In the war with Mexico, the port of San Francisco was conquered
by the arms of the United States in the year 1846, and shortly
afterwards the United States had military possession of all of
Upper California. Early in 1847, the President of the United
States, as constitutional commander-in-chief of the army and navy,
authorized the military and naval commanders of the United States
forces in California to exercise the belligerent rights of a
conqueror, and to form a civil and military government for the
conquered territory, with power to impose duties on imports and
tonnage for the support of such government and of the army, which
had the conquest in possession.
This was done, and tonnage and import duties were levied under a
war tariff, which had been established by the civil government for
that purpose, until official notice was received by the civil and
military governor of California, that a treaty of peace had been
made with Mexico by which Upper California had been ceded to the
United States.
Upon receiving this intelligence the governor directed that
import and tonnage duties should thereafter be levied in conformity
with such as were to be paid in the other ports of the United
States, by the acts of Congress, and for such purpose he appointed
the defendant in this suit, collector of the port of San
Francisco.
The plaintiffs now seek to recover from him certain tonnage
duties and imposts upon foreign merchandise paid by them to the
defendant as collector between the 3d of February, 1848, the date
of the treaty of peace, and the 13th of November, 1849, when the
collector appointed by the President, according to law, entered
upon the duties of his office, upon the ground that they had been
illegally exacted.
The formation of the civil government in California, when it was
done, was the lawful exercise of a belligerent right over a
conquered territory. It was the existing government when the
territory was ceded to the United States as a conquest, and did not
cease as a matter of course or as a consequence of the restoration
of peace, and it was rightfully continued after peace was made with
Mexico until Congress legislated otherwise, under its
constitutional power, to dispose of and make all needful rules and
regulations respecting the territory or other property belonging to
the United States.
The tonnage duties and duties upon foreign goods imported into
San Francisco were legally demanded and lawfully collected by the
civil governor whilst the war continued and afterwards from the
ratification of the treaty of peace until the revenue system of the
United States was put into practical operation in California under
the acts of Congress passed for that purpose.
Cross, Hobson & Co., brought an action of assumpsit to
recover back from Harrison, moneys paid to him while acting as
collector of customs at the port of San Francisco, in California,
for tonnage on vessels and duties on merchandise, not of the
growth, produce, or manufacture of the United States, imported by
the plaintiffs from foreign places into California, and there
landed, between February 3, 1848, and November 12, 1849.
The plea was
nonassumpsit, and the verdict and judgment
were for Harrison, in January, 1852.
The bill of exceptions contained the substance of much
testimony
Page 57 U. S. 165
offered by the plaintiff, which it is not necessary to recite,
and also the whole of the Senate Document, No. 18, of the first
session of the thirty-first Congress. The opinion of the Court
contains a statement of the material parts of this evidence.
Page 57 U. S. 181
MR. JUSTICE WAYNE delivered the opinion of the Court.
It was an action brought by Cross, Hobson & Company against
Harrison, for the return of duties alleged to be illegally exacted
by Harrison whilst he was acting as collector of the customs at the
port of San Francisco, in California. The claim covered various
amounts of money which were paid at intervals between the 3d day of
February, 1848, and the 13th of November, 1849. The first of these
dates was that of the treaty of peace between the United States and
Mexico, and the latter when Mr. Collier, a person who had been
regularly appointed collector at that port, entered upon the
performance of the duties of his office. During the whole of this
period it was alleged by the plaintiffs that there existed no legal
authority to receive or collect any duty whatever accruing upon
goods imported from foreign countries.
The period of time above mentioned was subdivided by the
plaintiffs in the prayers which they made to the court below, into
two portions, to each of which they supposed that different rules
of law attached. The three periods may be stated as follows:
Page 57 U. S. 182
3d of February, 1848, the date of the treaty of peace between
the United States and Mexico. 9 Stat. 922 to 943.
3d of March, 1849, when the act of Congress was passed,
including San Francisco within one of the collection districts of
the United States, and
13th of November, 1849, when Collector Collier entered upon the
duties of his office.
In order to show what was the state of things on the 3d of
February, 1848, it is necessary to refer to some of the public
documents which were offered in evidence by the plaintiffs, being
Senate Document No. 18 of the first session of the thirty-first
Congress.
On the 19th of August, 1847, H. W. Halleck, signing himself
"Lieutenant of Engineers and Secretary of State for the Territory
of California," issued a circular to certain persons who had been
appointed collectors of the customs, in which he recited that the
commander-in-chief of the naval forces had been authorized by the
President of the United States to establish port regulations, to
prescribe the conditions under which American and foreign vessels
might be admitted into the ports of California, and also to
regulate the import duties. The circular then prescribed certain
rules which were to be observed.
On the 15th of September, 1847, Commodore Shubrick prescribed
certain rates, or scales of duties, which were confirmed on the
14th of the ensuing October, by R. B. Mason who signed himself
Colonel of the 1st Dragoons and Governor of California.
On the 20th of October, 1847, Colonel Mason still styling
himself Governor of California, issued an order saying, that
"recent instructions from the President of the United States made
the officers of the army and navy the collectors of the customs in
California." The arrangement was made accordingly.
This was the state of things up to the 3d of February, 1848, the
first epoch mentioned by the plaintiffs in their prayers to the
court. The war tariff was collected by officers of the army and
navy.
On the 3d of February, 1848, a treaty of peace was signed
between the United States and Mexico, the ratifications of which
were exchanged on the 30th of May ensuing. Some alterations were
made in the mode of collecting the revenue during this second
period of time, namely, between the 3d of February, 1848, and 3d of
March, 1849, which it is necessary to notice.
On the 26th of July, 1848, Colonel Mason still calling himself
Governor of California, issued a number of regulations for
Page 57 U. S. 183
the government of the custom house, amongst which the following
two may be mentioned:
"7. If any master of a vessel shall be detected in landing, or
attempting to land, anywhere in California, any goods or
merchandise, without permit from a collector, he shall be fined for
every such offense in the sum of five hundred dollars, and the
goods or merchandise so landed, or attempted to be landed, and the
boat or boats through which such landing is effected or attempted,
shall be seized, forfeited, and sold by the nearest collector."
