Under the act of Congress passed on 14 July, 1832, entitled "An
act to alter and amend the several acts imposing duties on
imports," worsted shawls with cotton borders, and worsted
suspenders with cotton straps or ends, are not subjected to a duty
of fifty percentum
ad valorem.
Laws imposing duties on importation of goods are intended for
practical use and application by men engaged in commerce, and hence
it has become a settled rule in the interpretation of statutes of
this description to construe the language adopted by the
legislature, and particularly in the denomination of articles,
according to the commercial understanding of the terms used.
A collector of the revenue is not personally liable in an action
to recover back an excess of duties paid as collector and by him in
the regular or ordinary course of his duty paid into the Treasury
of the United States, he, the collector, acting in good faith and
under instructions from the Treasury Department and
no protest
being made at the time of payment or notice not to pay the money
over or intention to sue to recover back the amount given
him.
In case of a voluntary payment by mere mistake of law, no action
will lie to recover back the money. The construction of the law is
open to both parties, and each presumed to know it.
Any instructions of the Treasury Department to the collector
could not change the law or affect the rights of a party injured by
them. He was not bound to take and adopt that construction. He was
at liberty to judge for himself and act accordingly. These
instructions from the Treasury seem to be thrown into the question
in this case for the purpose of showing beyond all doubt that the
collector acted in good faith. To make the collector answerable
after he had paid over the money without any intimation having been
given that the duty was not legally charged cannot be sustained
upon any sound principle of policy or of law. There can be no
hardship in requiring the party to give notice to the collector
that he considers the duty claimed illegal, to put him on his
guard, by requiring him not to pay over the money. The collector
would then be placed in a situation to claim an indemnity from the
government. But if the party is entirely silent, and no intimation
of an intention to seek a repayment of the money, there can be no
ground upon which the collector can retain the money or call upon
the government to indemnify him against a suit. It is no sufficient
answer to this that the party cannot sue the United States. It is
the case of a voluntary payment under a mistake of law, and the
money paid over into the Treasury, and if any redress is to be had,
it must be by application to the favor of the government, and not
on the ground of a legal right.
The collector is personally liable in an action to recover back
an excess of duties paid to him as collector and by him paid over
in the regular and ordinary course of his duty into the Treasury of
the United States, he, the collector, acting in good faith and
under instructions from the Treasury Department, a
notice
having been given him at the time of payment that the duties were
charged too high and that the party paying, so paid to get
possession of his goods, and intended to sue to recover back the
amount erroneously paid, and a notice not to pay over the amount
into the Treasury. It is the settled doctrine of the law that
where money is illegally demanded
Page 35 U. S. 138
and received by an agent, he cannot exonerate himself from
personal
responsibility by paying it over to his principal when he has
had notice not to pay it over.
The suit was originally instituted in the Superior Court of the
City of New York by the plaintiff against the defendant, the
Collector of the Port of New York, and was removed by certiorari
into the Circuit Court of the United States.
The action was assumpsit to recover from the defendant the sum
of thirty-one hundred dollars and seventy-eight cents received by
him for duties as collector of the port of New York on an
importation of worsted shawls with cotton borders and worsted
suspenders with cotton straps or ends. The duty was levied at the
rate of fifty percentum
ad valorem under the second clause
of the second section of the Act of 14 July, 1832, entitled "An act
to alter and amend the several acts imposing duties on imports," as
manufactures of wool or of which wool is a component part. The plea
of
nonassumpsit was pleaded by the defendant in bar of the
action.
The following points were presented during the progress of the
trial for the opinion of the judges and on which the judges were
opposed in opinion:
First. Upon the trial of the cause, it having been proved that
the shawls imported, and upon which the duty of fifty percentum
ad valorem had been received, were worsted shawls with
cotton borders sewed on, and that the suspenders were worsted with
cotton ends or straps, and that worsted was made out of wool by
combing, and thereby became a distinct article, well known in
commerce under the denomination of worsted.
The judges were divided in opinion whether the said shawls and
suspenders were or were not a manufacture of wool or of which wool
is a component part within the meaning of the words "all other
manufactures of wool, or which wool is a component part" in the
second article of the second section of the Act of Congress of 14
July, 1832.
Second. Whether the collector is personally liable in an action
to recover back an excess of duties paid to him as collector
Page 35 U. S. 139
and by him in the regular or ordinary course of his duty paid
into the Treasury of the United States, he, the collector, acting
in good faith and under instructions from the Treasury Department,
and no protest being made at the time of payment or notice not to
pay the money over or intention to sue to recover back the amount
given him.
