Mr. Haldeman to Mr. Seward.

No. 38.]

Sir: I have the honor to acknowledge your despatch of the 5th of last month No. 34.

I take the liberty to enclose an abridgment of the great Swedish case (cut from the London Times) relating to “the duties of neutral nations.” In 1825, the [Page 352] Swedish government was occupied in the construction of its navy, and had sold several vessels of war considered unfit for service. Among others in the year 1825 three vessels, one ship-of-the-line and two frigates, were offered for sale at. Stockholm; these vessels were purchased by a British mercantile firm in open market. The Spanish minister, M. Alvarado, (instructed by his government,) having cause to believe or discovering that the vessels were intended to augment the naval forces of the revolted Spanish American colonies, protested and remonstrated against their being permitted to depart from Sweden, “since these ships (no doubt without the cognizance of the Swedish government) are destined to re-enforce the rebel armaments of Mexico.” He also writes that he is well aware that the British purchasers are far from admitting such a destination, but, on the contrary, have omitted no means to dissemble it, and thereby to deceive the good faith of the cabinet of Stockholm; also, that the sale of such public vessels not being an act of customary trade on the part of a government of a state, Spain protests against it, as an act inconsistent with the neutrality of the Swedish crown.

M. de Curry, in commenting on the above transaction in his treatise entitled “Phases et Causes Célèbres du Droit Maritime des Nationes,” observes that the sale of these ships was originally intended as a simple operation of commerce upon the part of the Swedish government, and as such was perfectly legitimate on its part; but as soon as it was brought clearly to its knowledge that such of the vessels as had been permitted to sail were destined to augment the maritime forces of the insurgent colonists, the Swedish government felt it to be inconsistent with the neutrality of the Swedish crown that it should lend itself to a transaction whereby the state would be rendered subservient to the uses of war of one of the belligerent parties, to the manifest prejudice of the other, and as its good faith had been surprised, cancelled the sale of such of the vessels as were still in Swedish waters.

The purchasers received $9,000 from the Swedish government for giving up their bargain, and so the affair peaceably concluded.

I remain, your obedient servant,

J. S. HALDEMAN.

Hon. William H. Seward, Secretary of State.

The duties of neutral nations.

To the Editor of the Times:

Sir:At a moment when public attention is much directed to the question of the sale or equipment of vessels of war on account of belligerent states within the precincts of neutral governments, a short account of a diplomatic correspondence, forming an authentic precedent in some degree bearing upon this subject, will probably be acceptable to your readers. I am not aware that the Swedish case to which I am about to refer has been noticed in the recent discussions of this head of international law. The documents relating to this matter will be found in a recent volume of the Causes Célèbres du Droit des Gens, published by Baron C. Martens, (vol. v, Cause iv, p. 229.) For the benefit of those of your readers who may not have access to the work, I will give a short but sufficient abstract of the facts—the correspondence. I may mention that I have omitted a good deal of the merely political part of the discussion, which smacks not a little of the doctrines of the Holy Alliance. Apart from this, however, the legal bearings of the case are well deserving of study and consideration.

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For several years the Swedish government had been occupied in the reconstruction of its navy, and had put up for sale several vessels of war, which were considered unfit for service. This traffic had taken place publicly, without objection in any quarter. In the year 1825 three vessels, one ship-of-the-line and two frigates, were offered for sale to the Spanish minister at Stockholm. On his declining to purchase them they were put up for sale in the open market, and were purchased in due form by the firm of Michaelson & Benedicks, who re-sold them to the house of Barclay, Haming, & Richardson, of London. Shortly after the conclusion of this contract, and before the delivery and departure of the vessels, it became generally rumored that they had been, in fact, purchased on account of the revolted states of South America, with whom Spain was then at war. This transaction led to a correspondence of considerable interest and importance between M. d’Alvarado, the representative of the court of Spain at Stockholm, and Count Wetterstedt, the Swedish minister for foreign affairs. The following extracts will give your readers an idea of the leading features of the discussion.

In a note dated July 1, 1825, M. Alvarado, after reciting the sale of the vessels, remonstrates against their being permitted to depart from Sweden, “since these ships (no doubt without the cognizance of the Swedish government) are destined to re-enforce the rebel armaments of Mexico. The undersigned is well aware that the purchasers are far from admitting such a destination, but, on the contrary, have omitted no means proper to dissemble it, and thereby to deceive the good faith of the cabinet of Stockholm; that they have alleged that the vessels are twenty or thirty years old: that their second tier of guns has been withdrawn; and, lastly, they have announced that their object is to traffic with India,”

