United States v. Two Hundred & Fourteen Boxes of Arms, Ammunition, & Munitions of War
United States v. Two Hundred & Fourteen Boxes of Arms, Ammunition, & Munitions of War
Opinion of the Court
These are libels of information brought by the United States attorney, for and in behalf of the United States, against two cannons, sundry cases of fire-arms and ammunition, and kegs of gunpowder, found on board the schooner E. Gr. Irwin, lying in the port of Richmond, and seized for forfeiture in August last. The two proceedings are founded upon section 5283 of the Revised Statutes of theUnited
The case of the prosecution is claimed to be that the steam-tug Mary N. Hogan, lying in the port of New York in July last, was made ready to be sent out to the waters of Hayti to cruise and commit hostilities in those waters, as a gun-boat, in behalf of the insurrectionists of that island, against the 3'epublic of Hayti; and that the two cannons, the cases of fire-arms and ammunition, and the kegs of gunpowder, which were seized on board of the Irwin under process of this court, were intended to be put upon her as her armament and outfit, and to have been taken on board of the Plogan from the Irwin at some point on the Atlantic seaboard near Hog island or Hampton roads; and that they were shipped at Now York on the Irwin for that purpose; and that Capt. Dodd, the master of the Irwin, knew of such character and destination of this part of his cargo, and therein willingly and knowingly assisted in the attempt to arm, fit out, and furnish the Hogan, although it is conceded that he was ignorant of the particular steamer which he was thus to aid in furnishing, and of her name. The prosecution have produced evidence tending to prove,, among others, the following facts, namely:
On the fifteenth of March, 1883, an expedition left Philadelphia on the steamer Tropic, with arms and ammunition, nominally bound for Kingston, Jamaica. The steamer, instead of going to Kingston, went to the island of Inagua, lying between Hayti and Jamaica. There she took on board Gen. .Bazelais, with some 75 armed men, and afterwards took on about the same number of men from an English steamer at sea. She then proceeded to the port of Marigoane, Hayti, with all men, arms, and ammunition, and landed them about daybreak, when, under the command of Gen. Bazelais, they successfully inaugurated the rebellion against the government of Hayti, which continued to maintain itself through the year 1883. This Gen. Bazelais had, before leaving Jamaica, supplied one Simon Soutar, a merchant of Kingston, with money for purchasing arms and ammunition. Those which went out on the Tropic were purchased in New York by one Ilenry A. Kearney, on Soutar’s order, from Joseph W. Frazer, a dealer in such goods, and were shipped by Frazer to Philadelphia, and shipped by Kearney at Philadelphia on the Tropic. The master and mate of the Tropic were afterwards tried in Philadelphia, and convicted and sent to the penitentiary for the violation of section 5286 of the Revised Statutes ol' the United States, of which they were found guilty. See U. S. v. Rand, 17 Fed. Rep. 142. Early in the summer of 1883 Soutar appeared in New York, and was in conference with Kearney, Frazer, one George W. Brown, and one Wellesley Bourke. Kearney had. been vice consul of the United States, during some years before 1883, in Hayti. Afterwards he had been consul of Hayti in New York. Brown had conducted business in Jamaica, and knew Soutar, and had known Kearney for*52 10 years. Brown’s business in New York in July last was that of an insurance agent, but he took part in the affair about to be mentioned as an out.side job. Bourke was the agent of the Haytian insurrectionists in New York. A sequel of the intercourse of these men was that a steam-tug called the Mary N. Hogan, capable of carrying some 75 tons or more in weight of freight, not in large bulk, was purchased, with money supplied by Soutar, through the agency of Kearney, at a cost, all told, of $11,600. There were also purchased by Kearney, with funds supplied by Soutar, the guns, arms, and ammunition which are the subjects of the present libels, at a cost of $7,000. They were bought of Joseph TV. Frazer, the same person who had sold' the like articles which had gone to Marigoane on board the Tropic. Kearney, wishing to keep in the background, got Brown to engage a vessel by which these military goods might be sent out of New York billed for some home port; and Brown, through a regular ship-broker in New York, engaged the schooner E. G-. Irwin — Silas H. Dodd, master — for that purpose. It was concerted between Kearney, Brown, and Dodd that after these military goods were put on board the Irwin, and after the schooner should have proceeded down the coast for some distance, say to Hog island or Hampton roads, she should be hailed, by means of concerted signals, by a steamer bound from New York for Hayti, and that the munitions of war on board of her should be transferred to the steamer. Dodd, however, was not informed what steamer was to relieve him of his'military cargo, or of its name.
