1. Parties have a right to enter into a stipulation waiving a
jury in the district court, and to submit their case to the court
upon an agreed statement of facts, independent of any legislative
provision on the subject.
2. Where a forfeiture is made absolute by statute a decree of
condemnation relates back to the time of the commission of the
wrongful acts, and takes effect from that time, and not from the
date of the decree. Accordingly, where a removal of distilled
spirits from the place where distilled, with intent to defraud the
United States of the tax thereon, was alleged its a ground for the
forfeiture of the spirits, it was held that neither the subsequent
payment of the taxes nor the fact that the claimant was an innocent
purchaser, without notice of the wrongful acts of the antecedent
owner, constituted a defense to the charge.
3. A removal of distilled spirits from the place where distilled
to a bonded warehouse of the United States, if made to secure the
payment of the tax to the government, is a lawful act, but if made
with intent to defraud the United States of the tax, the act of
removal is illegal, and the spirits removed are subject to
forfeiture. A removal of the spirits from the place where distilled
to the bonded warehouse is not inconsistent with, and may be a part
of a scheme to defraud the United States of the duties
On the 13th July, 1866, Congress passed an act to provide
internal revenue, [
Footnote 1]
laying and levying taxes on many hundred products of the country.
The act is a long act, having seventy-one sections and covering
seventy-five large and closely printed pages of the statute book.
The first thirteen sections, which cover fifty-three of these
pages, relate to the levying and collecting of taxes on a great
variety of things, but not of a tax on spirits. Section 14th thus
proceeds:
"That in case any goods or commodities for or in respect whereof
any tax is or shall be imposed, or any materials, utensils,
Page 81 U. S. 45
or vessels, proper or intended to be made use of, for or in the
making of such goods or commodities, shall be
removed, or
shall be deposited, or concealed in any place
with intent to
defraud the United States of such tax, or any part thereof,
all such goods and commodities, and all such materials, utensils,
and vessels, respectively, shall be forfeited, and in every such
case, and in every case, where any goods or commodities shall be
forfeited under this act or any other act of Congress relating to
the internal revenue, all and singular the casks, vessels, cases,
or other packages whatsoever containing, or which shall have
contained, such goods or commodities respectively, and every
vessel, boat, cart, carriage, or other conveyance whatsoever, and
all horses or other animals and all things used in the removal or
for the deposit or concealment thereof, respectively shall be
forfeited, and every person who shall remove, deposit, or conceal
or be concerned in removing, depositing or concealing any goods or
commodities for or in respect whereof any tax is or shall be
imposed with intent to defraud the United States of such tax or any
part thereof shall be liable to a fine or penalty of not exceeding
$500."
The sections from the 21st to the 45th relate to distilled
spirits. The 28th section provides:
"That general bonded warehouses for the storage of spirits or
other merchandise allowed by law to be placed in bond may be
established."
And the 45th section enacts:
"That any person who shall remove any distilled spirits from the
place where the same are distilled
otherwise than into a bonded
warehouse as provided by law shall be liable to a fine of
double the amount of the tax imposed thereon or to imprisonment for
not less than three months. All distilled spirits so removed, and
all distilled spirits found
elsewhere than in a bonded
warehouse, not having been removed from such warehouse
according to law, and the tax imposed by law on the same not having
been paid, shall be forfeited to the United States or may,
immediately upon discovery, be seized, and after assessment of the
tax thereon, may be sold by the collector for the tax and expenses
of seizure and sale. And proceedings upon such seizure shall be
according to existing provisions of law in relation to
distraint,
Page 81 U. S. 46
and in conformity with any regulations which shall be made by
the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. And the burden of proof shall
be upon the claimant of said spirits to show that the requirements
of law in regard to the same have been complied with. And any
person who shall aid or abet in the removal of distilled spirits
from any distillery
otherwise than to a bonded warehouse
as provided by law, or shall aid in the concealment of such spirits
so removed, shall be liable, on conviction thereof, to a fine of
not less than $200, or more than $1,000, or to imprisonment for not
less than three nor more than twelve months. And any person who
shall remove, or shall aid or abet in the removal of any distilled
spirits from any bonded warehouse other than is allowed by law
shall be liable to a fine of not more than $1,000 or to
imprisonment for not less than three nor more than twelve
months."
Section 54th provides a fine of $100 and imprisonment not
exceeding a year of anyone who shall sell, remove &c., any
fermented liquor on which no stamp or a fraudulent one has
been affixed.
The act took effect generally from the 1st of August, 1866,
[
Footnote 2] but so far as it
changed existing laws relative to distilled and fermented spirits,
only from the 1st of September.
