Certain goods were imported in November, 1869, and stored in a
bonded warehouse until March 20, 1871, when they were withdrawn for
consumption.
Held that, having so remained in such
warehouse, they were, under the Act of March 14, 1866, 14 Stat. 8,
subject to the additional duty of ten percent thereby imposed.
In November, 1869, Fabbri & Chauncey imported from Manila
into New York certain sugar which, on the seventeenth day of that
month, was stored in a United States bonded warehouse, where it
remained until March 20, 1871, when it was withdrawn for
consumption. The duty at the latter date amounted to $34,360.50,
gold, to which ten percent was added by the defendant Murphy, then
collector of New York, as the sugar had remained in the bonded
warehouse more than one year. The additional ten percent was paid
under protest, and an appeal taken from the collector's liquidation
and decision. The Secretary of the Treasury having affirmed that
decision, this suit was seasonably brought by the plaintiffs to
recover the ten percent with interest thereon from the time of its
payment. At the trial they requested the court to charge in
substance that the additional ten percent was illegally imposed.
This request was denied and the jury told that, upon the
uncontradicted evidence, the defendant was entitled to a verdict,
which was rendered accordingly. To the instruction given and to
those refused the plaintiffs duly excepted, and sued out this
writ.
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Goods imported here from a foreign country may be entered for
consumption or for warehousing, but, when entered for consumption,
the requirement is that the duties shall be paid or be secured to
be paid before a permit for landing the goods is granted. 1 Stat.,
sec. 62, p. 673.
Page 95 U. S. 192
Importations of the kind are required to be landed in open day,
and the collection act provides that the goods shall not be landed
or delivered from the ship without a permit from the collector.
Examination of the entry is usually made by the entry clerk, and if
found correct, the collector then proceeds to estimate the duties,
as shown by the invoice value and quantity, and if the estimated
amount of the duties is paid or secured to be paid as required by
law, the collector is then authorized to grant a permit for the
discharge and landing of the cargo.
Kimball v.
Collector, 10 Wall. 436.
Merchandise, if duly imported, with certain exceptions not
necessary to be noticed, may be entered for warehousing without
paying the duties at the time of the entry, in which event the
goods are delivered into the possession of the collector, and are
deposited, at the option of the owner, importer, consignee, or
agent, at his expense in any public warehouse or other place
provided by law for the storage of such property.
Both the duties and expenses are required to be ascertained at
the time of the entry of the goods for warehousing, and the duties
and charges are to be secured by the bond of the owner, importer,
or consignee, with surety or sureties to the satisfaction of the
collector, the goods being at all times subject to the orders of
the depositor, upon the payment of the proper duties and expenses.
United States v. Benson, 2 Cliff. 520.
By the record, it appears that the plaintiffs, in the month of
November, 1869, imported from Manila one million nine hundred and
sixty-three thousand four hundred and fifty pounds of sugar; that
on the 17th of the same month they made entry of the whole amount
for warehouse, and that the same were duly stored in a public
bonded warehouse, situated in the City of New York, as appears from
the warehouse entry and the return of the weigher; that the sugars
were classified on the warehouse entry by the appraiser as not
above No. 12, Dutch standard, in color; and that the duties, on the
17th of January following, were assessed at three cents a pound
under the then existing tariff. On the 20th of January, 1871, the
plaintiffs made a withdrawal entry of the sugars for consumption,
which throughout the whole period from the time they were stored to
the date of the withdrawal entry, had remained in the public
Page 95 U. S. 193
bonded warehouse. Prior to that time, to-wit on the 16th of the
same month, the sugars were reclassified by the appraiser, under
the Act of Dec. 22, 1870, as appears by a memorandum on the
withdrawal entry for consumption, as not above No. 7, Dutch
standard, in color, and the rate of entry was noted by the
appraiser on the entry at 1 3/4 cents per pound.
