Mr. Olney to Sir
Julian Pauncefote.
Department of State,
Washington, January 16,
1897.
No. 581.]
Excellency: I have the honor to acknowledge the
receipt of your note of the 30th ultimo, inclosing a copy of the
ordinance passed by
[Page 555]
the
municipal council at Apia, with regard to the arrest and imprisonment of
men-of-war’s men.
The proposed ordinance is to provide the manner in which members of crews
of war vessels offending against municipal ordinances and regulations
shall be dealt with, and its object and purport are to place the
offending sailor in the custody of the commander of his ship, who shall
punish all minor infractions of the municipal regulations as he shall
see fit.
I observe that the honorable commissioners of the admiralty who have had
under consideration Mr. T. B. Cusack-Smith’s dispatch, have expressed
their concurrence with the views taken by the consuls regarding this
ordinance. It appears that the consular board at its meeting on
September 19, 1895, made the following note:
Consideration was deferred in order that the consuls might refer
the question to the powers. Meanwhile the consuls unanimously
request that in case of an arrest of a man-of-war’s man the
president of the municipal council will at once notify the
captain of the man-of-war concerned and inform him that if he
sends the necessary guard the prisoner will be handed over.
It is understood that the municipal council accorded this action.
I gather from the statement of Her Majesty’s consul at Apia that the
ordinance, which for brevity is to be known as “the men-of-war’s men
offenders ordinance,” has been proposed, owing to several cases in
former years of arrests oh shore of German men-of-war’s men, which
occasioned considerable friction, “but more particularly,” says Mr.
Cusack-Smith, “owing to a recent instance, in which the president of the
municipal council and the German consul obtained the release of the
sailors from the custody of the municipal police.”
At this point it seems proper to add that Mr. Churchill, the
consul-general of this Government to Samoa, in his dispatch No. 21 of
September 29, 1896, presented the whole of this subject to the
Department substantially as reported in Mr. Cusack-Smith’s dispatch, but
more in detail, and mentioned besides the case of the two sailors
belonging to the German war ship Falk, who were
arrested by the police at Matafele, charged with being drunk and
disorderly on the streets and with willfully damaging private property,
and who were subsequently released by direction of the German consul,
who stated that he would assume all responsibility.
I inclose a copy of the Department’s instructions to Mr. Churchill, No.
37 of December 21, 1896, which discloses the views of this Government
upon the subject. A copy of this instruction was sent to Mr. Bayard at
London and to Mr. Uhl at Berlin, on December 23, 1896.
After reciting the arrest of the two sailors and their subsequent release
by direction of the German consul, contrary to any provision of law to
that end, I remarked that as early as January, 1895, it also appeared
that the president of the municipal council at Apia instructed the chief
of police that, in case any sailors from the German warships were
arrested by the police, they were to be released on bail upon a watch
being sent ashore for them.
As I was unable to find any warrant of law for the action of the German
consul or the order of the president of the municipal council, I felt
constrained to instruct our ambassadors at London and Berlin to make
proper representations upon the subject to the Governments to which they
were respectively accredited, and to suggest the propriety of adopting
the necessary means to prevent a recurrence of such arbitrary and
unlawful acts in the future.
So far as concerns the adoption of the proposed ordinance—copy of
[Page 556]
which was submitted to Mr.
Churchill as well as to Mr. Cusack-Smith, and is transmitted with your
note—the Department held that “it should abstain from expressing any
opinion upon the subject.”
The concluding portion of Mr. Rockhill’s dispatch to Mr. Churchill on
this particular feature of the situation may, with equal force and
propriety, be literally transcribed as a part of my reply. He said:
It has been clearly shown that the municipal council has
exclusive jurisdiction within the municipal district of Apia,
and that it is charged with the duty of making, by and with the
advice and approval of the consular body and the chief justice,
in case of disagreement, as well as enforcing all laws,
ordinances, and regulations that are applicable to the said
district. In this aspect of the case, it would be manifestly
improper to indicate the course you should follow when the
measure comes up anew. The municipal council and the consular
board, who are presumably the best informed as to the actual
situation and the necessity for any change in that respect,
must, therefore, be the best judges of what they think desirable
and proper to promote the interest or maintain peace within the
municipal jurisdiction.
In saying this, it must not be thought that the Department lacks
interest on the subject, or does not wish to see peace and
harmony prevail and all irritating differences disappear. But it
realizes that ample provision is made for all such questions
under the general act itself, and it believes that the best
interests of all concerned are more easily advanced by
withholding advice in such case than by any intimation from
either Government as to the course to be pursued in a given
instance. Our desire is to see the administration of justice
impartially performed, without fear or favor in any direction.