"8. If any person or persons other than the master of a vessel
shall be detected in landing, or attempting to land, anywhere in
California, any goods or merchandise, without permit from a
collector, he or they shall be fined in the sum of one hundred
dollars, and the goods or merchandise so landed, or attempted to be
landed, and the boat or boats through which such landing is
effected or attempted, shall be seized, forfeited, and sold by the
nearest collector."
On the 7th of August, 1848, a proclamation was issued to the
people of California, by R. B. Mason the governor, announcing the
ratification of the treaty of peace, by which Upper California was
ceded to the United States.
On the 9th of August, H. W. Halleck, Lieutenant of Engineers and
Secretary of State, wrote to Captain Folsom, the collector of the
customs at San Francisco, directing him to perform the duties until
further orders, but announcing that he would be relieved as soon as
some suitable citizen could be found to be appointed his successor.
In the meantime, he was told
"The tariff of duties for the collection of military
contributions will immediately cease, and the revenue laws and
tariff of the United States will be substituted in its place."
In order to illustrate the view which Colonel Mason took of his
position, it may be proper to insert the following extract from a
letter written by him to the War Department on the 14th of August,
1848:
"In like manner, if all customs were withdrawn and the ports
thrown open free to the world, San Francisco would be made the
depot of all the foreign goods in the north Pacific, to the injury
of our revenue and the interests of our own merchants. To prevent
this great influx of foreign goods into the country duty free, I
feel it my duty to attempt the collection of duties according to
the United States tariff of 1846. This will render it necessary for
me to appoint temporary collectors &c., in the several ports of
entry, for the military force is too much reduced to attend to
those duties."
"I am fully aware that, in taking these steps, I have no
Page 57 U. S. 184
further authority than that the existing government must
necessarily continue until some other is organized to take its
place, for I have been left without any definite instructions in
reference to the existing state of affairs. But the calamities and
disorders which would surely follow the absolute withdrawal of even
a show of authority, impose on me, in my opinion, the imperative
duty to pursue the course I have indicated, until the arrival of
dispatches from Washington which I hope are already on their way
relative to the organization of a regular civil government. In the
meantime, however, should the people refuse to obey the existing
authorities, or the merchants refuse to pay any duties, my force is
inadequate to compel obedience."
On the 3d of September, 1848, Governor Mason appointed Edward H.
Harrison temporary collector of the port of San Francisco, with a
salary of two thousand dollars per annum, provided that so much was
collected over and above the expenses of the custom house.
In order further to illustrate the view which was taken by the
executive branch of the government, of the existing condition of
things in California, it is proper to insert an extract from a
dispatch written by Mr. Buchanan, Secretary of State, to Mr.
Voorhees, on the 7th of October, 1848. It is as follows:
"The President, in his annual message at the commencement of the
next session, will recommend all these great measures to Congress
in the strongest terms and will use every effort, consistent with
his duty, to insure their accomplishment."
"In the meantime, the condition of the people of California is
anomalous, and will require on their part the exercise of great
prudence and discretion. By the conclusion of the Treaty of Peace,
the military government which was established over them under the
laws of war, as recognized by the practice of all civilized
nations, has ceased to derive its authority from this source of
power. But is there for this reason no government in California?
Are life, liberty, and property under the protection of no existing
authorities? This would be a singular phenomenon in the face of the
world, and especially among American citizens, distinguished as
they are above all other people for their law-abiding character.
Fortunately they are not reduced to this sad condition. The
termination of the war left an existing government, a government
de facto, in full operation, and this will continue, with
the presumed consent of the people, until Congress shall provide
for them a territorial government. The great law of necessity
justifies this conclusion. The consent of the people is
irresistibly inferred from the fact that no civilized community
could possibly desire to abrogate
Page 57 U. S. 185
an existing government, when the alternative presented would be
to place themselves in a state of anarchy, beyond the protection of
all laws, and reduce them to the unhappy necessity of submitting to
the dominion of the strongest."
"This government
de facto will, of course, exercise no
power inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution of the
United States, which is the supreme law of the land. For this
reason, no import duties can be levied in California on articles
the growth, produce, or manufacture of the United States, as no
such duties can be imposed in any other part of our Union on the
productions of California. Nor can new duties be charged in
California upon such foreign productions as have already paid
duties in any of our ports of entry, for the obvious reason that
California is within the territory of the United States. I shall
not enlarge upon this subject, however, as the Secretary of the
Treasury will perform that duty."
At the same time, dispatches were issued by the War and Treasury
Departments to their respective officers, of similar import to the
above. Mr. Walker, the Secretary of the Treasury, after providing
for the reciprocal admission of goods which were the growth
&c., of California and the United States, free of duty, into
the ports of each, thus provided for the case under consideration,
so as to protect the revenue:
"Third. Although the Constitution of the United States extends
to California, and Congress have recognized it by law as a part of
the Union, and legislated for it as such, yet it is not brought by
law within the limits of any collection district, nor has Congress
authorized the appointment of any officers to collect the revenue
accruing on the import of foreign dutiable goods into that
territory. Under these circumstances, although this department may
be unable to collect the duties accruing on importations from
foreign countries into California, yet if foreign dutiable goods
should be introduced there and shipped thence to any port or place
of the United States, they will be subject to duty as also to all
the penalties prescribed by law when such importation is attempted
without the payment of duties."
"R. J. WALKER"
"
Secretary of the Treasury"
When these papers reached California, some doubt was entertained
whether or not the revenue laws would be enforced, and application
was made to Commodore Jones, then commanding the naval forces in
the Pacific, to know whether he would use the forces under his
command to aid the collector in seizing and confiscating goods
&c.; to which the commodore replied that he would so employ the
force under his command.
