493.11N15/316
The American Commissioners on the Sino-American Joint Commission to the Secretary of State
[Received April 15.]
Sir: The American Commissioners on the Sino-American Joint Commission for the assessment of damages for American losses at Nanking have the honor to enclose the final awards of the Commission as signed and sealed on March 15th [13th], and to submit this final report on the work of the Commission. Details of the Commission’s previous activities have already been reported to the Department in the Commissioners’ confidential communications of October 12, 1928, November 19, 1928, December 27, 1928, February 6, 1929, and March 9, 1929,65 and in a number of telegrams transmitted through the Legation at Peking.
In assessing the claims for American losses at Nanking, the American Commissioners were in general guided by the Department’s telegraphic instruction No. 315 of September 17, 4:00 p.m. to the Legation,66 to the effect that:
“As to the value to be used as the measure of damages, … the Department’s view would be that generally the actual value of the property at the time of the loss, as nearly as ascertainable, should be used.”
The claims as filed were in general very reasonable in nature and in only a few instances were there encountered claims in which there appeared conclusive evidence of an overstatement of values, the Commission reducing such claims in accordance with the evidence. Seasonable amounts were written off for depreciation in certain of the large number of cases in which values were stated in terms of cost of goods purchased over a period of years, although in a number of these cases, the valuations were so modest in nature that the Chinese Commissioners agreed to the American Commissioners’ proposal that the [Page 864] claim be assessed in the full amount claimed. Of the 122 individual claims assessed, 45 were assessed as presented, while the bulk of the remainder were subject to comparatively slight reductions, each case being decided on its merits, so far as these merits could be determined from the claim as filed and from collateral evidence available to the Commissioners.
The Chinese Commissioners in the main evinced a spirit of conciliation and fairness in reference to the assessments, although in a number of cases they made most unreasonable attacks on claims which appeared entirely legitimate in every way. The American Commissioners, however, had an unfailing source of strength in such cases in the provision that the sworn statements of American citizens were to be accepted as ‘prima facie’ evidence which was to be questioned only upon proof of error. After their experiences in the matter, the American Commissioners are of the opinion that but for this provision in the exchange of notes, the assessment of damages at all commensurate with the losses suffered would have been out of the question.
In assessing damages to immovable property, the Chinese Commissioners agreed to the following scale of depreciation for buildings:
First five years after construction | No depreciation. |
First ten years thereafter | 2½ per cent per annum. |
Second ten years thereafter | 1½ per cent per annum on first depreciated valuation. |
Third ten years thereafter | ½ per cent per annum on second depreciated valuation. |
This scale, as compared with those supplied to the American Commissioners by the local real estate and insurance companies, was a very favorable one and in most cases was liberally construed by the Commission, which was working with figures based on the appreciated cost of building materials and workmanship.
As reported in the American Commissioners’ telegram of November 23, 10:00 a.m. to the Legation,67 only one of the claims presented to the Commission contained a specific claim for rental of the property (which had been forcibly occupied by Nationalist troops for a number of months). The Chinese Commissioners held that such claim was not a proper chargé against the National Government, the American Commissioners holding the opposite view. The matter was accordingly referred to the Legation, which in its telegram No. 298 of December 1, 4:00 p.m., quoted the Department’s instruction to the Legation of November 30, 6:00 p.m.,68 reading in part as follows: [Page 865]
“One. Department considers that claim for rental as such cannot be supported on legal grounds but will leave to the discretion of the Commissioners to decide to what extent the argument of simple justice should be pressed.”
This original instruction was later modified by the Department’s telegraphic instruction of December 17, 5:00 p.m. to the Legation,69 but the American Commissioners in the meantime had been pressing the claim as a matter of simple justice and the Chinese Commissioners on these grounds had agreed to a readjustment, without making any formal definite ruling on the matter of rental. This was possible because of a dispute concerning the exchange rate used in converting gold to Chinese currency, and the claim was assessed as a whole in accordance with the usual practice governing the assessment of organization claims.
The American Commissioners, as reported in each of their previous communications to the Department, experienced much difficulty in securing the attendance of the Chinese Commissioners at meetings, both Commissioners holding concurrent positions in the Government at Nanking, which necessitated frequent trips to that city. …
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
As reported in the American Commissioners’ telegrams of January 30, 10:00 p.m. and January 31, 7:00 p.m. to the Legation,70 the Commission on the latter date had assessed all claims other than the Hobart claim for personal injuries, the Department’s telegraphic advices as to the examining surgeon’s report on Mr. Hobart’s injuries not having been received until January 31st, too late for consideration at the Commission’s meeting held that morning.
In the same telegrams the American Commissioners requested instructions as to the action to be taken in reference to the American Government claims; and reported a deadlock between the American and Chinese Commissioners in reference to the matter of interest on claims and the admission of the claims of four American citizens of the Chinese race. Report was also made of certain difficulties encountered in reference to the negotiations looking to the replacement of American owned deeds lost as a result of the disturbances at Nanking.
The American Government’s claim71 as presented in the Legation’s telegram of March 4, 5:00 p.m. to the American Commissioners was accepted and approved by the Commission on March 13th, while the matter of the replacement of lost deeds was adjusted by the Commission’s [Page 866] formal recommendation which constitutes Section five of the final report signed by the American and Chinese Commissioners and enclosed herewith.
However, all efforts by the American Commissioners to break the deadlock which existed on January 31st in reference to interest on claims and the claims of four American citizens of the Chinese race, proved unavailing and the Commission in its final report of March 13, 1929, noted division in reference to these two questions as instructed in the Department’s telegram of February 27, 12:00 p.m. to the Legation, this instruction having been received by the American Commissioners on March 5th in the Legation’s telegram No. 43 of March 4, 5:00 p.m.
Detailed confidential memoranda as to the negotiations before and after January 31, 1929, in reference to interest and the four claims of Chinese-Americans are being submitted under cover of separate despatches of today’s date72 supplementing this final report, so will not be referred to at greater length here.
In accordance with the instructions contained in paragraph 2 of section 7 of the Department’s telegram of January 28th to the American Commissioners,73 the original copies of all claims appearing on the final list of awards together with the original book of minutes and all other archives of the Commission are being handed over to the American Consul General at Shanghai for safekeeping. The file of claims consists of 117 individual claims and 14 group or organization claims, each claim being contained in a manila envelope with the name of the claimant written thereon, while the minutes and other archives are contained in nine Shipman binders duly indexed.
We have [etc.]
- C. J. Spiker
- V. G. Lyman
- None printed.↩
- Foreign Relations, 1928, vol. ii, p. 359.↩
- See telegram No. 844, November 26, 1928, from the Minister in China, Foreign Relations, 1928, vol. ii, p. 366.↩
- ibid., p. 367.↩
- ibid., p. 368.↩
- See extracts in telegram No. 83, February 2, from the Minister in China, p. 859.↩
- See telegram No. 79, February 27, to the Minister in China, p. 862.↩
- None printed.↩
- See point 2 of telegram No. 57, February 9, to the Minister in China, p. 861.↩