penhallow_vs_doanes_admins 2021-12-19 16:52:12 -1000

Exact Original Citation (of Penhallow v. Doane’s Administraters (3 U.S. 54; 1 L.Ed. 57; 3 Dall. 54, Supreme Court of the United States 1795))
By Anna Von Reitz
Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Here's the exact original citation of the Penhallow v. Doane's Administrators case I quoted and that Larry Becraft said "didn't exist" even though I told him to look in the annotations to the case record he was citing -- where the original source was noted:
"Inasmuch as every government is an artificial* person, an abstraction*, and a creature of the MIND ONLY with other artificial* persons; the imaginary*, having neither actuality* nor substance*, is foreclosed from creating and attaining parity with the tangible*. The legal manifestation of this is that NO government, as well as any law agency, aspect, court, etc., can concern itself with anything other than Corporate, Artificial Persons and the Contracts between them." (emphasis added). S.C.R. 1795, Penhallow v. Doane's Administrators ( 3 U.S. 54; 1 L.Ed 57; 3 Dall. 54, Supreme Court of the United States 1795, [ Not the "United States Supreme Court" -ed. ] )
This is the actual Supreme Court of the United States which over-stands all inferior courts including "The United States Supreme Court", "the United States Supreme Court" and the "UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT".



abstraction
From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48  [gcide]:

  Abstraction \Ab*strac"tion\, n.  [Cf. F. abstraction. See
     {Abstract}, a.]
     1. The act of abstracting, separating, or withdrawing, or the
        state of being withdrawn; withdrawal.
         [1913 Webster]
  
              A wrongful abstraction of wealth from certain
              members of the community.             --J. S. Mill.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     2. (Metaph.) The act process of leaving out of consideration
        one or more properties of a complex object so as to attend
        to others; analysis. Thus, when the mind considers the
        form of a tree by itself, or the color of the leaves as
        separate from their size or figure, the act is called
        abstraction. So, also, when it considers whiteness,
        softness, virtue, existence, as separate from any
        particular objects.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     Note: Abstraction is necessary to classification, by which
           things are arranged in genera and species. We separate
           in idea the qualities of certain objects, which are of
           the same kind, from others which are different, in
           each, and arrange the objects having the same
           properties in a class, or collected body.
            [1913 Webster]
  
                 Abstraction is no positive act: it is simply the
                 negative of attention.             --Sir W.
                                                    Hamilton.
            [1913 Webster]
  
     3. An idea or notion of an abstract, or theoretical nature;
        as, to fight for mere abstractions.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     4. A separation from worldly objects; a recluse life; as, a
        hermit's abstraction.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     5. Absence or absorption of mind; inattention to present
        objects.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     6. The taking surreptitiously for one's own use part of the
        property of another; purloining.  [Modern]
         [1913 Webster]
  
     7. (Chem.) A separation of volatile parts by the act of
        distillation. --Nicholson.
         [1913 Webster]

From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)  [wn]:

  abstraction
      n 1: a concept or idea not associated with any specific
           instance; "he loved her only in the abstract--not in
           person"  [syn: {abstraction}, {abstract}]
      2: the act of withdrawing or removing something
      3: the process of formulating general concepts by abstracting
         common properties of instances  [syn: {abstraction},
         {generalization}, {generalisation}]
      4: an abstract painting
      5: preoccupation with something to the exclusion of all else
          [syn: {abstractedness}, {abstraction}]
      6: a general concept formed by extracting common features from
         specific examples  [syn: {abstraction}, {abstract entity}]
actuality
From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48  [gcide]:

  Actuality \Ac`tu*al"i*ty\, n.; pl. {Actualities}.
     The state of being actual; reality; as, the actuality of
     God's nature. --South.
      [1913 Webster] Actualisation

From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)  [wn]:

  actuality
      n 1: the state of actually existing objectively; "a hope that
           progressed from possibility to actuality"
artificial
From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48  [gcide]:

  Artificial \Ar`ti*fi"cial\, a.  [L. artificialis, fr. artificium:
     cf. F. artificiel. See {Artifice}.]
     1. Made or contrived by art; produced or modified by human
        skill and labor, in opposition to natural; as, artificial
        heat or light, gems, salts, minerals, fountains, flowers.
         [1913 Webster]
  
              Artificial strife
              Lives in these touches, livelier than life. --Shak.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     2. Feigned; fictitious; assumed; affected; not genuine.
        "Artificial tears." --Shak.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     3. Artful; cunning; crafty.  [Obs.] --Shak.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     4. Cultivated; not indigenous; not of spontaneous growth; as,
        artificial grasses. --Gibbon.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     {Artificial arguments} (Rhet.), arguments invented by the
        speaker, in distinction from laws, authorities, and the
        like, which are called inartificial arguments or proofs.
        --Johnson.
  
     {Artificial classification} (Science), an arrangement based
        on superficial characters, and not expressing the true
        natural relations species; as, "the artificial system" in
        botany, which is the same as the Linn [ae]an system.
  
     {Artificial horizon}. See under {Horizon}.
  
     {Artificial light}, any light other than that which proceeds
        from the heavenly bodies.
  
     {Artificial lines}, lines on a sector or scale, so contrived
        as to represent the logarithmic sines and tangents, which,
        by the help of the line of numbers, solve, with tolerable
        exactness, questions in trigonometry, navigation, etc.
  
     {Artificial numbers}, logarithms.
  
     {Artificial person} (Law). See under {Person}.
  
