Under § 2930 of the Revised Statutes, the merchant appraiser
must be a person familiar with the character and value of the
goods, and under § 2901, he must open, examine and appraise the
packages designated by the collector and ordered to be sent to the
public stores for examination.
In a suit to recover back duties paid under protest, an importer
has a right to show that those provisions of the statute have not
been complied with.
For that purpose, the merchant appraiser is a competent
witness.
This was an action against the collector of the port of New
York, to recover back duties alleged to have been illegally
exacted. Judgment for defendant. Plaintiff sued out this writ of
error. The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 123 U. S. 357
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action at law brought in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Southern District of New York by the members
of the co-partnership firm of E. Oelbermann & Co. against the
collector of the port of New York, in November, 1880, to recover
the sum of $4,925.20, with interest, as an alleged excess of duties
exacted by the collector on an importation of 34 cases of silk and
cotton velvets into the port of New York from Germany, via
Rotterdam, in June, 1879.
There were two invoices covered by one entry. One of the
invoices was for 10 cases and the other for 24 cases. The collector
designated two cases from the invoice of 10 cases and three cases
from the invoice of 24 cases for examination by the appraiser,
which five cases were sent to the public store. The appraiser,
after examination, raised the entered value of the merchandise more
than 10 percent and reported such advance in value to the
collector. The plaintiffs thereupon gave notice to the collector of
their dissatisfaction with such appraisement. The collector then
selected Levi M. Bates, a merchant of New York City, to be
associated as merchant appraiser with A. P. Ketchum, general
appraiser, in examining and appraising the merchandise. Such
proceedings were had that the general appraiser and the merchant
appraiser disagreed, and made separate reports of their
appraisement to the collector, who decided between them and adopted
the report of the general appraiser as to the value of the
merchandise. The entered value of the invoice of the 10 cases was
$3,477, and the entered value of the invoice of the 24 cases was
$9,441, being an aggregate entered value of $12,918, upon which at
the time of entry, the plaintiffs paid a duty of 60 percent
ad
valorem, the proper rate, amounting to $7,750.80. The value of
the invoice of the 10 cases was advanced by the reappraisement to
$4,032, and that of the invoice of the 24 cases to $11,522, making
a total advanced value of the goods, after the reappraisement, of
$15,554. Thus, the entered value of each invoice was advanced by
the reappraisement more than 10 percent, and the collector
liquidated the
Page 123 U. S. 358
duty on the goods at 60 percent upon such advanced valuation,
such duties amounting to $9,332.40, being an increase in the duty
of $1,581.60. In addition to such regular duty, he levied an
additional duty of 20 percent, under § 2900 of the Revised
Statutes, upon the $15,554, amounting to $3,110.80. The plaintiffs
paid such two sums of $1,581.60 and $3,110.80, and filed a protest
in writing on the 16th of October, 1879, in due time, against the
alleged exaction. They also appealed from the decision of the
collector to the Secretary of the Treasury, and brought this suit
within the time limited by law. They included in their suit a
further sum of $232.80, which had reference to some other matter.
At the trial, the court directed the jury to find a verdict for the
defendant, which was done; and, after a judgment for the defendant,
the plaintiffs sued out a writ of error.
It appeared in evidence at the trial that all the cases covered
by the invoice of the 10 cases were, before the official
appraisement was made, sent to the appraisers' store; that the
merchant appraiser advanced the value of the 10 cases an average of
8.4 percent, and the value of the 24 cases an average of 8.9
percent, and that the general appraiser advanced the value of the
10 cases an average of 16 percent, and the value of the 24 cases an
average of 22.1 percent
Among the grounds of objection stated in the protest were these:
(1) that the merchant appraiser was not a merchant duly qualified
to appraise the merchandise in question, as required by law,
inasmuch as he was not familiar with the character and value of the
goods to be appraised; (2) that the appraisers, and each of them,
did not diligently and faithfully examine and inspect such packages
of the goods as were designated by the collector on the invoices
and were ordered to the public store to be opened, examined, and
appraised.
Section 2930 of the Revised Statutes provides that the importer
may, after the original appraisement of imported goods, give notice
to the collector in writing of his dissatisfaction therewith, and
that, on the receipt of such notice,
"The collector shall select one discreet and experienced
merchant, to be associated with one of the general appraisers
wherever practicable,
Page 123 U. S. 359
or two discreet and experienced merchants, citizens of the
United States, familiar with the character and value of the goods
in question, to examine and appraise the same, agreeably to the
foregoing provisions, and if they shall disagree, the collector
shall decide between them, and the appraisement thus determined
shall be final and be deemed to be the true value, and the duties
shall be levied thereon accordingly."