It must be equally assumed that both Germany and Great Britain
are animated by a like desire, and that, consequently, they too
will refrain from any suggestions that might bias or influence
the action of their consular representatives or of the municipal
council in dealing with such questions.
With these general observations the Department commits the
subject to your judgment and discretion. It would appear from
your presence on the spot and your familiarity with all the
phases of the situation that you should be the best judge in all
such matters, unless it should clearly appear that the measure
was primarily one for the conjoint decision of the three
Governments, parties to the Berlin general act.
I realize the peculiar circumstances that surround the situation in Samoa
and have no desire to be considered as standing in the way of needed
reforms or ordinances that have for their object the betterment of the
conditions there or the procuration of peace and concord. Mr. Churchill,
in submitting the facts, thought it unnecessary to pass an opinion on
them, except to view with alarm any arrangement permitting the landing
on neutral territory of the Apia municipality of any armed force under
any pretext whatever.
Even Mr. Cusack-Smith remarks that the consuls unanimously dislike the
cumbersome provisions of the proposed ordinance, and that in announcing
to the municipal council that they deferred consideration thereof until
it could be submitted to the treaty powers, they made the tentative
suggestion previously mentioned. Mr. Cusack-Smith goes so far as to say
that within his recollection only two cases have occurred during the
past seven years in which sailors from British men-of-war have been
arrested on shore by the municipal police. In these cases no friction
occurred. The men were tried, fined, or acquitted by the municipal
magistrate.
Mr. Churchill makes no complaint that the municipal ordinances are
insufficient to meet the ordinary offenses triable by the local
magistrates appointed for that purpose by the municipal council. On the
contrary, it would appear that whatever friction may have arisen was due
to the illegal and unauthorized conduct of the German consul and the
municipal president in causing the release of the two sailors who had
been arrested, in the one instance, and in issuing an order that German
sailors arrested by the municipal police should be immediately turned
over to their companions upon a watch being sent ashore for them, in the
other.
[Page 557]
Friction can readily be avoided if the Berlin general act is carried out
in spirit and letter. The desire of this Government is that it shall be.
But it is an easy matter to trespass upon dangerous ground, as well as
to weaken the local influence, if almost at every step some action is
taken not authorized by the general act or contemplated by the
ordinances and regulations made in accordance therewith.
I am at a loss to comprehend why the proposed ordinance should be enacted
into a law. It is not alleged that the existing regulations and
ordinances are insufficient to maintain or preserve the peace. Moreover,
friction would perhaps be more liable to follow the carrying out the
provisions of the ordinance should it become a law than it would did the
offenders know that they would be tried by the local magistrates. If
they once realize that, although they may be arrested by the municipal
police, they can not be tried by the local authorities, they will have
less fear of the consequences and a greater disregard for the ordinances
and regulations; whereas the police, on the contrary, might feel less
incentive in the performance of their duties. I can perceive no good
reason, even taking into account the peculiar circumstances at Apia, why
an offending British or German sailor belonging to a vessel of war of
either country should not be tried and punished for a breach of the
peace there, by the duly constituted municipal magistrates, as well as
in the United States for a similar offense, unless a treaty provision
should otherwise provide. And upon this particular point the Berlin
general act, although making what may be regarded as ample provision for
the due and proper trial and punishment of all offenders, is silent.
It should be the aim of the three Governments to strengthen the municipal
council in the performance of the duties assigned to it by the Berlin
general act and to uphold the authority of its officers appointed to
maintain and promote peace. In this view of the case, I may assure you
of the aid and support of the Government of the United States so long as
it remains party to that engagement. But I can not, as at present
advised, agree to instruct the president of the municipal council at
Apia to notify the commander of the vessel of war whose sailor has been
arrested that the prisoner will be delivered into his authority upon
sending a guard ashore for that purpose.
In obedience to the wish of Lord Salisbury to learn the views of this
Government concerning the proposed “men-of-war’s men offenders’
ordinance,” I have endeavored to set them forth somewhat in detail,
notwithstanding they may be supplementary to those I have instructed the
United States ambassador at London to present, and which I presume have
already been laid before his lordship.
I have, etc.,
[Inclosure in No. 581.]
Mr. Rockhill to
Mr. Churchill.
Department of State,
Washington, December 21,
1895.
No. 37.]
