Sprott v. United States
APPEAL from the Court of Claims.
The act known as the Captured and Abandoned Property Act, passed March 12th, 1863, [1] providing for 'the collection of abandoned property, &c., in the insurrectionary districts within the United States,' enacts that any person claiming to have been the owner of any such abandoned or captured property may, within a time specified in the act, prefer his claim to the proceeds thereof in the Court of Claims, and on proof to the satisfaction of the court: (1) of his ownership; (2) of his right to the proceeds thereof; and (3) that he has never given any aid or comfort to the rebellion, receive the residue of such proceeds, after deducting any purchasemoney which may have been paid, &c.
Under this act one Sprott, a resident of Claiborne County, Mississippi, filed a claim in the Court of Claims to the proceeds of certain cotton. That court made the following finding of facts:
At different times during the years 1864 and 1865, large quantities of cotton were purchased by the agents of the Confederate States for the treasonable purpose of maintaining the war of the rebellion against the government of the United States. Of cotton thus purchased by various agents in Claiborne County, Mississippi, three hundred bales were sold to the claimant by one agent, in March, 1865, for ten cents a pound, in the currency of the United States. The sale was made by the agent as of cotton belonging to the Confederate States, and it was understood by the claimant at the time of the purchase to be the property of the rebel government, and was purchased as such. The agent had been specially instructed by the Confederate government 'to sell any and all cotton he could for the purpose of raising money to purchase munitions of war and supplies for the Confederate army;' but the purpose of the sale was not disclosed to the claimant, whose purpose was not to aid the Confederate States, buying the cotton at its market value and regarding it as a mere business transaction of 'cotton for cash.' The cotton was delivered to him at the time when the money was paid, he then being a resident of Claiborne County, within the Confederate lines.
The cotton was captured in May, 1865, and the proceeds or some portion thereof are in the treasury.
And upon these facts the Court of Claims found, as conclusions of law—
1. That the government of the Confederate States was an unlawful assemblage, without corporate power to take, hold, or convey a valid title to property, real or personal.
2. That the claimant was chargeable with notice of the treasonable intent of the sale by the Confederate government, and that the transaction was forbidden by the laws of the United States, and wholly void, so that the claimant acquired no title to the property which was the subject of suit.
The court therefore decreed against the claimant, and from its decree he brought the case here.
Messrs. George Taylor and R. M. Corwine, for the appellant; Mr. C. H. Hill, Assistant Attorney-General, contra.
Mr. Justice MILLER delivered the opinion of the court.
Notes
[edit]- ↑ 12 Stat. at Large, 820.
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).
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