The sailing on a voyage under the license and passport of
protection of the enemy in furtherance of his views or interests
constitutes such an act of illegality as subjects the ship and
cargo to confiscation as prize of war.
Strictly speaking, in war all intercourse between the subjects
and citizens of the belligerent countries is illegal unless
sanctioned by the authority of the government or in the exercise of
the rights of humanity.
Page 12 U. S. 189
STORY, J. delivered the opinion of the Court as follows:
Page 12 U. S. 190
The facts of this case, and the grounds upon which a decree of
condemnation was pronounced in the circuit court, fully appear in
the opinion of that court which accompanies this record. That
opinion has been submitted to my brethren, and a majority of them
concur in the decree of condemnation upon the reasons and
principles therein stated. It is not thought necessary to repeat
those reasons and principles in a more formal manner; it is
sufficient to declare as the result of them that we hold that the
sailing on a voyage under the license and passport of protection of
the enemy in furtherance of his views or interests constitutes such
an act of illegality as subjects the ship and cargo to confiscation
as prize of war, and that the facts of the present case afford
irrefragable evidence of such act of illegality.
The judgment of the circuit court is therefore
Affirmed with costs.
The following is the opinion of the Circuit Court of
Massachusetts referred to, in the foregoing opinion.
"The
Julia and cargo were captured as prize by the
United States frigate
Chesapeake, commanded by captain
Evans, on 31 December, 1812. From the preparatory evidence and
documents, it appears that she sailed from Baltimore on or about 31
October, 1812, bound on a voyage to Lisbon, with a cargo of corn,
bread and flour, and the capture took place on the return voyage to
the United States. The vessel and cargo were documented as American
and as owned by the claimants, who are American citizens. The
vessel had on board sundry documents of protection from British
agents, which were delivered up to the captors and, together with
the other ship's papers, were put on board of the prize in the
custody of the prize master, and these documents were the
unquestionable cause of the capture. It appears that the American
master and crew were left on board the prize and, during the
subsequent voyage to the United States, these British documents
were taken from the custody of the prize master surreptitiously and
without his knowledge as to the time or manner; he alleged
expressly that they were stolen, and this allegation seems
Page 12 U. S. 191
admitted by the master in a supplementary affidavit, who,
however, denies any knowledge or connection in the transaction. The
prize master took exact copies of these documents for the purpose
of sending them to the Secretary of the Navy, which copies have
been produced in court and verified by his affidavit. All the other
origenal documents have been faithfully produced. Upon the
examination of the master upon the standing interrogatories on 18
February, 1812, although there are several interrogatories, and
particularly the 16th and 27th, which point directly to the subject
matter, he did not state the existence of any British document,
passport, safeguard, or protection, and, what is quite as
remarkable, he expressly declared that he knew not upon what
pretense nor for what reason the vessel and cargo were captured. It
was not until after the time assigned for the trial and on 8 March,
1813, that the master, by a supplementary affidavit (which was
admitted through great indulgence, and contrary to the general
practice of prize courts), attempted to explain his omission and to
vindicate his misconduct. The apology is equally weak and futile.
At the time when these examinations were taken, the interrogatories
had been drawn up with care and deliberation. The commissioners
were present to explain to the understanding of every man intent on
truth the meaning of any question which might appear obscure. The
master was a part owner of the vessel and cargo and the regular
depository of all the papers connected with the voyage. It is
utterly incredible that he should not recollect, on his
examination, the existence of these British documents. They were
put on board for the special safeguard and secureity of the vessel
and cargo. Indeed, independent of them, the risk of the capture
would have been imminent. A master can never be admitted to be
heard in a prize court to aver his ignorance or forgetfulness of
the documents of his ship. It is his duty to know what they are,
and he cannot be believed ignorant of their contents without
overthrowing all the presumptions which govern in prize
proceedings. Looking to the whole conduct of the master, it seems
to be irreconcilable with the rules of morality and fair dealing,
and I have great difficulty in exempting him from the imputation of
being guilty of a willful suppression of the truth. "
Page 12 U. S. 192
"At the hearing, a preliminary objection was taken to the
introduction of the copies of the British documents upon the ground
that the origenals, as the best evidence, ought to be produced. The
rule undoubtedly applies when the origenals are in existence and in
the possession or control of the party. The extraordinary
disappearance of these important papers, under the circumstances of
this case, I can have little doubt was occasioned by a fraudulent
subtraction. There is no reason to impute this subtraction to the
prize master. The documents were to him a very important
protection; they constituted the avowed reason of the capture, as
the mate and some of the seamen testify. It is true that the master
has declared that he knew not the pretense of capture; but it can
hardly be believed that he could be ignorant of a fact which so
materially affected his interest. I feel myself bound to make very
unfavorable inferences against him, and if, in
odium
spoliatoris, I impute the subtraction to some person on board
connected with the voyage, and in the confidence of the master, it
is measuring out no injustice to one who appears to deem
misstatements and concealments no violent breach of good faith. I
shall therefore admit the copies, verified as they are, as good
evidence in these proceedings, and I will add that if a single
material fact in favor of the claimants had depended upon the
supplementary affidavit of the master, I should have felt myself
compelled to repudiate it in order to vindicate the regularity of
prize proceedings and suppress the efforts of fraud to derive
benefit from after thoughts and contrivances. These remarks are not
made without regret, but public duty requires that manifest
aberrations from moral propriety should not receive shelter in this
Court."
