Legation of France,
Washington, January 7, 1884.
(Received January 7.)
M. Ferry to Mr.
Morton.
[Translation.]
Copy of a letter
addressed by M. Ferry, president of the council, minister of
foreign affairs, to Mr. Morton, minister of the United
States, under date of
December 27, 1883.
You were pleased to communicate to me, on the 22d nst., a telegram
from Mr. Frelinghuysen in relation to the claim brought against the
United States by Mr. Le More, a French citizen, and laid before the
mixed commission sitting at Washington. The honorable Secretary of
State of the United States desired that the decision of this claim
should be postponed, in order that the two Governments might thus be
enabled to decide whether it was not proper for it to be withdrawn,
according to Article II of the treaty of 1880.
With a view to complying with this desire, I at once telegraphed to
our commissioner at Washington not to oppose the desired
postponement. It appears, however, from Mr. Lefaivre’s reply, that,
by a unanimous decision, after a formal deliberation, the Commission
ordered, on the 19th of December, that Mr. Le More’s case should be
submitted to it on the 28th instant. This decision, in which the
American commissioner acquiesced, as did also the Brazilian
commissioner, evidently changes the condition of the question; to
the doubts which existed, and which should have inured to the
benefit of the claimant, it adds a presumption, and, as it were, a
kind of acquired right, of the benefit of which it does not seem
possible to deprive him. It does not appear, moreover, by what right
one of the two Governments could interfere in order to cause the
postponement of a decision adopted by the commission, which alone
has power to decide upon the order in which its work is to be
performed. In this state of things, it has seemed proper to me to
allow the proceedings to take their own course, the Commission being
theproper judge of the question whether Mr. Le More’s claim should
be withdrawn for a reason based upon Article II of the treaty of
1880, which is the law by which it is governed. I will thank you to
inform Mr. Frelinghuysen of the reasons which have prevented me from
complying with his request.