     {Artificial sines}, {tangents}, etc., the same as logarithms
        of the natural sines, tangents, etc. --Hutton.
         [1913 Webster]

From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)  [wn]:

  artificial
      adj 1: contrived by art rather than nature; "artificial
             flowers"; "artificial flavoring"; "an artificial
             diamond"; "artificial fibers"; "artificial sweeteners"
              [syn: {artificial}, {unreal}]  [ant: {natural}]
      2: artificially formal; "that artificial humility that her
         husband hated"; "contrived coyness"; "a stilted letter of
         acknowledgment"; "when people try to correct their speech
         they develop a stilted pronunciation"  [syn: {artificial},
         {contrived}, {hokey}, {stilted}]
      3: not arising from natural growth or characterized by vital
         processes

From Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)  [bouvier]:

  ARTIFICIAL. What is the result of, or relates to, the arts; opposed to
  natural; thus we say a corporation is an artificial person, in opposition to
  a natural person. Artificial accession is the uniting one property to
  another by art, opposed to a simple natural union. 1 Bouv. Inst. n. 503.
imaginary
4 definitions found

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48  [gcide]:

  Imaginary \Im*ag"i*na*ry\, a.  [L. imaginarius: cf. F.
     imaginaire.]
     Existing only in imagination or fancy; not real; fancied;
     visionary; ideal.
      [1913 Webster]
  
           Wilt thou add to all the griefs I suffer
           Imaginary ills and fancied tortures?     --Addison.
      [1913 Webster]
  
     {Imaginary calculus} See under {Calculus}.
  
     {Imaginary expression} or {Imaginary quantity} (Alg.), an
        algebraic expression which involves the impossible
        operation of taking the square root of a negative
        quantity; as,  [root]-9, a + b  [root]-1.
  
     {Imaginary points}, {lines}, {surfaces}, etc. (Geom.),
        points, lines, surfaces, etc., imagined to exist, although
        by reason of certain changes of a figure they have in fact
        ceased to have a real existence.
  
     Syn: Ideal; fanciful; chimerical; visionary; fancied; unreal;
          illusive.
           [1913 Webster]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48  [gcide]:

  Imaginary \Im*ag"i*na*ry\, n. (Alg.)
     An imaginary expression or quantity.
      [1913 Webster]

From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)  [wn]:

  imaginary
      adj 1: not based on fact; unreal; "the falsehood about some
             fanciful secret treaties"- F.D.Roosevelt; "a small
             child's imaginary friends"; "to create a notional world
             for oneself"  [syn: {fanciful}, {imaginary}, {notional}]
      n 1: (mathematics) a number of the form a+bi where a and b are
           real numbers and i is the square root of -1  [syn: {complex
           number}, {complex quantity}, {imaginary number},
           {imaginary}]

From Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0  [moby-thesaurus]:

  123 Moby Thesaurus words for "imaginary":
     Barmecidal, Barmecide, abstract, air-built, airy, algorismic,
     algorithmic, aliquot, apparent, apparitional, autistic, cardinal,
     chimeric, chimerical, cloud-built, deceptive, decimal, delusional,
     delusionary, delusive, delusory, dereistic, differential, digital,
     dreamlike, dreamy, erroneous, ethereal, even, exponential,
     fallacious, false, fancied, fanciful, fantastic, fatuitous,
     fatuous, fictional, fictitious, fictive, figmental, figural,
     figurate, figurative, finite, fractional, gaseous, gossamery,
     hallucinatory, hypothetical, ideal, illusional, illusionary,
     illusive, illusory, imaginational, imaginative, imagined,
     immaterial, impair, impossible, infinite, integral, irrational,
     legendary, logarithmic, logometric, made-up, merely nominal,
     misleading, mythic, mythical, mythological, negative, nonexistent,
     not real, notional, numeral, numerary, numerative, numeric, odd,
     ordinal, ostensible, pair, phantasmagoric, phantasmal, phantasmic,
     phantom, phantomlike, positive, possible, prime, quixotic, radical,
     rarefied, rational, real, reciprocal, seeming, self-deceptive,
     self-deluding, shadowy, specious, spectral, spirituous,
     submultiple, subtile, subtle, supposititious, surd, tenuous,
     transcendental, unactual, unfounded, unreal, unrealistic,
     unsubstantial, untrue, vaporous, visional, visionary, windy
substance
5 definitions found

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48  [gcide]:

  Substance \Sub"stance\, n.  [F., fr. L. substantia, fr. substare
     to be under or present, to stand firm; sub under + stare to
     stand. See {Stand}.]
     1. That which underlies all outward manifestations;
        substratum; the permanent subject or cause of phenomena,
        whether material or spiritual; that in which properties
        inhere; that which is real, in distinction from that which
        is apparent; the abiding part of any existence, in
        distinction from any accident; that which constitutes
        anything what it is; real or existing essence.
         [1913 Webster]
  
              These cooks, how they stamp, and strain, and grind,
              And turn substance into accident!     --Chaucer.
         [1913 Webster]
  
              Heroic virtue did his actions guide,
              And he the substance, not the appearance, chose.
                                                    --Dryden.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     2. The most important element in any existence; the
        characteristic and essential components of anything; the
        main part; essential import; purport.
         [1913 Webster]
  
              This edition is the same in substance with the
              Latin.                                --Bp. Burnet.
         [1913 Webster]
  
