The manufacturer of the sugar, and not the producer of the sugar
cane, is the person entitled to the "bounty on sugar" granted by
the Act of March 2, 1895, c. 189, to "producers and manufacturers
of sugar in the United States."
Page 173 U. S. 390
This was a controversy arising over the distribution of the
estate of Richard H. Allen, a large sugar planter of Lafourche
Parish, Louisiana, who died September 14, 1894, leaving a will, of
which the following clauses only are material to the disposition of
this case:
"I give to my wife, Bettie Allen, one-half on my Rienzi
Plantation, and one-half of all tools, mules, etc. The names of my
executors, etc., will be named hereafter. My executors shall have
from one to five years to sell and close up the estate, as I fear
property will be very low and dull. They can sell part cash, part
on time, eight percent interest, with vendor's lien. I will that my
wife do have one-half of everything belonging to Rienzi, except the
claim due me by the United States. That and other property I will
speak of further on. I appoint as my executors Ogden Smith and W.
F. Collins, residing on Rienzi Plantation. I also appoint Mrs.
Bettie Allen executrix. I give them full power to sell Rienzi
Plantation whenever they find a good offer for all the property
there belonging. When it is sold, half of all the proceeds, cash,
notes, etc., is to belong to my dear wife, Bettie Allen. The other
half will be spoken of hereafter. As I fear property will be very
low, I give my executors five years to work for a good price. In
the meantime that they are waiting to sell, the place can be rented
or worked so as to pay all taxes and other charges, any over that
to go to Mrs. Bettie Allen's credit."
Letters testamentary were issued to William F. Collins, Ogden
Smith, and M. Elizabeth Greene, the widow, better known as Bettie
Allen, who were authorized by special order to carry on and work
the plantation, etc.
The executors did not agree as to the disposition of the estate,
Mrs. Allen and Collins filing a provisional account of their
administration and praying for its approval, while Smith filed a
separate account, prayed for its approval, and stated that he
disagreed with his co-executors in several particulars, and
therefore filed an account in which his co-executors did not
concur. The principal dispute seems to have been over the cash left
by the deceased, which Mrs. Allen claimed under the will, and Smith
insisted belonged to the legal heirs who
Page 173 U. S. 391
were not cut off by the will. Mrs. Allen also claimed the crop
of the Rienzi Plantation, while Smith insisted it belonged to the
legatees named in the will, to whom the realty was bequeathed.
Oppositions to the approval of both accounts were also filed by
various parties interested in the estate, and for various reasons
not necessary to be here enumerated. Judgment was delivered by the
district court, June 10, 1895, settling the questions in dispute
between the parties interested, and an appeal was taken to the
Supreme Court of Louisiana, which rendered an opinion March 9,
1896, varying the decree of the court below to the extent of
holding Mrs. Allen entitled to the net proceeds of the crop for the
year 1894, but affirming it in other respects. 48 La.Ann. 1036. No
reference, however, was made in the proceedings up to this time to
the government bounty upon sugar, amounting to $11,569.35, which
was collected by Mrs. Allen and which forms the subject of the
present litigation.
This suit was initiated by a petition filed August 18, 1896, by
Collins and Mrs. Allen, for the approval of their final account,
and of the proposed distribution of the undistributed assets, among
which was the bounty granted by Congress for sugar produced on the
Rienzi Plantation for the year 1894, the portion received,
$11,569.35, being all that the estate was entitled to out of the
appropriation made by Congress for this purpose.
"This amount the accountants proposed to turn over to Mrs.
Bettie Allen, as the owner of the net proceeds of the crop of 1894
on the Rienzi Plantation under the will of the testator and the
decree of the supreme court."
Smith also filed a final account, and an opposition to that of
Mrs. Allen and Collins, particularly opposing giving any part of
the bounty to Mrs. Allen, stating that
"this money formed no part of the crop of 1894, is an unwilled
asset, and must be distributed among the legal heirs who have not
been cut off by the will in accordance with the petitioner's final
account filed herewith."
These heirs, as stated by him in his account, were (1) the
estate of Thomas H. Allen, Sr., a deceased brother of the testator,
represented by J. Louis Aucoin, administrator, (2) two children of
Mrs. Myra Turner, a deceased
Page 173 U. S. 392
sister, (3) five children of Mrs. Cynthia Smith, a deceased
sister. Opposition was also filed by these several classes of heirs
to the accounts of Mrs. Allen and Collins, and by certain other
heirs, who were not recognized by the executors, to that of Smith.
