A., a collector of internal revenue, seized certain whiskey
belonging to B. for the condemnation and forfeiture whereof
proceedings were afterwards, at the suit of the United States,
brought in the proper court. The court rendered a judgment
dismissing them, and, "it appearing that the seizure, though
improperly made, was made by his superior officer, the supervisor,"
ordered that
a certificate of probable cause be issued to A. B. brought
trespass against the supervisor.
Held:
1. That the certificate was a bar to the suit.
2. That the motive of the court for granting it makes no part of
the record, and should not have been recited therein.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 97 U. S. 643
MR. JUSTICE HUNT delivered the opinion of the Court.
Emery, a supervisor of internal revenue, was sued by Stacey for
causing the seizure of a quantity of whiskey belonging to him,
which had been libeled by the collector of internal revenue, under
Emery's direction, and subsequently released, on dismissing the
proceedings against it.
That judgment and the accompanying order are in the words
following:
"It is, therefore, considered by the court that the information
in this cause be dismissed and that the delivery bond given by the
claimant for the property seized in this cause be discharged. It is
further ordered by the court that the cost be certified to the
proper accounting officers for payment, and that a certificate of
probable cause of seizure be issued to W. D. Peabody, collector, it
appearing that the seizure, although improperly made, was made by
his superior officer, the supervisor."
Emery justified as supervisor, and upon demurrer to his pleas
setting up the certificate of probable cause as above set forth,
judgment was given in his favor.
Stacey then sued out this writ of error, which is based on the
ground that the certificate is no protection to Emery.
It is contended that the certificate protects the collector, on
the sole ground that he acted as a ministerial officer, in
obedience to the orders of his superior, and that the granting of
the certificate in this form implies that the seizure was made
without probable cause. These facts, it is said, determine
conclusively that the seizure was wrongfully made, and that the
defendant was a trespasser in making it.
Gelston v.
Hoyt, 3 Wheat. 246;
The
Apollon, 9 Wheat. 362.
The defendant must and does base his exemption from liability
for an unauthorized seizure of the plaintiff's goods upon the Act
of March 2, 1799, 1 Stat. 696, sec. 89, which provides as
follows:
"When any prosecution shall be commenced on account of the
seizure of any ship or vessel, goods, wares, or merchandise, and
judgment shall be given for the claimant or claimants if it shall
appear to the court before whom such
Page 97 U. S. 644
prosecution shall be tried that there was a reasonable cause of
seizure, the said court shall cause a proper certificate or entry
to be made thereof, and in such case the claimant or claimants
shall not be entitled to costs, nor shall the person who made the
seizure or the prosecutor be liable to action, suit, or judgment on
account of such seizure or prosecution."
Under this act, if it appeared to the court that there was a
reasonable cause of seizure, it was its duty to cause a proper
certificate to be made thereof. This was its sole duty in this
respect, and its decision is conclusive. The reason entitling the
defendant to exemption or the motive for granting the certificate
makes no part of the record, and should not be recited therein. If
the prosecutor had called together a jury of twelve good men prior
to the seizure and had taken their judgment whether the goods were
liable to seizure and had acted upon it, this circumstance should
have found no place in the record. Its recital would have been
surplusage simply.
So when the court states as a reason for granting a certificate
of probable cause of seizure by the collector that the seizure was
made by the direction of his superior officer, this statement is
irrelevant and superfluous. The certificate of probable cause is
all there is of it. The residue of the sentence is out of the case.
The unusual form of the certificate should work on prejudice to the
rights of the defendant.
The act we have cited provides that when such certificate shall
be made, neither the party making the seizure nor the prosecutor
shall be liable to action on account of such seizure or
prosecution. The collector who made the seizure has been certified
not to be liable, and the present defendant, the party directing
the seizure -- that is, the prosecutor -- is equally entitled to
exemption.
Generally it is the duty of the district attorney of the United
States to prosecute for all violations of the customs revenue laws
or the internal revenue laws of the country. Rev.Stat., sec. 838.
No doubt he falls within the protection of this statute of 1799, as
does the collector of customs, who is expressly authorized by the
act of 1796 to direct actions to be commenced to recover the
penalties for the violations in that act specified.
Supervisors of internal revenue are authorized to be
appointed
Page 97 U. S. 645
by the Act of July 20, 1868, 15 Stat. 143, 144. It was made a
part of their duty
"to see that all laws and regulations relating to the collection
of internal taxes are faithfully executed and complied with, to aid
in the prevention, detection, and punishment of any frauds in
relation thereto."
It was in the discharge of this duty to see that the laws were
faithfully executed and to aid in the detection and punishment of
frauds that the defendant gave the direction complained of.
We are of the opinion that this officer, equally with the
district attorney and customs collector, is entitled to the
protection given by the act of 1799.
The complaint alleges that the seizure of the goods was illegal
and wrongful and malicious, and it is now contended that a
certificate of probable cause affords no protection where the
seizure is malicious.
This is an error. The question of malice or of good faith is not
an element in the case. It is not a question of motive. If the
facts and circumstances before the officer are such as to warrant a
man of prudence and caution in believing that the offence has been
committed, it is sufficient. Whether the officer seized the
occasion to do an act which would injure another, or whether he
moved reluctantly, is quite immaterial.
Mr. Justice Washington says, in
Munn v. Dupont, 3 Wash.
37: "If malice is proved, yet if probable cause exists, there is no
liability. Malice and want of probable cause must both exist" to
justify an action. He then defines probable cause in these
words:
"A reasonable ground of suspicion, supported by circumstances
sufficiently strong in themselves to warrant a cautious man in the
belief that the party is guilty of the offence with which he is
charged."
Chief Justice Shaw defines it in similar language: "Such a state
of facts as would lead a man of ordinary caution to believe, or to
entertain an honest and strong suspicion, that the person is
guilty."
Ulmer v. Leland, 1 Me. 135.
In
Forhay v. Ferguson, 2 Den. (N.Y.) 617, the rule is
laid down by Bronson, C.J., in the same language, with this
addition: "And such cause will afford a defense to a malicious
prosecution, however innocent the plaintiff may be." In that case,
there was evidence to justify a finding that the prosecution
Page 97 U. S. 646
had been from a bad motive. This rule is so clear, that it is
not necessary to multiply authorities.
In the case before us, the certificate was of "probable cause of
seizure."
The authorities we have cited speak of "probable" cause. The
statute of 1799, however, uses the words "reasonable cause of
seizure." No argument is made that there is a substantial
difference in the meaning of these expressions, and we think there
is none. If there was a probable cause of seizure, there was a
reasonable cause. If there was a reasonable cause of seizure, there
was a probable cause. In many of these reported cases, the two
expressions are used as meaning the same thing:
Talbot v.
Seeman, 1 Cranch 1;
Carrington
v. Merchants' Insurance Co., 8 Pet. 495;
United States v.
Riddle, 5 Cranch 311;
Sixty
Pipes of Brandy, 10 Wheat. 421;
United States
v. The Recorder, 2 Blatchf. 119. Although informal in this, as
in the terms already referred to, we are of the opinion that the
certificate is sufficient to protect a prosecutor, and that the
defendant is to be ranked as of that class.
Judgment affirmed.