No. 36.
Mr. Reuterskiöld to Mr. Bayard.
[Translation.]

Mr. Secretary of State:

Referring to my previous notes on the tonnage question, I have the honor to address a few further considerations on this subject to your excellency.

[Page 1901]

With a view to ascertaining (by documents forming part of the correspondence exchanged at the time of the conclusion of the treaty of July 4, 1827, between the United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway and the United States) the spirit in which that treaty should be interpreted as regards the question now before us, his excellency Count Ehrensvärd ordered a search to be made among the archives of the royal ministry of foreign affairs at Stockholm. That search brought to light three documents, which I have been instructed to transmit to your excellency.

Immediately after the conclusion of the treaty in question a difference of opinion arose with regard to Article VIII. This led to an exchange of notes between Baron Stackelberg, chargé d’affaires of Sweden and Norway at Washington, and Mr. Clay, Secretary of State of the United States, and to another exchange of notes between Count de Wetterstedt, minister of foreign affairs at Stockholm, and Mr. Appleton, chargé d’affaires of the United States at that capital, the two latter gentlemen having been the signers of the treaty.

Your excelleney will find herewith a copy of—

(1)
A note addressed by Baron Stackelberg to Mr. Clay under date of April 3, 1828.
(2)
A note from Mr. Clay to Baron Stackelberg, dated April 28, 1828.
(3)
A note addressed by Count de Wetterstedt to Mr. Appleton under date September 10, 1828.

I think it unnecessary for me here to recapitulate the question which gave rise to the difference of opinion relative to the enforcement of Article VIII, and to a reclamation on the part of the United States Government.

That reclamation had reference to Norway alone. Tonnage duties in Sweden were uniform for all arrivals and for all distances, while in Norway there existed a classification with three schedules, differing according to the port of departure. A distinction was made between vessels which had sailed—

(1)
From any place outside of Europe except the Mediterranean.
(2)
From the Mediterranean; and
(3)
From any European port. The tonnage duties levied upon vessels arriving from ports outside of Europe, or from those in the Mediterranean, were higher than those levied upon vessels arriving from European ports.

Against this state of things, which was unfavorable to American vessels coming from the United States, the Federal Government remonstrated, asking the privilege of the lowest duty for its vessels.

The Secretary of State replied, by his note of April 28, 1828, to the argument presented by the chargé d’affaires of Sweden and Norway at Washington in his note of April 3, 1828. which argument was similar in many respects to the interpretation now given by the United States Government to Article VIII.

The force and justice of Mr. Clay’s argument seemed to the Government of the King to be of such a nature as to exclude any possibility of a rejoinder, and I can do no better now than to make use of Mr. Clay’s own words in support of the present claim of my Government.

(Here follows a lengthy extract from Mr. Clay’s note, beginning with the paragraph “The eighth article” and continuing to the end.)

The Government of the King did not even attempt, as I have already had the honor to remark, to refute these arguments of Mr. Clay, but yielded entirely to the opinion of the United States Government, and granted all that the latter asked for, as is shown by the note of September [Page 1902] 10, 1828, which was addressed by Count de Wetterstedt to Mr. Appleton.

The Government of the King has thought that the sense of Article VIII can not be better elucidated than by original letters from the very persons who took part in the conclusion of the treaty to which that article belongs.

In concluding this note, I can find no form better adapted to our present solicitation than the one used by Mr. Clay at the close of his note of April 28, 1828, and I shall confine myself to saying that the Government of my august sovereign “hopes to obtain the concurrence of Mr. Bayard and the United States Government in the construction of the treaty which is now submitted.”

Be pleased to accept, etc.,

Reuterskiöld.
[Inclosure 1.]
Copy of a communication addressed by Baron Stacketherg, chargé d’affaires of the King, to Mr. Clay, Secretary of State of the United States, dated Washington, April 3, 1828.

The undersigned, chargé d’affaires of His Majesty the King of Sweden and Norway, having had the honor verbally to communicate with his excellency Mr. Clay, Secretary of State of the United States, in relation to the difference of opinion which has arisen concerning the proper application of the text of Article VIII of the treaty of commerce recently concluded between His Majesty the King of Sweden and Norway and the United States of America, has the honor, by order of his Government, to address the present note to his excellency the Secretary of State.

Article VIII of the treaty reads as follows:

“The two high contracting parties engage not to impose upon the navigation between their respective territories, in the vessels of either, any tonnage or other duties, of any kind or denomination, which shall be higher or other than those which shall be imposed on every other navigation except that which they have reserved to themselves, respectively, by the sixth article of the present treaty.”

