The notice of dissatisfaction with the decision of the collector
of customs as to the rate and amount of duties on imported goods,
required by the Act of June 30, 1864, c. 171, § 14, Rev.Stat. §
2931, to be given "within ten days after the ascertainment and
liquidation of the duties by the proper officers of the customs,"
may be given at any time after the entry of the goods and the
collector's original estimate of the amount of duties, and before
the final ascertainment and liquidation of the duties as stamped
upon the entry.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action against the executors of a late collector of
the port of New York to recover back duties exacted on goods
imported by the plaintiffs in July, August, and September,
1873.
At the trial, the plaintiffs introduced evidence tending to show
that the duties exacted and paid were excessive; that appeals to
the Secretary of the Treasury were taken, and this action brought
in due time, and that the protest as to each entry was filed after
the collector's decision on the rate and amount of duties but
before the date of the final ascertainment and liquidation of the
duties as stamped upon the entry. The court directed a verdict for
the defendants on the ground that the protest was filed "before the
liquidation of the entry to which it referred, and not within ten
days thereafter, as required by law." The plaintiffs duly excepted
to
Page 130 U. S. 285
the ruling, and, after judgment for the defendants, sued out
this writ of error.
The customs acts in force at the time of the importation of
these goods contained the following provisions:
The collector and the naval officer are required to make and to
endorse upon the importer's entry a gross estimate of the amount of
the duties on the merchandise to which the entry relates, and the
merchandise cannot be lawfully landed until the amount of the
estimated duties has been first paid or secured to be paid and a
permit granted. Act March 2, 1799, c. 22, § 49, 1 Stat. 664;
Rev.Stat. § 2869.
The merchandise must be appraised, or bonds given by the
importer in double its estimated value, before it is delivered from
the custody of the officers of the customs. If the collector deems
any appraisement too low, he may order a new appraisement and may
cause the duties to be charged accordingly. If the importer is
dissatisfied with the appraisement, the collector must order
another appraisement by two appraisers of a specified class, and if
they disagree, decide between them, and the appraisement thus
determined shall be final, and duties levied accordingly. Acts May
28, 1830, c. 147, §§ 2, 4, 4 Stat. 409, 410; August 30, 1842, c.
270, § 17, 5 Stat. 564; March 3, 1851, c. 38, § 3, 9 Stat. 630;
Rev.Stat. §§ 2899, 2929, 2930.
On the entry of any merchandise, the decision of the collector
of customs at the port of importation and entry as to the rate and
amount of duties to be paid on such merchandise shall be final and
conclusive against all persons interested therein unless the owner,
importer, agent, or consignee of the merchandise
"shall, within ten days after the ascertainment and liquidation
of the duties by the proper officers of the customs, as well in
cases of merchandise entered in bond as for consumption, give
notice in writing to the collector on each entry, if dissatisfied
with his decision, setting forth thirty days after the date of such
ascertainment of his objection thereto, and shall, within thirty
days after the date of such ascertainment and liquidation, appeal
therefrom to the Secretary of the Treasury."
Act June 30, 1864, c. 171, § 14, 13 Stat. 214; Rev.Stat. §
2931.
Page 130 U. S. 286
The question is whether the period allowed for filing the
protest or notice of dissatisfaction with the decision made by the
collector at the time of the entry upon the rate and amount of
duties extends from the time of that decision, or only from the
date of the final ascertainment and liquidation of the duties as
stamped upon the entry, until ten days after that date; or, in
other words, whether this period, which is admitted to expire ten
days after the ascertainment and liquidation of the duties as so
stamped, begins at the date of the stamp, or at the earlier date of
the collector's original decision upon the estimated rate and
amount of duties. The determination of this question will be aided
by a brief consideration of the history of the law before the
passage of the act of 1864.
Under the earlier acts of Congress, which contained no provision
on this subject, an importer who had paid unauthorized duties under
protest and in order to obtain possession of his goods might
recover them back from the collector in an action of assumpsit for
money had and received.
Elliott v.
Swartwout, 10 Pet. 137.
The Act of March 3, 1839, c. 82, § 2, requiring the collector to
pay the money into the Treasury notwithstanding the protest of the
importer, and giving the importer a right of appeal to the
Secretary of the Treasury, was held by this Court at January term,
1845, to take away the importer's right to bring an action of
assumpsit. 5 Stat. 348;
Cary v.
Curtis, 3 How. 236.
