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JUDICIAL DECISIONS INVOLVING QUESTIONS OF

INTERNATIONAL LAW

AMERICAN AND BRITISH CLAIMS ARBITRATION TRIBUNAL1

[Arbitrators: M. Henri Fromageot, Sir Charles Fitzpatrick,
Hon. Chandler P. Anderson]

IN THE MATTER OF H. J. RANDOLPH HEMMING

CLAIM No. 8

Decision rendered December 18, 1920

This is a claim presented by His Britannic Majesty's Government on behalf of Henry Joseph Randolph Hemming for $2,000 and $1,280 for sixteen years' interest at 4 per cent, and also for such further compensation as this Tribunal may think right.

This claim is on account of professional services rendered as a lawyer by H. J. Randolph Hemming at the request of the United States Consul at Bombay in December, 1894, January and February, 1895, in the prosecution of certain persons accused of counterfeiting United States gold coin in India.

The Government of the United States admits the employment of Hemming by its Consul and the rendering by him of some legal services. It does not deny the American Consul's clear right to prevent, if possible, the counterfeiting of American coin in India by setting in motion the machinery of police and prosecution, but it contends that the Consul had no legal authority to employ private counsel on behalf of his Government, for the performance of duties which might well have been carried out by the public officials of the crown.

As to the facts:

It appears from the documents in the case, that on December 13 and 15, 1894, the United States Consul at Bombay informed the Secretary of State of the counterfeiting of American gold dollars in India and asked for instructions, and that, in the absence of any reply, he further informed him on December 22 and January 5 and 26, 1895, of the steps which he was taking to put an end to the counterfeiting and for the prosecuting of the offenders, of the employment of a lawyer, and also of the various legal services and assistance rendered in the matter by the said Hemming.

1 Previous decisions of the Tribunal are printed in this JOURNAL, Vol. 13, pp. 875-890. Vol. 14, pp. 650-665.

On January 30, 1895, the Secretary of State in reply forwarded some technical remarks of the Treasury Department as to the counterfeiting and made no objection to or criticism of the steps which had been taken. On February 2 and May 11, 1895, the Consul forwarded to the Secretary of State further information as to the progress of the prosecution he had initiated and the employment of the attorney and finally communicated to his Government the decision of the Indian court, and asked for instructions as to an appeal.

By a letter dated July 2, 1895, the Secretary of State, still acting in conjunction with the Secretary of the Treasury, negatived the suggestion of an appeal. As before, he made no criticism of, nor did he refer in any way to, the employment of Hemming.

The legal proceedings thus came to an end, and the Consul, by a letter dated August 2, 1895, reported to the Secretary of State the request of Hemming for a fee of $2,000, but recommended a fee of $500.

It is shown by the documents that the United States Government decided not to pay Hemming the fee recommended by the Consul on the ground that his employment was unauthorized, and would not have been sanctioned. There is no evidence that this decision was communicated to Hemming either by the United States Government or by its Consul.

In 1904, Hemming, who had in the meantime given up practice in India and returned to England, addressed the American Embassy in London through Merton & Steele, solicitors in London. But it appears from the documents that the United States Government, on the receipt through the Embassy of this new request, adhered to its decision that as the records did not show any authorization for the employment of counsel, or for the incurring of expense in connection with the case, the claim could not be paid. There is no evidence that this decision was communicated by the United States Government, or by its Embassy, either to Hemming or to his solicitors.

In 1908 Hemming went to Washington to endeavor to secure payment. There he obtained the presentation before Congress of some bills which were favorably reported upon, at first for $500, finally, after hearing Hemming's explanation, for $2,000. But they had not passed when the claim was brought before this Tribunal.

It was only in April, 1910, that Hemming appealed to His Britannic Majesty's Government for assistance in procuring redress, and it is said that the claim was accordingly recommended informally to the State Department by the British Ambassador at Washington.

As to the law:

Whatever at the outset was the authority of the United States Consul to employ an attorney at the expense of the United States Government, it is plain, from the correspondence referred to above, that that Government was perfectly well aware, after its Consul's letter of December 22, 1894,

received January 14, 1895, of Hemming's employment in a prosecution initiated solely for its benefit, that it did not object in any way whatever during the progress of the case to the steps taken by its Consul, but appeared implicitly at all events to approve of those steps and of Hemming's employment.

This Tribunal is, therefore, of opinion that the United States is bound by the contract entered into, rightly or wrongly, by its Consul for its benefit and ratified by itself.

As to the amount of the claim:

There is no evidence that any specific sum was ever agreed upon as a fee to be paid to Hemming.

As has been shown, the American Consul first recommended a sum of $500. The same sum was accordingly recommended in 1910 as equitable to the Committee of Claims of the House of Representatives by the Secretary of State and favorably reported upon in 1910 by that Committee. Subsequently, in 1912, after a close investigation into Hemming's claim, the same Committee suggested a sum of $2,000 in full settlement.

This Tribunal, taking into consideration the services rendered, and the expense and trouble undergone by Hemming, as well as the delay in payment, thinks that the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) is sufficient in full settlement of the claim, without interest.

For These Reasons:

This Tribunal decides that the Government of the United States must pay to the Government of His Britannic Majesty, for the benefit of Henry Joseph Randolph Hemming, the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) without interest.

For the Tribunal,

(Signed) HENRI FROMAGEOT,

President.

IN THE MATTER OF THE HOME MISSIONARY SOCIETY

CLAIM No. 11

Decision rendered December 18, 1920

This is a claim for $78,068.15, together with interest thereon from May 30, 1898, presented by the United States Government on behalf of an American religious body known as the "Home Frontier and Foreign Missionary Society of the United Brethren in Christ." The claim is in respect of losses and damages sustained by that body and some of its members during a native rebellion in 1898 in the British Protectorate of Sierra Leone.

The facts are few and simple.

In 1898 the collection of a tax newly imposed on the natives of the Protectorate and known as the "Hut tax" was the signal for a serious

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