The Schooner Exchange v. McFaddon
The Schooner Exchange v. McFaddon
The Schooner Exchange v. McFaddon
Robert Taylor
GVFA 440
Dr. Barrus
Facts: The Exchange was an American vessel privately owned by John McFaddon and
William Greetham (Plaintiffs). They filed a libel action to reclaim it in the District Court of the
United States for the District of Pennsylvania against the vessel, claiming “…that they were her
sole owners, on the 27th of October, 1809, when she sailed from Baltimore, bound to St.
Sebastians, in Spain” (831). During the vessel’s voyage, the ship was forcefully taken on
December 30, 1810 by agents of France who were acting under direct orders from Napoleon, the
Emperor of France. The Exchange was then outfitted as an armed public vessel of the French
Government under the name of Balaou. When the Balaou docked in the port of Philadelphia due
to bad weather, McFaddon and Greetham claimed that the vessel had been illegally seized and
that they were legally entitled to the ship and its possessions. The district court denied the libel
for lack of jurisdiction, so the plaintiffs appealed. The appellate court reversed the decision, and
the French appealed. As a result, the case was heard by the Supreme Court.
Legal Issue: The Supreme Court had to determine whether the Balaou was protected
under the legal rules of foreign sovereign immunity, which shields foreign sovereigns and their
acts from the scrutiny of national courts. Can an American citizen assert a title to an armed
national vessel in an American court after it was found in the waters of the United States?
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Holding and Reasoning: Chief Justice Marshall delivered the majority opinion, and the
Supreme Court reversed the appellate court’s decision and affirmed the district court’s dismissal
of the libel. It found that the Balaou was a public armed vessel commissioned by and in service
of Emperor Napoleon of France. If the ship had been seized for commercial use, the Supreme
Court would not have lacked territorial jurisdiction and would have been permitted to hear the
case. However in this instance, the meddling of U.S. courts cannot occur without affecting
Napoleon’s power and his dignity. “The implied license therefore under which such vessel enters
friendly port, may reasonably be construed, and it seems to the Court, ought to be construed, as
containing an exemption from the jurisdiction of the sovereign, within whose territory she claims
the rites of hospitality” (832-833). Essentially, the Court held that the Balaou entered American
territory under the implied promise that it was exempt from the jurisdiction of the United States
since it enjoyed sovereign immunity. “Upon these principles, by the unanimous consent of
nations…nations have not yet asserted their jurisdiction over the public armed ships of a foreign
sovereign entering a port open for their reception” (833). Thus, by allowing French naval ships
in U.S. ports, it was implicit that these ships will be protected by the Foreign Sovereign
Immunity Doctrine.
Legal and Political Implications: Despite losing the case in America, McFaddon and
Greetham still had the option of going to France and trying their suit there, but it would have
been extremely difficult to win in a French court. Conclusively, the Supreme Court was
upholding the absolutist or traditional theory of sovereign immunity. Since the world is
composed of different types of sovereigns who enjoy equal rights and independence “…all
circumstances, of that absolute and complete jurisdiction within their respective territories which
sovereignty confers” (832). The Court’s upholding was certainly a direct result of a peculiar
circumstance since France was an ally of the U.S. during the War of 1812. Consequently, the
Supreme Court did not want to upset diplomatic relations with a key ally while the U.S. was
fighting a war against the British. Even though the Exchange was seized improperly, the fact that
the Emperor was an ally and took custody of it for the public purpose of military use meant that
the Court lacked territorial jurisdiction. In addition, the U.S. was still a relatively weak country
in 1812 that had limited international influence, so it could not afford to anger both France and
Britain. With the onset of the 20th century and globalization, the United States began to adopt a
more limited theory of sovereign immunity because it wanted states to be more accountable for
their actions. After both World War II and the Cold War, the United States had the ability to
implement and enforce this new modern theory since it had become a major world power and