              It is insolent in words, in manner; but in substance
              it is not only insulting, but alarming. --Burke.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     3. Body; matter; material of which a thing is made; hence,
        substantiality; solidity; firmness; as, the substance of
        which a garment is made; some textile fabrics have little
        substance.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     4. Material possessions; estate; property; resources.
         [1913 Webster]
  
              And there wasted his substance with riotous living.
                                                    --Luke xv. 13.
         [1913 Webster]
  
              Thy substance, valued at the highest rate,
              Can not amount unto a hundred marks.  --Shak.
         [1913 Webster]
  
              We are destroying many thousand lives, and
              exhausting our substance, but not for our own
              interest.                             --Swift.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     5. (Theol.) Same as {Hypostasis}, 2.
         [1913 Webster]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48  [gcide]:

  Substance \Sub"stance\, v. t.
     To furnish or endow with substance; to supply property to; to
     make rich.  [Obs.]
      [1913 Webster]

From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)  [wn]:

  substance
      n 1: the real physical matter of which a person or thing
           consists; "DNA is the substance of our genes"
      2: the choicest or most essential or most vital part of some
         idea or experience; "the gist of the prosecutor's argument";
         "the heart and soul of the Republican Party"; "the nub of the
         story"  [syn: {kernel}, {substance}, {core}, {center},
         {centre}, {essence}, {gist}, {heart}, {heart and soul},
         {inwardness}, {marrow}, {meat}, {nub}, {pith}, {sum}, {nitty-
         gritty}]
      3: the idea that is intended; "What is the meaning of this
         proverb?"  [syn: {meaning}, {substance}]
      4: material of a particular kind or constitution; "the immune
         response recognizes invading substances"
      5: considerable capital (wealth or income); "he is a man of
         means"  [syn: {means}, {substance}]
      6: what a communication that is about something is about  [syn:
         {message}, {content}, {subject matter}, {substance}]
      7: a particular kind or species of matter with uniform
         properties; "shigella is one of the most toxic substances
         known to man"

From Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0  [moby-thesaurus]:

  308 Moby Thesaurus words for "substance":
     Swiss bank account, actuality, affective meaning, affluence, air,
     amount, amplitude, assets, atom, atomic particles, atoms, axiom,
     balance, bank account, basis, bearing, being, bench mark,
     best part, better part, body, bottom, bottom dollar,
     bottomless purse, brute matter, budget, building block,
     bulging purse, bulk, burden, call, cardinal point, case,
     cash reserves, cause, center, chapter, checking account,
     chemical element, chief thing, climax, coloring, command of money,
     component, composition, concern, concreteness, connotation,
     consequence, constituent, core, cornerstone, corporeality, corpus,
     crisis, critical point, crux, denotation, density, distillate,
     distillation, drift, durability, earth, easy circumstances, effect,
     element, elementary particle, elementary unit, elixir,
     embarras de richesses, entity, essence, essential,
     essential matter, essentiality, exchequer, extension, extent,
     fabric, finances, fire, firmness, flower, focus,
     focus of attention, focus of interest, force, fortune, foundation,
     fund, fundamental, fundamental particle, funds, generality, gist,
     gold, good reason, grammatical meaning, gravamen, great point,
     ground, grounds, handsome fortune, head, heading, heart,
     high income, high point, high tax bracket, hyle, hypostasis, idea,
     impact, implication, import, important thing, independence,
     individual, inner essence, intension, issue, kernel, keystone,
     kitty, landmark, lexical meaning, life savings, literal meaning,
     living issue, lucre, luxuriousness, magnitude, main body,
     main point, main thing, major part, majority, mammon, marrow, mass,
     material, material basis, material point, material resources,
     material wealth, material world, materiality, materials, materiel,
     matter, matter in hand, meaning, meaningfulness, means, measure,
     measurement, meat, medium, milestone, molecule, monad, money,
     money to burn, moneybags, moneys, most, motif, motive,
     natural world, nature, nest egg, nub, nubbin, nucleus, numbers,
     nuts and bolts, object, opulence, opulency, overtone, palpability,
     pecuniary resources, pelf, pertinence, physical world, pith, pivot,
     plenum, plurality, pocket, point, point at issue,
     point in question, ponderability, pool, possessions, postulate,
     practical consequence, principle, problem, property, prosperity,
     prosperousness, purport, purse, quantity, quantum, question, quid,
     quiddity, quintessence, quintessential, range of meaning,
     raw material, real issue, real meaning, reality, reason, recap,
     recapitulation, reference, referent, relation, relevance, reserves,
     resources, resume, riches, richness, right, rubric, run-through,
     rundown, salient point, sap, savings, savings account, scope,
     semantic cluster, semantic field, sense, short, significance,
     signification, significatum, signifie, sine qua non, solidity,
     soul, soundness, span of meaning, spirit, stability, staple,
     steadiness, stock, store, stoutness, strength, structural meaning,
     stuff, sturdiness, subject, subject matter, subject of thought,
     substances, substantiality, substantialness, substantive point,
     substratum, sum, sum and substance, sum total, summary, summation,
     supply, symbolic meaning, tangibility, tangible, tenor, text,
     the bottom line, the four elements, the nitty-gritty, the point,
     theme, thrust, topic, totality of associations, toughness,
     transferred meaning, treasure, turning point, unadorned meaning,
     undertone, unit of being, unregistered bank account, upper bracket,
     upshot, value, warrant, water, wealth, wealthiness, wherewithal,
     whole, worth
  
  

From Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)  [bouvier]:

  SUBSTANCE, evidence. That which is essential; it is used in opposition to 
  form. 
       2. It is a general rule, that on any issue it is sufficient to prove 
  the substance of the issue. For example, in a case where the defendant 
  pleaded payment of the principal sum and all interest due, and it appeared 
  in evidence that a gross sum was paid, not amounting to the full interest, 
  but accepted by the plaintiff as full payment, the proof was held to be 
  sufficient. 2 Str. 690; 1 Phil. Ev. 161. 
tangible
3 definitions found

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48  [gcide]:

  Tangible \Tan"gi*ble\, a.  [L. tangibilis, fr. tangere to touch:
     cf. F. tangible. See {Tangent}.]
     1. Perceptible to the touch; tactile; palpable. --Bacon.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     2. Capable of being possessed or realized; readily
        apprehensible by the mind; real; substantial; evident. "A
        tangible blunder." --Byron.
         [1913 Webster]
  
              Direct and tangible benefit to ourselves and others.
                                                    --Southey.
         [1913 Webster] -- {Tan"gi*ble*ness}, n. -- {Tan"gi*bly},
        adv.
         [1913 Webster]

From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)  [wn]:

  tangible
      adj 1: perceptible by the senses especially the sense of touch;
             "skin with a tangible roughness"  [syn: {tangible},
             {touchable}]  [ant: {impalpable}, {intangible}]
      2: capable of being treated as fact; "tangible evidence"; "his
         brief time as Prime Minister brought few real benefits to the
         poor"  [syn: {real}, {tangible}]
      3: (of especially business assets) having physical substance and
         intrinsic monetary value ; "tangible property like real
         estate"; "tangible assets such as machinery"  [ant:
         {intangible}]
      4: capable of being perceived; especially capable of being
         handled or touched or felt; "a barely palpable dust"; "felt
         sudden anger in a palpable wave"; "the air was warm and close
         --palpable as cotton"; "a palpable lie"  [syn: {palpable},
         {tangible}]  [ant: {impalpable}]

From Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0  [moby-thesaurus]:

  81 Moby Thesaurus words for "tangible":
     actual, apparent, appreciable, assessed valuation, assets,
     assets and liabilities, atoms, bodily, circumstances, clear,
     clear as crystal, concrete, corporeal, crystal-clear,
     current assets, deferred assets, detectable, discernible, distinct,
     embodied, evident, explicit, express, fabric, fixed assets,
     frozen assets, funds, gross, indisputable, indubitable,
     intangible assets, intangibles, liquid assets, manifest, material,
     material assets, matter, means, medium, net assets, net worth,
     noticeable, objective, observable, obvious, open-and-shut,
     ostensive, palpable, patent, perceivable, perceptible, perspicuous,
     phenomenal, physical, plain, plain as day, ponderable,
     quick assets, real, resources, seeable, self-evident,
     self-explaining, self-explanatory, sensible, solid, somatic, stock,
     stock-in-trade, stuff, substance, substantial, substantive,
     tactile, tangible assets, tangibles, to be seen, touchable,
     unmistakable, visible, wealth


Update: SUPREME COURT RULING–NO CORPORATE JURISDICTION OVER THE NATURAL MAN
Posted on May 18, 2015 By, arnierosner

Important development:

John Parks Trowbridge, Jr. in the matter of Americans must accept responsibility… Learning skills to perform research is vital to your safety and security!

On May 17, 2015, at 8:16 PM, Joanne Johnson wrote:

>>> Penhallow v. Doane’s Administraters (3 U.S. 54; 1 L.Ed. 57; 3 Dall. 54),

SUPREME COURT RULING – NO CORPORATE JURISDICTION OVER THE NATURAL MAN

Supreme Court of the United States 1795;
"Inasmuch as every government is an artificial person, an abstraction, and a creature of the mind only, a government can interface only with other artificial persons. The imaginary, having neither actuality nor substance, is foreclosed from creating and attaining parity with the tangible. The legal manifestation of this is that no government, as well as any law, agency, aspect, court, etc. can concern itself with anything other than corporate, artificial persons and the contracts between them."
S.C.R. 1795, (3 U.S. 54; 1 L.Ed. 57; 3 Dall. 54),

"For every thousand men who hack at the branches of evil, there is only one who is striking at the root."
Henry David Thoreau


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U.S. Supreme Court:
Penhallow v. Doane's Administrators, 3 U.S. 3 Dall. 54 54 (1795)

Syllabus

Congress had power before the ratification of the Articles of Confederation, to 
establish courts of appeals for all prize causes, and the decision of the court 
of appeals is final against all proceedings in courts of admiralty erected by 
or under the authority of the separate states of the union.

Courts of appeal in cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction may, having 
all the matter in controversy before them, make such a decree as the inferior 
court, from which the case was removed, should have given.

The district courts of the United States having admiralty jurisdiction may 
sustain a libel to carry into effect the decree of the court of appeals, 
erected by Congress under the Articles of Confederation. A decree of a court of 
admiralty in rem is final and conclusive as to all the matters in controversy, 
and the grounds of the decree cannot be inquired into in another admiralty 
court on a libel to carry the decree into execution.

An appeal from the decree of a court of admiralty suspends the effect of the 
decree from which the appeal is taken.

The case was argued from the sixth to the seventeenth of February.

The case, reduced to an historical narrative by Judge Paterson in delivering 
his opinion, exhibits these features:

"This cause has been much obscured by the irregularity of the pleadings, which 
present a medley of procedure, partly according to the common and partly 
according to the civil law. We must endeavor to extract a state of the case 
from the record, documents, and acts which have been exhibited."