Apart from that, it also appears that on the 20th of March in
the same year, the duties on the sugars were liquidated by the
collector at the reduced rate noted on the withdrawal entry, making
the amount $34,360.50, with an additional duty of ten percent on
the previous duty imposed under the act of the 14th of March, 1866,
the goods imported having remained in the public bonded warehouse
for a longer period than one year.
By that act, all goods, wares, and merchandise remaining in
warehouse under bond on the first day of May of that year might be
withdrawn for consumption within one year from the date of original
importation on payment of the duties and charges to which they were
subject by law at the time of such withdrawal. 14 Stat. 8.
Ten percent on the original duty amounts to $3,436.05, and the
two sums amount to $37,796.55.
Payment of the original duty was made without objection, but the
record shows that the plaintiffs paid the additional duty of ten
percent under protest, and instituted the present suit to recover
back the amount. Proper notice in writing was given by the
plaintiffs to the collector that they were dissatisfied with his
decision in the final liquidation of the duties, and on the day the
payment was made, they appealed from his decision to the Secretary
of the Treasury, who subsequently affirmed the decision of the
collector.
Interest at six percent on the amount of the additional duty is
$593.27, making the additional duty, adding the interest to the
date of the judgment, $4,029.30.
All of these facts were proved by the plaintiffs, the defendant
offering no testimony, and the court directed a verdict for the
defendant. Exceptions were filed by the plaintiffs, and they sued
out a writ of error and removed the cause into this Court.
Errors are assigned as follows:
1. That the court erred in
Page 95 U. S. 194
refusing to charge the jury that if they found that the sugars
were not above No. 7, Dutch standard, in color, and were in public
warehouse on Dec. 31, 1870, and so continued until March 20, 1871,
and were on that day entered to be withdrawn for consumption, the
sugars were not subject to any other duty than at the rate of 1 3/4
cents per pound.
2. That the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that if
they found the facts to be as stated in the preceding assignment of
error, the collector illegally exacted the additional duty of ten
percent.
3. That the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that
the plaintiffs were entitled to recover the amount of the
additional duty of ten percent exacted by the collector, with
interest.
Import duties upon the sugars at the rate of 1 3/4 cents per
pound, it is conceded, were properly exacted by the collector, and
the record shows that the duties were finally liquidated at that
rate before the sugars were withdrawn from the public bonded
warehouse for consumption, and that the plaintiffs paid the whole
of that amount without protest. Both parties agree that goods
deposited in a public warehouse, and being there on the first day
of May, 1866, might be withdrawn for consumption within one year
from the date of the original importation on payment of the duties
and charges to which they were subject by law at the time of such
withdrawal.
Imported, as the sugars in question were, on the 17th of
November, 1869, it is clear that the plaintiffs might have
withdrawn the same for consumption on payment of the duties to
which they were subject by law, if withdrawn within one year from
the time the importation was made; but they did not make any such
entry until the 20th of the following March, more than four months
after the year allowed for the purpose had expired.
Such depositors of imported goods might withdraw the same for
consumption within one year from the date of importation without
paying any thing beyond the duties and charges, but the privilege
extended to depositors did not stop there, as appears by what
follows in the same section. Instead of that, the provision is that
after the expiration of one year from the date of original
importation, and until the expiration of three years from said
date, any goods, wares, or merchandise in bond
Page 95 U. S. 195
as aforesaid may be withdrawn for consumption on payment of the
duties assessed on the original entry and charges, and an
additional duty of ten percent of the amount of such duties and
charges.
Pursuant to that provision in the Act of the 14th of March,
1866, the collector exacted the additional duty which is the
subject of contest under the present writ of error.
Certain intimations are made by the parties respectively that
the computation of the collector is erroneous, but the Court is of
the opinion that it is exactly correct, and that it does not lie
with the plaintiffs to call it in question, as they allege in their
declaration that the additional duty exacted by the collector is
ten percent of the duties properly assessed on the merchandise.