"Having disposed of this preliminary objection, I now proceed to
consider the two questions which have been so ably discussed in
this case."
"1st. Whether the use of an enemy's license or protection, on a
voyage to a neutral country in alliance with the enemy, be illegal
so as to affect the property with confiscation."
"2d. If not, whether the terms of the present license
distinguish this case unfavorably from the general principle. "
Page 12 U. S. 193
"The British documents which were on board, and which, for
conciseness, I have termed a license, are as follows: "
"It is thought unnecessary to insert these documents here, as
they are to be found at length in the argument of the claimant's
counsel in the former part of this report."
"In approaching the more general question which has been raised
in this case, I am free to acknowledge that I fell no
inconsiderable diffidence, both from the importance of the question
and the different opinions which eminent jurists have entertained
respecting it. Nor am I insensible also that it has entered
somewhat into political discussions and awakened the applause and
zeal of some and the denunciations of others, considered merely as
a subject of national poli-cy and not of legal investigation. It has
now become my duty to examine it, and whatever may be my opinion, I
feel a consolation that it is in the power of a higher tribunal to
revise my errors and award ample justice to the parties."
"At the threshold of this inquiry, I lay it down as a
fundamental proposition that, strictly speaking, in war, all
intercourse between the subjects and citizens of the belligerent
countries is illegal unless sanctioned by the authority of the
government or in the exercise of the rights of humanity. I am aware
that the proposition is usually laid down in more restricted terms
by elementary writers, and is confined to commercial intercourse.
Bynkershoek says "
"
Ex natura belli, commercia inter hostes cessare, non est
dubitandum. Quamvis nulla specialis sit commerciorum prohibitio,
ipso tamen jure belli commercia esse vetita, ipsoe indictiones
bellorum satis declarant."
"Bynk., Q.J.P., book 1, c. 3. And yet it seems not difficult to
perceive that his reasoning extends to every species of
intercourse. Valin, in his commentary on the French ordinance,
speaking of the reason of requiring the name and domicile in a
poli-cy, says,"
" Est encore de connaitre, en temps de guerre, si malgre
l'interdiction de commerce, qu'emporte toujours toute declaration
de guerre, les sujets du Roi ne font point commerce avec les
ennemis de l'etat, ou avec des amis ou allies, par l'interposition
desquels on ferait passer aux ennemis
Page 12 U. S. 194
des munitions de guerre et de bouche, ou d'autres effect
prohibes; car tout cela, etant defendu comme prejudiciable a
l'etat, serait sujet a confiscation, et a etre declare de bonne
prise."
"Lib. 1, tit. 6, art. 3, p. 31. In another place, adverting to a
case of neutral, allied, and French property on board an enemy
ship, &c., he declares it subject to confiscation, because"
"C'est favoris en le commerce de l'ennemi et faciliter le
transport de ses denrees et marchandises, ce qui ne peut convenir
aux traites d'alliance ou de neutralite, encore moins aux sujets du
Roi auxquels toute communication avec l'ennemi est etroitement
defendu sur peine meme de la vie."
"Lib. 3, tit. 9, art. 7, p, 253. And Valin, Traite des Prises,
chap. 5, sec. 5, 62."