Then came the Act of February 26, 1845, c. 22, providing that
nothing in the act of 1839 should have that effect,
"nor shall any action be maintained against any collector to
recover the amount of duties so paid under protest unless the said
protest was made in writing and signed by the claimant at or before
the payment of said duties, setting forth distinctly and
specifically the grounds of objection to the payment thereof."
5 Stat. 727. Under that act, Chief Justice Taney, sitting in the
circuit court, held that a protest might be made prospectively, so
as to cover subsequent similar importations, because, said the
Page 130 U. S. 287
Chief Justice:
"The protest is legally made when the duties are finally
determined, and the amount assessed by the collector, and a protest
before or at that time is sufficient notice, as it warns the
collector, before he renders his account to the Treasury
Department, that he will be held personally responsible if the
portion disputed is not legally due, and that the claimant means to
assert his rights in a court of justice."
Brune v. Marriott, Taney 132, 144. And his decision was
affirmed by the judgment of this Court.
Marriott
v. Brune, 9 How. 619.
That judgment, though criticized in
Warren v. Peaslee,
2 Curt. 231, was generally regarded and acted on as laying down a
general rule establishing the validity of prospective protests.
Steegman v. Maxwell, 3 Blatchford 365;
Hutton v.
Schell, 6 Blatchford 48, 55, and
Fowler v. Redfield,
there cited;
Wetter v. Schell, 11 Blatchford 193, 196, and
Chouteau v. Redfield, there cited.
None of these cases was brought up to this Court, and in some of
them the rule was applied under the Act of March 3, 1857, c. 98, §
5, which provided that on the entry of any merchandise the decision
of the collector of customs at the port of importation as to its
liability to duty or exemption therefrom should be final and
conclusive against the owner, importer, consignee, or agent of such
merchandise unless he should,
"within ten days after such entry, give notice to the collector
in writing of his dissatisfaction with such decision, setting forth
therein distinctly and specifically his grounds of objection
thereto,"
and should, "within thirty days after the date of such decision,
appeal therefrom to the Secretary of the Treasury." 11 Stat.
195.
The phrase "within ten days after such entry" was thus treated
as fixing a
terminus ad quem, and not a
terminus a
quo -- or, in other words, as limiting the time after which a
protest should not be made, but permitting it to be made as early
as it could have been made under the previous law. The act of 1857
applied only to cases where the question was whether the goods
imported were or were not subject to duty at all, and left the case
of goods admitted to be dutiable,
Page 130 U. S. 288
the rate and amount of duties being alone in question, to be
governed by the act of 1845, requiring the protest to be filed at
or before the time of paying the duties.
Barney v. Watson,
92 U. S. 449.
We are then brought to the act of 1864, which, as already
stated, provides that on the entry of any merchandise the decision
of the collector as to the rate and amount of duties shall be final
and conclusive, unless the importer shall,
"within ten days after the ascertainment and liquidation of the
duties by the proper officers of the customs, give notice in
writing to the collector on each entry if dissatisfied with his
decision."
This act requires the notice of dissatisfaction with the
collector's decision to be filed "within ten days after the
ascertainment and liquidation of the duties," instead of within ten
days after the entry of the goods, as in the act of 1857, evidently
for the reason stated by MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY in
Barney v.
Watson, above cited:
"In most cases, the amount, and in many cases the rate, could
not be ascertained until after examination and appraisement, and
hence a limitation to ten days from the time of entry would often,
perhaps generally, deprive the party of any remedy at all."
92 U.S.
92 U. S.
453.
The act of 1864, by requiring the notice of dissatisfaction to
be given on each entry, necessarily prevents such a notice as to
any goods from being given before the entry thereof and precludes a
prospective protest covering future entries or importations.
Ullman v. Murphy, 11 Blatchford 354.
But the matter to which the notice of dissatisfaction applies is
the decision of the collector on the rate and amount of the duties.
The whole purpose of the notice is to give the collector
opportunity to revise that decision, and that purpose is as well
accomplished by giving the notice as soon as the goods have been
entered and the duties estimated by the collector, as by postponing
the giving of the notice until after the final ascertainment and
liquidation of the duties have been made and stamped upon the
entry.
The clause requiring the importer to give such notice "within
ten days after the ascertainment and liquidation of the duties"
must therefore, according to the fair and reasonable
interpretation
Page 130 U. S. 289
of the words as applied to the subject matter, be held to fix
only the
terminus ad quem, the limit beyond which the
notice shall not be given, and not to fix the final ascertainment
and liquidation of the duties as the
terminus a quo, or
the first point of time at which the notice may be given.