, The Hogan, before being purchased by Kearney for Soutar, was examined by Edward A. Bushnell, a friend of Kearney, wholiad sometime before been chief engineer of the Haytian navy. John H. McCarthy, an adventurous and somewhat dissipated character, was employed as master, and the bill of sale of the Hogan, when purchased, was made in the name of McCarthy as owner; but he executed a mortgage for the amount of the purchase money, bn the vessel, in favor of a Mr. Abbott, a merchant of Jamaica, and friend of Soutar. Patrick Cox was employed as chief engineer, and Finton Costigau as gunner. Several weeks were consumed in making repairs and preparar tions, and on the twentieth of July the Hogan, with a crew and a supply of coal, but without other freight, was ready to leave for her destination, when she was seized and libeled by the United States for an attempted violation of the neutrality laws, under section 5283 of the Revised Statutes. Prevented in this way, as the Hogan was, from proceeding on her intended voyage, there was no steamer to overhaul the schooner Irwin in her sail down the coast, and to relieve her of the arms and military munitions which constituted part of her cargo. She had taken on pig-iron and cement at New York for Biehmond at the time when she had been engaged to take the military munitions; and these latter had-been consigned, as a matter of form, to “or■der” in Richmond. The Irwin, therefore, looked out in vain for a steamer during her voyage down the coast; and after standing off Hog island for a couple of days, and lying at anchor in Hampton roads for a week, she came, with all her cargo, on to Richmond. Here she discharged her legitimate cargo, but was herself arrested and libeled by the government at the same time that the contraband portion of her cargo was seized.
In opposition to this train of testimony the defense deny that the Hogan was intended for warlike cruising in the waters of Hayti against that republic; insist that she was purchased for the purpose of being sent out and used jin the port of Antonio, Jamaica, to raise a steamer, the Calvert, which had been sunk in the harbor there in a collision, and which had been purchased at auction, as she lay, by Soutar; and; not controverting many of the facts brought out in evidence by the prose
Counsel for defense insist that there is no direct proof of an illegal purpose in fitting out the Hogan. That would be an insufficient objection if the circumstances were such as to leave no other reasonable hypothesis than that of her guilt, and if they pointed conclusively to that fact. But there is very much direct evidence. The chief engineer, Patrick Cox, and the gunner, Pintón Costigan, of the Hogan, testify positively and circumstantially that McCarthy, the master of tiio Hogan, fold them that they were to fight the vessel against the llaytian government; that she was going there for that purpose; that a bounty of >15,000 would be divided, on reaching there, between her four principal officers; and that they hired themselves for that express enterprise. Declarations of McCarthy to the same effect, made to others when off his guard from liquor, were also proved. The pretense that the Hogan was to bo used in the port of Antonio to raise the Calvert is insufficient to overcome the circumstantial and positive evidence sustaining the hypothesis of the prosecution, that she was intended to be used as a gun-boat in the waters of ITayti. The Calvert cost, as she lay, $500 or ¿'500, — the evidence seeming to be confused as to the two sums, — but I suppose the true price was £500. In order to save this £500, it is pretended that Soutar went nearly a thousand miles to New York, and paid $11,600 for a lug-boat to be used for the purpose of raising the Calvert; putting on that tug-boat when about to sail no sort of apparatus such as salvors employ in lifting ships from the bottom of the sea. If the raising of the Calvert had been Soutar’s real object, the services of experienced wreckers, provided with wrecking schooners, and wrecking pumps, anchors, cables, falls, and other expensive material such as are kept on hand only by professional wreckers, would have been sought in Havana,
I come, therefore, to the additional questions on which the cases at bar depend, namely: First, whether or not the military material which is the subject of these libels was intended to be sent out as merchandise, in a commercial venture, and destined to some point in the West Indies for sale as merchandise. If not, whether this military material was intended to be sent directly to Hayti, as the military outfit of the gun-boat Hogan, for use in the hostile and insurrectionary enterprise for which that vessel was destined. No principle of the law is more clear or well settled than that merchandise, including munitions of war, may be sold to belligerents without violating the laws of neutrality. If those munitions had been sent on a vessel of commerce, which
The only remaining question, therefore, is, did those who purchased the goods and shipped them on the Irwin, and did the Irwin’s master, Capt. Dodd, know of this destination of the goods? Did they attempt to fit out the Hogan with these goods? Were they “knowingly concerned in furnishing, fitting out, and arming” the Hogan, or attempting to do so, with these goods ? “Attempt to fit out and arm, ” “knowingly concerned in the furnishing, fitting out, and arming of any vessel with intent that such vessel shall be employed to cruise or commit hostilities against a state,” etc., are the searching and comprehensive terms of the law applying to these libels. It were a waste of words, in view of the cumulative evidence in these cases, to state the proofs of the complicity of Soutar and Kearney in the purchase and preparation of the Hogan for her expedition; and of Soutar,
I will sign a decree of condemnation and sale in both of these cases.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- United States v. Two Hundred and Fourteen Boxes of Arms, Ammunition, and Munitions of War United States v. One Hundred and Forty Kegs of Gunpowder
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published