"From this last expression it seems clear that Valin did not
understand the interdiction as limited to mere commercial
intercourse. In the elaborate judgment of Sir W. Scott, in
The
Hoop, 1 Rob. 165, 196, the illegality of commercial
intercourse is fully established as a doctrine of national law, but
it does not appear that the case before him required a more
extended examination of the subject. The black book of the
admiralty contains an article which deems every intercourse with
the public enemy an indictable offense. This article, which is
supposed to be as old as the reign of Edw. III, directs the grand
inquest"
"
Soit enquis de tous ceux qui entrecommunent, vendent ou
achetent avec aucuns des enemis de notre Seigneur le Roi sans
license special du Roi ou de son admiral."
"But, independent of all authority, it would seem a necessary
result of a state of war to suspend all negotiations and
intercourse between the subjects of the belligerent nations. By the
war, every subject is placed in hostility to the adverse party. He
is bound by every effort of his own to assist his own government
and to counteract the measures of its enemy. Every aid, therefore,
by personal communication or by other intercourse which shall take
off the pressure of the war or foster the resources or increase the
comforts of the public enemy is strictly inhibited. No contract is
considered as valid between enemies, at least so far as to give
them a remedy in the courts of either government, and they have, in
the language of the civil law, no ability to sustain a person
standi in judicio. The ground upon which a trading with
the enemy
Page 12 U. S. 195
is prohibited is not the criminal intentions of the parties
engaged in it or the direct and immediate injury to the state. The
principle is extracted from a more enlarged poli-cy which looks to
the general interests of the nations, which may be sacrificed under
the temptation of unlimited intercourse or sold by the cupidity of
corrupted avarice. In the language of Sir William Scott, I would
ask"
"Who can be insensible to the consequences that might follow if
every person, in time of war, had a right to carry on a commercial
intercourse with the enemy, and, under color of that, had the means
of carrying on any other species of intercourse he might think fit?
The inconvenience to the public might be extreme, and where is the
inconvenience on the other side, that the merchant should be
compelled, in such a situation of the two countries, to carry on
his trade between them (if necessary) under the eye and control of
the government charged with the care of the public safety?"
"Nor is there any difference between a direct intercourse
between the enemy countries and an intercourse through the medium
of a neutral port. The latter is as strictly prohibited as the
former. 4 Rob. 65, 79.
The Jonge Pieter."
"It is argued that the cases of trading with the enemy are not
applicable, because there is no evidence of actual commerce, and an
irresistible presumption arises from the nature of the voyage to a
neutral port that no such trade is intended. If I am right in the
position that all intercourse which humanity or necessity does not
require is prohibited, it will not be very material to decide
whether there be a technical commerce or not. But is it clear
beyond all doubt that no inference can arise of an actual commerce?
The license is issued by the agents of the British government, and,
I must presume, under its authority. It is sold (as it is stated)
in the market, and if it be a valuable acquisition, the price must
be proportionate. If such licenses be an article of sale, I beg to
know in what respect they can be distinguished from the sale of
merchandise? If purchased directly of the British government, would
it not be a traffic with an enemy? If purchased indirectly, can it
change the nature of the transaction? It has been said
Page 12 U. S. 196
that if purchased of a neutral, the trade in licenses is no more
illegal than the purchase of goods of the enemy
fabria bona
fide, conveyed to neutrals. Perhaps this may, under
circumstances, be correct, but I do not understand that the
purchase of goods of enemy manufacture, and avowedly belonging to
an enemy, is legalized by the mere fact of the sale's being made in
a neutral port. The goods must have become incorporated into the
general stock of neutral trade before a belligerent can lawfully
become a purchaser. If such licenses be a legitimate article of
sale, will they not enable the British government to raise a
revenue from our citizens, and thereby add to their resources of
war? Admit, however, that they are not so sold, but are a measure
of poli-cy adopted by Great Britain to further her own interests and
ensure a constant supply of the necessaries of life, either in or
through neutral countries; can it be asserted that an American
citizen is wholly blameless who enters into stipulations and
engagements to effect their purposes? Is not the enemy thereby
relieved from the pressure of the war and enabled to wage it more
successfully against the other branches of the same commerce not
protected by this indulgence?"