Upon consideration of these various pleadings and the testimony
introduced in connection therewith, the district court was of
opinion that the bounty formed no part of the crop proper, or the
proceeds thereof,
"though based on the crop, as a means of calculation, and
conditioned on the production of the crop by the owner of the
plantation under certain rules, it was a pure gratuity from the
government,"
that it did not therefore go to Mrs. Allen, under the will, but
to the heirs as an unwilled portion.
An appeal was taken to the supreme court by the Smith heirs, by
Ogden Smith, executor, and by Mrs. Allen and Collins. That court
first held that the bounty was a gratuity from the government,
though based upon an estimate of the crop, as a means of
calculation; that its allowance was conditioned on the fulfillment
by the deceased of certain prerequisites; that the equitable claim
of the deceased to the bounty had been created during his lifetime,
the license obtained, and all conditions precedent complied with;
that it formed no part of the crops of 1894 or 1895, nor of their
proceeds; that the executors did nothing but make the necessary
proofs preparatory to its collection, and receive payment of the
money;
"it must consequently be classed as an unwilled asset of the
deceased, and not as part of the net proceeds of the crop of 1894,
passing, under the will, to Mrs. Bettie Allen;"
and that it must pass to the account of the legal heirs. 49
La.Ann. 1096. Upon a rehearing, applied for by both parties, that
court modified its views and adjudged that the bounty money in
controversy be divided equally; that one-half be distributed among
the heirs, as an unwilled portion, and that the other half be
delivered to Mrs. Allen, as legatee. From this decree both parties
sued out a writ of error from this Court. 49 La.Ann. 1112.
Page 173 U. S. 393
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case involves the question whether, under the act of
Congress and the will of Richard H. Allen, the bounty of
eight-tenths of one percent per pound granted by Congress to the
"producer" of sugar was payable to his widow or to his heirs at
law.
In the course of the litigation in the state courts, a large
number of questions were raised and decided which are not pertinent
to this issue. So far as these questions depend upon the
construction of state laws or of the will of Mr. Allen, they are
beyond our cognizance. So far as the question of bounty depends
upon the construction of that law, the decision of the supreme
court is equally binding upon us, but, so far as it depends upon
the construction of the act of Congress awarding such bounty, it is
subject to reexamination here.
The course of legislation upon the subject of the sugar bounty
is set forth at length in the opinion of this Court in
United
States v. Realty Co., 163 U. S. 427, and
is briefly as follows:
By the Tariff Act of October 1, 1890, x. 1244, 26 Stat. 567, it
was provided, in paragraph 231 that on and after July 1, 1891, and
until July 1, 1905, there should be paid "to the producer of sugar"
a variable bounty, dependent upon polariscope tests, "under such
rules and regulations as the Commissioner of Internal Revenue . . .
shall prescribe." Then follow three paragraphs requiring the
producer to give notice to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue of