The 29th section enacts:
"That there shall be appointed by the Secretary of the Treasury
an inspector for every distillery established according to law, who
shall take an oath faithfully to perform his duties and who shall
take an account of all the meal and vegetable productions or other
substances to be used for the purpose of producing spirits, when
put into the mash tub or otherwise used, and shall inspect, gauge,
and prove all the spirits distilled under such rules and
regulations as may be prescribed by the Commissioner of Internal
Revenue, and shall take charge of the bonded warehouse established
for the distillery in conformity to law, and such warehouse shall
be in the joint custody of such inspector and the owner thereof,
his agent or superintendent; and when any spirits shall be placed
in such warehouse, an entry therefor, in such form as shall be
prescribed by regulations, shall immediately be made and signed by
the owner of
Page 81 U. S. 47
said spirits, and shall have endorsed thereon a certificate of
the inspector that the spirits mentioned have been duly inspected
and received in said warehouse, and such entry and certificate
shall be filed with the collector of the district; and said
inspector shall not engage in any other business while employed as
an inspector."
With this act in force, the Attorney of the United States for
the Eastern District of Missouri filed an information in the
district court there on the 7th of September, 1868, to enforce a
forfeiture of one hundred barrels of distilled spirits. The fourth
count of the information was founded on the first of the above two
quoted sections -- that is to say, upon the 14th section of the
statute, and was as follows:
"That the said one hundred barrels of spirits were manufactured
at some place within the United States to the said attorney
unknown, and between the 1st day of September, A.D. 1866, and the
date of the said seizure, by some person or persons to the said
attorney unknown, and were then and there goods and commodities on
which a tax was then and there imposed by the provisions of law,
and the same were removed from the place where distilled with
intent to defraud the United States of such tax, the same being
then and there unpaid, contrary to the form of the statutes of the
United States in such case made and provided."
One Henderson, of New Orleans, appeared to the monition issued
on the information and claimed the spirits as owner. And he filed
an answer putting in issue the material matters alleged in the
information, and further alleged that the said spirits
"were purchased by him while the same were in a bonded
warehouse, and that he, the claimant, paid the tax imposed thereon
by law before he removed the same from said bonded warehouse."
In answer to the count, the claimant denied that the "spirits
were removed from the place where distilled with intent to defraud
the United States of any tax being then and there imposed as
alleged."
An agreement was filed in the district court waiving a jury
trial, and the case was heard by the judge upon the following
facts, agreed to by the parties according to a stipulation filed
before the trial:
Page 81 U. S. 48
"1st. That Henderson purchased the spirits while in a bonded
warehouse of the United States, at New Orleans,
after the same
had been placed therein by the owners of the distillery at which
the same were made, and that he, Henderson, paid to the United
States collector the taxes due on the spirits and removed them from
the warehouse, according to law, without knowledge on his part at
any time before seizure of any fraud on the part of the distiller,
either actual or alleged; that Henderson was a purchaser, innocent
and
bona fide, and paid, himself, the tax on the
spirits."
"2d. That he shipped the same to St. Louis, and that they were
in his constructive possession at the time of seizure."
"3d. That they were manufactured and distilled at a distillery
in the First Collection District of Louisiana in May and June,
1868, carried on in the name of Nimrod Johnson by the use and means
of certain boilers, stills, and other vessels of which Johnson was
superintendent and owner."
"4th. That the fourth article in the information was true, but
that Henderson subsequently to removal from the distillery and
before removal from the bonded warehouse, and before seizure, paid
the tax on said spirits, and was a
bona fide and innocent
purchaser thereof."
"5th. That he was not a purchaser from the United States, and
the United States at no time sold said spirits."
The district court gave judgment for the claimant and the
circuit court affirmed the judgment, that court holding that as the
overt act alleged, namely the removal, was rightful,
"it was difficult to see how it could have been made to defraud
the United States of the tax, and that a mere intent to defraud,
formed or existing in the mind of the distiller, which intention
had never been executed, or attempted to be, was not made a ground
of forfeiture."
The case was now here on error.
Page 81 U. S. 52
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Distilled spirits upon which no tax had been paid according to
law were, by the thirty-second section of the act of the thirteenth
of July, 1866, subject to a tax of two dollars on each and every
proof gallon, to be paid by the distiller, owner, or any person
having possession thereof, and the same section provided that the
tax shall be a lien on the spirits distilled and on the distillery
used for distilling the same, with the stills, vessels, fixtures,
and tools therein &c. [
Footnote
3] Express provision is also made by the fourteenth section of
that act that all goods or commodities for or in respect whereof
any tax is or shall be imposed or any materials, utensils, or
vessels proper or intended to be made use of for or in the making
of such goods or commodities, in case they shall be removed or
shall be deposited or concealed in any place with intent to defraud
the United States of such tax, or any part thereof, shall be
forfeited. [
Footnote 4] Certain
alterations are made in each of those provisions by the fourteenth
section of the Act of the second of March, 1867, but the
alterations are not material to the present case, as the same
section provides that the new provision shall not exclude any other
remedy or proceeding provided by law, which beyond all doubt leaves
in full operation the fourteenth section of the prior act.
