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tivity beyond the text of those instructions, either upon the principle of affecting the return voyage, with the penalty of contraband, contrary to Sir William Scott's own previous opinions,ee or, upon the principle of a continuity of the voyage which had been repudiated by the lords of appeal, in the war of 1756, even where the colonial produce was transhipped in a neutral port, from barks, in which it was brought from enemy's ports, and not from the shore. Upon one or the other of these assumptions, the rule was applied to cut off the exportation of the produce of the enemy's colonies from neutral countries, where it had been imported, unless it had become incorporated into the general stock of national commodities according to the fluctuating rules prescribed to break the continuity of voyage. On the renewal of the war, after the peace of Amiens, the following order was issued, dated on the 24th of June, 1803: " In consideration of the present state of commerce, we are pleased hereby to direct the commanders of our ships of war, and privateers, not to seize any neutral vessel which shall be carrying on trade directly between the colonies of the enemy, and the neutral country to which the vessel belongs, and laden with the property of the inhabitants of such neutral country; provided, that such neutral vessel shall not be supplying, nor shall, on the outward voyage, have supplied the enemy with any articles contraband of war, and shall not be trading with any blockaded port." This instruction is substantially the same with that of 1798, except that it adopts the innovation of the prize courts, affecting the return voyage, with the penalty of contraband carried outward. Under it, the same course of decisions took place, by which the noxious qualities of the rule were much enlarged, and its wide-spreading desolation threatened to interrupt the amicable relations between the United States and Great Britain: when the order in council, of the 16th of May, 1806, was issued, blockading the coasts from the river Elbe to Brest, inclusive, except that neutral

ee 1 Rob. 87. The Frederick Molke. 2 Rob. 140. The Margaretta Magdalina.

ff See 5 Rob. 349. (The William ;) and Ib. 325. (The Maria.,) where all the cases on the subject of continuity of voyage, are cited.

vessels, coming directly from the ports of their own country, were allowed to enter, and depart, from the blockaded ports, with cargoes not enemy's property, nor contraband, but were not permitted to trade from port to port. This order was supposed to have been drawn up with a view to the colonial trade; but it does not appear to have been considered by the prize courts as containing any relaxation of the principles they had established respecting that trade, and the whole question was, at length merged in the orders in council of the 7th of January, and the 11th of November, 1807; by the first of which, all neutral trade, from one enemy's port, or from a port where the British flag was excluded, to another such port, and by the latter (among other provisions) the exportation of the produce of the enemy's colonies, from a neutral country, to any other country than Great Britain, was prohibited. These orders were issued in retaliation of the Berlin decree of the French emperor, and on the 26th of April, 1809, they were relaxed as to the European blockade, but extended to the total prohibition of all neutral trade with the colonies of France and Holland.

It would unreasonably swell this note to enlarge upon this part of the subject. These edicts were condemned by the universal voice of the impartial world; they were condemned by the past example of the powers who issued them; they were condemned by the authority of the jurists whom Europe revered in better times as the oracles of public law. It is pretended, by a superficial writer on the law of nations, that Sir William Scott decided the case of the Nayade, (4 Rob. 251.,) upon the principle of retaliating the injustice of an enemy on a neutral power, who passively submits to that injus

gg Bynkershoek, speaking of the edicts of the States General of Holland, retaliating upon neutrals, certain illegal orders of France and of England, denies that these edicts could be founded upon the law of retortion, which is only applicable to him who has inflicted

the injury. Retorsio non est nisi adversus eum, qui ipse damni quid dedit, ac deindè patitur, non verò adversus communem amicum. (Q. J. Pub. c. 4.) See, also, Sir William Scott's remarks, in the case of the Flad Oyen. (1 Rob. 142.)

tice.hh Sir William Scott did no such thing; all that he determined, in that case, was, that Portugal and Great Britain, being allied by ancient treaties, the casus fœderis between them had arisen by the passive submission of Portugal to the hostile attacks of France, which involved Portugal, nolens volens, as an ally, in the war against France, and, consequently, rendered the property of a Portugeuse merchant, taken in trade with the common enemy, liable to condemnation in the British prize courts. It cannot be pretended that the neutral states, whose commerce was affected by the Berlin decree, had participated in the injustice of France, by passively submitting to that measure; since the orders in council were issued before sufficient time had elapsed to ascertain what would be the conduct either of France, or of those states, in respect to the decree. Nor can the order of the 7th of January, 1807, be justified as an original and abstract measure; because the trade from the port of one enemy, to the port of another, was always held lawful by the British tribunals. "This sort of traffick, from one of his (the enemy's) ports to the ports of another country, has always been open, and is, in its own nature, subject to the uses of all mankind, who are not in a state of hostility with him. The Dane has a perfect right, in time of profound peace, to trade between Holland and France, to the utmost advantage he can make of such a navigation; and there is no ground upon which any of its advantages can be withheld from him in time of war."kk It is needless, however, to enlarge upon the topicks which might be urged against this train of innovations, by which first the trade from neutral countries to the colonies, and from port to port, of the enemy, and then, all neutral traffick whatever, with him, was prohibited. It deserves notice, however, that Great Britain and France appropriated to themselves, by means of free ports or licenses, the very commerce they were prohibiting to neutrals, and to their allies, under the pretext of its aiding their enemy in the war.

hh Chitty's Law of Nations, 152.

ii See Lord Erskine's Speech in Parliament on the Orders in Council, Cobbett's Parl. Debates, vol. 10., p. 945.

kk 2 Rob. 101. The Wilhelmina, in note to the Rebeccab.

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264 2.

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BOTTOMRY.

See HYPOTHECATION.

C

CHANCERY.

195

1. A court of equity will decree a spe-
cific performance of a contract for
the sale of land, if the vendor is
able to make a good title at any
time before the decree is pronoun-
ced; but the dismission of a bill to
enforce a specific performance in
such a case, is a bar to a new bill for
the same object. Hepburn & Dun-
das v. Dunlop & Co.
The inability of the vendor to make
a good title at the time the decree
is pronounced, though it form a suf-
ficient ground for refusing a specific
performance, will not authorize a
court of equity to rescind the agree-
ment in a case where the parties
have an adequate remedy at law
for its breach. Ib.
The alienage of the vendee is an in-
sufficient ground to entitle the ven-
dor to a decree for rescinding a con-
tract for the sale of lands, though
it may afford a reason for refusing a
specific performance as against the
vendee. Ib.

3.

4.

197

198

203

But if the parties have not an ade-
quate remedy at law, the vendor
may be considered as a trustee for
whoever may become purchasers,
under a sale by order of the court,
for the benefit of the vendee. Ib.
200
5. Under what circumstances, a spe-
cific performance will, or will not,
be decreed. Ib. note d.
A bill, to obtain a specific perform-
ance of an alleged agreement to re-
ceive a quantity of cotton bagging,
at a specified price, in satisfaction
of certain judgments at law, dis-
missed, under the circumstances of
the case. Burr v. Lapsley,
In England, the courts of equity will
not, generally, entertain a bill for
the specific performance of con-
tracts for the sale of chattels, or re-

6.

7.

151

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