On the 23d of February, 1849, Cross, Hobson & Company
Page 57 U. S. 186
protested against the payment of $105.62, duties which accrued
upon an importation by the French bark
Staonele, and also
protested against the payment of duties upon all other
importations, past, present, or to come.
In order still further to explain the views of those who
administered the government in California, it may be proper to
introduce another extract from instructions which were issued on
the 2d of February, 1849, by H. W. Hallecks, Secretary of State, to
Mr. Harrison, the collector, namely:
"This view of the subject presents a ready reply to the
questions proposed in your letter. No vessel can demand as a right
to enter any foreign dutiable goods here, and you will not be
liable to prosecution for refusing such entry, and by a voluntary
payment of her duties here, in preference to going to a regularly
established port of entry, such vessel binds herself to abide by
the revenue laws of the United States, in the absence of all
instructions to the contrary."
On the 3d of March, 1849, another of the periods of time
mentioned in the prayers to the court, Congress passed an Act, 9
Stat. 400, making the port of San Francisco a collection
district.
On the 13th of November, 1849, Collector Collier, who had been
regularly appointed, entered upon the execution of his duty at San
Francisco. This was the third period referred to in the prayers to
the court.
In April, 1851, Cross, Hobson & Company brought an action of
trespass on the case in the Circuit Court of the United States for
the Southern District of New York against Edward H. Harrison to
recover sundry sums of money paid, under the above protest, for
duties upon goods imported into San Francisco during the period
between the 3d of February, 1848, and the 12th of November,
1849.
Upon the trial, the jury, under the instructions of the court,
found a verdict for the defendant.
The bill of exceptions contained the deposition of sundry
persons as to the payment and other facts in the case, and also the
whole of the Senate Document above mentioned.
The counsel for the plaintiffs then rested, and the counsel for
the plaintiffs thereupon prayed the court to charge and instruct
the jury, as matter of law, as follows:
"1. That during the period from the 3d day of February, 1848,
the date of the treaty of peace and limits with the Republic of
Mexico, and the 3d of March, 1849, the date of the act of Congress
which erected the State of California into a collection district of
the United States, no duties accrue to the United States on
merchandise not the production of the United States nor of
Page 57 U. S. 187
vessels not of the United States which arrived within the limits
of California, ceded by said treaty to the United States, and that
the exaction by the defendant of such alleged duties on such goods
imported into California by the plaintiffs within said period was
not authorized by any law of the United States, and was therefore
illegal."
"2. That during the period from the 3d of March, 1849, when the
act of Congress erected the State of California into a collection
district, and the 13th of November, 1849, when Collector Collier
entered upon his duties as collector of customs at the port of San
Francisco, in said district, the exaction of alleged duties to the
United States, by the defendant, was not authorized by any law of
the United States, and was therefore illegal unless the jury shall
find that the defendant was legally appointed and qualified to act
as collector of the customs at San Francisco."
"3. That if the jury shall find that on the 23d February, 1849,
the plaintiffs made their written protest against all exactions
that then were or thereafter should be made by said defendant, as
unauthorized by any act of Congress and illegal, and that moneys
then and thenceforward were demanded as alleged duties to the
United States by said defendant, and were paid under coercion of
military power and duress, and not in pursuance of any law of the
United States, that then such exactions were unauthorized and
illegal, and the jury must find for the plaintiffs."
"4. That if the jury shall find from the evidence that alleged
duties were exacted by the defendant from the plaintiffs between
the 3d February, 1848, and the 12th November, 1849, by coercion and
duress, and against their remonstrance and protest, that then the
plaintiffs are entitled to the customary interest of California
upon such exactions."
Whereupon the court,
pro forma, then and there charged
and instructed the jury in conformity with the following prayers,
in conformity with which the defendant's counsel insisted and
prayed the court to instruct the jury as matters of law:
"1. That between the 3d February, 1848, and the 3d March, 1849,
duties did accrue to the United States, on foreign merchandise, not
the production of the United States, and on foreign vessels not of
the United States, which were imported into and arrived within the
limits of California, as ceded to the United States by the treaty
of peace and limits with the Republic of Mexico, signed at
Guadaloupe Hidalgo."
"2. That after the Act of 3 March, 1849, erecting the State of
California into a collection district of the United States, took
effect, duties accrued to the United States, both on foreign
Page 57 U. S. 188
merchandise, not the production of the United States, and on
foreign vessels not of the United States, imported and brought
within the limits of such collection district."
"3. That if, from the evidence in the cause, the jury shall find
that between the 3d February, 1848, and 12 November, 1849, the
plaintiffs were allowed by the defendant to enter their said
foreign goods and vessels at another port of the United States
within a collection district, and thereafter to land the same at
San Francisco without further exaction of duties, and that the
plaintiffs neglected so to do, and elected to enter and land the
same at San Francisco, and pay duties thereon, and that the duties
were paid by defendant to the use of the United States, that then
the said payment of duties was voluntary and not coercive, and the
jury must find for the defendant."
"4. That if the jury shall find that the plaintiffs paid duties
to the defendant on foreign merchandise, and on foreign vessels,
not of the United States, between 3 February, 1848, and 12
November, 1849, and that such payments were illegal but voluntary,
and made through mistake of law, then the plaintiffs are not
entitled to interest upon such exactions, and that upon the whole
evidence the payments aforesaid were voluntary and not
coercive."
And the court further,
pro forma, refused to instruct
and charge the jury in conformity with the points insisted upon by
the plaintiffs' counsel, and in conformity with which he had prayed
the court to charge and instruct the jury as aforesaid.
Upon this exception, the case came up to this Court.