[
Footnote 5]
Regular seizure of the one hundred barrels of distilled spirits
in question was made on the first day of September,
Page 81 U. S. 53
1868, by the collector of the district, as alleged in the
information, and the record shows that the information was duly
filed by the district attorney on the seventh of the same month in
the district court of the United States for the district where the
seizure was made. Being a seizure on land, the claimant was
entitled to a trial by jury, but he appeared and the parties
entered into a stipulation waiving a jury and submitted the case to
the court upon an agreed statement of facts, as they had a right to
do, even before any legislative provision was enacted for waiving a
jury by a written stipulation. [
Footnote 6] Pursuant to that stipulation, the parties were
heard, and the district court dismissed the information and
rendered judgment for the respondent. Exceptions were duly taken by
the district attorney, and he sued out a writ of error and removed
the cause into the circuit court, where the judgment rendered by
the district court was affirmed, and the United States thereupon
sued out a writ of error to the circuit court and removed the cause
into this Court for reexamination.
Seizure of the spirits was made, as before explained, by the
collector of internal revenue for the district, and it is alleged
in the information that the collector still holds the same in his
possession and custody as forfeited to the United States under the
provisions in the act to amend the existing laws relating to
internal revenue. Six articles, each charging a forfeiture of the
spirits in question, are contained in the information, but in the
view of the case taken by the Court, it will only be necessary to
examine the fourth in the series, which is as follows:
That the said one hundred barrels of spirits were manufactured
at some place within the United States to said attorney unknown,
and between the first day of September, 1866, and the date of said
seizure, by some person or persons to said attorney also unknown,
and were then and there goods and commodities on which a tax was
then and there
Page 81 U. S. 54
imposed by the provisions of law, and the same were removed from
the place where distilled, with intent to defraud the United States
of such tax, the same being then and there unpaid, contrary to the
form of the statutes of the said United States in such case made
and provided.
Seasonable claim in due form was made for the spirits by the
defendant, and he appeared and filed an answer, denying all the
material allegations of the information, and tendered an issue to
the country, which was joined by the United States. Apart from
that, he also answered each article separately, and in respect to
the fourth article he denied that the spirits in question were
removed from the place where distilled with intent to defraud the
United States of any tax then and there imposed, as alleged in the
information.
Evidently the answer was precisely equivalent to the general
issue, and made it incumbent upon the United States to prove the
charge as alleged, and the effect of the stipulation submitting the
case to the court was to substitute the court for the jury as the
tribunal to determine the issue of fact presented in the pleadings.
Had the stipulation contained nothing further, it is clear that the
evidence on the one side and the other must have been introduced to
the court substantially as provided in the recent act of Congress
upon that subject, but the parties went further and stipulated in
writing as to what the facts in the case were, in which stipulation
it is agreed that the fourth article in the information is true,
and it is insisted by the United States that that stipulation is
equivalent to a confession of guilt, and that it entitles the
United States to judgment, and the court would certainly be of the
same opinion if that admission was unaccompanied by what follows in
the stipulation in the same connection.
Standing alone, it is an admission that the charge as contained
in the fourth article of the information is true, but it must be
read in connection with what follows as a part of the same
stipulation, and the question is whether the qualification annexed
to the admission that the fourth article of the information is
true, changes the aspect of the evidence
Page 81 U. S. 55
and entitles the defendant to the judgment rendered in his favor
by the subordinate courts.
Appended to the admission that the fourth article in the
information is true is the statement that the defendant,
subsequently to the removal of the spirits from the distillery and
before their removal from the bonded warehouse, and before the
seizure, "paid the tax on said spirits, and that he was a
bona
fide and innocent purchaser," and the question is whether that
statement, appended as it is to the admission, qualifies the
language of the admission in such a way that the admission does not
establish the truth of the charge contained in the fourth article
of the information.
Due weight must also be given to certain other facts stated in
the stipulation in determining the question whether the judgment
for the defendant was correct or incorrect. He was not the
purchaser from the United States, nor have the United States ever
sold the spirits in question, but the agreed statement also shows
that he purchased the spirits while they were in a bonded warehouse
in New Orleans, after the same had been placed therein by the owner
of the distillery at which the same were distilled; that he paid
the tax due on the spirits to the collector, and removed the same
from the warehouse according to law, without any knowledge on his
part, at any time before the seizure, of any fraud, either actual
or alleged, on the part of the distiller; that the spirits were
manufactured and distilled at a certain distillery in that
district, in the months of May and June, prior to the seizure, by
the person therein named, by the use and means of certain boilers,
stills, and other vessels of which the distiller was superintendent
and owner, and the parties agree to the effect that all the acts
averred in the fifth and sixth articles of the information as
having been done in respect to the spirits in question by some
person unknown are true, when the averments are applied to the
person named in the agreed statement as the manufacturer and
distiller of the said spirits.