It was under this provision of the statute that the foregoing
proceedings took place.
After evidence to the purport before mentioned had been given,
the plaintiffs called as a witness Mr. Bates, the merchant
appraiser, who testified that he resided and carried on business in
the City of New York, and that he served as merchant appraiser in
this case, and received his appointment as such from the collector.
The witness was then asked in succession, by the plaintiffs'
counsel, the following questions:
"Q. Will you state whether at the time you were selected to act
as merchant appraiser, you had any familiarity, and if so, how much
familiarity, with silk velvets?"
"Q. Will you state what familiarity you had with silk velvets at
the time you were appointed merchant appraiser in this case?"
"Q. At the time you were appointed merchant appraiser were you
familiar with the value of silk velvets?"
To each of these questions the counsel for the defendant
objected, on the ground that each was incompetent and immaterial,
and also upon the grounds
"(1) that it is not competent now to try the question as to
whether the person appointed by the collector was familiar with the
goods in question or not; that that is a question which must be
determined by the collector;"
"(2) that if it were competent for the plaintiffs to try the
question at all here, it is not competent for them to prove the
incompetency of this appraiser by his own mouth."
The court sustained the objection to each question, and the
plaintiffs excepted to each ruling.
After the last question above recited had been objected to, and
before it was ruled upon, the court said:
"I will exclude that in that form, but I do not intend to cut
you off from
Page 123 U. S. 360
introducing any competent evidence of the fact that Mr. Bates
was not a merchant -- that is, an experienced man having some
familiarity with these goods; that he was not of the class pointed
out in the act of Congress as an experienced merchant."
The plaintiffs' counsel then asked the witness the following
question:
"Q. Will you state to the court and jury what steps you took
after you became merchant appraiser to examine the merchandise
which was the subject of reappraisement?"
The defendant's counsel objected to this question "on the ground
that it was incompetent and immaterial, and because the witness
should not be allowed to impeach his own finding as merchant
appraiser." Thereupon the court said:
"As you put the question, I shall exclude it; at the same time,
I should not exclude evidence that he made no examination at all or
that he did not act at all."
To this ruling the plaintiffs excepted.
The following question was then ruled out under the same
objection, and the ruling was excepted to by the plaintiffs:
"Q. What did you do in the way of examination of the merchandise
which was the subject of that reappraisement?"
The following question was then put by the plaintiffs'
counsel:
"Q. Did you make any examination of any of the merchandise which
was the subject of that reappraisement?"
The witness answered that he did, and that his examination was
at the appraisers' headquarters on the west side of the town.
The following questions in succession were then asked the
witness by the plaintiffs' counsel, and to each the same objection
was taken by the defendant. Each was ruled out by the court, and to
each ruling an exception was taken by the plaintiffs:
"Q. Did your examination of the goods, such as it was, take
place in the wareroom at the appraisers' headquarters?"
"Q. Who was present?"
"Q. Were the importers? "
Page 123 U. S. 361
"Q. Or either of them?"
"Q. How many cases of merchandise belonging to this invoice did
you find there?"
"Q. How many cases did you open or have opened for
examination?"
"Q. How many pieces of velvet did you examine?"
"Q. Was that the only examination you made of those goods?"
"Q. Assuming that you had been examining those goods as a
purchaser, and that you did not know who the owners were, and knew
nothing of their responsibility, would you have purchased the goods
from the examination that you made, if there was nobody behind you
to fall back upon if there were any variations in the quality?"
The court then directed a verdict for the defendant, and the
plaintiffs excepted to such direction.
Although the advance made in the valuation of each invoice by
the merchant appraiser was less than 10 percent, yet the importers
were entitled to have a merchant appraiser with the qualifications
prescribed by the statute, with a view to his legitimate influence
with the general appraiser to limit his advance not only so that it
should not exceed 10 percent, with reference to the additional
duty, but so that it should not exceed such sum at a merchant
appraiser with those qualifications should deem just and fair. For
the collector is required, by § 2930, to decide between the two
appraisers, if they disagree.
It was held by this Court in
Hilton v. Merritt,
110 U. S. 97, that
the valuation of merchandise made by the customs officers under the
statute for the purpose of levying duties thereon is, in the
absence of fraud on the part of the officers, conclusive on the
importer, and that §§ 2931 and 3011 of the Revised Statutes, which
give the right of appeal to the Secretary of the Treasury when
duties are alleged to have been illegally or erroneously exacted,
and the right of trial by jury in case of adverse decision by the
Secretary of the Treasury, do not relate to alleged errors in the
appraisement of goods.