This statement presents the case of the plaintiffs as strongly
as it can be made from the record, and that contains every fact and
document having any connection with the subject. The cause has been
argued here with much research. Every argument has been brought to
bear upon it by counsel on both sides, which can enter into its
consideration. It seems, from the institution of the suit until
now, to have been conducted with the wish upon the part of the
United States to give to the plaintiffs every opportunity to
establish their claim judicially, if that could be done, and with a
desire upon its part to obtain from this Court a decision as to
what are the rights of the United States in respect to tonnage and
impost duties, in such a conjuncture as that was, when California
was ceded by treaty to the United States, before Congress had
authorized such duties to be collected there by a special act. We
have received much assistance from the argument, and make the
acknowledgment the more readily because it has enabled us to come
to conclusions which we believe will be satisfactory, though
adverse from the claim of the plaintiffs.
Page 57 U. S. 189
The purpose of the suit is to recover from the defendant certain
tonnage duties and imposts which were paid to him by the plaintiffs
upon ships which had arrived in San Francisco, and upon foreign
merchandise landed there from them, between the 3d February, 1848,
and the 13th November, 1849. Harrison had been appointed collector
for the port of San Francisco by Colonel Mason military Governor of
California. He told the plaintiffs, officially, that he would not
permit them to land their goods without the payment of duties;
stating if they attempted to do so, without having made an entry of
them, that they would be seized and forfeited. He placed an
inspector of the customs on board of the vessels of the plaintiffs,
to prevent any merchandise from being landed from them without
permits and entries, and when they complained that the duties which
they were required to pay were illegal exactions, which they
protested against, the collector refused to receive the duties
under protest, and told the plaintiffs that they might enter their
ships at some other port in the United States, and then discharge
their goods at San Francisco. That he considered San Francisco a
port in the United States at which foreign goods could not be
landed without the payment of duties. It is as well to remark here,
though the same fact appears in our statement of the case already
given, that the duties for which the plaintiffs sue were paid by
them between the 3d February, 1848, and the 12th November, 1849.
They were paid, however, until some time in the fall of 1848, at
the rate of the war tariff; which had been established early in the
year before by the direction of the President of the United
States.
The authority for that purpose given to the commander-in-chief
of our naval force on that station was to establish port
regulations to prescribe the conditions upon which American and
foreign vessels were to be admitted into the ports of California
and to regulate import duties. That war tariff, however, was
abandoned as soon as the military governor had received from
Washington information of the exchange and ratification of the
treaty with Mexico, and duties were afterwards levied in conformity
with such as Congress had imposed upon foreign merchandise imported
into the other ports of the United States, Upper California having
been ceded by the treaty to the United States. This last was done
with the assent of the Executive of the United States, or without
any interference to prevent it. Indeed, from the letter of the then
Secretary of State, and from that of the Secretary of the Treasury,
we cannot doubt that the action of the military Governor of
California was recognized as allowable and lawful by Mr. Polk and
his cabinet. We think it was a rightful and correct recognition
Page 57 U. S. 190
under all the circumstances, and when we say rightful, we mean
that it was constitutional, although Congress had not passed an act
to extend the collection of tonnage and import duties to the ports
of California.
California, or the port of San Francisco, had been conquered by
the arms of the United States as early as 1846. Shortly afterward,
the United States had military possession of all of Upper
California. Early in 1847, the President, as constitutional
commander-in-chief of the army and navy, authorized the military
and naval commander of our forces in California to exercise the
belligerent rights of a conqueror, and to form a civil government
for the conquered country, and to impose duties on imports and
tonnage as military contributions for the support of the
government, and of the army which had the conquest in possession.
We will add, by way of note to this opinion, references to all of
the correspondence of the government upon this subject; now only
referring to the letter of the Secretary of War to General Kearney,
of the 10th of May, 1847, which was accompanied with a tariff of
duties on imports and tonnage, which had been prepared by the
Secretary of the Treasury, with forms of entry and permits for
landing goods, all of which was reported by the Secretary to the
President on the 30th of March, 1847. Senate Doc. No. 1, 1st
session, 30th Congress, 1847, 567, 583. No one can doubt that these
orders of the President, and the action of our army and navy
commander in California, in conformity with them, was according to
the law of arms and the right of conquest, or that they were
operative until the ratification and exchange of a treaty of peace.
Such would be the case upon general principles in respect to war
and peace between nations. In this instance it is recognized by the
treaty itself. Nothing is stipulated in that treaty to be binding
upon the parties to it, or from the date of the signature of the
treaty, but that commissioners should be appointed by the
general-in-chief of the forces of the United States, with such as
might be appointed by the Mexican government, to make a provisional
suspension of hostilities that, in the places occupied by our arms,
constitutional order might be reestablished as regards the
political, administrative, and judicial branches in those places,
so far as that might be permitted by the circumstances of military
occupation. All else was contingent until the ratifications of the
treaty were exchanged, which was done on the 30th of May, 1848, at
Queretaro; and there is in the 3d article of the treaty a full
recognition by Mexico of the belligerent rights exercised by the
United States during the war in its ports which had been conquered.
In that article, besides other things provided for, it was
stipulated that
Page 57 U. S. 191
the United States, upon the ratifications of the treaty by the
two republics, should dispatch orders to all persons in charge of
the custom houses at all ports occupied by the forces of the United
States, to deliver possession of the same to persons authorized by
Mexico to receive them, together with all bonds and evidences of
debts for duties on importations and exportations not yet fallen
due, and that an exact account should be made out, showing the
entire amount of all duties on imports and exports collected at
such custom houses or elsewhere in Mexico by the authority of the
United States after the ratification of the treaty by Mexico, with
the cost of collection, all of which was to be paid to the Mexican
government, at the City of Mexico, within three months after the
exchange of ratifications, subject to a deduction of what had been
the cost of collection.
The plaintiffs, therefore, can have no right to the return of
any moneys paid by them as duties on foreign merchandise in San
Francisco up to that date. Until that time, California had not been
ceded in fact to the United States, but it was a conquered
territory within which the United States were exercising
belligerent rights, and whatever sums were received for duties upon
foreign merchandises, they were paid under them.