Sir: I have received your dispatch No. 21,
of September 29, 1896. It presents the case of two sailors belonging
to the German war ship Falke who were
arrested by the police at Matafele, charged with being drunk and
disorderly in the street and with willfully damaging private
property, and who were subsequently released by direction of the
German consul, who stated that he would assume all responsibility in
the
[Page 558]
premises. Against this
assumption of authority Mr. William Cooper, a municipal magistrate,
strongly objects in letters to the municipal council, makes some
pertinent comments, and cites the case of a German sailor from the
Sperber who had been arrested for
dangerous riding. In that case the municipal council sustained the
magistrate, and in fact adopted a resolution to the effect that the
sergeant of police be instructed that it is his duty not to release
any prisoner who is in custody for breach of the municipal
regulations unless bail shall have been allowed by the
magistrate.
In the discussion that ensued because of the failure of the municipal
council to sustain the action of Mr. Cooper, and because the
consular board did not unanimously approve the resolution of the
municipal council to lay the matter on the table, it was referred to
the chief justice, who proposed to the council the drafting of an
ordinance covering the question. You inclose such an ordinance whose
title is “An ordinance to provide the manner in which members of
crews of ships of war offending against municipal ordinances and
regulations shall be dealt with,” and ask for instructions that will
enable you to act in concert with your British and German colleagues
when the subject arises anew after such reference.
The purport and effect of the proposed ordinance is to place the
offending sailor completely under the control of the commander of
the ship to which he is to be delivered.
The meeting of the consular board of September 19 last deferred
action on this ordinance until it could be referred to the powers.
Meanwhile it was unanimously agreed to request that, in case of the
arrest of sailors belonging to a man-of-war, the president of the
municipal council would promptly notify the commander of the vessel
to which such sailor belonged and say that if the necessary guard
were sent ashore the prisoner would be handed over to it.
The municipal council, it appears, assented to this action.
Meanwhile, during the pendency of the discussion of these matters,
the German war vessel in the harbor landed a file of armed sailors
“to perform the function of provost-marshal’s guard.” It seems they
were landed with the consent of the president of the municipality,
but without that of the consular board, which was not, in fact,
consulted in the premises.
Concerning the landing of this guard, it seems only necessary to say
that, while the incident is an independent matter, not directly
pertinent to the present consideration, no warrant for their landing
appears either in the general act or in the municipal enactments
thereunder, so far as the Department is advised.
It is not altogether clear from your statement that the offense
committed by the sailors of the German war ship was “an infraction
of any law, ordinance, or regulation passed by the municipal
council.” The inference from the very essence of the subject,
coupled with the authority conferred upon the municipal council to
make all such laws and ordinances to promote the public interests
and maintain peace and security within the municipal district, is
that such an ordinance existed and that the offense of the sailors
constituted a breach thereof. You do not, however, indicate it
specifically.
Therefore your submission of the proposed ordinance directing how
offenders on shore from ships of war shall be treated is open to
either of two interpretations: First, that no such ordinance exists,
or, second, that instead of making foreign national seamen amenable
thereto, it was thought best to supersede (although this is not
stated unless inferable
[Page 559]
from section 5) the existing regulation by providing that all such
offenders, instead of being tried by municipal magistrates as the
duly appointed administrators of the peace of the municipality,
shall be immediately handed over to the consul of the nation to
which the vessel belongs, or, failing this, to the commander
thereof, to be dealt with as he may elect.
I am inclined to the view, however, because of the plenary power of
the municipal council to pass such regulations, and of the necessity
that everywhere exists for such laws to deal with offenses of which
the sailors were accused, that there was such an ordinance and that
it was being violated.
Therefore in treating your dispatch with the consideration its
importance demands, it is necessary to examine certain of the
provisions of the general act providing for the neutrality and
autonomous government of the Samoan Islands concluded June 14,
1889.
Section 3 of the act, respecting the municipal district of Apia,
expressly provides that the municipal council shall have
jurisdiction over the municipal district of Apia, so far as
necessary to enforce therein the provisions of the general act which
are applicable to the district, including the appointment of a
municipal magistrate and of the necessary subordinate officers of
justice and of administration therein. Among other things, it is to
provide for the security in the district of person and property;
proper fines and penalties for the violation of the laws and
ordinances which shall be in force in the district and not in
conflict with the act, including sanitary and police
regulations.
The same article stipulates that—
all ordinances, resolutions, and regulations
passed by the municipal council, before becoming laws, shall
be referred to the consular representatives of the three
treaty powers, sitting conjointly as a consular board, who
shall either approve and return such regulations or suggest
such amendments as may be unanimously deemed necessary by
them.