Basing his action on this article, Mr. Appleton, chargé d’affaires of the United States of America near His Majesty the King, claims for American commerce between the United States and Sweden and Norway the privilege of the lowest rate of tonnage duties, in case the latter are not uniform for all navigations, but are regulated according to localities and the length of the voyages; he excepts only trade* between Sweden and Norway.

Tonnage duties are uniform in Sweden for all arrivals of vessels, and for all distances; this is not, however, the case in Norway. The list of that country contains the following classification: (1) Vessels coming from all places outside of Europe, excepting the Mediterranean, pay per ton (commerce-lӕst) if they are laden, 1 specie 11 skillings, and if they are in ballast or are laden below one-fourth of their capacity, 66 shillings. (2) Vessels from the Mediterranean, in which category are comprised all ports that the vessel can not reach, and from which it can not come otherwise than by passing through the Strait of Gibraltar, pay, if they are laden, 105 skillings per ton, and if in ballast or laden below one-fourth of their capacity, 53 skillings. (3) Vessels coming from all European ports, not including those of No. 2, and excepting the ports of Sweden, when Swedish or Norwegian vessels go thither or return therefrom, pay, per ton, if laden, 53 skillings, and if in ballast or laden below one-fourth of their capacity, 26 skillings species. It thus appears that, if this privilege were to be allowed, American vessels would pay less than those of Norway, which certainly can not have been the intention of the negotiators when the article in question was inserted in the treaty, since the system of equality with the natives forms the general basis of the treaty, and is, at the same time, derived from the immutable rules of justice. It also seems that the sense and purpose of Article VIII of the treaty is to furnish a guaranty against any increase of tonnage duties to the detriment of the commerce concerned. The words on every other navigation have reference solely to another foreign navigation, and consequently the article in question made provision for the two following cases only: First, that a Swedish or Norwegian vessel going to America or returning therefrom should be subjected to the [Page 1903] same tonnage duties as an American vessel going to Sweden or Norway and returning to the’ United States, and second, that no other foreign vessel, engaged in the same trade and sailing by the same route (exerçant la même navigation), should obtain more favorable tonnage duties either in Sweden and Norway or in the United States. The undersigned believes that every necessary guaranty is shown by the foregoing statement to exist, in point of fact, for American commerce, without the necessity of claiming any exclusive advantage on the ground of Article VIII, even at the expense of Norwegian citizens, under a forced interpretation of the sense of that article; he therefore trusts that his excellency the Secretary of State will think proper to consider Article VIII of the treaty in the sense in which the undersigned has had the honor to present it.

The undersigned has the honor, etc.,

Stackelberg.
[Inclosure 2.]
Mr. Clay to Baron Stackelberg, April 28, 1828.

The undersigned, Secretary of State of the United States, has the honor to acknowledge the receipt of the note of the Baron de Stackelberg, under date of the 3d instant, in relation to the construction of the eighth article of the treaty of commerce lately concluded between His Majesty the King of Sweden and Norway and the United States, respecting which a difference of opinion appears to have arisen at Stockholm between the Swedish Government and Mr. Appleton, chargé d’affaires of the United States. The President has given attentive consideration, the result of which the undersigned is now charged to communicate to Baron Stackelberg.

It seems that a different principle regulates the tonnage duty imposed in the ports of Norway from that which prevails in those of Sweden. According to that of the former it is not a uniform rate, applicable to the navigation of all countries, but is graduated by the distances of commercial States from Norway, those paying most which are most remote. This is a peculiar mode of levying the duty, to which the practice of no other country is known to conform. It is worthy of consideration, whether, if any difference at all ought to be made in the rate of duty, a rule directly the reverse of that of Norway would not be more expedient and equitable. States situated remotely from each other labor under a great disadvantage in their commercial intercourse from the space which separates them. It increases the charges on the objects of their commercial exchanges, and consequently lessens the mutual consumption of their respective commodities. Ought this disadvantage to be augmented by an increase of tonnage or any other duty? Long voyages are favorable to the acquisition of skill in mariners, an important object with maritime powers. By taxing higher either the vessel or the cargo employed in those voyages they are discouraged. But these considerations belong exclusively to the wisdom of Norway; the United States are only concerned in the just interpretation and fair execution of the existing treaty.

The eighth article stipulated that the two high contracting parties shall not impose upon the navigation between their respecting territories, in the vessels of either, any tonnage or other duties of any kind or denomination which shall be higher or other than those which shall be imposed on every other navigation, except that which they have reserved to themselves, respectively, by the sixth article of the treaty. The reservation in that article is of the coastwise navigation and that between the ports of Sweden and Norway, and, consequently, does not affect the question under consideration.