It appears, that 25 November, 1775, Congress passed a series of Resolutions 
respecting captures. These Resolutions are as follow:

"Whereas it appears from undoubted information that many vessels, which had 
cleared at the respective custom houses in these colonies, agreeable to the 
regulations established by acts of the British Parliament, have, in a lawless 
manner, without even the semblance of just authority, been seized by His 
Majesty's ships of war and carried into the harbor of Boston and other ports, 
where they have been rifled of their cargoes by order of His Majesty's naval 
and military officers there commanding without the said vessels' having been 
proceeded against by any form of trial and without the charge of having 
offended against any law."

"And whereas orders have been issued in His Majesty's name to the commanders of 
his ships of war to proceed as in the case of actual rebellion against such of 
the sea port towns and places being accessible to the King's ships, in which 
any troops shall be raised or military works erected,

Page 3 U. S. 55

under color of which said orders the commanders of His Majesty's said ships of 
war have already burned and destroyed the flourishing and populous town of 
Falmouth, and have fired upon and much injured several other towns within the 
United Colonies and dispersed at a late season of the year, hundreds of 
helpless women and children with a savage hope that those may perish under the 
approaching rigor's of the season, who may chance to escape destruction from 
fire and sword, a mode of warfare long exploded amongst civilized nations."

"And whereas the good people of these colonies, sensibly affected by the 
destruction of their property and other unprovoked injuries, have at last 
determined to prevent as much as possible a repetition thereof and to procure 
some reparation for the same, by fitting out armed vessels and ships of force, 
in the execution of which commendable designs it is possible that those who 
have not been instrumental in the unwarrantable violences above mentioned may 
suffer unless some laws be made to regulate and tribunals erected competent to 
determine the propriety of captures. Therefore resolved"

"1. That all such ships of war, frigates, sloops, cutters, and armed vessels as 
are or shall be employed in the present cruel and unjust war against the United 
Colonies and shall fall into the hands of or be taken by the inhabitants 
thereof be seized and forfeited to and for the purposes herein after mentioned."

"2. Resolved that all transport vessels in the same service, having on board 
any troops, arms, ammunition, clothing, provisions, military or naval stores of 
what kind soever, and all vessels to whomsoever belonging, that shall be 
employed in carrying provisions or other necessaries to the British army or 
armies or navy that now are or shall hereafter be within any of the United 
Colonies, or any goods, wares, or merchandise for the use of such fleet or army 
shall be liable to seizure, and with their cargoes shall be confiscated."

"3. That no master or commander of any vessel shall be entitled to cruise for 
or make prize of any vessel or cargo before he shall have obtained a commission 
from the Congress or from such person or persons as shall be for that purpose 
appointed in some one of the United Colonies."

"4. That it be and is hereby recommended to the several legislatures in the 
United Colonies as soon as possible to erect courts of justice or give 
jurisdiction to the courts now in being for the purpose of determining 
concerning the captures to be made as aforesaid and to provide that all trials 
in

Page 3 U. S. 56

such case be had by a jury under such qualifications as to the respective 
legislatures shall seem expedient."

"5. That all prosecutions shall be commenced in the court of that colony in 
which the captures shall be made, but if no such court be at that time erected 
in the said colony or if the capture be made on open sea, then the prosecution 
shall be in the court of such colony as the captor may find most convenient, 
provided that nothing contained in this resolution shall be construed so as to 
enable the captor to remove his prize from any colony competent to determine 
concerning the seizure after he shall have carried the vessel so seized within 
any harbor of the same."

"6. That in all cases an appeal shall be allowed to the Congress or such person 
or persons as it shall appoint for the trial of appeals, provided the appeal be 
demanded within five days after definitive sentence and such appeal be lodged 
with the Secretary of Congress within forty days afterwards, and provided the 
party appealing shall give security to prosecute the said appeal to effect, and 
in case of the death of the Secretary during the recess of Congress, then the 
said appeal to be lodged in Congress within twenty days after the meeting 
thereof."

"7. That when any vessel or vessels shall be fitted out at the expense of any 
private person or persons, then the captures made shall be to the use of the 
owner or owners of the said vessel or vessels; that where the vessels employed 
in the capture shall be fitted out at the expense of any of the united 
colonies, then one-third of the prize taken shall be to the use of the captors 
and the remaining two-thirds to the use of the said colony, and where the 
vessels so employed shall be fitted out at the continental charge, then 
one-third shall go to the captors and the remaining two-thirds to the use of 
the united colonies, provided nevertheless that if the capture be a vessel of 
war, then the captors shall be entitled to one-half of the value, and the 
remainder shall go to the colony or continent as the case may be, the necessary 
charges of condemnation of all prizes being deducted before distribution made."

That on 23 March, 1776, Congress resolved that the inhabitants of these 
colonies be permitted to fit out armed vessels to cruise on the enemies of the 
united colonies.

That on 2 April, 1776, Congress agreed on the form of a commission to 
commanders of private ships of war; that the commission run in the name of the 
delegates of the united colonies of New Hampshire &c., and was signed by the 
President of Congress.