In that case, there was a reappraisement by a merchant
appraiser,
Page 123 U. S. 362
associated with one of the general appraisers, of an invoice of
kid gloves, and the collector had thereafter adopted the
appraisement returned in an amended report of the general
appraiser, and the advance of the invoice value being 16.2 percent,
had imposed an additional duty of 20 percent, on account of
undervaluation in the entry. At the trial, the plaintiffs offered
to show the foreign market value of the goods. They also offered in
evidence the records of the proceedings before the merchant
appraiser and the general appraiser, including the testimony and
various documents before those officers and subsequently before the
collector, and also the testimony of the collector to show all the
facts within his knowledge, or officially acted upon by him, in
relation to the invoice in question, and to show what his
experience was in valuing kid gloves. This evidence was excluded.
The plaintiffs also claim the right to go the jury upon the
questions (1) whether the collector, acting as appraiser, fully and
fairly examined the goods (2) whether the goods were invoiced at
their fair and actual value in the principal markets of France at
the time of exportation (3) whether a fair examination of the goods
was made by the general appraiser, associated with the merchant
appraiser, when that question was referred to him (4) whether the
facts stated in the protests had been established by the evidence
(5) whether the appraisers followed the evidence before them or
disregarded it, and whether the collector disregarded the evidence
or was negligent in his appraisal.
This Court, in its opinion, stated that the question presented
by the plaintiffs' exceptions was
"whether the valuation of merchandise made by the customs
officers under the statutes of the United States for the purpose of
levying duties thereon, is, in the absence of fraud on the part of
the officers, conclusive on the importer, or is such valuation
reviewable in an action at law brought by the importer to recover
back duties paid under protest."
On a consideration of all the sections of the Revised Statutes
relating to the subject, embracing §§ 2900, 2902, 2906, 2922, 2929,
2930, 2931, 2949, and 3011, the court came to the conclusion
Page 123 U. S. 363
that the meaning of those sections was that the appraisement of
the customs officers should be final, but that all other questions
relating to the rate and amount of duties might, after the importer
has taken the prescribed steps, be reviewed in an action at law
brought to recover duties unlawfully exacted; that the valuation
made by the customs officers was not open to question in an action
at law, so long as the officers acted without fraud and "within the
power conferred upon them by the statute;" that the evidence
offered by the plaintiffs and ruled out by the court "tended only
to show carelessness or irregularity in the discharge of their
duties by the customs officers, but not that they were assuming
powers not conferred by the statute;" and that the questions which
the plaintiffs proposed to submit to the jury were immaterial and
irrelevant. This view of the statutes on the subject, and to which
we adhere, does not cover the material questions raised in this
case.
Section 2930 of the Revised Statutes provides that on the
receipt by the collector of notice of dissatisfaction, he
"shall select one discreet and experienced merchant to be
associated with one of the general appraisers wherever practicable,
or two discreet and experienced merchants, citizens of the United
States, familiar with the character and value of the goods in
question, to examine and appraise the same."
The qualification prescribed by this section requires as well
that the merchant appraiser associated with one of the general
appraisers shall be a discreet and experienced merchant, and a
citizen of the United States, and familiar with the character and
value of the goods in question, as it does that the two merchant
appraisers, who are to act without the general appraiser, shall be
discreet and experienced merchants, and citizens of the United
States, and familiar with the character and value of the goods in
question.
This § 2930 was taken from § 17 of the Act of August 30, 1842,
c. 270, 5 Stat. 564, and § 3 of the Act of March 3, 1851, c. 38, 9
Stat. 630. Section 17 of the act of 1842 provided that on the
receipt by the collector of the notice of dissatisfaction, he
should select
"two discreet and experienced merchants, citizens
Page 123 U. S. 364
of the United States, familiar with the character and value of
the goods in question, to examine and appraise the same."
Section 3 of the act of 1851 provided that "wherever
practicable, in cases of appeal from the decision of United States
appraisers," under the provisions of § 17 of the Act of August 30,
1842,
"the collector shall select one discreet and experienced
merchant, to be associated with one of the appraisers appointed
under the provisions of this act, who together shall appraise the
goods in question."
It is quite apparent that the "one discreet and experienced
merchant" referred to in § 3 of the act of 1851 is to be a discreet
and experienced merchant having the additional qualifications
prescribed in § 17 of the act of 1842 -- that is, that he is to be
also a citizen of the United States and familiar with the character
and value of the goods in question.