But after the ratification of the treaty, California became a
part of the United States, or a ceded, conquered territory. Our
inquiry here is to be whether or not the cession gave any right to
the plaintiffs to have the duties restored to them, which they may
have paid between the ratifications and exchange of the treaty and
the notification of that fact by our government to the military
governor of California. It was not received by him until two months
after the ratification, and not then with any instructions or even
remote intimation from the President that the civil and military
government, which had been instituted during the war, was
discontinued. Up to that time, whether such an intimation had or
had not been given, duties had been collected under the war tariff,
strictly in conformity with the instructions which had been
received from Washington.
It will certainly not be denied that those instructions were
binding upon those who administered the civil government in
California until they had notice from their own government that a
peace had been finally concluded. Or that those who were locally
within its jurisdiction, or who had property there, were not bound
to comply with those regulations of the government, which its
functionaries were ordered to execute. Or that anyone could claim a
right to introduce into the territory of that government foreign
merchandise, without the payment of duties which had been
originally imposed under belligerent
Page 57 U. S. 192
rights, because the territory had been ceded by the original
possessor and enemy to the conqueror. Or that the mere fact of a
territory having been ceded by one sovereignty to another, opens it
to a free commercial intercourse with all the world, as a matter of
course, until the new possessor has legislated some terms upon
which that may be done. There is no such commercial liberty known
among nations, and the attempt to introduce it in this instance is
resisted by all of those considerations which have made foreign
commerce between nations conventional. "The treaty that gives the
right of commerce, is the measure and rule of that right." Vattel,
c. 8, ยง 93. The plaintiffs in this case could claim no privilege
for the introduction of their goods into San Francisco between the
ratifications of the treaty with Mexico and the official
annunciation of it to the civil government in California, other
than such as that government permitted under the instructions of
the government of the United States.
We must consider them as having paid the duties upon their
importations voluntarily, notwithstanding that they protested
against the right of the collector to exact them. Their protest was
made from a misconception of the principles applicable to the
circumstances under which those duties were claimed, and from their
misapprehension of what were the commercial consequences resulting
from the treaty of peace with Mexico and the cession of California
to the United States. That treaty gave them no right to carry
foreign goods there upon which duties had not been paid in one of
our ports of entry. The best test of the correctness of what has
just been said is this: that if such goods had been landed there
duty free, they could not have been shipped to any other port in
the United States without being liable to pay duty.
Having considered and denied the claim of the plaintiffs to a
restoration of the duties paid by them from the date of the treaty
up to the time when official notice of its ratification and
exchange were received in California, we pass on to the examination
of their claim from that time until the revenue system in respect
to tonnage and import duties had been put into practical operation
in California under the act of Congress passed for that purpose.
The ratification of the treaty of peace was proclaimed in
California, by Colonel Mason on the 7th of August, 1848. Up to this
time, it must be remembered that Captain Folsom, of the
quartermaster's department of the army, had been the collector of
duties under the war tariff. On the 9th of August, he was informed
by Lieutenant Halleck, of the Engineer Corps, who was the Secretary
of State of the civil government of California, that he would be
relieved as soon as
Page 57 U. S. 193
a suitable citizen could be found for his successor. He was also
told that
"the tariff of duties for the collection of military
contributions was immediately to cease, and that the revenue laws
and tariff of the United States will be substituted in its
place."
The view taken by governor Mason of his position, has been given
in our statement. The result was to continue the existing
government, as he had not received from Washington definite
instructions in reference to the existing state of things in
California.
His position was unlike anything that had preceded it in the
history of our country. The view taken of it by himself has been
given in the statement in the beginning of this opinion. It was not
without its difficulties, both as regards the principle upon which
he should act and the actual state of affairs in California. He
knew that the Mexican inhabitants of it had been remitted by the
treaty of peace to those municipal laws and usages which prevailed
among them before the territory had been ceded to the United
States, but that a state of things and population had grown up
during the war, and after the treaty of peace, which made some
other authority necessary to maintain the rights of the ceded
inhabitants and of immigrants, from misrule and violence. He may
not have comprehended fully the principle applicable to what he
might rightly do in such a case, but he felt rightly, and acted
accordingly. He determined, in the absence of all instruction, to
maintain the existing government. The territory had been ceded as a
conquest, and was to be preserved and governed as such until the
sovereignty to which it had passed had legislated for it. That
sovereignty was the United States, under the Constitution, by which
power had been given to Congress to dispose of and make all needful
rules and regulations respecting the territory or other property
belonging to the United States, with the power also to admit new
states into this Union, with only such limitations as are expressed
in the section in which this power is given. The government, of
which Colonel Mason was the executive, had its origin in the lawful
exercise of a belligerent right over a conquered territory. It had
been instituted during the war by the command of the President of
the United States. It was the government when the territory was
ceded as a conquest, and it did not cease, as a matter of course,
or as a necessary consequence of the restoration of peace. The
President might have dissolved it by withdrawing the army and navy
officers who administered it, but he did not do so. Congress could
have put an end to it, but that was not done. The right inference
from the inaction of both is that it was meant to be continued
until it had been legislatively changed. No presumption
Page 57 U. S. 194
of a contrary intention can be made. Whatever may have been the
causes of delay, it must be presumed that the delay was consistent
with the true policy of the government. And the more so as it was
continued until the people of the territory met in convention to
form a state government, which was subsequently recognized by
Congress under its power to admit new states into the Union.