the place of production, the methods employed, and an estimate of
the amount to be produced, together with an application for a
license, and an accompanying bond. The commissioner was required to
issue
Page 173 U. S. 394
this license, and to certify to the Secretary of the Treasury
the amount of the bounty, for which the secretary was authorized to
draw warrants on the Treasury. This act was repealed August 28,
1894, c. 394, 28 Stat. 509, while the crop of 1894 was in progress
of growth and about a fortnight before the death of Mr. Allen. But
by a subsequent Act of March 2, 1895, c. 189, 28 Stat. 910, 933, it
was enacted that there should be paid to those "producers and
manufacturers of sugar" who had complied with the provisions of the
previous law a similar bounty upon sugar manufactured and produced
by them previous to August 28, 1894, upon which no bounty had been
previously paid. As the sugar in question in this case was not
manufactured and produced prior to August 28, 1894, this provision
was not applicable, but there was a further clause (under which the
bounty in this case was paid) to the effect that there should be
paid to "those producers who complied with the provisions" of the
previous bounty law of 1890, by filing an application for license
and bond thereunder required, prior to July 1, 1894, and who would
have been entitled to receive a license as provided for in said
act, a bounty of eight-tenths of a cent per pound on the sugars
actually manufactured and produced during that part of the fiscal
year ending June 30, 1895, comprised in the period commencing
August 20, 1894, and ending June 30, 1895, both days inclusive. The
constitutionality of this act was affirmed by this Court in
United States v. Realty Co., 163
U. S. 430.
At the time of Mr. Allen's death, September 19, 1894, and for
many years prior thereto, he was the owner of a valuable sugar
plantation upon which he was engaged in the cultivation of cane and
the manufacture of sugar. At this time there was standing in his
fields a large crop of cane, nearly ready for harvesting. In
anticipation of this crop and of the manufacture of sugar
therefrom, Mr. Allen had complied with all the provisions of the
bounty law, and would, but for the repeal of the act of 1894 about
one month prior to his death, have been entitled to collect the
bounty. While, then, there was no bounty provision in force at the
time of his death,
Page 173 U. S. 395
Congress, in March of the following year, enacted the bounty law
above specified in fulfillment of its moral obligation to
recompense those who had planted their cane upon the supposition
that the bounty granted by the act of 1890 would be continued. The
crop of cane upon his plantation at his death was harvested by his
executors at the expense of the funds in their hands, which expense
was deducted from the gross proceeds of the sugar.
The material provisions of his will are as follows:
"1. I give to my wife, Bettie Allen, one-half on my Rienzi
Plantation, and one-half of all tools, mules, etc."
"2. My executors shall have from one to five years to sell and
close up the estate."
"3. I will that my wife do have one-half of everything belonging
to Rienzi Plantation, except the claim due me by the United States.
[This was not the claim for bounty.]"
"4. When it [the plantation] is sold, half of all the proceeds,
cash, notes, etc., is to belong to my dear wife, Bettie Allen. . .
. As I fear property will be very low, I give my executors five
years to work for a good price."
"5. In the meantime that they are waiting to sell, the place can
be rented or worked so as to pay all taxes and other charges, any
over that to go to Mrs. Bettie Allen's credit."
Under the last clause of the will, the executors, while awaiting
a favorable opportunity to sell the plantation, were authorized to
work it so as to pay all taxes and other charges, and to place the
net proceeds to Mrs. Allen's credit. In construing this clause, the
Supreme Court of Louisiana held, upon the first hearing, 48 La.Ann.
1036, that Mistress Bettie was entitled to the net proceeds of the
crop of the Rienzi Plantation for the years 1894-95. At the time of
the filing of their first account by the executors, the crop of
1894 had not been sold by them, and the bounty granted by the Act
of March 2, 1895, had not been collected. Consequently these two
items were reserved, to be afterwards accounted for by the
executors. A further question, however, arose, and that was as to
whether, in making up the net proceeds of the crop of 1894, the
expenses incurred prior to the death of the testator
Page 173 U. S. 396
should be deducted, as well as those incurred by the executors
after the death of the testator. Both the district court and the
supreme court were of opinion that the will contemplated and dealt
with the renting or cultivation of the plantation after the death
of the testator, and during such a period of time as it might
remain under the administration of the executors pending a sale;
that the date at which the expenses were to begin was evidently
that at which the administration of the executors commenced, and
only those incurred during their administration should be deducted
from the proceeds of the crop in order to ascertain the net
proceeds thereof, including the expenses of making the sale. 49
La.Ann. 1096.
The supreme court was further of the opinion that the bounty
money which was collected from the government by the executors
formed no part of the crops of 1894 and 1895, nor of their
proceeds; that it was not
in esse at the time those crops
were grown and gathered; that the executors did nothing but make
the necessary proofs preparatory to its collection and receive
payment of the money, and that it should therefore be classed as an
unwilled asset of the deceased, and not as part of the net proceeds
of the crop of 1894, passing, under the will, to Mrs. Allen. 49
La.Ann. 1096. But upon a rehearing of this question, 49 La.Ann.
1112, the supreme court modified its views to a certain extent,
treated the case as one depending upon the question who was the
producer of the crop within the meaning of the act of Congress, and
held that the producer of the cane was to be the first to receive
the benefit of the bounty on complying with certain formalities;
that the act placed the manufacturer of the sugar, in the matter of
the bounty laws, in a secondary position, but that both production
and manufacture were essential in order to enable the producer to
recover the bounty; that, to determine who was the producer, it was
necessary to consider the questions of title and ownership; that
the crop had been planted and cultivated by Allen, and all expenses
to the date of his death were paid from his funds; that he had
earned the value of the crop on that date,
Page 173 U. S. 397
and had also earned a proportionate share of the bounty, not
because the bounty was a part of the crop or its proceeds, but
because it was granted to the producer of the crop; that, in
determining who was the producer, it could not exclude from
consideration the labor applied under the direction of the owner of
the plantation and the amount expended by him; that Mistress Bettie
was not the exclusive producer, and was therefore not entitled to
the whole bounty of the government granted to the producer who
produced the entire thing -- a crop.