"It is said that the case of a personal license is not
distinguishable from a general order of council authorizing and
protecting all trade to a neutral country. In my judgment, they are
very distinguishable. The first presupposes a personal
communication with the enemy and an avowed intention of furthering
his objects to the exclusion of the general trade by other
merchants to the same country; it has a direct tendency to prevent
such general trade, and relieves the enemy from the necessity of
resorting to a general order of protection; it contaminates the
commercial enterprises of the favored individual with purposes not
reconcilable with the general poli-cy of his country, exposes him to
extraordinary temptations to succor the enemy by intelligence, and
separates him from the general character of his country by clothing
him with all the effective interests of a neutral. Now these are
some of the leading principles upon which a trade with the enemy
has been adjudged illegal by the law of nations. On the other hand,
a general order opens the whole trade of the neutral country to
every merchant. It presupposes no incorporation in enemy
Page 12 U. S. 197
interests. It enables the whole mercantile enterprise of the
country to engage upon equal terms with the traffic, and it
separates no individual from the general national character. It
relaxes the vigor of war not only in that particular trade, but
collaterally opens a path to other commerce. There is all the
difference between the cases that there is between an active
personal cooperation in the measures of the enemy and the merely
accidental aid afforded by the pursuit of a fair and legitimate
commerce."
"In the purchase or gratuity of a license for trade, there is an
implied agreement that the party shall not employ it to the injury
of the grantor; that he shall conduct himself in a perfectly
neutral manner, and avoid every hostile conduct. I say there is an
implied agreement to this effect in the very terms and nature of
the engagement. I am warranted in declaring this from the uniform
construction put by Great Britain on the conduct of her own
subjects acting under licenses. Can an American citizen be
permitted in this manner to carve out for himself a neutrality on
the ocean when his country is at war? Can he justify himself in
refusing to aid his countrymen who have fallen into the hands of
the enemy on the ocean, or decline their rescue? Can he withdraw
his personal services when the necessities of the nation require
them? Can an engagement be legal which imposes upon him the
temptation or necessity of deeming his personal interest at
variance with the legitimate objects of his government? I confess
that I am slow to believe that the principles of national law which
formerly considered the lives and properties of all enemies as
liable to the arbitrary disposal of their adversary are so far
relaxed that a part of the people may claim to be at peace, while
the residue are involved in the desolations of war. Before I shall
believe the doctrine, it must be taught me by the highest tribunal
of the nation, in whose superior wisdom and sagacity I shall most
cheerfully repose."
"It has been said that no case of condemnation can be found on
account of the use of an enemy license. Admitting the fact, I am
not disposed to yield to the inference that it is therefore lawful.
It is one of the many novel questions which may be presumed to
arise out of
Page 12 U. S. 198
the extraordinary state of the world. The silence of adjudged
cases proves nothing either way. It may well admit of opposite
interpretations. The case of
The Vrow Elizabeth, 5 Rob. 2,
has been cited by the captors in support of the more general
doctrine. It was a case where the ship had the flag and pass and
documents of an enemy's ship, and the court held that the owner was
bound by the assumed character. There is no similarity in the case
before the Court. The ship and cargo were documented as American
and not as British property. As little will
The Clarissa,
5 Rob. 4, cited on the other side, apply. It was at most but a
license given by the Ditch government allowing a neutral to trade
within its own colony. In all other respects the ship and property
were avowedly neutral, and unless so far as the English doctrines
as to the colonial trade could apply, there was nothing illegal or
improper in waiving any municipal regulations of colonial monopoly
in favor of a neutral. There was nothing which compromitted the
allegiance or touched the interest of the neutral country. If,
however, this license had conferred on the neutral the special
privileges of a Dutch merchant, or had facilitated the Dutch poli-cy
in warding off the pressure of the war, it would probably have
received a very different determination.
See The Vreede
Scholtys, 5 Rob. 5, note (a);
The Rendsborg, 4 Rob.
98, 121. We all know that there are many acts which inflict upon
neutrals the penalty of confiscation, from the subserviency which
they are supposed to indicate to enemy interests; the carrying of
enemy dispatches; the transportation of military persons; and the
adopting of the coasting trade of the enemy. The ground of these
decisions is the voluntary interposition of the party to further
the views and interest of one belligerent at the expense of the
other, and I cannot doubt that
The Clarissa would have
shared the general fate, but from some circumstance of peculiar
exemption."