Third. Whether the collector is personally liable in an action
to recover back an excess of duties paid to him as collector, and
by him paid in the regular and ordinary course of his duty into the
Treasury of the United States, he, the collector, acting in good
faith and under instructions from the Treasury Department, a notice
having been given at the time of payment that the duties were
charged too high and that the party paying so paid to get
possession of his goods, and intended to sue to recover back the
amount erroneously paid, and a notice not to pay over the amount
into the Treasury.
These several points of disagreement were certified to this
Court by the direction of the judges of the circuit court.
Page 35 U. S. 150
MR. JUSTICE THOMPSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action of assumpsit to recover from the defendant the
sum of three thousand one hundred dollars and seventy-eight cents
received by him for duties as collector of the Port of New York on
an importation of worsted shawls with cotton borders and worsted
suspenders with cotton straps or ends. The duty was levied at the
rate of 50 percentum
ad valorem under the second article
of the second section of the Act of 14 July, 1832, entitled "An act
to alter and amend the several acts imposing duties on imports" as
manufactures of wool or of which wool was a component part. Upon
the trial of the cause, it appeared that the shawls imported, and
upon which the duty of 50 percentum
ad valorem had been
received, were worsted shawls with cotton borders sewed on, and
that the suspenders were worsted with cotton ends or straps. And it
appeared in evidence that worsted was made out of wool by combing,
and thereby become a distinct article, well known in commerce under
the denomination of worsted, and upon the trial the judges were
divided in opinion upon the following questions:
1. Whether the said shawls and suspenders were or were not a
manufacture of wool or of which wool was a component part within
the meaning of the words "all other manufactures of wool, or of
which wool is a component part" in the second article of the second
section of the Act of Congress of 14 July, 1832.
2. Whether the collector is personally liable in an action to
recover back an excess of duties paid to him as collector, and by
him in the regular or ordinary course of his duty paid into the
Treasury of the United States, he, the collector, acting in good
faith and under instructions from the Treasury Department, and no
protest being made at the time of payment or notice not to pay the
money over or intention to sue to recover back the amount given
him.
3. Whether the collector is personally liable in an action to
recover back an excess of duties paid to him as collector and by
him paid over in the regular and ordinary course of his duty into
the Treasury of the United States, he, the collector, acting in
good faith and under instructions from the Treasury Department,
a
Page 35 U. S. 151
notice having been given him at the time of payment that the
duties were charged too high and that the party paying so paid to
get possession of his goods, and intended to sue to recover back
the amount erroneously paid and a notice not to pay over the amount
into the Treasury.
1. The act of 1832, in the section under which this question
arises, after imposing a specific duty on a number of enumerated
articles, concludes in these words:
"And upon merino shawls made of wool, all other manufactures of
wool, or of which wool is a component part, and on ready-made
clothing, 50 percentum
ad valorem."
And the only question under this point is whether worsted shawls
with cotton borders and worsted suspenders with cotton ends or
straps are manufactures of wool or of which wool is a component
part. It is stated in the point as a fact and to be taken in
connection with the question that worsted is made out of wool by
combing, but that it becomes thereby a distinct article, well known
in commerce under the denomination of "worsted."
Laws imposing duties on importations of goods are intended for
practical use and application by men engaged in commerce, and hence
it has become a settled rule in the interpretation of statutes of
this description to construe the language adopted by the
legislature, and particularly in the denomination of articles,
according to the commercial understanding of the terms used. This
rule is fully recognized and established by this Court in the case
of
Two Hundred Chests of
Tea, 9 Wheat. 438. The Court there said the object
of the duty laws is to raise revenue, and for this purpose to class
substances according to the general usage and known denominations
of trade. Whether a particular article was designated by one name
or another in the country of its origin or whether it were a simple
or mixed substance was of no importance in the view of the
legislature. It applied its attention to the description of
articles as they derived their appellations in our own markets in
our domestic as well as our foreign traffic, and it would have been
as dangerous as useless to attempt any other classification than
that derived from the actual business of human life. It being
admitted in this case that worsted is a distinct article, well
known in commerce under
Page 35 U. S. 152
that denomination, we must understand Congress as using the term
in that commercial sense, and as contradistinguished from wool and
woolen goods and other well known denomination of goods. The
classification of the article in this section shows that Congress
had in view a class of goods known as worsted goods, as
contradistinguished from wool, and upon which a different duty is
laid. A duty of ten percentum
ad valorem is laid on
worsted stuff goods, shawls, and other manufactures of silk and
worsted, and on worsted yarn, twenty percentum
ad valorem.