In the case at bar, the result is that the notice on each entry,
having been given after the collector's decision, and before the
expiration of ten days from the date of finally stamping upon the
entry the ascertainment and liquidation of the duties, was
seasonable.
This conclusion is in accordance with a decision of Judge
Shipman in the Circuit Court for the Southern District of New York
in October, 1878, in the case of
Keyser v. Arthur, not
reported, but mentioned in a circular of the Treasury Department of
July 8, 1879, and shown by minutes produced at the argument of the
present case to have been as follows:
Two distinct entries of goods for immediate consumption were
made -- the one September 15, and the other October 10, 1873 -- and
the duties were estimated by the collector and paid forthwith. The
notice of dissatisfaction with the collector's decision was given
as to the first entry October 1, and as to the second entry October
24, 1873, and each entry was stamped as finally liquidated November
6, 1873. Judge Shipman held the protests or notices of
dissatisfaction with the collector's decisions to be seasonable,
saying:
"When the collector had officially and in writing upon the entry
ascertained and liquidated the duties upon the goods named in such
entry at a certain rate of duty, a protest within ten days after
such ascertainment and liquidation, and an appeal within thirty
days thereafter, are good and valid as to time, although
subsequently to the date of such ascertainment, liquidation,
appeal, and protest the collector revises the amount of such
liquidation and makes a final ascertainment and liquidation at the
same rate of duty. The first ascertainment and liquidation is in
fact a final one as to rate. A protest and appeal within the
statutory time after the final liquidation are also good and valid.
The uniform practice in this port for many years, as to time of
protest and appeal, in conformity with this rule, which practice
has been
Page 130 U. S. 290
sanctioned by all the officers of the government, is of much
importance in the decision of this question."
Our conclusion also accords with decisions of state courts
expounding similar words in other statutes.
Young v. The
Orpheus, 119 Mass. 179;
Atherton v. Corliss, 101
Mass. 40;
Levert v. Read, 54 Ala. 529.
Some expressions of judges of this Court, not having this point
before them, might seem to support the opposite conclusion,
especially the language of Chief Justice Waite in
Watt v.
United States, 15 Blatchford 29, decided July 1, 1878, and
that of Mr. Justice Strong in
Westray v. United
States, 18 Wall. 322. But in
Watt's Case,
the only question of time presented or considered related not to
giving the collector notice of dissatisfaction with his decision,
but to taking an appeal to the Secretary of the Treasury, and the
adjudication of the Chief Justice that the collector's decision
upon the rate and amount of duties, if not duly appealed from, was
final and conclusive in a case where the duties had not been paid
to obtain possession of the goods, but were sued for by the United
States, was overruled, with his concurrence, in
United States
v. Schlesinger, 120 U. S. 109. And
in
Westray's Case, the importer never gave any notice of
dissatisfaction with the collector's decision or took any appeal to
the Secretary of the Treasury, and the only point adjudged was that
the importer was not entitled to notice from the collector of his
decision before being bound thereby or required to give a notice of
dissatisfaction or take an appeal.
It was insisted by the Solicitor General that
"the views of the department, legally expressed, so far as they
appear in the record, recognize the true interpretation of the
statutes to be that the protest must be filed after the final
ascertainment and liquidation of the duties."
But the orders and circulars of the Treasury Department given in
evidence at the trial either merely repeat the words of the act of
1864 without giving them any construction or else clearly show that
from the time of the passage of that act until long after the
entries now in question, the practical construction was to allow
the notice of dissatisfaction to be
Page 130 U. S. 291
given at any time after the collector's decision estimating the
rate and amount of duty at the time of the entry of the goods,
provided it was not given after ten days from the final
ascertainment and liquidation of the duties as stamped upon the
entry.
The circular of the Treasury Department of September 30, 1878,
and the opinion of the Attorney General to the Secretary of the
Treasury, of October 31, 1878, 16 Opinions of Attorneys General
197, requiring notices of dissatisfaction under § 2931 of the
Revised Statutes to be filed after the final liquidation of the
duties were based on a misconception of the scope and effect of the
decision in
Watt's Case, above cited. The circular of the
Treasury Department of July 8, 1879, reestablished the practice
which, as therein stated, had prevailed before that decision at the
port of New York
"and all the other prominent ports of the United States, under
which protests and appeals had been recognized, both by the customs
officers and by this department, as valid if filed at any time
before the expiration of the time mentioned in the section of law
cited."
And the old practice appears to have been since constantly
recognized and acted on until 1886, when the Treasury Department
again undertook to establish the opposite rule.
Judgment reversed and the case remanded to the circuit court
with directions to set aside the verdict and order a new
trial.