Should the consular board not unanimously approve the regulations
referred to them, or the amendments recommended by them be not
accepted by a majority of the municipal council, then the
regulations in question shall be referred for modification and final
approval to the chief justice of Samoa.
The effect of this provision is to give the municipal council supreme
authority over all such measures when they are enacted into positive
law. This view is further strengthened by section 4 of article 5,
which states that the municipal magistrates, who, with subordinate
officers of justice and of administration therein, are appointed by
the municipal council, shall have exclusive jurisdiction in the
first instance over all persons, irrespective of nationality, in
case of infraction of any law, ordinance, or regulation passed by
the municipal council, in accordance with the provisions of the
general act, except when the penalty exceeds a fine of $200 or
imprisonment of more than 180 days.
The release of the two sailors under consideration was, in the
present instance, effected by direction of the German consul, but it
is further alleged that the president of the municipal council had
as early as January last instructed the chief of police that if any
sailors from the German war ships were arrested by the police they
were to be released on bail upon a watch being sent ashore for
them.
It is not to be denied that the German consul exceeded his authority
in respect of these two sailors, and unless an ordinance upon the
subject shall be passed conferring upon him the necessary authority,
it
[Page 560]
is presumed that he
will abstain from any such arbitrary power in the future, and permit
the civil authorities to deal with all such acts according to the
law and regulations.
Although the president of the municipal council shall, as the chief
executive officer, be in charge of the administration of the laws
and ordinances applicable to the municipal district of Apia, he is
at present nowhere advised, authorized, or empowered to order the
release or discharge of a person who has been legally placed in
custody charged with an offense triable by a municipal magistrate.
It is rather the duty of such president to see that the laws are
properly executed. Under no circumstances should he arbitrarily
override the municipal regulations, set them at naught, or assume
functions clearly not within his province. Such acts, besides being
illegal, tend unnecessarily to create ill feeling, discord, strife,
and dissatisfaction; whereas the letter and spirit of the general
act is to conciliate all differences and restore peace and harmony.
The chief aim of the three Governments concerned, no less than the
object of the officers appointed to carry out its provisions, should
be to administer the laws impartially and compose all differences in
the interest of order and good government, and with a due respect
for the laws, ordinances, and regulations.
Touching the conduct of Mr. von Schmidt in the present instance, the
municipal magistrate pertinently observes that “if the responsible
head of the municipal administration himself sets the laws and
ordinances at defiance it can not be expected that other persons
will pay much respect to them.”
This is self-evident.
I propose, therefore, to give a copy of your dispatch and of my reply
to the United States ambassadors at London and Berlin for
communication to the Governments of Great Britain and Germany. I
shall advert to the reported conduct of both the German consul and
of President Schmidt, and express the hope that some means may be
devised whereby a recurrence of such arbitrary and unlawful acts may
be prevented in the future.
So far as concerns the adoption of the proposed measure to be known
as “the men-of-war men offenders ordinance,” this Department holds
that it should abstain from expressing any opinion upon the
subject.
It has been clearly shown that the municipal council has exclusive
jurisdiction within the municipal district of Apia, and that it is
charged with the duty of making, by and with the advice and approval
of the consular body, and the chief justice, in case of
disagreement, as well as enforcing, all laws, ordinances, and
regulations that are applicable to the said district. In this aspect
of the case, it would be manifestly improper to indicate the course
you should follow when the measure comes up anew. The municipal
council and the consular board, who are presumably the best informed
as to the actual situation and the necessity for any change in that
respect, must therefore be the best judge of what they think
desirable and proper to promote the interest or maintain the peace
within the municipal jurisdiction.
In saying this, it must not be thought that the Department lacks
interest on the subject, or does not wish to see peace and harmony
prevail and all irritating differences disappear. But it realizes
that ample provision is made for all such questions under the
general act itself, and it believes that the best interests of all
concerned are more easily advanced by withholding advice in such
case than by any intimation from either Government as to the course
to be pursued in a given instance. Our desire is to see the
administration of justice impartially performed, without fear or
favor in any direction. It must be equally
[Page 561]
assumed that both Germany and Great Britain
are animated by a like desire, and that, consequently, they too will
refrain from any suggestions that might bias or influence the action
of their consular representatives or of the municipal council in
dealing with such questions.
With these general observations, the Department commits the subject
to your judgment and discretion. It would appear from your presence
on the spot and your familiarity with all phases of the situation,
that you should be the best judge in all such matters, unless it
should clearly appear that the measure was one primarily for the
conjoint decision of the three Governments, parties to the Berlin
general act.
I am, etc.,
W. W. Rockhill,
Assistant Secretary.