No. 143.
Mr. Seward to Mr. Evarts.

No. 561.]

Sir: Having great confidence in the good judgment of General Stahel, and knowing that his experience in the management of mixed cases [Page 211] both in China and Japan has given him practical acquaintance with the subject, I sent to him, unofficially, copies of the memoranda on procedure in mixed cases between our people and subjects of China, and asked his views. He has responded under date of December 10, and I have now the honor to place his letter before you.

I have, &c.,

GEOEGE F. SEWAED.
[Inclosure in No. 561.]

Mr. Stahel to Mr. Seward.

My Dear Mr. Seward: I have received your two memoranda, and I congratulate you on the able manner in which yon deal with the subject. You have clearly shown that by the treaties ample provision is made for a kind of “mixed court,” where an official assessor of plaintiff’s nationality shall sit and have a voice, judgment, however, to be finally given by the presiding officer, who must be of defendant’s nationality.

If this arrangement were carried out in practice it would undoubtedly accomplish much toward alleviating the natural apprehensions of a plaintiff when suing in the court not of his nationality, toward a careful, dignified, and impartial trial, and toward a cordial acceptance of the principle of extraterritoriality, and I think it would generally insure right decisions, and go far to mitigate the bitterness of feeling which frequently, and sometimes with apparent good reason, regards decisions against the plaintiff by the court of the opposite nationality as foregone conclusions and denials of justice.

But to carry out this very desirable arrangement effectively, both nations ought to appoint official assessors for this special purpose, whose qualifications and integrity should be unquestionable. It is impossible that consuls, however irreproachable, should fulfill this duty in addition to their ordinary duties.

Any other kind of mixed court than these (I agree with you) is impracticable. For the first thing courts involve is a code of laws, and mixed courts would involve a mixed code, the successful and intelligent construction of which, in our present condition of knowledge as to Chinese and Japanese methods and principles of justice, or in any knowledge we are likely to gain of them during this generation, would be a task which would fail even our ablest men, and is probably impracticable.

Far better than any such attempt would be a suitable provision for carrying out the treaty stipulations now existing, and securing the presence, at every trial, of an official assessor of plaintiff’s nationality with rights and powers to make his presence effective toward securing an equitable decision according to the laws of defendant’s nation; and the importance of this is at least as great in civil as in criminal matters, for it is in the adjudication of civil cases that injustice is now more frequent.

I think the proposals which you make are very appropriate and entirely practicable. But permit me to suggest that No. 3, on page 11 of your memorandum of date the 4th of October, should make it imperative on the consul (at plaintiff’s demand) to sit as assessor.

Any interference of the consul with the magistrate’s procedure (except, of course, in protection of his own national) would probably work only harm, and should not be allowed. In practice, and with the exercise of the tact you urge, repulsive measures for exacting truth would rarely be resorted to in presence of the foreign official.

The general rule that justice should be done according to the law or practice of the court sitting should be scrupulously adhered to, otherwise advantage of the interference will surely be taken to defeat justice. It must not be forgotten that Asiatic ideas on these points radically differ from ours; that we cannot change these ideas during a sitting of court, and that there undoubtedly exists a strong and perfectly natural prejudice on the part of the Chinese and Japanese officials of all classes in favor of their own nationals and against foreigners, which tends against the obtainment of justice, even under favorable circumstances.

Yours &c.,

J. STAHEL.