The importer is entitled to have a merchant appraiser who
answers these qualifications, and is entitled to raise the question
of a want of qualification by a protest and an appeal to the
Secretary of the Treasury and in a suit at law brought thereafter.
If the merchant appraiser does not possess these qualifications, he
has no power conferred on him by the statute to act as a merchant
appraiser. The questions excluded by the court at the trial of this
case, so far as they bore upon the question as to whether Mr. Bates
was familiar with the goods in question or not, were competent, and
the ruling of the court, which was to the effect that that question
was to be determined solely by the collector, was erroneous. The
questions excluded by the court as to whether Mr. Bates had any
familiarity, and if so, how much, with silk velvets, and as to
whether he was familiar with the value of silk velvets, were
questions in the exact language of § 2930.
The remark of the court that it did not intend to cut the
plaintiffs off from any "competent evidence of the fact that Mr.
Bates was not a merchant, that is, an experienced man, having some
familiarity with these goods," and "that he was not of the class
pointed out in the act of Congress, as an experienced merchant,"
must be regarded as emphasizing the word "competent," in view of
the objection taken, that if it
Page 123 U. S. 365
were competent for the plaintiffs to try at all the question as
to whether Mr. Bates was familiar with the goods in question, it
was not competent for them to prove his incapacity by his own
mouth, and as sustaining that objection, and as holding that Mr.
Bates was not a competent witness upon the subject of his
familiarity with the character and value of silk velvets.
That the plaintiffs had a right on the trial to inquire whether
the provisions of § 2930 had been complied with in this respect has
been determined by the decisions of this Court in like cases. In
Greeley v.
Thompson, 10 How. 225, the circuit court had
instructed the jury that the valuation made by two merchant
appraisers, under the act of 1842, was invalid because one of the
merchants who made the appraisement was wrongfully substituted for
another who had been appointed, and who was removed by the
collector for having stated it to be his opinion that the
plaintiffs should have time to obtain evidence from England as to
the true market value of the goods. The judgment of the circuit
court was affirmed by this Court on the ground, among others, that
the removal of one of the merchant appraisers and the appointment
in his place of another, under the circumstances stated, were
illegal. This was an examination into the competency of the
appointment of the substituted merchant appraiser, of the same
character with the inquiry into the competency of the merchant
appraiser in the present case.
In
Converse v.
Burgess, 18 How. 413, which arose under the act of
1842, the plaintiffs offered to prove that the merchant appraisers
did not examine or see any of the original packages of the
merchandise, which was sugar, but only saw samples which had been
previously taken from one in ten of the packages described in the
invoice, and that such samples would not, when exposed to the air,
afford a fair criterion by which to judge of the importation, and
claimed the right to go behind the return of the merchant
appraisers, on the ground that they had not examined the sugar.
Section 21 of the Act of August 30, 1842, c. 270, 5 Stat. 565, now
embodied in § 2901 of the Revised Statutes, provided that the
collector
Page 123 U. S. 366
should designate on the invoice at least one package of every
invoice, and one package at least of every ten packages, imported,
to be opened, examined, and appraised in the public stores. The
defendant objected to the admission of the evidence, in the absence
of fraud on the part of the appraisers, and claimed that their
decision was in the nature of an award, and final under the
statute, and not open to review under the protest. The protest
alleged that the goods "were not fairly and faithfully examined by
the appraisers." The circuit court ruled that the evidence was
admissible, and that the plaintiffs might go to the jury on the
question whether the examination made by the merchant appraisers
was in substance and effect equivalent to an examination of one
package in ten of the importation, and that, if it was not, the
appraisement was void. The plaintiffs had a verdict and a judgment,
and, on a writ of error by the collector, the judgment was affirmed
by this Court. The court observes in its opinion that the decision
of the merchant appraisers is final "provided it is made in
pursuance of law," and, referring to the acts of Congress on the
subject, the court adds:
"These acts of Congress provide for the appointment, regulate
the duties, and impose the limitations on the authority, of the
appraisers, and determine the conditions on which the validity of
their assessment depends. All their powers are derived from these
acts, and it is their duty to observe the restrictions and to obey
the directions they contain. In the present instance, there was a
neglect of the positive mandate 'to open, examine, and appraise one
package of every invoice, and one package at least of every 10
packages of goods, wares, and merchandise;' and the jury have found
that the inquiry they made was not, in substance nor in effect, an
equivalent for such an examination. We are therefore of the opinion
that the importer was not precluded by their return from disputing
the sufficiency or accuracy of their assessment."