"That on 3 July, 1776, the Legislature of New Hampshire

Page 3 U. S. 57

passed an act for the trial of captures, of which the part material in the 
present controversy is as follows: "

"And be it further enacted that there shall be erected and constantly held in 
the Town of Portsmouth or some town or place adjacent in the County of 
Rockingham a court of justice by the name of the Court Maritime by such able 
and discreet person as shall be appointed and commissioned by the council and 
assembly for that purpose, whose business it shall be to take cognizance and 
try the justice of any capture or captures of any vessel or vessels that have 
been, may, or shall be taken by any person or persons whomsoever and brought 
into this colony or any recaptures that have or shall be taken and brought 
thereinto."

"And be it further enacted that any person or persons who have been or shall be 
concerned in the taking and bringing into this colony any vessel or vessels 
employed or offending or being the property as aforesaid shall jointly or 
either of them by themselves or by their attorneys, or agents, within twenty 
days after being possessed of the same in this colony, file before the said 
judge a libel in writing, therein giving a full and ample account of the time, 
manner, and cause of the taking such vessel or vessels. But in case of any such 
vessel or vessels already brought in as aforesaid, then such libel shall be 
filed within twenty days next after the passing of this act, and at the time of 
filing such libel shall also be filed all papers on board such vessel or 
vessels, to the intent that the jury may have the benefit of the evidence 
therefrom arising. And the judge shall as soon as may be appoint a day to try 
by a jury the justice of the capture of such vessel or vessels, with their 
appurtenances and cargoes, and he is hereby authorized and empowered to try the 
same. And the same judge shall cause a notification thereof, and the name, if 
known, and description of the vessel so brought in, with the day set for the 
trial thereon, to be advertised in some newspapers printed in the said colony 
(if any such paper there be) twenty days before the time of the trial, and for 
want of such paper, then to cause the same notification to be affixed on the 
doors of the Town House, in said Portsmouth to the intent that the owner of 
such vessel, or any persons concerned, may appear and show cause (if any they 
have) why such vessel, with her cargo and appurtenances, should not be 
condemned as aforesaid. And the said judge shall, seven days before the day set 
and appointed for the trial of such vessel or vessels, issue his warrant to any 
constable or constables within the county aforesaid commanding them or either 
of them to assemble the inhabitants of their towns respectively and to draw out 
of the box, in manner provided for drawing jurors, to serve at the Superior

Page 3 U. S. 58

Court of Judicature so many good and lawful men as the said judge shall order, 
not less than twelve nor exceeding twenty-four, and the constable or constables 
shall, as soon as may be, give any person or persons so drawn to serve on the 
jury in said court due notice thereof, and shall make due return of his doings 
therein to the said judge, at or before the day set and appointed for the 
trial."

"And the said jurors shall be held to serve on the trial of all such vessels as 
shall have been libeled before the said judge, and the time of their trial, 
published, at the time said jurors are drawn, unless the judge shall see cause 
to discharge them, or either of them before, and if seven of the jurors shall 
appear and there shall not be enough to complete the number of twelve (which 
shall be a panel) or if there shall be a legal challenge to any of them, so 
that there shall be seven, and not a panel, it shall and may be lawful for the 
judge to order his clerk, the sheriff, or other proper officer attending said 
court to fill up the jury with good and lawful men present, and the said jury 
when so filled up and empanelled shall be sworn to return a true verdict on any 
bill, claim, or memorial which shall be committed to them according to law and 
evidence, and if the jury shall find that any vessel or vessels against which a 
bill or libel is committed to them have been offending, used, employed or 
improved as aforesaid, or are the property of any inhabitants of Great Britain 
as aforesaid, they shall return their verdict thereof to the said judge, and he 
shall thereupon condemn such vessel or vessels, with their cargoes and 
appurtenances and shall order them to be disposed of as by law is provided, and 
if the jury shall return a special verdict, therein setting forth certain facts 
relative to such vessel or vessels (a bill against which is committed to them) 
and it shall appear to the said judge by said verdict that such vessel or 
vessels have been infesting the seacoast of America or navigation thereof, or 
that such vessels have been employed, used, improved, or offending, or are the 
property of any inhabitant or inhabitants of Great Britain as aforesaid, he, 
the said judge, shall condemn such vessel or vessels and decree them to be 
sold, with their cargoes and appurtenances, at public vendue, and shall also 
order the charges of said trial and condemnation, to be paid out of the money 
which such vessel and cargo, with her appurtenances, shall sell for to the 
officers of the court according to the table of fees last established by law of 
this colony, and shall order the residue thereof to be delivered to the 
captors, their agents, or attorneys for the use and benefit of such captors and 
others concerned therein, and if two or more vessels (the commanders whereof 
shall be properly commissioned) shall jointly take such vessel, the money which 
she and her cargo shall sell for (after payment of charges as aforesaid) shall

Page 3 U. S. 59

be divided between the captors in proportion to their men. And the said judge 
is hereby authorized to make out his precept, under his hand and seal, directed 
to the sheriff of the county aforesaid (or if thereto requested by the captors 
or agents to any other person to be appointed by the said judge) to sell such 
vessel and appurtenances and cargo at public vendue, and such sheriff or other 
person after deducting his own charges for the same, to pay and deliver the 
residue according to the decree of the said judge."

"And be it enacted by the authority aforesaid that any person or persons 
claiming the whole or any part or share, either as owner or captor of any such 
vessel or vessels against which a libel is so filed, may jointly or by 
themselves or by their attorneys or agents, five days before the day set and 
appointed for the trial of such vessel or vessels, file their claim before the 
said judge, which claim shall be committed to the jury, with the libel, which 
is first filed, and the jury shall thereupon determine and return its verdict, 
of what part or share such claimant or claimants shall have of the capture or 
captures, and every person or persons who shall neglect to file his or their 
claim in the manner as aforesaid shall be forever barred therefrom."