In confirmation of what has been said in respect to the power of
Congress over this territory and the continuance of the civil
government established as a war right until Congress acted upon the
subject, we refer to two of the decisions of this Court, in one of
which it is said in respect to the treaty by which Florida was
ceded to the United States:
"This treaty is the law of the land, and admits the inhabitants
of Florida to the enjoyment of the privileges, rights, and
immunities, of the citizens of the United States. It is unnecessary
to inquire whether this is not their condition, independently of
stipulations. They do not however participate in political power --
they do not share in the government until Florida shall become a
state. In the meantime, Florida continues to be a territory of the
United States, guarded by virtue of that clause in the Constitution
which empowers Congress to make all needful rules and regulations
respecting the territory or other property belonging to the United
States. Perhaps the power of governing a territory belonging to the
United States, which has not, by becoming a state, acquired the
means of self-government, may result necessarily from the facts
that it is not within the jurisdiction of any particular state, and
is within the power and jurisdiction of the United States. The
right to govern may be the natural consequences of the right to
acquire territory."
American Insurance Co. v.
Canter, 1 Pet. 542,
26 U. S.
543.
The Court, afterwards, in the case of
United
States v. Gratiot, 14 Pet. 526, repeats what it
said in the case of
Canter in respect to that clause of
the Constitution giving to Congress the power to make all needful
rules and regulations respecting the territory or other property of
the United States.
Colonel Mason was fortunate in having his determination to
continue the existing government sustained by the President of the
United States and the Secretaries of his cabinet. And nothing but
an almost willing misunderstanding of the circular of the Secretary
of the Treasury, Mr. Walker, could have caused a doubt as to the
liability of the importers of foreign goods into California to pay
duties upon them. That part of the secretary's circular relating to
duties is in our statement of the case. It will show that the
secretary says no more than this, that as Congress had not brought
California by law within the limits
Page 57 U. S. 195
of any collection district, or authorized the appointment of
officers to collect the revenue accruing upon the importation of
foreign dutiable goods into that territory, that his department may
be unable to collect them. Revenue accruing upon the importation
into California of foreign dutiable goods, means that the goods
were liable to pay the duty. There is nothing uncertain in the
secretary's circular. It does not warrant in any way the
declaration that it was his opinion that the goods were not
dutiable, or that they might not be legally collected, though that
could not be done by the instrumentality of officers of a
collection district. Our conclusion, from what has been said, is
that the civil government of California, organized as it was from a
right of conquest, did not cease or become defunct in consequence
of the signature of the treaty or from its ratification. We think
it was continued over a ceded conquest, without any violation of
the Constitution or laws of the United States, and that until
Congress legislated for it, the duties upon foreign goods imported
into San Francisco were legally demanded and lawfully received by
Mr. Harrison, the collector of the port, who received his
appointment, according to instructions from Washington, from
Governor Mason.
But it was assumed in the argument, and not without force and
ingenuity, and with some appearance of authority, that duties did
not accrue to the United States upon foreign goods brought into
California between the 3d of February, 1848, and the 3d of March,
1849, and from the last date until the 12th of November, 1849, and
that the exaction of them was illegal. The two first dates
mentioned, comprehend the time between the date of the treaty and
the date of the act of Congress which included California within
one of the collection districts of the United States, and the other
date comprehends the time from the date of the act of Congress
until Mr. Collier, the collector, entered upon the duties of his
office. It was also said by counsel, that as there was no treaty or
law enjoining or permitting the collection of the duties, that the
exaction of them by the defendant was illegal. It was said, that
the duties were illegally exacted, because the laws of a ceded
country, including those of trade, remained unchanged until the new
sovereignty of it changed them, and that this Congress had not
done. That the practice of the United States had been,\ not to
collect duties upon importations upon goods brought into a ceded
territory until Congress passed an act for it to be done. Louisiana
and Florida were the instances cited, and the ratification by North
Carolina and Rhode Island of the Constitution of the United States,
were also mentioned as having been the subjects of special
legislation to bring them within the operation of the revenue laws
which had been passed by Congress.
Page 57 U. S. 196
And it was said that as Congress has the constitutional power to
regulate commerce, and had not done so specifically in respect to
tonnage and import duties in California, that none of the existing
acts of Congress, for such purposes, could be applied there until
Congress had passed an act giving to them operation, and had
legislated California into a collection district, with denominated
ports of entry.
This last being the most important of the objections which were
made, we will examine it first, and afterwards notice those which
precede it. The objection assumes that under the laws then in
force, duties could not be collected in California after the war
with Mexico had been concluded by a treaty of peace, and that the
President had no legal authority to order the collection of duties
there upon foreign goods, or power to enforce any revenue
regulations, or to prevent the landing of goods prior to the
passage of the act, by which our revenue laws were extended to
California, and before proper officers had been appointed to
execute those laws. It has already been shown that for seven months
of the time, the duties received were paid under the war tariff,
and that the treaty, though signed in 1848, did not become
operative until the ratifications and exchanges of it. And further,
that it could not have any effect upon the existing government of
California, until official information of those ratifications had
been received there. The belligerent right of the United States to
make a civil government in California when it was done, and to
authorize it to collect tonnage and impost duties whilst the war
continued, is admitted.
It was urged that our revenue laws covered only so much of the
territory of the United States as had been divided into collection
districts, and that out of them no authority had been given to
prevent the landing of foreign goods or to charge duties upon them,
though such landing had been made within the territorial limits of
the United States. To this it may be successfully replied that
collection districts and ports of entry are no more than designated
localities within and at which Congress had extended a liberty of
commerce in the United States, and that so much of its territory as
was not within any collection district must be considered as having
been withheld from that liberty. It is very well understood to be a
part of the laws of nations that each nation may designate, upon
its own terms, the ports and places within its territory for
foreign commerce, and that any attempt to introduce foreign goods
elsewhere, within its jurisdiction, is a violation of its
sovereignty. It is not necessary that such should be declared in
terms, or by any decree or enactment, the expressed allowances
being the limit of the liberty given to foreigners to trade with
such nation.