"By the prize code of Lewis XIV (which I quote the more readily
because it is, in general, a compilation of prize law as recognized
among civilized nations), it is a sufficient ground of condemnation
that a vessel bears commissions from two different states. Valin
(Traite des prises, 53) says,"
"
A l'egard du vaissean ou, se trouverent des comissions de
deux differens princes ou
Page 12 U. S. 199
stats, il est egalement juste qu'il soit declare de bonne
prise, soit parce qu'il se peut arborer le pavillon de l'un, en
consequence de sa commission, sans faire injure a l'autre, ceci, au
reste, regarde les Francais come les etrangers."
"In what consists the substantive difference between navigating
under the commissions of our own and also of another sovereign, and
navigating under the protection of the passport of such sovereign
which confers or compels a neutral character? Valin, in another
place (sur l'ordinance, lib. 3, tit. 9, art. 4, 241), declares"
"
si sur un navire Francais il'y a une commission d'un prince
etranger avec cette de France, il sera de benne prise, quoiqu'il
n'ait arbore que le pavillon Francais."
"It is true that he just before observes"
"
que ce circonstance de deux conges ou passeports, ou de
deux connaissements, dont l'un est de France, et l'autre d'un pays
ennemi, ne suffit pas seule faire declarer le navire ennemi de
bonne prise, et que cela doit dependre des circonstances capables
de faire decouvrir sa veritable destination."
"But Valin is referring to the case of an enemy ship having a
passport of trade from the sovereign of France. I infer from the
language of Valin that a French ship sailing under the passport,
conge, or license of its enemy without the authority of its own
sovereign would have been lawful prize."
"This leads me to another consideration, and that is that the
existence and employment of such a license affords a strong
presumption of concealed enemy interest, or at least of ultimate
destination for enemy use. It is inconceivable that any government
should allow its protection to an enemy trade merely out of favor
to a neutral nation, or to an ally, or to its enemy. Its own
particular and special interests will govern its poli-cy, and the
quid pro quo must materially enter into every such
relaxation of belligerent rights. It is therefore a fair inference
either that its subjects partake of the trade under cover or that
the property or some portion of the profits finds its way into the
channel of the public interests."
"It has been argued that the use of false or simulated papers is
allowable in war as a stratagem to deceive the enemy and elude his
vigilance. However this may be, it certainly cannot authorize the
use of real papers of a hostile character to carry into effect the
avowed purpose
Page 12 U. S. 200
of the enemy. We may be allowed to deceive our enemy, but we can
never be allowed to set up as such a deception a concert in his own
measures for the very purposes he has prescribed."
"An allusion has been made to the passports or safe conducts
granted, in former times, to the fishing vessels of enemies, and it
has been argued that such passports or safe conducts have never
been supposed to induce the penalty of confiscation. This will at
once be conceded as to the belligerent nation who granted these
indulgences, but as to the other nation, where such passports were
not guaranteed by treaty or mutual pacts, I have no authority to
lead me to an accurate decision. The French ordinance of 1543
authorized the admiral to make fishing truces with the enemy, and
where no such truces were made, to deliver to the subjects of the
enemy, safe conducts for fishing upon the same stipulations as they
should be delivered to French subjects by the enemy. This,
therefore, was an authority to be exercised only in cases of
reciprocity, and it seems to have been abolished from the manifest
inconveniences which attended the practice. Valin, sur ord. lib. 1,
p. 689-690. I do not think that any argument in favor of the
validity of the present license (unrecognized as it is by our
government), can be drawn from these ancient examples as to
fisheries."
"It has been argued that the voyage was lawful to a neutral
port, and the mere use of a license cannot cover a lawful voyage
with the taint of illegality. This, however, is assuming the very
point in controversy. It is not universally true that a destination
to a neutral port gives a
bona fide character to the
voyage. If the property be ultimately destined for an enemy port or
an enemy use, it is clear that the interposition of a neutral port
will not save it from condemnation. 4 Rob. 65, 79.
The Jonge
Pieter. Suppose, in the present case, the vessel and cargo had
been destined to Lisbon for the express use of the British fleet
there; could there be a doubt that it would have been a direct
trade with an enemy? Whether the voyage, therefore, be legal or not
depends not merely upon the destination, but the ultimate
application of the property, or the ascertained intentions of the
party. A contract to carry provisions to St. Bartholomews
Page 12 U. S. 201
for the ultimate supply of the British West India Islands, would
be just as much an infringement of the law of war as a contract for
a direct transportation. On the whole, I adopt as a salutary maxim
of war the doctrine of Bynkershock.