"And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid that every vessel which 
shall be taken and brought into this colony by the armed vessels of any of the 
united colonies of America and shall be condemned as aforesaid, the proceeds of 
such vessels and cargoes shall go and be one-third part to the use of the 
captors and the other two-thirds, to the use of the colony at whose charge, 
such armed vessel was fitted out."

"And where any vessel or vessels shall be taken by the fleet and army of the 
united colonies and brought into this colony and condemned as aforesaid, the 
said judge shall distribute and dispose of the said vessels and cargoes 
according to the resolves and orders of the American Congress."

"And whereas the honorable Continental Congress has recommended that in certain 
cases an appeal should be granted from the court aforesaid."

"Be it therefore enacted that from all judgments or decrees hereafter to be 
given in the said Court Maritime on the capture of any vessel, appurtenances, 
or cargoes where such vessel is taken or shall be taken by any armed vessel 
fitted out at the charge of the united colonies, an appeal shall be allowed to 
the Continental Congress or to such person or persons as they already have, or 
shall hereafter appoint for the trials of appeals, provided the appeal be 
demanded within five days after definitive sentence given, and such appeal 
shall be lodged

Page 3 U. S. 60

with the Secretary of the Congress within forty days afterwards, and provided 
the party appealing shall give security to prosecute said appeal with effect, 
and in case of the death of the Secretary during the recess of the Congress, 
the said appeal shall be lodged in Congress within twenty days after the next 
meeting thereof, and that from the judgment, decrees, or sentence of the said 
court on the capture of any vessel or cargo which have been or shall hereafter 
be brought into this colony by any person or persons, excepting those who are 
in the service of the united colonies, an appeal shall be allowed to the 
Superior Court of Judicature which shall next be held in the county aforesaid."

"And whereas no provision has been made by any of the said resolves for an 
appeal from the sentence or decree of the said judge where the caption of any 
such vessel or vessels may be made by a vessel in the service of the united 
colonies and of any particular colony or person together,"

"Therefore be it enacted by the authority aforesaid that in such cases the 
appeal shall be allowed to the then next superior court as aforesaid, provided 
the appellant shall enter into bonds with sufficient sureties to prosecute his 
appeal with effect. And such superior court, to which the appeal shall be shall 
take cognizance thereof in the same manner as if the appeal was from the 
inferior court of common pleas, and shall condemn or acquit such vessel or 
vessels, their cargoes, and appurtenances, and in the sale, and disposition of 
them proceed according to this act. And the appellant shall pay the court and 
jury such fees as are allowed by law in civil actions."

That on the 30 January, 1777, Congress resolved that a standing committee, to 
consist of five members be appointed to hear and determine upon appeals brought 
against sentences passed on libels in the courts of admiralty in the respective 
states.

That Joshua Stackpole, a citizen of New Hampshire, commander of the armed 
brigantine called the McClary, acting under the commission and authority of 
Congress, did, in the month of October, 1777, on the high seas, capture the 
brigantine Susanna as lawful prize.

That John Penhallow, Joshua Wentworth, Ammi R. Cutter, Nathaniel Folsom, Samuel 
Sherburne, Thomas Martin Moses Woodward, Neil McIntire, George Turner, Richard 
Champney, and Robert Furness, all citizens of New Hampshire, were owners of the 
brigantine McClary.

That George Wentworth was agent for the captors.

That, on 11 November 1777, a libel was exhibited to the Maritime Court of New 
Hampshire in the names of John

Page 3 U. S. 61

Penhallow and Jacob Treadwell in behalf of the owners of the McClary and of 
George Wentworth, agent for the captors, against the Susanna and her cargo, to 
which claims were put in by Elisha Doane, Isaiah Doane, and James Shepherd, 
citizens of Massachusetts.

That on 16 December, 1777, a trial was had before the said court, when the jury 
found a verdict in favor of the libellants, whereupon judgment was rendered 
that the Susanna, her cargo &c., should be forfeited and deemed lawful prize, 
and the same were thereby ordered to be distributed according to law.

That an appeal to Congress was in due time demanded, but refused by the said 
court because it was contrary to the law of the state.

That then the said claimants prayed an appeal to the Superior Court of New 
Hampshire, which was granted.

That on the first Tuesday of September, 1778, the Superior Court of New 
Hampshire proceeded to the trial of the said appeal, when the jury found in 
favor of the libellants; that thereupon the court gave judgment that the 
Susanna, with her goods, claimed by Elisha Doane, Isaiah Doane, and James 
Shepherd, were forfeited to the libellants, and the same were ordered to be 
sold at public vendue for their use and benefit, and that the proceeds thereof, 
after deducting the costs of suit and charges of sale, be paid to John 
Penhallow and Jacob Treadwell, agents for the owners, and to George Wentworth, 
agent for the captors, to be by them paid and distributed according to law.

That the claimants did in due time demand an appeal from the said sentence to 
Congress, and did also tender sufficient security or caution to prosecute the 
said appeal to effect, and that the same was lodged in Congress within forty 
days after the definitive sentence was pronounced in the Superior Court of New 
Hampshire.

That on 9 October, 1778, a petition from Elisha Doane was read in Congress, 
accompanied with the proceedings of a court of admiralty for the State of New 
Hampshire on the libel Treadwell and Penhallow v. Brig Susanna, praying, that 
he may be allowed an appeal to Congress, whereupon it was ordered that the same 
be referred to the committee on appeals. Fourth Journal of Congress 586.