Four material ingredients are involved in the charge contained
in the fourth article of the information:
(1) That the
Page 81 U. S. 56
spirits were manufactured at some place within the United
States, between the day therein named and the date of the
seizure.
(2) That the spirits were then and there goods and commodities
on which a tax was imposed by some provision of law then in
force.
(3) That the spirits were removed from the place where distilled
with intent to defraud the United States of such tax.
(4) That the tax was unpaid at the time the spirits were so
removed with such fraudulent intent.
Beyond all doubt, the admission that the fourth article is true
is a conclusive admission that each and every one of the well
pleaded allegations which it contains are also true, which,
standing alone, would certainly be a confession on the record that
the property is subject to forfeiture unless it can be shown that
the fourth article in the information is insufficient in law to
warrant a judgment in favor of the United States.
Viewed in that light, as the admission must be, the next
question is whether the statement appended to the admission is
sufficient to save the property from condemnation in the possession
of the defendant. Properly analyzed, the statement appended to the
admission contains two averments in avoidance of the consequences
which would otherwise follow from the admitted acts of the
antecedent owner:
(1) That the defendant paid the tax subsequent to the removal of
the spirits from the distillery and before they were removed from
the bonded warehouse and before the seizure by the collector.
(2) That he was a
bona fide and innocent purchaser,
without notice that the spirits were forfeited as alleged in that
article of the information.
Where the forfeiture is made absolute by statute, the decree of
condemnation, when entered, relates back to the time of the
commission of the wrongful acts, and takes date from the wrongful
acts and not from the date of the sentence or decree. [
Footnote 7] Subsequent payment of the
duties, therefore, is
Page 81 U. S. 57
no defense to an information for a forfeiture founded upon
antecedent wrongful acts, as the effect of such wrongful acts,
where the forfeiture is made absolute by statute, is to divest the
owner of all property in the goods seized and to vest the title to
the same in the United States in case a prosecution ensues, and a
decree of condemnation follows, as the decree of condemnation when
entered by a court of competent jurisdiction relates back to the
date of the wrongful acts as alleged and proved at the trial or in
the hearing of the cause. [
Footnote
8] Repeated decisions of this Court have established that rule
in all cases where the forfeiture is made absolute by the act of
Congress, and it necessarily follows that neither the subsequent
payment of the duties nor the fact that the defendant is an
innocent purchaser, without notice of the wrongful acts of the
antecedent owner, constitutes any defense to the charge contained
in the fourth article of the information. [
Footnote 9] Many such adjudged cases are to be found in
the reported decisions of this Court, and it must be admitted that
they establish the rule beyond all doubt, that the forfeiture
becomes absolute at the commission of the prohibited acts, and that
the title from that moment vests in the United States in all cases
where the statute in terms denounces the forfeiture of the property
as a penalty for a violation of law, without giving any alternative
remedy, or prescribing any substitute for the forfeiture, or
allowing any exceptions to its enforcement, or employing in the
enactment any language showing a different intent; and that in all
such cases it is not in the power of the offender or former owner
to defeat the forfeiture by any subsequent transfer of the property
even to a
bona fide purchaser for value without notice of
the wrongful acts done and committed by the former owner.
Established as that rule has been by the decisions of this Court
for more than half a century, it is insisted that it should be
applied in the case before the Court, and it is
Page 81 U. S. 58
difficult to see any reason for rejecting the proposition, as
the words of the act under which the fourth article of the
information is drawn denounce the forfeiture of the property in
terms as absolute and unqualified as any which can be chosen in our
language. [
Footnote 10]
Goods and commodities falling within that provision, it is enacted,
shall be forfeited in case they shall be removed with
intent to defraud the United States of such tax, or any part
thereof, and the language denouncing the forfeiture is explicit and
absolute and without any qualification whatever. Compare the
language of the act of Congress with the language employed in the
fourth article of the information and it will be seen that the
charge against the spirits is preferred in the same language as
that employed in the act of Congress denouncing the forfeiture, as
the fourth article alleges that the spirits in question were then
and there goods and commodities on which a tax was then and there
imposed by the provisions of law, and that the same were removed
from the place where distilled with intent to defraud the United
States of such tax, the same being then and there unpaid; and the
admission set forth in the agreed statement is that the fourth
article of the information is true, which is a direct confession
that the prohibited acts charged in that article were done and
committed at the time and place and by the person and in the manner
therein alleged.
Concede all that and it is clear that the United States are
entitled to judgment if it be true that the forfeiture relates back
to the date of the wrongful acts charged in the information. Escape
from that conclusion, it would seem, is impossible if it be
admitted that the fourth article of the information sets forth a
good cause of forfeiture, and it is clear that the affirmative of
that proposition must be admitted, unless it be affirmed that the
14th section of the act of Congress, on which it is drawn, does not
provide for such a forfeiture, under the circumstances therein
described.
