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36. A copy of these regulations and instructions for privateers to be on board of every privateer.

These be our will and orders, according to which every one is to conform.

Our royal residence of Copenhagen, 10th March, 1810.

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Attachment on money in the hands of the sheriff, under fi. fa.

COURT.-Money in the hands of the sheriff is not the property of the plaintiff until it is paid over; and therefore it is not liable to be attached for his debts. Courts will not suffer the execution of one process to interfere with another. If this money may be attached, you prevent the sheriff from bringing it into court, as, by the writ, he was ordered.

Attachment Quashed.

J. Scorr for plaintiff-HOFFMAN for defendant.

CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES.

MARYLAND DISTRICT.

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May term, 1812.

Benjamin Hitchen, et al. v. Wm. Wilson & Sons.

This was a libel for wages. The vessel had been captured and condemned. Pending the appeal she was restored to the underwriters, to whom she had been abandoned, upon a compromise. The defendants were willing to pay the seamen's wages, after deducting the expense of recovering the property. But the District Court decreed full wages; and the sentence was affirmed in this court.

John Wesley, et al. v. James Biays.

Libel for wages. The vessel was captured and sent in for adjudication. The master offered to discharge the seamen and find passages home for them, but they refused to quit the ship. She was condemned; but, upon appeal, the decree was reversed. The vessel then prosecuted her voyage and returned to Baltimore. The District Judge, decreed wages for the whole time, including the delay at the port, where the vessel was sent in for adjudication, which sentence was affirmed by this court.

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Baxter v. Biays.

Biays was bail for one Merrihu. After the sci. fa issued, and within the time allowed by the rule for a surrender of principal, Biays surrendered Merihu before HouSTON, J. during vacation, who ordered an exoneretur to be entered. But by Duval, Ch. J.-there is no law authorizing a surrender before a judge at his chambers, nor is there any rule of court to that effect. It was once attempted before Judge Hanson, and refused.

Jones, et al. v. Smith and Buchanan.

Libel for seamen's wages. The libellants were shipped in December, 1807, on board the ship Rebecca, for a voyage from Baltimore to Batavia, and thence, if required, to one or more ports beyond the cape of Good Hope, and back to Baltimore. On the 18th of May, 1808, the vessel arrived at Batavia, and completed her unlading 3d June. On the 27th April, 1809, she sailed thence for Japan, in the employment of the Dutch government. On the 24th May she was captured by the British and sent to Bombay, where she was condemned, on the 3d January, 1810, as being Dutch property, and as infringing the orders in council, for the prevention of trade in enemies' ports. (7th Jan. 11th Nov.)

There were three descriptions of claimants. 1st. The administrators of seamen who died at Batavia. 2d. Those who died after leaving Japan and before the capture. 3d. Those who returned to Baltimore.

For the Libellants. It is true that where a voyage is broken up the seamen lose their wages; but this is a principle of law which should apply to them with as little rigour as possible. When a voyage is divisible into many parts, the seamen are enentitled to each part as soon as it is performed. That part is an

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entire voyage, though a loss may happen afterwards. This is a mitigation of the former rule, by which seamen were made insurers of the voyage. In contracts of freight, if the charterer does any act by which the goods or vessel are lost, he must nevertheless pay the whole freight. So in insurance, if a deviation be committed, the insurer is discharged. In this case, the long delay at Batavia was a deviation-and consequently a termination of the first voyage. What reason was there for such a delay? If the seamen could be kept there one year, their articles would hold them there half a century, or any indefinite term. Batavia was held out as the chief port, the terminus ad quem; and the ports "from thence" were to be visited in continuation of that voyage. The voyage to Japan was a new voyage, and entirely out of the usual course of business. The taking on board a Dutch governour and Dutch property was an increase of the peril, because it subjected the vessel to suspicion and condemnation, and it would be very unreasonable to make the seamen incur a hazard which was never communicated to them.

For the Respondents. The whole contract respecting bills of exchange arises from legal implication: not a word is inserted by legal implication. So it is in the mariner's contract; every seaman knows what his contract binds him to do. It is immaterial if he is ignorant of his duty-for the law will not believe him. What benefit has the owner derived if the mariner perform but a part of the voyage. Here the owners lost the whole voyage, and the court is called upon to apportion the contract. The vessel was at Batavia during the operation of the embargo, and the seamen subsisted at the expense of the owners. If the seamen had been brought home they would have been idle.

The law of insurance may safely be allowed to apply to this The stay at Batavia was not only reasonable but absolutely necessary, by reason of the embargo. It is absurd to contend

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that seamen are entitled to know what shall be the operations of a voyage. Such a doctrine is practically pernicious to the state, and destructive of all commercial enterprize.

If the sailing from Batavia be a new contract, where is it? Whether that new contract arise from implication or record is immaterial; for that voyage, if it be called a new voyage, was entirely broken up by the capture.

DUVAL, Ch. J―This is a case depending on the terms of the shipping articles. The voyage was to commence at Baltimore, and proceed to Batavia; thence, if required, to one or more ports beyond the cape of Good Hope, and back to Baltimore.

The terms of the articles are plain, and must have been clearly understood by the parties. There is a difference of opinion as to the effect of the voyage, from Baltimore to Batavia; the difference commences there. On the one hand, it has been contended that the extension of the voyage to Japan, was not justified by the articles, and that the ship was engaged in an unlawful commerce; on the other, that it was in pursuance of the terms of the articles, and that that commerce was lawful.

The court have no doubt on this point. It appears to them to be within the letter and spirit of the shipping articles, and that there was nothing in the voyage repugnant to the principles of neutral rights. The condemnation at Bombay under the orders in council cannot be regarded by this court. This court denies the legality of the orders in council, which are founded on the prostration of the principles of neutral rights and in their decisions they will respect only the general law of nations.

The only question about which a doubt can arise, is, as to the time when the claim of the mariners for wages, whilst at Batavia, shall cease.

The court think it a case in which they ought to exercise a discretion, more particularly as the vessel waited at Batavia for some time, for instructions.

They are of opinion, and so order, adjudge and decree, that the mariners be paid to an intermediate day between the third day of June, 1808, the time when the vessel was unladen, and the 27th April, 1809, the time of her sailing from Batavia, that is to say, until the 15th November, 1808.

That the representatives of the mariners who died before that day, receive wages until the time of their decease; and of them who died afterwards, receive in common with the survivors, until the 15th November, 1808.

SCOTT, BRICE and HARPER, for libellants.
PURVIANCE & PINKNEY, for respondents.

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