Responsive to that theory of the defense, the plaintiffs insist
that the first clause of the twenty-sixth section of the Act of the
14th of July, 1870, 16 Stat. 269, supersedes the provision invoked
by the defendant, and that it gave to them the right to withdraw
the sugars for consumption without paying any thing except the
original duties and charges, as finally liquidated and noted in the
withdrawal entry.
Imported goods, wares, and merchandise, the section provides,
which may be in the public stores or bonded warehouses on the day
and year the act shall take effect, shall be subjected to no other
duty upon the entry thereof for consumption than if the same were
imported after that day. When that act was passed, the sugars
imported by the plaintiffs had been in the public warehouse nearly
eight months, and the sugars could remain there something more than
four months longer before the year would have expired during which
the owner, importer, or consignee might withdraw the same for
consumption under the prior act, on payment of the liquidated
duties and charges.
Suppose the new act applies to the case before the Court, which
is not admitted, still it is clear that it would not supersede the
defense arising under the prior act, as four months remained during
which the plaintiff might have withdrawn the goods for consumption
without being subjected to any additional duty under the prior act,
and for the further reason that the
Page 95 U. S. 196
prior act is not repealed by the new act under which the
plaintiffs claim, nor is the provision of the new act repugnant to
that of the prior act. Nothing like inconsistency appears in the
provisions of the two acts at the passage of the latter, as applied
to the case before the Court, as the plaintiffs might under either
act have withdrawn their goods deposited in the public warehouse at
any time within four months subsequent to the passage of the new
act, on payment of the duties and charges finally liquidated by the
collector, and noted by the appraiser on the withdrawal entry.
Authorities to show that there must be a positive repugnancy
between the provisions of the new law and the old to work a repeal
of the old law by implication, and that even then the old law is
only repealed to the extent of the repugnancy, are very numerous
and decisive.
Wood v. United
States, 16 Pet. 342.
Repeal by implication, upon the ground that the subsequent
provision upon the same subject is repugnant to the prior law, is
not favored in any case, and must always meet with disfavor where
the attempt is made to apply the principle in the construction of
the revenue laws of the United States.
Acts of Congress of the kind are often very complex in their
provisions in order to enable those charged with their execution to
protect the treasury against the constant attempts of importers to
evade the payment of new duties or increased taxation. New
regulations often become necessary to enable the officers of the
customs to defeat such designs, and the rule is that in such cases,
there ought to be a manifest and irreconcilable repugnancy to
warrant the conclusion that the old law is abrogated, or that the
new law was intended to supersede the antecedent provision.
Aldridge v.
Williams, 3 How. 9;
The
Distilled Spirits, 11 Wall. 356.
Concede the theory of the plaintiffs to be correct and it would
follow that the sugars imported by the plaintiffs might remain in
the public warehouse for an indefinite period without paying the
liquidated duties and without subjecting the importer, owner, or
consignee to any additional charge when he should withdraw the same
for consumption. Congress, it is believed, never intended that any
such result should follow,
Page 95 U. S. 197
as it would be contrary to the policy of the government as shown
in all the acts of Congress establishing and regulating the
warehousing system.
Authority to warehouse certain imported goods was granted by
Congress at a very early period in our history. 1 Stat. 673. Option
was given to the importers of teas, by the sixty-second section of
the original collection act, either to secure the duties, as in
case of other importations, or to give bond to the collector of the
district where the teas were landed in double the amount of the
duties, with condition for the payment of the same in two years
from the date of the bond. Whenever the importer elected to give
the bond, the requirement was that the goods should be deposited,
at the expense of the importer, in one or more storehouses therein
described. Regulations to the same effect were subsequently enacted
in respect to the importation of wines and distilled spirits. 2
id. 469. Duties under that act were to be paid in twelve
calendar months from the date of the bond, and the collector was
required to accept the bond without surety.