Page 81 U. S. 59
Such a proposition, whether so intended or not, is precisely
equivalent to a demurrer to the fourth article of the information
or to a motion in arrest of judgment after verdict, and if so, then
it follows, as shown by all the authorities upon the subject, that
everything well pleaded in the fourth article of the information
must be taken as true, which is the exact admission contained in
the agreed statement. Nothing can be more certain in legal
investigation than that the decree must have been for the United
States if the claimant had demurred to the fourth article of the
information, unless it can be held that the act of Congress
denouncing the forfeiture is unconstitutional, as the article in
question embodies the exact language of that provision, and it is
equally certain that a motion in arrest of judgment would also have
been unavailing for the same reason, and also because the validity
of the act of Congress is beyond all doubt.
Congress possesses the power to levy taxes, duties, imposts, and
excises, and it is as clear that Congress may enact penalties and
forfeitures for the violation of such laws as it is that Congress
may levy the taxes or duties or pass laws for their collection,
safekeeping, and disbursement.
Section fourteen, it is admitted, is broad enough in its terms
to embrace the removal of spirits, on which there is a tax, from
the place where distilled, with intent to defraud the United States
of the tax, but it is suggested that another section of the same
act requires that spirits, when removed from the place where
distilled, shall be deposited in a bonded warehouse, and that the
penalty imposed for a violation of that requirement is different
from the penalty imposed by the fourteenth section of the act, and
it must be admitted that the suggestion is correct, but it is
impossible to see in what respect the suggestion tends to support
the views of the defendant in the present case.
Suggestion is also made that it is not an illegal act to remove
spirits from the place where distilled to a bonded warehouse, and
that also is true, but the corollary attempted to be drawn from the
two suggestions is a
non-sequitur, and
Page 81 U. S. 60
cannot be sustained, which is that the charge that the spirits
were removed from the place where distilled, with intent to defraud
the United States, cannot be true if it appears that the spirits
were removed from the distillery to a bonded warehouse, as the
removal of spirits from the place where distilled to a bonded
warehouse is authorized by law. Undoubtedly such a removal of
spirits from the place where distilled to a bonded warehouse, if
made to secure the payment of the tax to the government, is a
lawful act, but it is equally clear, if the removal is made even to
a bonded warehouse to defraud the United States of the tax, that
the act of removal is illegal, and that the spirits removed are
forfeited.
Both of these suggestions, however, are founded upon the assumed
theory that the record shows that the only removal of the spirits
alleged or proved was a removal from the place where distilled to a
bonded warehouse, but that assumption is wholly unsupported either
by the charge contained in the fourth article of the information or
by the admission that the fourth article is true, as exhibited in
the agreed statement. On the contrary, the fourth article of the
information alleges that the spirits were removed from the place
where distilled, with intent to defraud the United States of the
tax, without any specification as to the place to which the same
were removed or where they were deposited; nor is that omission any
objection to the form of the charge, as that article of the
information follows substantially the language of the fourteenth
section of the act of Congress on which it is drawn.
Tested by the charge, as made in that article and the admission
applicable to it, as exhibited in the agreed statement, as the
question must be, and it is clear that the spirits may have been
removed elsewhere than to a bonded warehouse before they were
placed in that depository by the owner and distiller. Such
certainly would be the legal conclusion if the defendant had
demurred to the information, and the Court is of the opinion that
the same conclusion must follow from the admission that the fourth
article of the
Page 81 U. S. 61
information is true, as the admission is expressed in the agreed
statement.
Henderson, the claimant, purchased the spirits while they were
in the bonded warehouse and after they had bee deposited therein by
the owner of the distillery where the spirits were manufactured,
and having made the purchase without notice that any fraud had been
practiced by the distiller, and having paid the tax before the
spirits were removed from the bonded warehouse, it is insisted by
his counsel, in every possible form of argument, that his title is
perfect and that the spirits are not liable to forfeiture, but the
decisive answer to all that is the one already given -- that the
forfeiture relates back to the unlawful or wrongful acts of the
antecedent owner and that he cannot by any subsequent transfer of
the property defeat the title of the United States, as settled by a
series of decisions which, if traced to their source, have their
origin in the early history of the common law. [
Footnote 11]
Rules of decision of such long standing and so necessary to
protect the public revenue cannot be changed, nor can it be
admitted that the charge contained in the fourth article of the
information may not be sustained, even if it appears that the only
removal of the spirits made by the distiller was to the bonded
warehouse, as assumed in argument by the defendant. [
Footnote 12]
Unquestionably a removal of distilled spirits from the place
where distilled to such a depository, if made to secure the payment
of the tax, is a lawful act, but it is equally clear that if it is
made with intent to defraud the United States of the tax, it is an
unlawful act and subjects the spirits to forfeiture.
