they feel reluctantly compelled to decline giving a pasage to any of the Sumter's men.”

As the system of blockade running grew in notoriety it became more difficult of execution, and Confederate agents were established in the various West India islands to facilitate its operations; and, instead of direct voyages to blockaded ports, goods were shipped in British bottoms to neutral ports and there transshipped into steamers of light draft and great speed, which could carry coal enough for the short passage to Charleston, Savannah, or Wilmington. Of the neutral ports thus used, Nassau, in the island of New Providence, acquired the greatest celebrity.

Moore, Int. Arbitrations, I. 580-581; Official Records of the Union and
Confederate Navies, Ser. I., vol. 1, p. 770.

July 5, 1862, Mr. A. H. Layard, by direction of Earl Russell, addressed a letter to certain British merchants and shipowners of Liverpool in reply to a memorial in which they invoked the protection of the British Government against "the hostile attitude assumed by Federal cruisers in the Bahama waters," so as to put a check on the seizures frequently made therein. Earl Russell, in his reply, stated that complaint had, on the other hand, been made on the part of the United States that ships had been sent out from Great Britain to America" with a fixed purpose to run the blockade; that high premiums of insurance have been paid with this view, and that arms and ammunition have been thus conveyed to the Southern States to

enable them to carry on the war. Lord Russell," so the letter continues, “was unable either to deny the truth of those allegations or to prosecute to conviction the parties engaged in those transactions. But he can not be surprised that the cruisers of the United States should watch with vigilance a port which is said to be the great entrêpot of this commerce.

"Her Majesty's Government have no reason to doubt the equity and adherence to legal requirements of the United States prize courts. But he is aware that many vessels are subject to harsh treatment, and that, if captured, the loss to the merchant is far from being compensated even by a favorable decision in a prize court.

"The true remedy would be that the merchants and shipowners of Liverpool should refrain from this species of trade. It exposes innocent commerce to vexatious detention and search by American cruisers; it produces irritation and ill will on the part of the population of the Northern States of America; it is contrary to the spirit of Her Majesty's proclamation; and it exposes the British name to suspicions of bad faith, to which neither Her Majesty's Government nor the great body of the nation are justly obnoxious.

"It is true, indeed, that supplies of arms and ammunition have been sent to the Federals equally in contravention of that neutrality which Her Majesty has proclaimed. It is true, also, that the Federals obtain more freely and more easily that of which they stand in need. But if the Confederates had the command of the sea they would no doubt watch as vigilantly and capture as readily British vessels going to New York as the Federals now watch Charleston and capture vessels seeking to break the blockade.

"There can be no doubt that the watchfulness exercised by Federal cruisers to prevent supplies reaching the Confederates by sea will occasionally lead to vexatious visits of merchant ships not engaged in any pursuit to which the Federals can properly object. This, however, is an evil to which war on the ocean is liable to expose neutral commerce, and Her Majesty's Government have done all they can fairly do, that is to say, they have urged the Federal Government to enjoin upon their naval officers greater caution in the exercise of their belligerent rights.

"Her Majesty's Government having represented to the United States Government every case in which they were justified in interfering, have only further to observe that it is the duty of Her Majesty's subjects to conform to Her Majesty's proclamation, and to abstain from furnishing to either of the belligerent parties any of the means of war, which are prohibited to be furnished by that proclamation." Dip. Cor. 1862, 171.

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