Corresponding regulations were made at a later period in respect
to wool and the manufactures of wool, or manufactures of which wool
was a component part. 4
id. 591. Imported goods of the
kind might be placed in public stores under bond, subject to the
payment of customary storage and charges and to the payment of
interest at the rate of six percent per annum while so stored, and
the provision was that the duties on the articles so stored should
be paid one-half in three months and the other half in six months
from the date of importation.
Duties of import were required by the subsequent tariff act to
be paid in cash, and it was provided in case of failure to pay the
duties as required that the collector should take possession of the
same and that the goods should be deposited in the public stores,
there to be kept with due and reasonable care, at the charge and
risk of the owner, importer, consignee, or agent. Goods of the kind
might remain in public store for sixty days, but if they remained
beyond that period without payment of the duties, they were
required to be appraised and sold by the collector. 5
id.
562. Throughout those provisions, the plain inference is that
Congress did not regard the importation as
Page 95 U. S. 198
complete while the goods remained in the custody of the proper
officers of the customs.
At a still later period, Congress passed the act to establish a
warehousing system, in which it is provided that in case any goods,
wares, or merchandise deposited in public stores shall remain in
the same beyond one year without payment of the duties and charges
thereon, the same shall be appraised . . . and sold by the
collector at public auction, under the regulations therein
prescribed. 9
id. 53, 399.
Alterations were made in the warehousing system by a subsequent
act, which provided that goods remaining in warehouse, and goods
subsequently entered for warehousing under bond, may continue in
warehouse without the payment of the duties for a period of three
years from the date of the importation, and that the same may be
withdrawn for consumption on payment of the duties and charges. 10
id. 271.
Increased revenue being required, Congress passed the Act of the
5th of August, 1861, the fifth section of which enacted that goods
actually on shipboard and bound to the United States, and all goods
on deposit in warehouses and public stores at the passage of that
act, shall be subject to pay such duties as were provided by law
before and at the time of the passage of the act. 12
id.
293.
Provision was also made by the same section that goods deposited
in public store or bonded warehouse after the act should take
effect and go into operation, if designed for consumption here,
must be withdrawn therefrom, or the duties thereon be paid, in
three months after the same are deposited, and that goods designed
for exportation and consumption in foreign countries may be
withdrawn by the owner at any time before the expiration of three
years after the same are deposited -- such goods, if not withdrawn
in three years, to be regarded as abandoned to the government, and
to be disposed of as therein provided.
Three months were allowed to owners within which to withdraw
their goods from the public store or warehouse or to pay the
liquidated duties, but the further provision was that if they
neglect to improve that privilege within three months from the time
of the deposit, the goods may be withdrawn and entered
Page 95 U. S. 199
for consumption at any time within two years of the time of
their deposit, upon the payment of the legal duties, with an
addition of twenty-five percent thereon.
Events beyond control made it necessary in that period that
taxes should follow taxes in rapid succession, but it cannot be
admitted that the taxes were any the less obligatory because the
exactions were more frequent and at higher rates than in former
years. None of these regulations amounted to a contract between the
government and the importer, and of course they were at all times
subject to modification, alteration, or repeal; but they show to a
demonstration that it never was the policy of Congress to allow the
owner, importer, or consignee to deposit imported goods in the
public stores or warehouses without the payment of duties for an
indefinite period of time, or for any great length of time, without
requiring the depositor, when he withdrew the same for consumption,
to pay an additional duty for the privilege.
Four months, less three days, of the year allowed by the prior
act remained in which the goods might be withdrawn for consumption
on payment of the liquidated duties and charges, without being
subjected to any additional exaction, which gave full scope and
opportunity for the corresponding privilege conferred by the
twenty-sixth section of the subsequent act. 14
id. 8; 16
id. 269.
Examined, as the question should be, in the light of these
suggestions and the antecedent legislation of Congress, it is clear
that the new law supposed to be applicable to the case is not
repugnant to the prior law, and that there is no error in the
record.
Judgment affirmed.