Grant that the removal was rightful, as assumed by the circuit
judge, and the conclusion which he adopted would follow, but it
cannot be assumed in this case that the removal
Page 81 U. S. 62
was rightful, as the charge in the fourth article of the
information is that it was made with intent to defraud the United
States of the tax, and the admission in the agreed statement is
that the fourth article of the information is true, which shows as
fully as it can be shown that the United States are entitled to a
decree of condemnation unless it can be established that the
fraudulent intent there charged could not under any circumstances
be carried into effect by such a removal as that alleged in the
fourth article of the information and admitted in the agreed
statement.
Suppose it be true, as assumed in argument, that the only
attempt made to execute the unlawful intent charged was the removal
of the spirits from the place where distilled to the bonded
warehouse, still it would by no means necessarily follow, as is
supposed, that the removal was a legal act, as the removal, though
to a bonded warehouse, may nevertheless have been made for the
express purpose to defraud the United States of the tax, and if so,
then the removal was indubitably an illegal act and the spirits are
properly subject to forfeiture as charged in the information.
Cases have arisen, as the records of this Court show, where the
removal to the bonded warehouse was made as a part of a
pre-concerted arrangement with other parties to avoid the payment
of the tax, and it would not be difficult to suppose other cases
where the removal of the spirits from the place where distilled to
the bonded warehouse would be a necessary part of a well devised
scheme to defraud the United States by delivering the spirits to
purchasers without the payment of the duties. [
Footnote 13]
Inspectors of spirits are required to be appointed by the
Secretary of the Treasury, and all distilled spirits, before being
removed from the distillery, are required to be inspected and
gauged by a general inspector, whose duty it is to mark the vessels
or packages in the manner required by law, and penalties are
prescribed and imposed in case the
Page 81 U. S. 63
spirits are removed from the place where distilled without a
compliance with those requirements. [
Footnote 14]
Persons distilling spirits, and the owners of stills used for
the purpose of distilling spirits, are required to keep books and
to make certain entries therein, and to render certain accounts to
assessors, and if they do not comply with those requirements they
also are subject to certain penalties for the neglect. [
Footnote 15]
Bonded warehouses are established for the storage of spirits to
be placed therein to secure the payment of the duties imposed by
law, and the provision is that if any person shall ship, transport,
or remove any spirits under any other than the proper mark or
brand, known to the trade as designating the kind and quality of
the contents of the casks or packages containing the same, or cause
the same to be done, he shall forfeit the same, and shall, on
conviction thereof, be subject to and pay a fine of five hundred
dollars. [
Footnote 16]
Cautious merchants, in consequence of those regulations and many
others equally stringent, are often disinclined to purchase spirits
at the place where distilled lest they should be subject to
forfeiture, if equally favorable terms are offered by other parties
who have made deposits in the bonded warehouses. Distillers
therefore intending to evade the payment of the duties may find it
a most effectual way to accomplish their unlawful designs, in case
they can, by bribery or otherwise, secure the cooperation of the
inspector, storekeeper, or collector, to remove the spirits to a
bonded warehouse, as spirits placed in that depository are less
subject to suspicion and sell more readily than before they were
removed from the place where distilled.
Spirits placed in such a depository sell more readily than
before they were removed, because they are regarded as less likely
to be subject to forfeiture than while they remained in the
distillery, but it is clear that the theory that an intent to
defraud the United States cannot be predicated of a removal of
spirits from the place where distilled to a bonded warehouse
Page 81 U. S. 64
is an erroneous theory, as it is manifest that the dishonest
distiller, if he can obtain the assistance of the inspector,
storekeeper, or collector, as a partner or agent, will find such a
removal an essential step in almost every scheme which he may
devise to accomplish his wicked designs.
Viewed in any light, therefore, the Court is of the opinion that
the judgment of the circuit court is erroneous.
Questions are also presented in the record under the fifth and
sixth articles of the information, but the Court having come to the
conclusion that the United States are entitled to judgment upon the
fourth article of the information, does not deem it necessary to
express any opinion as to the other questions.
Judgment reversed and the cause remanded with instructions
to render judgment for the United States.
[
Footnote 1]
14 Stat. at Large 98-173.
[
Footnote 2]
Section 1.
[
Footnote 3]
14 Stat. at Large 157.
[
Footnote 4]
Ib., 151.
[
Footnote 5]
Ib., 481.
[
Footnote 6]
Suydam v.
Williamson, 20 How. 434;
United
States v. Eliason, 16 Pet. 291;
Stimpson
v. Railroad, 10 How. 329;
Campbell v.
Boyreau, 21 How. 224.
[
Footnote 7]
Roberts v. Witherall, 1 Salkeld 223;
Robert v.
Witherhead, 12 Modern 92;
United States v. Bags of
Coffee, 8 Cranch 398;
The Brigantine Mars,
8 Cranch 417;
Gelston v.
Hoyt, 3 Wheat. 311;
Caldwell v. United
States, 8 How. 381;
United
States v. Grundy, 3 Cranch 338;
Wood v.
United States, 16 Pet. 342;
Clifton v. United
States, 4 How. 248.
