No. 370.

Mr. Bayard to Mr. Thompson.

No. 4.]

Sir: The Department has received Mr. Langston’s No. 740, giving the awards of the recent mixed commission in the following claims of American citizens, on account of property destroyed in connection with the events transpiring on the 22d and 23d September, 1883, at Port-au-Prince, viz:

Claim of Mr. C. W. Mossell $5,551 50
Claim of Mr. E. V. Garrido 1,791 00
Claim of Mrs. M. Hamilton 720 00
Claim of Bertram Brothers 1,800 00
Claim of Mrs. I. Fournier (in a matter of personal property) 1,000 00

“As regards the real property belonging to Mrs. Evan Williams and Mrs. Isabella Fournier, amounting in the first case to $10,000 and in the other to $1,500” says Mr. Langston, “the commissioners could not agree,” the two commissioners of the Haytian Government “claiming that, since foreigners cannot buy and hold real property in Hayti, according to the constitution and laws thereof, these citizens of the United States cannot recover the several amounts claimed for their property named.”

Mr. Langston continues his dispatch by observing that, in his opinion, the said claimants (Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Fournier) have valid claims and precedents in their favor, and adds:

Unless, then, instructions to the contrary shall he received from the Department, the claims of Mrs. Williams and Mrs. Fournier shall be duly pressed for settlement.

It is understood that these claimants held title deeds to the real property in question, and that no legal proceedings had ever been taken dispossessing them.

That being the case, their losses were actual and consequent on the same causes which inflicted the losses of the other United States citizens, whose claims have been partially allowed. The legal aspect of the case is clearly set forth in the inclosed copy of a report on the subject of Mr. Langston’s No. 740, by the law officer of the Department.

Without quoting this report bodily, you will proceed, on the principles of law which it discloses, in your representations to the Government of Hayti in the premises, and, pressing the considerations involved, will ask for indemnity to these particular claimants.

I am, &c.,

T. F. BAYARD.
[Inclosure in No. 4.]

Report of the Law Officer of the Department of State.

The question submitted by the accompanying papers is whether the fact that foreigners are prohibited by the local law from holding real estate in Hayti precludes them from making claim on the Government of Hayti under the recent commission for damages sustained by real estate owned by them in Hayti. The question, as thus put, answers itself. If a foreigner holds real estate under such a limitation, no matter how defeasible his title may be he owns something, for the arbitrary spoliation of which by the Government he has a claim for redress. A foreigner’s title to real estate under such a limitation may be likened to that of a foreigner’s title to real estate under the laws of many of our States. It is true that under such laws the foreigner [Page 526] is prohibited from holding real estate, yet it is equally true that he has an inchoate interest in such real estate when purchased by him and entered on, which can only be defeated by legal procedure in the nature of au inquisition duly instituted. Nor is this position one of mere local legislation. Not only by the English common law, but by the old Roman law, as accepted in the Spanish settlements in America, a foreigner is entitled to hold real estate, where there is such a prohibition, against even the Government, until legal proceedings are taken for his eviction (Hammekin v. Clayton, 2 Woods, 336; Phillips v. Moore, 100 U. S. 208).

The rule is that an injury done to a prima facie title exposes the party inflicting the injury to legal process as unquestionably as if the title was perfect. Titles, no matter how imperfect, are not to be determined by violence. Even supposing that the sole title is that of possession, yet the possessor cannot be dispossessed except by process of law. And this view is strengthened in cases like the present, when the possessor, there being no adverse private interest, and the Government being the only party entitled to make complaint, is permitted by the Government to remain in possession. This validates his possession so far, at least, as to prevent his expulsion, except by legal process. In the present case, however, the damage complained of was inflicted, not by legal process, but by arbitrary and revolutionary violence, for whose consequences the Government of Hayti holds itself in other relations responsible. If so, it is responsible for damages done by it to a title, which, though inchoate and imperfect, is nevertheless an interest whose spoliation is a subject of legal redress. I therefore respectfully report that the minister of the United States at Hayti be instructed to press these considerations on the Government of Hayti, and to ask for indemnity to these particular claimants for the damages thus sustained by them.

Respectfully submitted.

FRANCIS WHARTON,
Law Officer.