In its opinion upon the rehearing, the supreme court adjudged
that, under the will of Allen, the proceeds of the manufacture of
sugar carried on after his death were for the account of Mrs.
Allen, and not for that of the estate, and that as a consequence of
this construction, Mrs. Allen was the manufacturer of the sugar
made in the sugar house -- that is to say that while the executors
may have manufactured the sugar, they did so as the agents and for
the account of Mrs. Allen, and she was therefore the producer of
the sugar insofar as the manufacture thereof was concerned. In
delivering the opinion, the court used the following language:
"But there are other clauses of the will which in our view
extend her right and show that she was the producer after the death
of Mr. Allen. She paid all the expenses of the crop. She was to
receive the proceeds under the terms of the will. Indeed, she was
the owner of the crop. She can well be considered, as we think, the
producer. We desire it to be well understood that in our opinion
the bounty money is no part of the crop or proceeds of the crop.
The question was who was the owner and producer of the crop after
the death of the testator?"
Having thus determined that under the will of Mr. Allen, she,
through the executors, was entitled to all the proceeds of the
manufacture of sugar in the sugar house, the court proceeded to
take away from Mrs. Allen a part of these proceeds upon the theory
that by the act of Congress, the bounty was given not to the
manufacturer of the sugar, but to the producer of the cane. In
doing this, it necessarily took from Mrs.
Page 173 U. S. 398
Allen a part of the bounty belonging to her as manufacturer of
sugar under the act of Congress, and gave it to the legal heirs of
Allen, because they had produced the cane from which the sugar had
been manufactured. This therefore necessarily raised a federal
question, since it involved a construction of the act of Congress.
The theory upon which the court did this is thus stated in the
opinion:
"The end of the bounty was to encourage the production of cane.
It devolved upon us to determine by whom the cane was produced. In
our judgment, after carefully reading the act, it is evident that
the producer was to be the first to receive the benefit of the
bounty. . . . The act (although it includes the manufacture of cane
into sugar as one of the essentials) places the manufacture of the
sugar, in matter of the bounty scheme, in a secondary position. In
other words, in our view, production was a first, and manufacture a
secondary, consideration. Each, however, was essential in order to
enable the producer to recover the bounty."
The conclusion of the court was that, as the cost of cultivation
was about equal to the cost of manufacture, the heirs at law were
entitled to one-half of the bounty and Mrs. Allen the other
half.
The correctness of this construction is the question presented
for our consideration. In the final production of sugar, there are
two distinct processes involved: (1) the raising of the cane; (2)
the manufacture of the sugar from the cane so raised. If the cane
be raised and the sugar be manufactured by the same person, he is,
beyond peradventure, the "producer" of the sugar within the meaning
of the statute, but if the cane be raised by one person and the
sugar manufactured by another, which is the producer within the
intent of the act? Or, if, as in this case, the cane be raised by
the testator, and he die while the crop is growing, and his
executors reap it and convert it into sugar, which is the producer,
and which is entitled to the net proceeds of the crop? Conceding
the question of what are the net proceeds of the crop is one
determinable by the state courts alone, it is so commingled with
the federal question who, under the act of Congress, was the
producer of this crop that it is scarcely possible to give a
construction to the
Page 173 U. S. 399
one without also taking into consideration the bearing of the
other. In this particular, the case is not unlike that of
Briggs v. Walker, 171 U. S. 466, in
which, where certain moneys had been collected of the United States
by Briggs' executors, this Court assumed to determine who were the
"legal representatives" of Briggs and for whose benefit, under the
act of Congress, the money had been collected.
It is quite evident that Allen himself was not the producer of
the sugar. He had planted the crop of cane upon his own plantation.