The Spanish minister then proceeds to point out the obvious futility of these pretences. He argues, first, “that the purchase of ships-of-the-line by a private individual is an unheard of thing.” Next, “that the vessels in question are wholly dissimilar to those employed in the service of the East India Company.” Thirdly, he points out the absurdity of the supposition that the English merchant should have purchased the vessel on his own account. It is a government, he argues, not an individual who is the natural purchaser of ships of war. It is notorious that the South American republics are greatly in want of ships. And, further, the English firm in question is known to be largely engaged in the rebel loan, and consequently deeply interested in the rebel cause. “These observations,” proceeds the note,

“Prove sufficiently that the English firm can have no other object in acquiring these vessels than to hand them over to the Mexicans; it has the greatest interest in so doing, and will inevitably do so. After such decisive considerations, can it be necessary to recall the public notoriety of the destination of these ships accredited at Stockholm, Carlscrona, Gothenburg, and London, by public rumor, by commercial correspondents, and even by persons on board the vessels themselves, some of whom aver that they are bound to an unknown destination, while others more frankly speak of their voyage to America? To demand a greater certainty than that which is afforded by such grave presumptions and such vehement grounds of suspicion would be to require the public and legal confession of the purchasers, which it is too much their interest to withhold, or at all events that material but too tardy demonstration which will one day be acquired when the vessels covered by a Mexican flag shall have attacked the Spaniards in the Atlantic.”

The Spanish minister proceeds to urge upon the consideration of the Swedish court the following consideration:

“What would the King of Sweden think, supposing Norway to be in revolt, if friendly and allied powers were to furnish arms, munitions, and even a fleet to the rebels through the medium of speculators and under the pretence of ignorance of the results? Would the cabinet of Stockholm, when it was apprised of these preparations, wait till the iron and cannon furnished to its enemies had mowed down its soldiers, and the vessels so made over to the rebels had annihilated its commerce and desolated its shores, before it reclaimed against and if possible prevented such transactions?”

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The Spanish note concludes by demanding that the contract of sale to the English firm should be rescinded, or at least that the vessels should be detained until further instructions.

Count Wetterstedt, the Swedish minister, replied in a note of the date of July 7. 1825. He first of all argues the good faith of his own government— which, indeed, was not disputed—and shows the complete bona fides of the sale. He then proceeds to the following effect:

“A grave accusation is founded upon this sale. The vessels, it is alleged, are destined to re-enforce the maritime armaments of the rebels in Spanish America. Where assertions of this peremptory character are advanced, and a demand for the rescinding of the contract is based upon them, one has a right to expect material proofs of a positive and indisputable character. These the undersigned cannot discover in the reasonings of the Spanish minister founded on the nature of the vessels and the relations of the purchasers with the South American republics. When the public notoriety of the destination of the vessels is relied upon, and letters from persons on board are referred to, it would have been highly desirable that the Spanish minister should have given the details of the information he appears to possess and the correspondence which is alleged to exist, in order that the matter might be kept out of the vicious and deceitful circle of rumor and hearsay. If the Spanish minister can, or thinks he can, demonstrate that the purchasers of these vessels have formed the intention of putting them to a use which may be injurious to Spain, his court should address itself to the British government, which alone can exercise the proper control over its own subjects. But to demand the arrest of a sale upon simple presumption, and under the apprehension of future dangers which might result from it, would be to annihilate the activity and development of all commercial transactions.”

Referring to the supposition made by the Spanish minister of a rebellion in Sweden, Count Wetterstedt adds:

“In such a case the Swedish government would not seek to render foreign governments responsible for any succors which their subjects, without their knowledge, and contrary to their orders, might render to the insurgents.”

The Swedish note ends by declining to comply with the demand of the Spanish minister.

On July 15, 1825, M. Alvarado writes a further note, in which he calls attention to suspicious circumstances with reference to the enlistment of crews of the Swedish navy, and then, recurring to the former argument, protests against “the doctrine of irresponsibility which the cabinet of Stockholm professes with regard to these vessels.” He treats with disdain the suggestion of a recourse to the British government, and adds that “this will be no justification for Sweden, since she is the only government in the world which by selling vessels of this description without precautions to foreign speculators is the primary cause of the mischiefs which they may produce.” Referring to the observation of the Swedish note on the subject of inconveniences of restricting trade upon mere presumption of ulterior consequences, M. Alvarado says:

“Does, then, the Swedish government place in the rank of innocent commerce, and of transactions in which activity ought to be encouraged, the sale of ships-of-the-line to private individuals, who offer none of the guarantees which are given by nations and governments? Are these terrible instruments of destruction and conquest to be handed over to the passions or calculations of the first comer without taking any precautions that they shall not be made to serve the ends of piracy?”

