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Book Review



David R. Owen and Michael C. Tolley, Courts of Admiralty in Colonial America: The Maryland Experience, 1634-1776, Durham: Carolina Academic Press, 1995. Pp. xxxiii + 421. $45.00 (ISBN 0-89089-856-1).

These authors, like many authors, felt the need to explain the purpose of their book. They write that they are "interested in more than the origins and institutional development of the courts of admiralty. We are concerned also with how these courts worked, who used them and with what results ... we have compared the Maryland experience with developments in other colonies and have integrated legal history with the general history of colonial America" (p. xvii). This is an ambitious agenda and, not surprisingly, some parts of it are more fully met than others. The last part seems beyond their, or probably anyone's, reach to fully accomplish. But there is much that is impressive and useful in this work and much to admire. Among the attractive features of this book I would list these: The authors track Maryland maritime cases heard in both vice admiralty courts and common law courts, so the reader understands the full dimension of maritime legal activities and the comparative frequency and the disposition of cases in both types of jurisdiction. The comparison of outcomes provides significant information. The authors find that common law courts (with juries) were as likely as admiralty courts (without juries) to condemn vessels and cargoes. Prize cases and piracy cases are included in the accounting. Lawyers who were involved in maritime causes in either admiralty or common law courts are listed; judges who heard maritime cases in both jurisdictions are also identified. 1
    
In addition, there is a clear explanation of procedures followed in the vice admiralty courts (181 and following) and in the appeal routes available (190 and following). This is especially important because of the confusion and ambiguities often at work in determining the authority to establish the vice admiralty courts, their jurisdiction, and the appeal mechanisms available from them. The reader might also note the explanation of the significance of the administrative responsibilities, especially that belonging to the governor and the council, in matters concerning the development of trade and commerce in province.
2
     The genealogy of the courts and the demonstrations of their legitimacy, if any, are both important and tedious. The factual recounting will be useful for reference; no analysis is provided for pages on end so the reader may stop reading with attention until he finds some interesting material. But when the authors synthesize secondary writings on the courts, the customs service, and British agencies, interest in what they have to report returns and the value of their labors is apparent again. 3
     There are some places in the text where more careful attention might have smoothed out the illogic of the sentences. For example, on page 99, the authors assert that "Upon his death in 1734 Calvert was identified as 'Judge of the Admiralty.' If there had been only one case, it is doubtful his eulogizer would have identified him with that office." Well, maybe so. Again, on page 134, "Between 1699 and 1763 there were very few Navigation Acts cases in either the Provincial Court or the Court of Vice Admiralty. This may be due to the lack of records." Unlikely!

4
     The reader would have been helped if inclusive dates had been provided for the otherwise very useful tables showing courts, causes, and outcomes. Sometimes the nearby text explains clearly what the time span of the tables is; in other places textual indicators are nowhere near the tables, leaving the reader searching around for that information. 5
     In addition to the text the volume contains eight appendixes (153 pages) plus a bibliographical essay and an index. Appendix A is very valuable. It is composed of case summaries of all the disputes of a maritime nature heard and presumably determined (the records are far from complete) in Maryland's colonial courts from 1636 to 1773. They total well over one hundred cases. Some of the more important of them also are discussed in the text of the book. These summaries display keys to the evidence upon which the arguments of the book rest. They form a wonderful reference for all future work on the topic. 6
     My final comment has to do with the failure of the authors to see special significance in the first admiralty courts that used juries, created after the collapse of the British government, 1774-1775. We know that the states and Congress attempted to establish courts using jury trials and that those attempts were not successful. We know that within a half decade the attempts were dismantled and the American admiralty courts returned juryless trials. The authors know about these courts (see 219-21) but seem to dismiss their significance. They jump in to their basic narrative from 1776 (the condemnation of the loss of jury trial included in the list of grievances in the Declaration of Independence) to 1787/1789—U.S. Constitution/Judiciary Act (with their stipulations concerning federal admiralty jurisdiction). The authors claim surprise that admiralty jurisdiction was bestowed on new courts despite its nonjury feature hated during colonial years. So the revolutionaries' complaints are called "suspect" and "exaggerated." The authors discover continuity from juryless colonial courts to juryless federal courts. The problem is, not that there was not continuity eventually, but that the significance of the whole experiment in good-faith response to the pre-Revolution unhappiness with juryless trials is discounted or ignored. Does it matter? I think it does. Was there sincerity in the colonists' complaints about juryless trials. I think there was. I know that reasonable scholars may differ in their interpretation of historical evidence. In this case I disagree with Owen and Tolley. Thirty-five years ago in a book that also related some of the history of the courts of vice admiralty I indicated my belief that those early attempts to construct admiralty courts with juries were significant indicators of the sincerity of the colonists' rhetoric of grievance. I still believe that sincerity is part of the history of the era. . 7


Carl Ubbelohde
Case Western Reserve University



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