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14
The High Seas THE territory of a
State includes the mouths of all rivers, bays, and estuaries, as well as the
sea along its coast to the distance of a marine league. This is a regulation
dictated by the necessities of self-protection. For the policing of commerce
the distance is extended to four leagues; i.e. according to the usage
prevailing in Great Britain and the United States, foreign goods coming within
that distance cannot be transhipped without the payment of duties. Vessels belonging
to the citizens of any nation on the high seas, and public vessels wherever
found, have some of the attributes of territory. If a ship is confiscated on
account of piracy or of violation of custom-house laws in a foreign port, or is
there attached by the owner's creditor and becomes his property, we never think
that territory has been taken away. For a crime committed in port a vessel may
be chased into the high seas and there arrested, without a suspicion that
territorial rights have been violated, though on the other hand to chase a
criminal across the borders and seize him on foreign soil is a gross offence
against sovereignty. Yet again, a private vessel, when it arrives in a foreign
port, ceases to be regarded as territory, unless treaty provides otherwise, and
then becomes merely the property of aliens. The qualities of a private ship
which resemble rights of territory are (1), as against its own crew on the high
seas (for its own territorial or municipal law accompanies it as long as it is
beyond the reach of other law, or until it comes within the bounds of some
other jurisdiction), and (2), certain rights as against foreigners, who, on the
high seas, are excluded from exercising any form of sovereignty over it, just
as they would have been if the vessel in question had actually formed part of
the soil of its own country. Public vessels, on the other hand, stand on a
higher ground; they are not only public property, as being either built or
bought by their Government, but they are, as it were, floating barracks, a part
of the public organism, and represent the national dignity, and on this
account, even in foreign ports, they are exempt from the local jurisdiction. In
both cases, however, it is on account of the crew, rather than on that of the
ship itself, that they have any territorial quality. Take the crew away, let
the forsaken hulk be met at sea, and it becomes mere abandoned property, and
nothing more. The high sea is now
free and open to all nations, but formerly the ocean, or some portions of it,
were claimed as a monopoly. Thus the Portuguese prohibited the ships of other
nations, and even half-blood subjects of their own race from sailing in the
seas of Guinea and the East Indies. " No native-born Portuguese or alien,"
says one of their ancient ordinances, "shall traverse the lands or seas
of Guinea and the Indias, or any territory conquered by us, without license, on
pain of death and the loss of all his goods." So too the
Spaniards formerly claimed the right of excluding all others from the Pacific,
and it was against such claims, especially against those of the Portuguese,
that Grotius, in 1609, wrote his Mare
Liberum, in which he lays down the general principle of the free
right of navigation, and argues that the sea cannot become property, and that
the claims of the Portuguese to the discovery of countries which the ancients
have left us an account of, as well as their claims through the donation of
Pope Alexander VI., were without foundation. And yet the countrymen of Grotius,
who had been the defenders of the liberty of the seas, sought to prevent the
Spaniards on their way to the Philippines from taking the route of the Cape of
Good Hope. The English, in the seventeenth century, claimed property in the seas
surrounding Great Britain, as far as to the coasts of the neighbouring
countries, and it was only in the eighteenth that they softened down this claim
of property into one of sovereignty. Selden, who published his Mare Clausum in 1635, while contending against
the monopolising pretensions of Spain and Portugal, contended zealously, on the
ground of ancient precedent for this claim of his country. "The shores and
ports of the neighbouring States," said he, "are the limits of the
British sea-empire, but in the wide ocean to the north and west the limits are
yet to be constituted." Russia finally, at a more recent date, based an
exclusive claim to the Pacific, north of the 51st degree, upon the ground that
this part of the ocean was a passage to shores lying exclusively within her
jurisdiction. But this claim was resisted by the U.S. Government, and withdrawn
in a temporary convention of 1824. A treaty of the same empire with this
country, made in 1825, contained similar concessions, and at the present day it
has come to be generally recognised that the rights of all nations to the use
of the high sea being the same, their right to fish upon the high seas, or on
banks and shoal places in them are equal. — From Woolsey's International Law. |