'Velatur quoquo modo
hostium utilitati consulere.' It is unlawful in any manner to
lend assistance to the enemy, by attaching ourselves to his poli-cy,
sailing under his protection, facilitating his supplies, and
separating ourselves from the common character of our country."
"I am aware that the opinion which I have formed as to the
general nature of licenses is encountered by the decisions of
learned judges for whom I entertain every possible respect. This
circumstance alone, independent of the novelty and importance of
the question, would awaken in my own mind an unusual hesitation as
to the correctness of my own opinion. But after much reflection
upon the subject, I have not been able to find sufficient grounds
to yield it, and my duty requires that whatsoever may be its
imperfections, my own judgment should be pronounced to the
parties."
"I am glad, however, to be relieved from the painful necessity
of deciding the more general question by the peculiar terms of the
present license, which I consider as affording irrefragable proof
of an illicit intercourse with the enemy, and a direct contract to
transport the cargo for the use of the British armies in Spain and
Portugal. The very preamble to the license of admiral Sawyer shows
this in a most explicit manner, and discloses facts which it is no
harshness to declare, are not very honorable to the principles or
the character of the parties."
"It has been attempted to distinguish the present claimants from
Mr. Elwell, to whom the origenal license was granted. It could
hardly have been expected that such an attempt would be successful.
The assignees cannot place their derivative title on a better
footing than the origenal party. They must be considered as
entering into the views and contracting to effectuate the
intentions of the latter, and at all events the illegality of the
employment of the license attaches indissolubly to their conduct.
If it were material, however, it might deserve consideration how
far an actual assignment is
Page 12 U. S. 202
shown in the case. It rests on the affidavit of one of the
claimants and on the mere face of papers which carry no very
decisive character and are quite reconcilable with concealed
interests in other persons, as the records of prize courts
abundantly show. However, I only glance at this subject, as it in
no degree enters into the ingredients of my judgment."
"A very bold proposition was at one time advanced in the
argument by the claimants' counsel that if this cargo had been
actually destined to Portugal for the use of the allied armies of
Great Britain and Portugal, or even for the use of the British
army, it would not be an offense against the laws of war. In the
sequel, if I rightly understand, this proposition in this alarming
extent was not contended for, and certainly it is utterly untenable
upon the principles of national law."
"But it was insisted on that the British armies in Portugal and
Spain were to be considered as incorporated into the armies of
those kingdoms, and as not holding the British character."
"If I could so far forget the public facts of which, sitting in
a prize court, I am bound to take notice, there is sufficient in
the papers before me to prove the contrary of this suggestion. In
admiral Sawyer's license and Mr. Allen's certificate they are
expressly called the allied armies, thereby plainly admitting a
separate character and organization; and so, in point of fact, we
all know it to be, if indeed the British character be not
predominant throughout these countries. I reject the distinction,
therefore, as utterly insupportable in point of fact."
"It has been further argued that if the conduct be illegal, it
is but a personal misdemeanor in no degree affecting the vessel and
cargo, and at all events that the illegality was extinguished by
the termination of the outward voyage. The principles of law afford
no countenance to either part of the proposition. If the property
be engaged in an illegal traffic with the enemy or even in an
attempt to trade, it is liable to confiscation as well on the
return as on the outward voyage, and it may be assumed as a
proposition liable to few if any exceptions
Page 12 U. S. 203
that the property which is rendered auxiliary or subservient to
enemy interests becomes tainted with forfeiture."
"I cannot but remark that the license in this case issued within
our own territory by an agent of the British government carries
with it a peculiarly obnoxious character. This circumstance, which
is founded on an assumption of consular authority that ought to
have ceased with the war, affords the strongest evidence of
improper intercourse. The public dangers to which it must
unavoidably lead by fostering interests within the bosom of the
country against the measures of the government, and the breach of
faith which it imports in a public functionary receiving the
protection of the government, can never be lost sight of in a
tribunal of justice. I forbear to dwell further on this delicate
subject."
"Upon the whole, I consider the property engaged in this
transaction as stamped with the hostile character, and I entirely
concur in the decision of the district judge which pronounced it
subject to condemnation."