He had given notice and a bond to the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, and had applied for a license. But he had done nothing
towards the production of the sugar at the time of his death beyond
raising the cane, which certainly would not have entitled him to be
considered a producer of the sugar. The word "producer" does not
differ essentially, in its legal aspects, from the word
"manufacturer" except that it is more commonly used to denote a
person who raises agricultural crops and puts them in a condition
for the market. In the case of sugar, a process of strict
manufacture is also involved in converting the cane into its final
product. In a number of cases arising in this Court under the
revenue laws, it is said that the word "manufacture" is ordinarily
used to denote an article upon the material of which labor has been
expended to make the finished product; that such product is often
the result of several processes, each one of which is a separate
and distinct manufacture, and usually receives a separate name, or,
as stated in
Tide Water Oil Co. v. United States,
171 U. S. 210,
171 U. S.
216:
"Raw materials may be, and often are, subjected to successive
processes of manufacture, each one of which is complete in itself
and several of which may be required to make the final product.
Thus, logs are first manufactured into boards, planks, joists,
scantling, etc., and then, by entirely different processes, are
fashioned into boxes, furniture, doors, window sashes, trimmings,
and the thousand and one articles manufactured wholly or in part of
wood. The steel spring of a watch is made ultimately from iron ore,
but by a large number of processes or transformations, each
successive step in which is a distinct process of manufacture, and
for
Page 173 U. S. 400
which the article so manufactured receives a different
name."
So the one who raises the cane is undoubtedly entitled to be
considered the producer of the cane, but he is not the producer of
the sugar. That appellation is reserved for him who turns out the
finished product.
Neither can Mrs. Allen nor the heirs of her husband be said to
be the direct producers of the sugar. Neither of them was the owner
of the crop, which belonged to the plantation while growing, and
would, as hereinafter stated, have passed to the purchaser had a
sale been made while the cane was still uncut. One-half of the
plantation passed under the will to Mistress Bettie, and the other
half to the heirs of her husband.
There remain only the executors, who, as between the estate of
Allen and the government, must be deemed the producers of the
sugar. By the will, they were authorized to rent or work the
plantation, as they pleased, to pay all taxes and other charges and
to put the residue to the credit of Mrs. Allen. The inchoate right
to the bounty obtained by Allen before his death was a personal
asset which undoubtedly passed to the executors, who subsequently
perfected that right and received the money.
Of course this money did not belong to the executors personally.
They held it for the benefit of the estate, and as agents for all
persons interested therein, and the question, as between the
different heirs and legatee, who shall be deemed the producer of
the sugar? remains to be settled. We are all of opinion that this
question must be answered in favor of Mistress Bettie. If the cane,
when cut, had been sold, the proceeds, over and above all expenses
incurred since her husband's death, would have belonged to her, but
not the bounty
eo nomine, since the sugar had not been
produced nor the bounty earned. But if such sale had been made, the
cane undoubtedly would have fetched a price largely increased by
the fact that the purchaser would receive a bounty upon the
manufacture of the sugar. It is impossible to suppose that the
price of the cane would not be seriously affected by the promise of
the bounty, though perhaps not to the full amount of such
Page 173 U. S. 401
bounty. In this way, Mrs. Allen would have received indirectly
the benefit of the bounty, although she did not produce the sugar.
On the other hand, if the cane be converted into sugar, it is
equally just that she should receive the bounty. To deny it to her
would place her in a worse position than she would have been in if
the executors had sold the cane when it was cut. Whether she
received it directly or indirectly makes no difference in
principle.
The difficulty with the position of the Supreme Court of
Louisiana is this: that if A should raise the cane and sell it to
B, who manufactured it into sugar, A and B would be entitled to
share in the bounty, although A may have received a much larger
price for his cane than he would have received if there had been no
bounty. Under the terms of the will, Mistress Bettie was entitled
to receive the entire proceeds of the crop over and above the
expenses, taxes, and other charges, and whether these came from a
price received from the cane increased by the offer of a bounty or
from the bounty actually received upon the production of the sugar
is wholly immaterial. To give to one who raises the cane and sells
it to a manufacturer any part of the bounty is in reality to give
him a double bounty, since he must necessarily receive one in the
enhanced price given for the cane. On the other hand, the
manufacturer of the sugar is entitled to the proceeds of his sugar,
and to whatever the law has annexed thereto as an incident.
