The Schooner Exchange

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THE SCHOONER EXCHANGE (THE EXCHANGE V MCFADDON)

Facts:
On 24 August, 1811, John McFaddon & William Greetham, of the State of Maryland, filed their libel in the District Court
of the United States for the District of Pennsylvania against the Schooner Exchange, setting forth that they were its sole
owners, on 27 October, 1809, when the ship sailed from Baltimore, bound to St. Sebastians, in Spain. That while
lawfully and peaceably pursuing her voyage, she was on 30 December, 1810, violently and forcibly taken by certain
persons, acting under the decrees and orders of Napoleon, Emperor of the French, out of the custody of the libellants.
In the commission it was stated that the vessel was armed at Bayonne. The libel with costs upon the ground that a
public armed vessel of a foreign sovereign in amity with our government is not subject to the ordinary judicial tribunals
of the country so far as regards the question of title by which such sovereign claims to hold the vessel.
Issue:
Whether an American citizen can assert in an American court a title to an armed national vessel found within the
waters of the United States.
Held:
Dismissal of the libel is affirmed.
The jurisdiction of the nation within its own territory is necessarily exclusive and absolute. It is susceptible of no
limitation not imposed by itself. All exceptions, therefore, to the full and complete power of a nation within its own
territories must be traced up to the consent of the nation itself. They can flow from no other legitimate source.
Rise to a Class of cases in which every sovereign is understood to waive the exercise of a part of that complete
exclusive territorial jurisdiction which has been stated to be the attribute of every nation.

1st. One of these is admitted to be the exemption of the person of the sovereign from arrest or detention
within a foreign territory.
If he enters that territory with the knowledge and license of its sovereign, that license, although containing no
stipulation exempting his person from arrest, is universally understood to imply such stipulation.

2nd. A second case, standing on the same principles with the first, is the immunity which all civilized nations
allow to foreign ministers.
In what cases a minister, by infracting the laws of the country in which he resides, may subject himself to other
punishment than will be inflicted by his own sovereign is an inquiry foreign to the present purpose. If his crimes be such
as to render him amenable to the local jurisdiction, it must be because they forfeit the privileges annexed to his
character, and the minister, by violating the conditions under which he was received as the representative of a foreign
sovereign, has surrendered the immunities granted on those conditions, or, according to the true meaning of the
original assent, has ceased to be entitled to them.
3rd. A third case in which a sovereign is understood to cede a portion of his territorial jurisdiction is where he
allows the troops of a foreign prince to pass through his dominions.
It is obvious that the passage of an army through a foreign territory will probably be at all times inconvenient
and injurious, and would often be imminently dangerous to the sovereign through whose dominion it passed.
But the rule which is applicable to armies does not appear to be equally applicable to ships of war entering the
parts of a friendly power.
It seems then to the Court to be a principle of public law that national ships of war entering the port of a
friendly power open for their reception are to be considered.
the Exchange, being a public armed ship in the service of a foreign sovereign with whom the government of the
United States is at peace must be considered as having come into the American territory under an implied promise she
should be exempt from the jurisdiction of the country.

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