Page 57 U. S. 197
Upon this principle, the plaintiffs had no right of trade with
California with foreign goods, excepting from the permission given
by the United States under the civil government and war tariff
which had been established there. And when the country was ceded as
a conquest, by a treaty of peace, no larger liberty to trade
resulted. By the ratifications of the treaty, California became a
part of the United States. And as there is nothing differently
stipulated in the treaty with respect to commerce, it became
instantly bound and privileged by the laws which Congress had
passed to raise a revenue from duties on imports and tonnage. It
was bound by the eighteenth section of the Act of 2d of March,
1799. The fair interpretation of the second member of the first
sentence of that section is that ships coming from foreign ports
into the United States were not to be permitted to land any part of
their cargoes in any other than in a port of delivery, confined
then to the ports mentioned in the act, afterward applicable to all
other places which might be made ports of entry and delivery, and
excluding all right to unlade in any part of the United States
which had not been made a collection district with ports of entry
or delivery. The ninety-second section of that act had four objects
in view. First, to exclude foreign goods subject to the payment of
duties from being brought into the United States, except in the
localities stated, otherwise than by sea. Next, that they were not
to be brought by sea in vessels of less than thirty tons burden.
And third, to subject to forfeiture any foreign goods which might
be landed at any other port or place in the United States than such
as were designated by law. Fourth, to exclude the allowances of
drawback of any duties on foreign goods exported from any district
in the United States otherwise than by sea, and in vessels less
than thirty tons burden. The sixty-third section also of that act,
directing when tonnage duties were to be paid, became as operative
in California after its cession to the United States, as it was in
any collection district.
The Acts of 20 July, 1790, 1 Stat. 130, c. 30, and that of 2
March, 1799, 1 Stat. 627, c. 22, were also of force in California
without other special legislation declaring them to be so. It
cannot very well be contended that the words "entered in the United
States," give an exemption from them on account of the word
entered, because a ship has been brought into a port in the United
States where an entry cannot be made, as it may be done in a
collection district. The goods must be entered before a permit for
delivery can be given. Shall one then be permitted to land goods in
any part of the United States not in a collection district, because
he has voluntarily gone there with his vessel where an entry of
his
Page 57 U. S. 198
goods cannot be made; or to say I know that my goods cannot be
entered where I am, and therefore claim the right to land them for
sale and consumption free of duty?
It has been sufficiently shown that the plaintiffs had no right
to land their foreign goods in California at the times when their
ships arrived with them, except by a compliance with the
regulations which the civil government were authorized to enforce
-- first, under a war tariff, and afterward under the existing
tariff act of the United States. By the last, foreign goods, as
they are enumerated, are made dutiable -- they are not so because
they are brought into a collection district, but because they are
imported into the United States. The Tariff Act of 1846 prescribes
what that duty shall be. Can any reason be given for the exemption
of foreign goods from duty because they have not been entered and
collected at a port of delivery? The last become a part of the
consumption of the country, as well as the others. They may be
carried from the point of landing into collection districts within
which duties have been paid upon the same kinds of goods, thus
entering, by the retail sale of them, into competition with such
goods, and with our own manufactures, and the products of our own
farmers and planters. The right claimed to land foreign goods
within the United States at any place out of a collection district,
if allowed, would be a violation of that provision in the
Constitution which enjoins that all duties, imposts, and excises,
shall be uniform throughout the United States. Indeed, it must be
very clear that no such right exists and that there was nothing in
the condition of California to exempt importers of foreign goods
into it from the payment of the same duties which were chargeable
in the other ports of the United States. As to the denial of the
authority of the President to prevent the landing of foreign goods
in the United States out of a collection district, it can only be
necessary to say, if he did not do so, it would be a neglect of his
constitutional obligation "to take care that the laws be faithfully
executed."
We will here briefly notice those objections which preceded that
which has been discussed. The first of them, rather an assertion
than an argument -- that there was neither treaty nor law
permitting the collection of duties -- has been answered, it having
been shown that the ratifications of the treaty made California a
part of the United States, and that as soon as it became so, the
territory became subject to the acts which were in force to
regulate foreign commerce with the United States, after those had
ceased which had been instituted for its regulation as a
belligerent right.
The second objection states a proposition larger than the
case
Page 57 U. S. 199
admits, and more so than the principle is, which secures to the
inhabitants of a ceded conquest the enjoyment of what had been
their laws before, until they have been changed by the new
sovereignty to which it has been transferred. In this case, foreign
trade had been changed in virtue of a belligerent right before the
territory was ceded as a conquest, and after that had been done by
a treaty of peace, the inhabitants were not remitted to those
regulations of trade under which it was carried on whilst they were
under Mexican rule, because they had passed from that sovereignty
to another, whose privilege it was to permit the existing
regulations of trade to continue, and by which only they could be
changed. We have said in a previous part of this opinion, that the
sovereignty of a nation regulated trade with foreign nations, and
that none could be carried on except as the sovereignty permits it
to be done. In our situation, that sovereignty is the
constitutional delegation to Congress of the power "to regulate
commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states, and
with the Indian tribes."
In respect to the suggestion that it has not been the practice
of the United States to collect duties upon importations of foreign
goods into a ceded territory until Congress had passed an act for
that purpose, counsel cited the cases of Louisiana and Florida. The
reply is that the facts in respect to both have not been
recollected. There was no forbearance in either instance, in
respect to duties upon imports, until Congress had acted. Louisiana
was ceded by a treaty bearing the date of the 30th of April, 1803,
but the possession of it by the United States depended upon the
terms of final ratifications by the parties to it, and upon the
delivery of it by a commissioner to be appointed by the French
government to receive the transfer from Spain to France, and by him
to be immediately transferred to the United States. Articles 1, 2,
4, 5.