If such nonobservance of the positive mandate of the statute in
regard to the examination of so many of the original packages as
the statute specified, as a condition on which the validity of the
assessment depended, vitiated the
Page 123 U. S. 367
appraisement, the nonobservance of the statute in regard to the
qualifications of the merchant appraiser must be regarded as
equally one of the conditions on which the validity of the
assessment depends, and the plaintiff must have an equal right in
either case to make proof at the trial, of such nonobservance, if
he has complied with the other statutory requirements necessary for
the bringing of his suit. We do not lay down any absolute or
comparative standard of familiarity with the character and value of
the goods which must be applied to carry our the requirements of
the statute. There must be, in every case, a substantial compliance
with the statute. This does not necessarily require the highest
degree of such familiarity. There must be, in good faith, in every
case, the appointment of a person having the qualifications
prescribed by the statute.
In regard to the question whether Mr. Bates was a competent
witness to prove that he was not familiar with the character and
value of silk velvets, we are of opinion that his evidence on that
subject was admissible. As the question of his familiarity with the
article and with its value necessarily depended upon the nature,
and to some degree at least, upon the extent of his experience in
connection with the article, no one could know what that experience
was so well as himself. If he is to be excluded as a witness on the
subject, when offered by either side, the court, and the jury, and
the parties would be deprived of the best testimony within reach.
There is no ground of public policy which forbids that the merchant
appraiser should be a witness to the extent above indicated. The
brief of the Solicitor General does not urge that the witness was
not a competent witness to that extent.
The question is somewhat analogous to that in the case of an
arbitrator. It has been held that an arbitrator can be a witness as
to the time when, and the circumstances in which, he made an award
with a view to show that by the terms of the submission, he was not
authorized to make the award,
Woodbury v. Northy, 3
Greenleaf 85; as to the fact that the arbitrators did not examine
or act upon a certain matter,
Roop v. Brubacker, 1 Rawle
304; as to facts which occurred
Page 123 U. S. 368
at or during the arbitration, and which tend to show the award
to be void for legal cause,
Strong v. Strong, 9 Cush. 560,
576, and as to whether a certain claim was included in the award,
Hale v. Huse, 10 Gray 99.
See also Spurck v.
Crook, 19 Ill. 415. The same principle has been applied in the
case of a tribunal, called a jury, appointed to assess damages and
apportion benefits in the widening of a street,
Bank v.
Mayor, 9 Wend. 244, and in the case of commissioners appointed
to condemn land for railroad purposes,
Marquette Railroad Co.
v. Probate Judge, 53 Mich. 217. In
Duke of Buccleuch v.
Metropolitan Board of Works, 5 H.L. 418, it was held that an
arbitrator may be a witness as to what passed before him and as to
what matters were presented to him for consideration.
See
2 Greenleaf on Evidence § 78, and notes.
We are also of opinion that the court erred in excluding the
evidence of Mr. Bates, which was offered to show that he did not
observe the requirements of § 2901 of the Revised Statutes, and did
not open, examine, and appraise the packages designated by the
collector and ordered to be sent to the public store for
examination. The court observed that it would not exclude evidence
that Mr. Bates made no examination at all, and thereupon the
witness, in reply to a question whether he made any examination of
any of the merchandise, answered that he did. But this ruling did
not give to the plaintiffs that to which they were entitled. The
subsequent questions, which were excluded, as to how many cases he
opened or had opened for examination and as to the character of the
examination he made, the object of which questions was to ascertain
whether it was such an examination as the statute prescribed, were
intended to show a noncompliance with the statute as to examination
within the terms of the protest. This the plaintiffs had a right to
show. In
Greely v. Thompson, before cited, the circuit
court had instructed the jury that if both of the appraisers did
not make some personal examination of the goods, their report or
decision was not made in conformity to law, and did not justify the
penalty, and the propriety of this instruction was approved by this
Court. In
Converse v. Burgess,
Page 123 U. S. 369
before cited, it was held, as we have seen, that the
appraisement was vitiated by proof of a failure to open, examine,
and appraise the packages designated by the collector, or to do
what was an equivalent for such an examination.
We are also of opinion, for the reasons before stated, that Mr.
Bates was a competent witness to prove the extent and character of
the examination which he made of the goods in question. He may have
been the only witness who could testify as to such examination, and
certainly there was no witness who could know more on the subject.
We do not consider it necessary or proper to express an opinion
upon any of the other questions raised by the counsel for the
plaintiffs in error.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the case
is remanded to that court, with a direction to award a new
trial.