Title 28 › Part PART VI— - PARTICULAR PROCEEDINGS › Chapter CHAPTER 163— - FINES, PENALTIES AND FORFEITURES › § 2464
When a ship or other property is seized in a U.S. admiralty case (not in forfeiture cases), the owner or claimant can get the seizure stopped by giving a bond or written promise for twice the amount being claimed. The bond must have a reliable surety and be approved by the district judge where the case is happening, or by the collector of the port if the judge is not available. The marshal must stop the seizure or release the property when he gets the bond. The bond is filed with the court and can be used to satisfy the court’s final decision against the owner and the sureties. An owner may give one general bond to cover future suits against the same vessel. That bond prevents new seizures so long as it is at least twice the total amount claimed in all pending suits against the vessel. The court can make orders to carry out these rules, give notice, have the clerk record the bond in the case files, and ask for more security at any time. If a special bond is later given for a particular case, it cancels the general bond for that case. The parties can agree to a smaller bond equal to the claim amount plus interest and costs; if they cannot agree, the court will set the amount, and if it does not, the double-amount rule applies.
Full Legal Text
Judiciary and Judicial Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
28 U.S.C. § 2464
Title 28 — Judiciary and Judicial Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73