If, because worsted is made of wool, all manufactures of worsted
become woolen manufacturers, there would be no propriety in
enumerating worsted goods as a distinct class.
Suppose the shawls in this case had been without borders; they
would then have been entirely composed of worsted. It could not
certainly in such case be pretended that they were manufacturers of
wool if there is any distinction between worsted and wool. Nor
would they be a manufacture of which wool is a component part. Such
manufactures are, where the article is composed of different
materials, compounded, but these shawls without the borders would
be entirely worsted, and no compound of different materials. And if
the shawls without the borders, would be worsted, and not woolen
goods, the addition of a cotton border would not make them woolen.
If the border had been wool instead of cotton, it might with some
propriety be said that wool was a component part. But adding cotton
to worsted cannot with any propriety be said to make the article
woolen. The same remarks may be applied to the suspenders, adding
cotton ends or straps to worsted suspenders, cannot make them
woolen goods.
This view of the case would be an answer to the question as put
in the point. The Court is not called upon to say what is the duty
imposed by the law upon these articles, but only to say whether
they are subject to a duty of fifty percentum
ad valorem
as manufactures of wool or of which wool is a component part. But
as this question may arise upon the trial, it is proper for the
Court to express an opinion upon it. The question is certainly, as
it respects the suspenders, not free from difficulty. The language
of the act is obscure and not susceptible of an
Page 35 U. S. 153
interpretation entirely satisfactory. There is no part of this
section that will cover the goods in question except that which
imposes a duty of ten percentum
ad valorem on worsted
stuff goods, shawls, and other manufacturers of silk and worsted.
This duty is imposed upon shawls of some description, and none but
worsted would at all answer the denomination. Merino shawls made of
wool are specifically enumerated and made subject to a duty of
fifty percentum. The clause imposing the duty on worsteds may well
admit of reading "worsted stuff goods and worsted shawls;" they are
certainly not a manufacture of worsted and silk. It might be a
proper subject of inquiry upon the trial whether shawls of this
description are usually denominated "worsted shawls" in the market,
and if so, the rule of construction alluded to would apply to the
case. At all events, the answer to be given to the question as put
must be that the shawls and suspenders are not a manufacture of
wool or of which wool is a component part.
2. The case put in the second point is where the collector has
received the money in the ordinary and regular course of his duty
and has paid it over into the Treasury, and no objection made at
the time of payment or at any time before the money was paid over
to the United States. The manner in which the question is here put
presents the case of a purely voluntary payment, without objection
or notice not to pay over the money or any declaration made to the
collector of an intention to prosecute him to recover back the
money. It is therefore to be considered as a voluntary payment by
mutual mistake of law, and in such case no action will lie to
recover back the money. The construction of the law is open to both
parties, and each presumed to know it. Any instructions from the
Treasury Department could not change the law or affect the rights
of the plaintiff. He was not bound to take and adopt that
construction. He was at liberty to judge for himself and act
accordingly. These instructions from the Treasury seem to be thrown
into the question for the purpose of showing, beyond all doubt,
that the collector acted in good faith. To make the collector
answerable after he had paid over the money, without any
intimation's having been given that the duty was not legally
charged, cannot be sustained
Page 35 U. S. 154
upon any sound principles of policy or of law. There can be no
hardship in requiring the party to give notice to the collector
that he considers the duty claimed illegal, and put him on his
guard by requiring him not to pay over the money. The collector
would then be placed in a situation to claim an indemnity from the
government. But if the party is entirely silent, and no intimation
of an intention to seek a repayment of the money, there can be no
ground upon which the collector can retain the money or call upon
the government to indemnify him against a suit. It is no sufficient
answer to this that the party cannot sue the United States. The
case put in the question is one where no suit would lie at all. It
is the case of a voluntary payment under a mistake of law, and the
money paid over into the Treasury, and if any redress is to be had,
it must be by application to the favor of the government, and not
on the ground of a legal right.