[
Footnote 8]
Fontaine v. Ins. Co., 11 Johnson 293;
Kennedy v.
Strong, 14
id. 128.
[
Footnote 9]
Wilkins v. Despard, 5 Term 112.
[
Footnote 10]
United States v. Bags of
Coffee, 8 Cranch 398;
United
States v. Grundy, 3 Cranch 338.
[
Footnote 11]
4 Bacon's Abridgment, by Bouvier, 346; Plowden 488, b. Co. Litt.
25; 1 Chitty's Criminal Law 727.
[
Footnote 12]
Clarke v. Insurance Co., 1 Story 109.
[
Footnote 13]
Distilled
Spirits, 11 Wall. 364.
[
Footnote 14]
14 Stat. at Large 156; 14
id. 481.
[
Footnote 15]
Ib. 157.
[
Footnote 16]
Ib. 155, 156.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD, with whom concurred THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR.
JUSTICE MILLER, dissenting.
I am unable to concur in the judgment of the majority of the
Court, and will briefly state the grounds of my dissent.
The proceeding is an information for the forfeiture of one
hundred barrels of distilled spirits. The forfeiture is not decreed
on the ground that the government has not received the taxes levied
on the spirits, for it is admitted that these have been paid; nor
on the ground that the claimant has committed or participated in
the commission of any fraud in the acquisition of the property, for
it is conceded that he purchased the spirits in good faith without
knowledge of any defect or taint in his vendor's title. Nor is the
forfeiture inflicted for any violation of law in act or deed on the
part of the distiller of whom the claimant purchased. He only
removed the spirits from the place of their manufacture to the
bonded warehouse of the United States, and that was a lawful, and
not an unlawful, act. The forfeiture is decreed because the former
owner, in removing the spirits to the bonded warehouse, intended at
the time to defraud the government
Page 81 U. S. 65
of the tax thereon -- an intent, however, which he never
attempted to carry into execution.
We thus have this singular and I venture to say unprecedented
fact in the history of judicial decisions in this country that the
property of a citizen honestly acquired, without suspicion of wrong
in his vendor, is forfeited and taken from him because such vendor,
at some period whilst owning the property, conceived the intent to
defraud the government of the tax thereon, although such intent was
never developed in action, and for the execution of which no step
was even taken.
The presumption is that the majority of the Court are right in
this decision and that the minority are mistaken in their views of
the law governing the case. It is therefore, with diffidence that I
venture to dissent from their judgment, a diffidence which is
greatly augmented by the declaration of the majority that it is
impossible to escape the conclusion which they have reached.
But for this conclusion, I should have supposed that it would
have been impossible, at this day and in this age and in our
country, to obtain a decree confiscating the property of a citizen
for anything which a former owner of the property may have intended
to do, but never did, with respect to it. I should have said that
the intentions of the mind, lying dormant in the brain, had long
since ceased to be subjects for which legislatures prescribed
punishment. Against threatened injuries to person or property
remedies are provided, and this, it is believed, is the extent to
which legislation can legitimately go with respect to intentions,
however fraudulent or wicked, so long as they remain undeveloped by
action. Penalties and forfeitures are not inflicted at this day in
any civilized and free government for the motives with which lawful
acts are done.
The inability to ascertain with certainty the intentions of a
party except as they are exhibited in his acts and the injustice
which must necessarily follow any attempt to inflict punishment for
them except as they are thus exhibited have hitherto in this
country prevented any legislation of
Page 81 U. S. 66
that character, unless such legislation is found in the present
revenue act of Congress. The injustice in its operation of such
legislation, assuming such legislation to exist, could not be more
strikingly illustrated than in the present case. But I am not
prepared to admit, notwithstanding the cogency and persuasiveness
of the able and elaborate argument in the opinion of the majority,
that there is any such legislation on our statute book.
The act of Congress under which this proceeding was taken
provides, in its twenty-eighth section, [
Footnote 2/1] for the establishment of bonded warehouses
for the storage of spirits "to secure the payment of the internal
revenue tax thereon," and, in its forty-fifth section, prohibits
"the removal of distilled spirits [
Footnote 2/2] from the place where the same are
distilled
otherwise than into a bonded warehouse, as
provided by law," imposing penalties upon parties making such
removal, and declaring that "the distilled spirits so removed"
shall be forfeited to the United States.
The same act declares in its fourteenth section [
Footnote 2/3] that if any goods or commodities upon
which a tax is imposed or the materials, utensils, or vessels,
proper or intended to be used in their manufacture are removed,
deposited, or concealed in any place, "with intent to defraud the
United States of such tax, or any part thereof," they shall be
forfeited to the United States. And it is upon the language of this
section, as applied to the facts admitted by the parties, that the
majority of the Court found the decree of forfeiture.