That on 26 June, 1779, the commissioners of appeal or the Court of 
Commissioners gave their opinion that they had jurisdiction of the cause.

That the Articles of Confederation bear date 9 July, 1778, and were ratified by 
all the states on 1 March, 1781.

Page 3 U. S. 62

That by these articles, the United States was vested with the sole and 
exclusive power of establishing courts for receiving and determining finally 
appeals in all cases of capture.

That such a court was established by the style of "The Court of Appeals in 
Cases of Capture." By the commission, the judges were "to hear, try, and 
determine all appeals from the courts of admiralty in the states respectively, 
in cases of capture." 6th Journal of Congress, pp. 14, 21, 75.

That on 24 May, 1780, Congress resolved

"That all matters respecting appeals in cases of capture now depending before 
Congress or the Commissioners of Appeals, consisting of members of Congress, be 
referred to the newly erected Court of Appeals, to be there adjudged and 
determined according to law."

That in the month of September, 1783, the Court of Appeals, before whom 
appeared the parties by their advocates, did, after a full hearing and solemn 
argument, finally adjudge and decree that the sentences or decrees passed by 
the Inferior and Superior Courts of Judicature of New Hampshire, so far as the 
same respected Elisha Doane, Isaiah Doane, and James Shepherd, should be 
revoked, reversed, and annulled, and that the property specified in their 
claims should be restored, and that the parties each pay their own costs on the 
said appeal.

Here the cause rested till the adoption of the existing Constitution of the 
United States, except an ineffectual struggle before Congress on the part of 
New Hampshire and an unavailing experiment at common law to obtain redress on 
the part of the appellants. After the organization of the judiciary under the 
present government, the representatives of Elisha Doane, who was one of the 
appellants, exhibited a libel in the District Court of New Hampshire which was 
legally transferred to the circuit court against John Penhallow, Joshua 
Wentworth, Ammi R. Cutter, Nathaniel Folsom, Samuel Sherburne, Thomas Martin 
Moses Woodward, Neil McIntire, George Turner, Richard Champley, Robert Furness 
& George Wentworth.

This libel, after setting forth the proceedings in the different courts, states 
that the brigantine Susanna, with her tackle, furniture, apparel, and cargo and 
also the monies arising from the sales thereof, came, after the capture, to the 
hands and possession of Joshua Wentworth, and George Wentworth, whereby they 
became liable for the same, together with the captors and owners. That after 
the death of Elisha Doane, letters of administration of the personal estate of 
the said Elisha were granted to Anna Doane, his widow, and Isaiah Doane, and 
that the widow afterwards intermarried with David Stoddard Greenough. The 
libellants pray process against the respondents

Page 3 U. S. 63

to show cause why the decree of the Court of Appeals should not be carried into 
execution, and they also pray that right and justice may be done in the 
premises and that they may recover such damages as they have sustained by 
reason of the taking of the Susanna.

The respondents, protesting, that they never were owners of the McClary, and 
that they have none of the effects of the Susanna, nor her cargo in their 
possession, say that the Susanna was in the custody of the marshal and, upon 
the final decree of the Superior Court of New Hampshire, sold for the benefit 
of the owners and mariners of the McClary, and distributed among them according 
to law; that the decision of the said court was final; that no other court ever 
had or hath or ever can have power to revoke, reverse, and annul the said 
decree, and, in a subsequent part of the pleadings, that the District Court of 
New Hampshire hath no authority to carry the decree of the Court of Appeals 
into execution or to give damages.

To this sort of plea and answer, neither and yet both, the libellants reply 
that the matters contained in their libel are just and true, and that they are 
ready to verify and prove the same; that the matters and things alleged by the 
respondents are false and untrue; that the Court of Commissioners and Court of 
Appeals were duly constituted and had jurisdiction of the subject matter; that 
no other court hath or can have authority to draw into question the legality of 
their decisions, and that the District Court of New Hampshire hath jurisdiction.

I have extracted and consolidated the material parts of the libel, plea, 
answer, replication, rejoinder, surrejoinder, etc., if they may be so termed, 
without detailing the allegations of the parties as they arise in the course of 
procedure.

Upon these pleadings, the parties went to a hearing before the Circuit Court of 
New Hampshire, which, after full consideration, decreed that the respondents 
should pay to the libellants their damages and costs occasioned by their not 
complying with the decree of the Court of Appeals, the quantum of which to be 
ascertained by commissioners. This interlocutory sentence was pronounced 24 
October, 1793.

The commissioners reported, that the Susanna, her cargo, etc. were, on 2 
October, 1778, being the assumed time of sale, worth
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Penhallow v. Doane’s Administraters (3 U.S. 54; 1 L.Ed. 57; 3 Dall. 54),
SUPREME COURT RULING – NO CORPORATE JURISDICTION OVER THE NATURAL MAN

Supreme Court of the United States 1795, "Inasmuch as every government is an artificial person, an abstraction, and a creature of the mind only, a government can interface only with other artificial persons. The imaginary, having neither actuality nor substance, is foreclosed from creating and attaining parity with the tangible. The legal manifestation of this is that no government, as well as any law, agency, aspect, court, etc. can concern itself with anything other than corporate, artificial persons and the contracts between them."
S.C.R. 1795, (3 U.S. 54; 1 L.Ed. 57; 3 Dall. 54),