It is difficult to conceive any language more explicit than that which is employed in the eighth article. It expressly forbids either party from imposing on the vessels of the other any tonnage or other duties of any kind or denomination higher or other than those which shall be imposed on every other navigation, with the exception which has been stated. This language excludes altogether the office of interpretation, which can not make the stipulation clearer than the words plainly import. It leaves the parties but one inquiry to make, which is into the state of their respective laws imposing tonnage or other duties. According to the laws of the United States, of which the treaty nowforms one, a Swedish or Norwegian vessel, whether coming from the Mediterranean, from the ports of any parts of Europe, or from those of any other portion of the globe with the exception contained in the sixth article, is liable to pay no tonnage or other duties higher or other than those which an American vessel, or any foreign vessel, coming from the same places is chargeable with. But according to the laws of Norway, as stated by Baron Stackelberg, American vessels clearing from the United States for the ports of Norway are liable on entry to pay, if loaded, one species eleven schellings per ton, whilst vessels entering the ports of Norway from [Page 1904] all parts of Europe except the Mediterranean are charged only with fiftythree schellings per ton if loaded. In other words, American vessels are hound to pay in the ports of Norway both other and higher duties than the vessels entering the same ports from all parts of Europe. This condition of the laws of Sweden would seem to require that they should he altered so as to place the navigation of the United States on the footing which the treaty contemplated.

Baron Stackelberg argues that the object of the treaty was merely to place the vessels of the United States and those of Sweden and Norway, reciprocally, in their respective ports, on the same equal footing in regard to duties, and that this object is accomplished by the graduated tariff of Norway, since no higher or other duties are exacted from an American vessel than from a Norwegian vessel, when both vessels enter from the same place. That is the object of the second article of the treaty, and Baron Stackelberg would be right if there were no other articles in it. But the eighth article of the treaty was inserted for another and distinct purpose, which is to restrain either party from demanding higher or other tonnage duties from the vessels of the other than those which should be imposed on every other navigation.

It is said that the view now presented of the eighth article would have the effect of compelling a Norwegian vessel to pay a higher duty than an American vessel. This effect would not result from the treaty, but from the law of Norway; and the obvious remedy is a modification of the law so as to adapt it to the provisions of the treaty. The laws of the United States, if they were to remain unaltered, would, also, create a different rule for the vessels of Norway from that which is applicable to the vessels of the United States. But the United States, always faithful to their national engagements, never fail to accommodate their legislation to the obligations which those engagements import. The Government of the United States does not desire that American vessels should pay, in the ports of Norway, less tonnage duties than Norwegian vessels, but it does expect, and thinks that it has a right to insist, that the vessels of the United States shall not pay, in those ports, higher or other duties than the vessels of Norway or any other navigation, with the exception contained in the sixth article.

If it were necessary, the view now taken of the eighth article of the treaty might be forfeited by considerations drawn from other parts of the same instrument. It is stipulated, for example, in the ninth article that no duties of any kind or denomination shall be levied upon the products of the soil or the industry of the respective countries than such as are levied upon similar products of any other country. The object of this stipulation was to secure in the consumption of the respective countries an equality in the competition. But if a vessel laden with the products of the United States is burdened on her entry into the ports of Norway with higher duties than a vessel laden with similar products and entering the same ports from any part of Europe, that equality is as much disturbed in effect as if the unequal imposition were directly upon the cargo instead of the vehicle which transports it.

The undersigned hopes to obtain the concurrence of Baron Stackelberg and his Government in the construction of the treaty which is now submitted, and, in the mean time, requests him to accept assurances of the high consideration which the undersigned entertains for him.

H. Clay.

[Inclosure 3.]
Copy of a communication addressed by the minister of foreign affairs to Mr. Appleton, under date of Stockholm, September 10, 1828.

I communicated, without delay, to the competent Norwegian authorities the communication addressed by you to me, sir, under date of the 7th of July last, and I now hasten to inform you that, in obedience to the King’s command, the customhouses in Norway have been instructed, by a circular dated August 9, to refund to United States vessels, when they come directly from said States, or sail thither directly from Norway, the difference between the amount of tonnage duties computed according to schedule La. C. of the law of August 7, 1827, and that established by schedule La. C.

In accordauce with this principle, the customhouse at Bergen has been instructed to refund to the firm of Herman D. Janson & Son, of that city, the agents of the American vessel Magoon, the amount of tonnage duties paid in April last for the said Teasel in excess of what is required by the aforementioned schedule La. C.

Ct. De Wetterstedt.
  1. The original has “le commerce interlope;” this term is properly used of illicit trade, which sense does not seem admissible here.