The surrender from Spain to France was formally made on 30th of
November, 1803, and that to the United States was done on the 20th
of December, 1803. It was known in Washington, by a letter from the
commissioner appointed to receive it, early in January. It is said
that from that time until the Act of the 24th of February, or, as
was provided for in the act, until thirty days after, Louisiana was
not considered, in a fiscal sense, as a part of the United States;
and that duties were not only not collected by the United States on
importations into Louisiana, but that duties were charged on goods
brought from Louisiana into the United States. It seems to have
been forgotten that our commercial intercourse with Louisiana had
been the subject of legislation by Congress in several
Page 57 U. S. 200
particulars from the year 1800, and that before the revenue
system could be applied, it was necessary to repeal that special
legislation. Mr. Gallatin, in his report of the 25th of October,
1803, American State Papers, Finance, vol. 2, 48, suggested that it
should be done. Congress, however, did not do so until the act of
the 24th of February, 1804, was passed, by the third section of
which the repeal was effected. The postponement of the operation of
the act for thirty days longer, was with the view to prevent any
conflict of rights or interests between what would be the new
regulations of commerce under the act, and those which had preceded
them.
It is only necessary to say as to Florida, that the Treaty of
the 22d February, 1819, was not ratified by the United States until
the 19th February, 1821. In a few days afterward, the act was
passed extending our revenue system to it, subject to the
stipulation in the 15th article of the treaty in favor of Spanish
vessels and their cargoes. There was then no interval in either
instance where duties were not collected upon foreign importations,
because Congress had not legislated for it to be done.
The application of the revenue acts to North Carolina and Rhode
Island, when those states had ratified the Constitution of the
United States, though that was not done until the Constitution had
been ratified by eleven of the states, does not support the
position taken by the counsel of the plaintiff in error. Those
states had been parties to the Confederation, and North Carolina
was represented in the convention which formed the Constitution. It
was to become the government of the Union when ratified by nine
states. It had been ratified by eleven states, and Congress
declared that it should go into operation on the 4th day of March,
1789. The subsequent ratifications by North Carolina and Rhode
Island made them parties in the government. It brought them in,
without new forms or legislation, and their senators and
representatives were admitted into Congress upon the presentation
of their ratifications. Special acts were passed to apply to them
the previous legislation of Congress, and that of the revenue acts,
as a matter of course, because, previously to the ratification,
those states had not been attached to any collection district. But
it was not supposed by anyone that after those states had ratified
the Constitution, that foreign goods could have been imported into
them without being subject to duty, or that it was necessary to
make them collection districts to make such importations
dutiable.
But we do not hesitate to say, if the reasons given for our
conclusions in this case were not sound, that other
considerations
Page 57 U. S. 201
would bring us to the same results. The plaintiffs carried these
goods voluntarily into California, knowing the state of things
there. They knew that there was an existing civil government
instituted by the authority of the President, as commander-in-chief
of the army and naval forces of the United States, by the right of
conquest; that it had not ceased when these first importations were
made; that it was afterwards continued, and rightfully, as we have
said, until California became a state; that they were not coerced
to land their goods, however they may have been to pay duties upon
them; that such duties were demanded by those who claimed the right
to represent the United States -- who did so, in fact, with most
commmendable integrity and intelligence; that the money collected
has been faithfully accounted for, and the unspent residue of it
received into the Treasury of the United States; and that the
Congress has by two acts adopted and ratified all the acts of the
government established in California upon the conquest of that
territory relative to the collection of imposts and tonnage from
the commencement of the late war with Mexico to the 12th November,
1849, expressly including in such adoption the moneys raised and
expended during that period for the support of the actual
government of California after the ratification of the treaty of
peace with Mexico. This adoption sanctions what the defendant did.
It does more -- it affirms that he had legal authority for his
acts. It coincides with the views which we have expressed in
respect to the legal liability of the plaintiffs for the duties
paid by them, and the authority of the defendant to receive them as
collector of the port of San Francisco.
From these circumstances the law will not imply an assumpsit
upon the part of the defendant to repay the money received by him
from them for duties; the plaintiffs knew when they paid him that
the defendant received them for the United States. The plaintiffs
have no claim for damages against the defendant in justice or
equity. They paid duties to which the United States had a rightful
claim, and no more than the law required. The plaintiffs have paid
no excess. The moneys were paid under no deceit, no mistake; the
defendant has honestly paid them over to the United States, has
been recognized as their agent when he acted as collector, and is
not responsible to the plaintiffs
in foro conscientiae.
The moneys were paid from a portion of the funds in the Treasury of
the United States, subject to the constitutional restriction that
no money shall be drawn from the Treasury but in consequence of
appropriations made by law for such purposes as the Constitution
permits. Our conclusion is that the rulings made in this case
in
Page 57 U. S. 202
the circuit court are correct. We shall direct the judgment to
be
Affirmed.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record,
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern
District of New York, and was argued by counsel. On consideration
whereof, it is now here ordered and adjudged by this Court that the
judgment of the said circuit court in this cause be, and the same
is hereby affirmed, with costs.
NOTE
The following are the documents referred to in the above
opinion:
1847, October 13. Mr. Marcy to Colonel Mason.
1848, July 26. Colonel Mason's Custom House Regulations.
1848, August 7. Colonel Mason's Proclamation, announcing the
ratification of the Treaty of Peace.
1848, October 7. Mr. Buchanan to W. B. Voorhees.
1848, October 7. Mr. Walker's Circular.
1848, October 9. Mr. Marcy to Colonel Mason.
1849, March 15. Persifor F. Smith to Adjutant General Jones.
1849, April 1. Persifor F. Smith's Circular to Consuls.
1849, April 3. Mr. Clayton to Thomas Butler King.
1849, April 3. Mr. Meredith to James Collier, Collector.
1849, April 5. Persifor F. Smith to Adjutant General Jones.
1849, June 20. Persifor F. Smith to Mr. Crawford, secretary of
War.
1849, June 30. General Riley to Adjutant General Jones.
1849, August 30. General Riley to Adjutant General Jones.
1849, October 1. General Riley to Adjutant General Jones.
1849, October 20. Carr, acting Deputy-Collector, to Mr.
Meredith.
1849, October 31. General Riley to Adjutant General Jones.
1849, November 13. Mr. Collier, Collector, to Mr. Meredith.