The language is undoubtedly broad enough to cover any removal of
spirits upon which a tax has been imposed from their place of
manufacture, and if it has any reference to articles of that
character, it must be construed in connection with the language of
the forty-fifth section. And the evident meaning of the two
sections, if they are construed together, is that the removal for
which a forfeiture is declared is a removal to some other place
than a bonded
Page 81 U. S. 67
warehouse of the United States. Of a removal to such warehouse
it is difficult to perceive how an intent to defraud the government
can be, in truth, affirmed. It would be as reasonable to declare
that a debtor had an intention to defraud his creditor when he
placed in the hands of the latter the money to pay his demand. It
is plain in my judgment, or rather I should have said it was plain
but for the opinion of the majority, that the removal of spirits
forbidden by that section is a removal to some place beyond the
reach of the government, or where the government would be in some
way embarrassed or obstructed in the collection of its tax. It
seems to me a strange application of the prohibition to make it
cover a removal of spirits to a warehouse specially provided by the
government for their reception, and where they are placed in the
possession and custody of the officers of the United States.
But I am unable to convince myself that the fourteenth section
has any reference whatever to the removal of distilled spirits. The
previous sections of the act relate to taxes on a great variety of
articles of several hundred different kinds, and it does not
include distilled spirits among them. The removal mentioned in the
fourteenth section would seem, therefore, to apply to the removal
from the place of their manufacture of the articles thus previously
designated, or at least of articles mentioned in the statute, for
the removal of which no different penalties are specifically
prescribed.
The sections of the act, from the twenty-first to the
forty-fifth inclusive, relate to the tax on distilled spirits, and
contain numerous provisions applicable only to them. The punishment
they prescribe for the removal of the spirits from the place of
their manufacture otherwise than to a bonded warehouse, in addition
to their forfeiture, is different from the penalty prescribed by
the fourteenth section, for the like removal of other goods. This
fact would seem to be conclusive, if other reasons were wanting,
that the fourteenth section has no reference to the removal of
distilled spirits. The special provisions respecting them should
except
Page 81 U. S. 68
them, according to all established canons of interpretation,
from the general language of that section.
"That a law," says Chief Justice Marshall,
"is the best expositor of itself, that every part of an act is
to be taken into view for the purpose of discovering the mind of
the legislature, and that the details of one part may contain
regulations restricting the extent of general expressions used in
another part of the same act are among those plain rules laid down
by common sense for the exposition of statutes, which have been
uniformly acknowledged. [
Footnote
2/4]"
And it is laid down in the elementary treatises that where a
general intention is expressed in one part of a statute and a
particular intention in another part inconsistent with the general
intention, the particular intention is to be regarded as an
exception. [
Footnote 2/5]
The suggestion by the counsel of the government that a removal
of distilled spirits to a bonded warehouse, although the law
provides for such removal as a means for securing the payment of
the tax, may be made with intent to defraud the United States of
such tax, inasmuch as there may be an agreement between distillers
and warehousemen to have the spirits secretly drawn out from the
vessels, or to have the spirits released upon insufficient
security, does not strike me as entitled to any consideration in
this case. Conspiracies there undoubtedly may be with officers of
the United States to defraud the government, but in the absence of
any proof tending to establish such a conspiracy, the court would
not be justified in imagining its existence for the purpose of
working a forfeiture of goods in the hands of an innocent party. It
would rather indulge the more rational and just presumption that
all the officers of the government did their duty, until at least
some evidence to the contrary was produced.
This is a case of great hardship and manifest injustice. The
claimant found the spirits in a bonded warehouse of the
Page 81 U. S. 69
government, in custody of the officers of the United States. He
paid to them the tax due on the goods, and he paid to the owner
their value. He had no suspicions that his vendor ever entertained
any intention to defraud the government of the tax levied on them,
and if he ever had such suspicions, he might well have supposed
that his vendor had repented of his intention when he delivered the
property to the keeping of the officers of the United States.
The government, through its officers, took from the innocent
purchaser the duties upon the goods, thus saying to him that the
goods then belonged to the distiller who placed them in the
warehouse. The government now declares through its officers that
these goods all the time belonged to it by reason of the previous
forfeiture, and thus the honest claimant loses both the taxes and
the goods, or at least is left to the doubtful chances of obtaining
the former by petition to the government, and the latter by action
against his vendor.
The object of the act of Congress under which the forfeiture is
declared is to raise revenue, and it seems to me that the severe
construction in favor of forfeitures in the hands of innocent
parties given by the majority of the Court must have a tendency to
defeat this object, for it will scarcely be possible for anyone to
purchase merchandise with safety when it may be seized and
forfeited in his possession for reasons such as are assigned in
this case.
I am of the opinion that the judgment of the court below should
be affirmed.
[
Footnote 2/1]
14 Stat. at Large 155.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Ib., 163.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Ib., 151.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Pennington v.
Coxe, 2 Cranch 52.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Potter's Dwarris on Statutes 110; Sedgwick on Statutes 423.