After this some further correspondence passed not material to the present purpose, but on September 9, 1825, M. Alvarado, having received final instructions from his own court, and re-enforced by the representatives of France, Russia, and Prussia, delivered his ultimatum. Referring to the grounds of suspicion. already set forth, and the notoriety of the destination of the vessels, he adds:

“However, although this point is unhappily but too clear, the undersigned cannot conceal from himself that to all his remonstrances the Swedish minister has opposed the observation that he could only regard the matter from a commercial point of view, as a sale which the twedish govenment was at liberty to make to the best account that it could for the sake of Se improvement of its navy.”

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Against such a line of argument the Spanish minister strongly remonstrates and asks whether the Swedish government really proposes—

“To furnish indiscriminately vessels-of-war to the first bidder, even to private individuals, without any guarantee; laying down, as it should seem, the proposition that the commercial benefits of these sales are of a higher order of necessity to the state than the loftiest political considerations or the most respectable moral obligations. If so, it would be to resolve on eluding the duties of neutrality towards belligerent powers, and those of friendship and alliance towards a friendly power whose subjects are in revolt. If so, then insurgents and pirates would never want maritime resources, for the supply of these implements of war to all sorts of persons would always offer to the Swedish government sufficient commercial advantages to justify their destination and intermediate speculators who would mask the wrongs—commercial advantages which would be all the greater, and speculators who would be all the more generous, just in proportion as the operations for which they were required were the more illicit.”

This final note ends by a renewal of the demand for the rescission of the contract with the English firm, and threatens to consider the departure of the vessels as an act of hostility on the part of the Swedish government.

On the 1st of November, 1825, the rescission of the contract was formally announced in the Swedish Official Gazette. The contract purported to be dissolved at the instance of the purchasers, whose consent, however, was obtained by the offer of liberal terms, as they received $9,000 from the Swedish government for giving up their bargain, and so the affair peaceably concluded.

Now, assuming this precedent to be well founded in principle, let us see what it does and what it does not establish. I need not point out to those of your readers who have paid any attention to this kind of questions the capital distinction between a transaction like that in the Swedish case, in which the government of a neutral country is itself a party to the transaction, and a mere sale of munitions of war by a subject of that government without its privity. The sale of the vessels to the English firm by the Swedish government was an act in itself clearly lawful. A sale by the Swedish government to the South American republics would have been equally clearly unlawful. The importance of this case is in showing upon what sort of evidence the Swedish government was bound to take notice that the sale, though apparently legitimate, was yet, from the circumstances of the case, not permissible. It is only in this way that it can be made applicable to the questions which at present engage public attention. It does not aid us to any degree in determining whether, under the foreign enlistment act or otherwise, the equipment of a vessel-of-war by a subject of the neutral government for a belligerent state is or is not an act which it is the duty of the neutral government to prohibit and prevent, or whether it is one which, like the sale of any other munition of war, the neutral government may permit its subjects to engage in at their own risk. But the question which has been recently raised divides itself into two branches. First, are the sale and equipment of a vessel-of-war for the account of a belligerent, acts which a government ought to prohibit and prevent in its subjects directly? Secondly, if this ought to be prohibited if the sale be direct to the belligerent, can the obligation be evaded and the responsibility declined by the colorable interposition of a third party to whom the prohibition does not personally apply, but who there is good reason to think is acting only as a channel for the accomplishment of the illegal intent? It is to this second head exclusively that the Swedish precedent applies itself. Assuming it to be established that the equipment of a ship-of-war for a belligerent is by the municipal law as much prohibited to the subject of a neutral state as it unquestionably is by international law forbidden to the neutral government itself, then the Swedish case shows that the responsibility of seeing that this prohibition is not eluded cannot be got rid of by the mere device of a sale to a merchant professing to purchase on his own account, but which the circumstances make it morally clear is really on account of the belligerent. The whole question is one of agency. Qui facit per alium facit [Page 356] per se. The question is whether the purchase is bona fide what it purports to be, or is it only a device for accomplishing indirectly what would not be permitted directly? Whether we ought or ought not to permit our ship-builders to construct steam rams for the confederate authorities may be a matter of dispute on which there is a good deal to be said on both sides. But this is quite clear, that if the thing cannot and may not be done openly, it ought not to be allowed to be done covertly. If the steam rams cannot be lawfully consigned to President Davis, they cannot lawfully be sold to any person who is, to all intent’s and purposes, Mr. Davis’s agent, whether he call himself a French merchant or take any other shape or designation. This is the common sense and common justice which receives an apt illustration in the Swedish case. The principal value of the precedent is as an example of the sort of evidence which ought to be offered and demanded in order to establish the obligation on the neutral government of taking notice of the existence of such an unlawful agency at work in a contract prima facie lawful. In this point of view it is well worthy of attention.

HISTORICUS.