
    Pargoud v. United States.
    The President’s proclamation of December 25th, 1868, granting pardon and amnesty unconditionally and without reservation to all who participated, directly or indirectly, in the late rebellion, relieves claimants of captured and abandoned property from proof of adhesion to the United States during the late civil war. It is unnecessary, therefore, in a claim in the Court of Claims,, under that act, to prove such adhesion or personal pardon for taking part in the rebellion against the United States.
    Appeal from the Court of Claims.
    Pargoud filed a claim in the court below to recover under the Abandoned and Captured Property Act, the proceeds of certain cotton. This act, as by reference to its provisions, on page 151, supra, will be. seen, makes “proof that the claimant had never given aid or comfort to the late rebellion” a prerequisite to recovery. Pargoud’s petition, however, averred no loyalty at all. On the contrary, it set forth in the first sentence of it “ that he was guilty of participating in the rebellion against the United States,” adding, however, “that he had been duly and legally pardoned for such participation by the President of the United States, and that he had received a pardon under the great seal, dated on the 11th day of January, 1866, which had been duly accepted by him, and that his acceptance, duly notified to the Secretary of State, was now on file in the. office of that department; and that he had complied with all the legal formalities in such case made and provided, and under the proclamations of' amnesty and pardon issued by the President of the United States, now stands and is entitled to be considered in law as if he never had, in point of fact, participated in the late rebellion against the United States, and consequently he now avers that in legal intendment and under the allegations already made, he has at all times home true allegiance to the government of the United States, and that he has not in any way aided, abetted, or given encouragement to the rebellion against the United States.”
    The Court of Claims decided against the claimant on the ground that the petition did not aver that he had given no aid or comfort to the rebellion, nor sufficiently aver a pardon by the President.
    Pargoud now brought the case here, where, on a motion made by the Attorney-General, Mr. Akerman, and supported by Air. Bristow, the Solicitor-General, to dismiss it for want of jurisdiction—they relying on the proviso to act of July 12th, 1870 (sometimes called the “Drake Amendment”), quoted supra, 133, in Klein v. United States (the said amendment not having been then as yet declared, by the judgment in that case, to be void), to show that the pardon ought not to he regarded—and Mr. P. Phillips opposing the motion—the whole matter was elaborately and ably argued.
   The CHIEF JUSTICE

now gave the judgmentof theeourt.

We have recently decided, in the case of Armstrong v. United States, that, the President’s proclamation of December 25th, 1868, granting pardon and amnesty unconditionally and without reservation to all who participated, directly or indirectly, in the late rebellion, relieves claimants of captured and abandoned property from proof of adhesion to the United States during the late civil war. It was unnecessary, therefore, to prove such adhesion or personal pardon for taking part in the rebellion against the United States.

The judgment of the Court of Claims dismissing the petition is

Reversed. 
      
       Supra, fhe case immediately preceding.
     