The case of
Morgan v. Palmer, 2 Barn. & Cres. 729,
was an action for money had and received to recover back money paid
for a certain license, and one objection to sustaining the action
was that it was a voluntary payment. The court did not consider it
a voluntary payment, and sustained the action, but Chief Justice
Abbot and the whole court admitted that the objection would have
been fatal if well founded in point of fact. The court said it had
been well argued that, the payment having been voluntary, it could
not be recovered back in an action for money had and received. And
in
Brisbain v. Dacres, 5 Taunt. 154, the question is very
fully examined by Gibbs, Justice, and most of the cases noticed and
commented upon, and with the concurrence of the whole court, except
Chambre, Justice, lays down the doctrine broadly that where a man
demands money of another, as matter of right, and that other with a
full knowledge of the facts upon which the demand is founded, has
paid a sum of money voluntarily, he cannot recover it back. It may
be, says the judge, that upon a further view he may form a
different opinion of the law, and it may be his subsequent opinion
may be the correct one. If we were to hold otherwise, many
inconveniences may arise. There are many doubtful questions of law.
When they arise, the defendant has an option either to litigate the
question or submit to the demand and pay the money. But
Page 35 U. S. 155
it would be most mischievous and unjust if he, who has
acquiesced in the right by such voluntary payment, should be at
liberty, at any time within the statute of limitations, to rip up
the matter, and recover back the money.
This doctrine is peculiarly applicable to a case where the money
has been paid over to the public treasury, as in the question now
under consideration. Lord Eldon, in the case of
Bromley v.
Holland, 7 Vesey 23, approves the doctrine and says it is a
sound principles that a voluntary payment is not recoverable back.
In
Cox v. Prentice, 3 Maul & Selw. 348, Lord
Ellenborough says
"I take it to be clear that an agent who receives money for his
principal is liable as a principal so long as he stands in his
original situation, and until there has been a change of
circumstances, by his having paid over the money to his principal
or done something equivalent to it."
And in
Buller v. Harrison, 2 Cowp. 568, Lord Mansfield
says the law is clear that if an agent pay over money which has
been paid to him by mistake, he does no wrong, and the plaintiff
must call on the principal that if, after the payment has been
made, and before the money has been paid over, the mistake is
corrected, the agent cannot afterwards pay it over without making
himself personally liable. Here, then, is the true distinction:
when the money is paid voluntarily and by mistake to an agent and
he has paid it over to his principal, he cannot be made personally
responsible, but if before paying it over he is apprised of the
mistake and required not to pay it over, he is personally liable.
The principle laid down by Lord Ellenborough in
Townsend v.
Wilson, 1 Campbell 396, cited and relied upon on the part of
the plaintiff, does not apply to this case. He says if a person
gets money into his hands illegally, he cannot discharge himself by
paying it over to another, but the payment in that case was not
voluntary, for, says Lord Ellenborough, the plaintiff had been
arrested and was under duress when he paid the money. In
Stevenson v. Mortimer, 2 Cowp. 816, Lord Mansfield lays
down the general principle that if money is paid to a known agent
and an action is brought against the agent for the money, it is an
answer to such action that he has paid it over to his principal.
That he intended, however, to apply this rule to cases of voluntary
payments made by
Page 35 U. S. 156
mistake is evident from what fell from him in
Sadler v.
Evans, 4 Bur. 1987. He there said he kept clear of all
payments to third persons but where it is to a known agent, in
which case the action ought to be brought against the principle
unless in special cases, as under notice or
mala fides,
which seems to be an admission that if notice is given to the agent
before the money is paid over, such payment will not exonerate the
agent. And this is a sound distinction, and applies to the two
questions put in the second and third points in the case now before
the Court. In the former, the payment over is supposed to be
without notice, and in the latter after notice and a request not to
pay over the money. The answer, then, to the second question is
that under the facts there stated, the collector is not personally
liable.
3. The case put by the third point is where, at the time of
payment, notice is given to the collector that the duties are
charged too high and that the party paying so paid to get
possession of his goods, and accompanied by a declaration to the
collector that he intended to sue him to recover back the amount
erroneously paid and notice given to him not to pay it over to the
Treasury.
This question must be answered in the affirmative unless the
broad proposition can be maintained that no action will lie against
a collector to recover back an excess of duties paid him, but that
recourse must be had to the government for redress. Such a
principle would be carrying an exemption to a public officer beyond
any protection, sanctioned by any principles of law or sound public
policy. The case of
Irving v. Wilson, 4 Term 485, was an
action for money had and received, against custom house officers to
recover back money paid to obtain the release and discharge of
goods seized that were not liable to seizure, and the action was
sustained. Lord Kenyon observed that the revenue laws ought not to
be made the means of oppressing the subject; that the seizure was
illegal; that the defendants took the money under circumstances
which could be no possibility justify them; and therefore this
could not be called a voluntary payment.
