The acting British consul for this port intervenes and answers, and claims against the libel filed in this suit against the vessel, and takes issue thereon. When the cause was called for hearing, the counsel for the libellants read the pleadings and proofs brought into court, and the counsel for the claimants entered a formal protest against the jurisdiction of the court and the liability of the vessel and cargo to proceedings in prize, on the ground that they were neutral property, belonging to English subjects. The libel was filed May 17, 1862, and the claim July 17. The trial was had December 2, thereafter. The vessel had on board, when captured, a certificate of registry, dated at Nassau, April 15, 1862, issued to George D. Harris, of Nassau, a merchant, stating that she was foreign built, at Charleston, South Carolina, in 1845,; also, a shipping agreement with the master and crew, made at Nassau in April, 1862, “from the port of Nassau to -, and back to Nassau;” also, a clearance from the port of Nassau to Philadelphia, with a cargo of three hundred and twenty sacks of salt, fifteen bags of pepper, and forty boxes of soap, dated April 16, 1862; bills of lading of the salt and soap shipped by Henry Adderly & Co., of Nassau, to Philadelphia, to order or assign, April 19; and a letter of advice from Adderly & Co., of the same date, addressed to W. S. Stockman, Philadelphia. The bills of lading refer to the charter-party as governing the shipment. That document was not produced from the vessel with the ship’s papers, nor was any log-book, invoice, or manifest of the cargo.
The vessel was captured by the United States steamer Uncas, April 26, 1862, at sea, while approaching the coast of South Carolina, off Cape Romaine, in nineteen fathoms of water. The master was an English subject by birth; he and his family had been residents in Charleston for several years. He joined the vessel at Nassau on the 17th of April. The crew consisted of six persons in all, mostly Italians. The mate was an American, and, by the printed constitution of an artillery company at Georgetown. South Carolina, found on board of the prize, marked with pencil as belonging to him, he appears *131to have been a member of that company, and, as such, necessarily a resident of South Carolina. The master, on his examination, evidently presses his statements strenuously, to maintain that his voyage was one to Philadelphia, and nowhere else; but bis representations as to his destination are contradicted by the shipping articles, • and his assumed ignorance of the previous employment of the vessel is placed in doubt by his admission that he had heard at Nassau that, on her voyage next preceding the one on which she was captured, she arrived at Nassau from Charleston, with a cargo of cotton. He says that he took charge of her on the 17th of April, and had only known her two or three days previously; and that he under- ■ stood that Mr. Harris was connected in some way in business with Adderly & Co. No proof is furnished that a bill of sale was given to Harris on the alleged purchase of the vessel, or that any consideration money was actually paid. The existence of the war and of the blockade of the southern coast was notorious at the time, as stated by the witnesses. The vessel- was captured west of the Gulf Stream, making towards the South ■Carolina coast, off Cape Romaine, within sounding, and, as the master supposes, fifty miles from the cape. The circumstances in evidence raise impressions strongly inculpating the motives and movements in the voyage.
1. The vessel had just come into the port of Nassau from an evasion of the blockade of Charleston, bringing with her a guilty cargo.
2. She was laden and virtually owned by parties notoriously actively concerned during the war in carrying on an illicit trade with that port and the southern blockaded ports from and to Nassau.
3. The master and mate were residents of Charleston or its vicinity, and had been taken up and employed on the voyage in question at the instant of its commencement.
4. There is no proof of the lawful transfer of the vessel from an enemy ownership, nor indeed of any actual sale or delivery of her on a bona fide purchase.
• 5. There was no written evidence in the ship’s papers that she was put upon or attempted to pursue a voyage to the port of Philadelphia.
A decree of condemnation and forfeiture of the vessel and cargo is ordered.