To return to the illustration of manufactures: can it be
possible that, if a bounty were offered for the manufacture of
furniture, the manufacturer of the finished product would be
obliged to share such bounty with the owner of the trees, or the
manufacturer of the lumber cut from such trees from which the
furniture was made? Or, under similar circumstances, would the
manufacturer of watches be compelled to share the bounty with the
scores of prior manufacturers who contributed directly or
indirectly to the production of the various articles of mechanism
which go to make up the finished watch? To state this question is
to answer it, and yet, if the producer of the cane be entitled to
any portion of the
Page 173 U. S. 402
bounty, why are not the manufacturers of the constituent parts
of a finished product?
The Supreme Court of Louisiana held that the widow was not
chargeable with any part of the expense of the crop incurred prior
to her husband's death, but that does not change her attitude to
the sugar, as its actual producer, nor deprive her of the benefit
of the bounty; nor do we think that her right to such bounty is
affected by the fact that the bounty law in existence when Allen
applied for his license was repealed before his death, and another
law passed in the following spring renewing the bounty applicable
to the crop of the previous year. Such act was passed, as was held
by this Court in
United States v. Realty Co., 163 U.
S. 427, in recognition of a moral obligation to those
who had put in their crop the previous year upon the faith of the
bounty law then in existence. It was not so much a gift by the
government as a reward paid in consideration of expenses incurred
by the planters upon the faith of the government's promise to pay a
bounty to the manufacturers and producers of sugar. As applied to
this case, we think the act of 1895 should be construed as a
continuation of the prior bounty. To say that it is an "unwilled
asset" is practically to hold that it is a gift from the government
"without anything in the nature of a consideration," and that the
amount of sugar produced is only to be considered as the measure of
the bounty. This dissociates the bounty altogether from the motive
which actuated Congress in granting it, and turns it into a mere
donation of so much money, which it cannot be presumed to have
made, even if it had the power. Bounties granted by a government
are never pure donations, but are allowed either in consideration
of services rendered or to be rendered, objects of public interest
to be obtained, production or manufacture to stimulated, or moral
obligations to be recognized. To grant a bounty irrespective
altogether of these considerations would be an act of pure
agrarianism, and to determine who is entitled to the benefit of the
bounty is but little more than to determine who has rendered the
consideration.
Page 173 U. S. 403
The act giving the supplementary bounty to replace that which
should have been paid under the original act clearly did not
contemplate giving a bounty to any other producer than the one
designated by the original act. That act plainly gives the bounty
only to the manufacturer, and not to the grower. It follows,
therefore, that the court, accepting its construction of the will
as unquestionable, declared that, although Mrs. Allen was a
manufacturer of the sugar and the successor of Mr. Allen in that
regard, she was yet not entitled to the whole bounty because, under
its construction of the act of Congress, the grower of the cane was
the primary person intended to be benefited by the act. As it is
obvious that the person intended to be benefited by the act of
Congress was the manufacturer, it follows that the Supreme Court of
Louisiana, after finding that Mrs. Allen was the manufacturer, has
taken from her a portion of the bounty to which she was entitled
under the act of Congress on the erroneous theory that that act
gave the bounty to the grower of the cane, instead of to the
manufacturer.
We do not undertake to say that the crop of growing or maturing
cane passed to Mrs. Allen at the date of her husband's death,
since, if the executors had chosen to sell the plantation the next
day, this cane would have passed to the vendee. In this, the common
law and the civil law agree. (1 Washb. on Real Prop., 5th ed. 11;
Code Napoleon art. 520.) The same principle is incorporated in the
Civil Code of Louisiana:
"Art. 465. Standing crops and the fruits of trees not gathered,
and trees before they are cut down, are likewise immovable, and are
considered as part of the land to which they are attached. As soon
as the crop is cut and the fruits gathered or the trees cut down,
although not yet carried off, they are movables."
But what she did own was the proceeds of the crop -- the right,
in case the plantation was not sold, to have this crop harvested
for her benefit, and if manufactured into sugar, to have the
proceeds of such sugar and all the incidents thereto placed to her
credit.
For the reasons above given, we think she must be considered as
the producer of the sugar, and that it is immaterial that she
Page 173 U. S. 404
was not the producer of the cane, since the two are distinct and
separate articles of production.
It results from this that the decree of the Supreme Court of
Louisiana must be reversed, and the cases remanded to that court
for further proceedings in consonance with this opinion.