The case of
Greenway v. Hurd, 4 Term 554, was an action
against an excise officer to recover back duties illegally
Page 35 U. S. 157
received, and Lord Kenyon did say that an action for money had
and received will not lie against a known agent, but the party must
resort to the superior. But this was evidently considered a case of
voluntary payment. The plaintiff had once refused to pay, but
afterwards paid the money, and this circumstance is expressly
referred to by Buller, Justice, as fixing the character of the
payment. He says though the plaintiff had once objected to pay the
money, he seemed afterwards to waive the objection by paying it.
And Lord Kenyon considered the case as falling within the principle
of
Sadler v. Evans, 4 Bur. 1984, which has already been
noticed. In the case of
Snowden v. Davis, 1 Taunt. 358, it
was decided that an action for money had and received would lie
against a bailiff to recover back money paid through compulsion
under color of process by an excess of authority, although the
money had been paid over. The court said the money was paid to the
plaintiff under the threat of a distress, and although paid over to
the sheriff and by him into the Exchequer, the action well lies;
the plaintiff paid it under terror of process to redeem his goods,
and not with intent that it should be paid over to anyone.
The case of
Ripley v. Gelston, 9 John. 201, was a suit
against a collector to recover back a sum of money demanded by him
for the clearance of a vessel. The plaintiff objected to the
payment as being illegal, but paid it for the purpose of obtaining
the clearance, and the money had been paid by the collector into
the branch bank to the credit of the treasurer. The defense was put
on the ground that the money had been paid over, but this was held
insufficient. The money, said the court, was demanded as a
condition of the clearance, and that being established, the
plaintiff is entitled to recover it back without showing any notice
not to pay it over. The cases which exempt an agent do not apply.
The money was paid by compulsion. It was extorted as a condition of
giving a clearance, and not with intent or purpose to be paid over.
In the case of
Clinton v. Strong, 9 John. 369, the action
was to recover back certain costs, which the marshal had demanded
on delivering up a vessel which had been seized, which costs the
court considered illegal, and one of the questions was whether the
payment was voluntary. The court said the payment, could
Page 35 U. S. 158
not be voluntary. The costs were exacted by the officer
colore officii, as a condition of the redelivery of the
property, and that it would lead to the greatest abuse to hold that
a payment under such circumstances was a voluntary payment
precluding the party from contesting it afterwards.
The case of
Hearsey v. Pryn, 7 John. 179, was an action
to recover back toll which had been illegally demanded, and
Spencer, Justice, in delivering the opinion of the court, said the
law is well settled that an action may be sustained against an
agent who has received money to which the principal had no right if
the agent has had notice not to pay it over. And in the case of
Fry v. Lockwood, 4 Cowen 456, the court adopted the
principle that when money is paid to an agent for the purpose of
being paid over to his principal and is actually paid over, no suit
will lie against the agent to recover it back. But the distinction
taken in the case of
Ripley v. Gelston is recognized and
adopted that the cases which exempt an agent when the money is paid
over to his principal without notice do not apply to cases where
the money is paid by compulsion, or extorted as a condition,
&c. From this view of the cases, it may be assumed as the
settled doctrine of the law that where money is illegally demanded
and received by an agent, he cannot exonerate himself from personal
responsibility by paying it over to his principal if he has had
notice not to pay it over. The answer, therefore, to the third
point must be that the collector is personally liable to an action
to recover back an excess of duties paid to him as collector under
the circumstances stated in the point, although he may have paid
over the money into the Treasury.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern
District of New York and on the questions on which the judges of
the said circuit court were opposed in opinion, and which were
certified to this Court for its opinion agreeably to the act of
Congress in such case made and provided and was argued by counsel,
on consideration whereof it is the opinion of this Court on the
first question that the said shawls and suspenders were
Page 35 U. S. 159
not a manufacture of wool or of which wool was a component part
within the meaning of the words "all other manufactures of wool or
of which wool is a component part" in the second article of the
second section of the Act of Congress of 14 July, 1832.
On the second question, it is the opinion of this Court that
under the facts as stated in the said second question, the
collector is not personally liable.
On the third question, it is the opinion of this Court that the
collector, under the circumstances as stated in the said question,
is liable to an action to recover back an excess of duties paid to
him as collector although he may have paid over the money into the
Treasury. Whereupon it is ordered and adjudged by this Court to be
so certified to the said Circuit Court of the United States for the
Southern District of New York.