20.14. 14. The Laws of Commerce concerning the Confiscation of Merchandise.
The Magna Charta of England forbids the seizing and confiscating, in
case of war, the effects of foreign merchants, except by way of
reprisals. It is an honour to the English nation that they have made
this one of the articles of their liberty.
In the late war between Spain and England, the former made a law
which punished with death those who brought English merchandise into the
dominions of Spain; and the same penalty on those who carried Spanish
merchandise into England.
[10]
An ordinance like this cannot, I believe,
find a precedent in any laws but those of Japan. It equally shocks
humanity, the spirit of commerce, and the harmony which ought to subsist
in the proportion of penalties; it confounds all our ideas, making that
a crime against the state which is only a violation of civil polity.
Footnotes
[10]
Published in Cadiz in March, 1740.