Fast-Fish, Loose-Fish: How Whalemen, Lawyers, and Judges Created the British Property Law of Whaling

Anglo-American whalemen in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries used customs largely of their own creation to resolve disputes at sea over contested whales. These customs were remarkably effective as litigation was rare and violence even rarer. Legal scholars such as Robert Ellickson have correct...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Deal, Robert
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Scholarship Archive 2009
Subjects:
Law
Online Access:https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/law_culture/33
https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/context/law_culture/article/1032/viewcontent/Deal_paper.pdf
Description
Summary:Anglo-American whalemen in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries used customs largely of their own creation to resolve disputes at sea over contested whales. These customs were remarkably effective as litigation was rare and violence even rarer. Legal scholars such as Robert Ellickson have correctly pointed to these customs as an example of how close knit communities settle disputes without recourse to formal legal institutions or even knowledge of the applicable law. Ellickson’s belief, however, that these whaling customs were universally followed at sea and were – in turn – adopted by courts, is not entirely accurate. While courts often deferred, in part, to whaling practices, judges and lawyers were also active participants in creating the property law of whaling. British courts at the turn of the nineteenth century did much to advance one whaling custom over a competing practice. In the 1820s, British lawyers and judges applied the emerging action of interference with trade to whaling disputes and thereby reintroduced aspects of the custom their predecessors had previously rejected. This paper is the first chapter of my dissertation. The second chapter looks at how Americans resolved disputes over contested whales. Beginning with municipal regulations and colonial legislation in the seventeenth century governing dead whales that drifted ashore, the second chapter follows the growth of American whaling into the sperm whale fisheries of the South Pacific at the beginning of the nineteenth century. Although American whalemen followed the custom of iron holds the whale by the middle of the eighteenth century, nineteenth century American legal scholars – in the absence of reported decisions from domestic courts – continued to rely on British cases and treatises and thereby failed to recognize that their countrymen had abandoned fast-fish, loose-fish. The American whalemen who dominated the sperm whale fisheries off the coasts of South America continued the practice of iron holds the whale that they had followed ...