United States v. Twenty-Eight Packages of Pins
United States v. Twenty-Eight Packages of Pins
Opinion of the Court
The question to be decided in this case is one of entire novelty, and considerable importance. It arises on the construction of the fifteenth section of the act of congress of September 24, 1789, “to establish the judicial courts of the United States.” Neither the counsel at the bar, nor the inquiries I have made since the argument, have been able to discover any judicial decision or practice, which affords us any aid in determining the question.
The case is this. An informaton has been filed against certain pins and needles, imported into the United States from England, and it is charged that they have become forfeited to the United States, by reason of a false valuation in an invoice, made up with an intent to defraud the revenue of the United States. A claim has been put in by Cardwell and Potter as agents for Kirby, Beard and Kirby, the exporting house in England, and the cause is in order for trial. The invoice, alleged to contain the false valuation, has never been produced at the custom house, and, of course, no entry of the goods has been or can be made, while it is withheld. The district attorney, nevertheless, proceeds for the forfeiture, under the fourth section of the act of May 28, 1830, by which it is enacted that “if any package or invoice be made up with intent, by a false valuation, to evade or defraud the revenue, the same shall be forfeited.” On the trial of the issue under this information, the production of the invoice alleged to be false, will be required; and in order to obtain it, the district attorney has taken a “rule on the claimants to show cause, why an order should not be made on them and their agents to produce, at the trial of the cause, the original invoice of the goods mentioned in the information; and on the nonproduction thereof, that judgment be rendered in favour of the United States.” This order is claimed of the court, under the fifteenth section of the act of September 24, 1789, above referred to. As a ground for this motion, the district attorney filed, in the first instance, the following affidavit: “James N. Barker, collector of the port of Philadelphia, being duly sworn according to law, deposes and says, that the original invoice of the twenty-eight cases of pins and one case of
An objection was made to the sufficiency of this proof, inasmuch as the deponent is a party interested in the condemnation of the goods, being entitled to a certain portion of the forfeiture. I had no doubt, in looking at the authorities, .that there was nothing in the objection; that the affidavit of the party is competent for this purpose; and that the affidavit may be taken ex parte without a cross-examination. Such has been the practice of toe state courts, as well as of this court; and aQ the party on whom the Call' is made, may extricate himself from the difficulty by making oath that he has not the papers required of him, he cannot complain.
The ground being thus laid by the United States, by reasonable proof of the possession of the papers by the claimants, and of their contents, to show that they are pertinent to the issue, the question comes up, which has been argued at the bar, to wit: whether the case is comprehended within the terms and meaning of the fifteenth section of the act of September 24, 1789. As the decision of the question must turn on the language and intention of the whole section, every word must be carefully attended to. The section is as follows: “That all the said courts of the United States shall have power, in the trial of actions at law, on motion and due notice thereof being given, to require the parties to produce books or writings in their possession or power, which contain evidence pertinent to the issue, in eases and under circumstances where they might be compelled to produce the same, by the ordinary rules of proceeding in chancery; and if a plaintiff shall fail to comply with such order to produce books or writings, it shall be lawful for the courts, respectively, on motion, to give the like judgment for the defendant, as in cases of non-suit; and if a defendant shall fail to comply with such order to produce books and writings, it shall be lawful for the courts, respectively, on motion, as aforesaid, to give judgment against him or her by default.” Several of the phrases of the act have been commented upon, with great minuteness, to show that its provisions cannot be applied to a prosecution for a penalty or. forfeiture; and a strict construction is demanded, because the enactments are highly penal. I do not find it to • be necessary to notice all the criticisms that, have been made on the language-of the law. There are some broad lines of description sufficiently definite, in-my opinion, to direct us to the decision of the case. The courts of the United States have a power given to them, to require parties to produce books and writings in their possession or power, which contain evidence pertinent to the issue, “in cases and under circumstances where they might be compelled to produce the same by the ordinary rules of proceeding in chancery.”' Is this such a case? Would a court of chancery,- on a bill of discovery, compel a party to produce evidence which would subject him to a forfeiture? I think not. No such order has been shown by a court of equity; and the authorities that have been referred to, hold a different doctrine.
In Fonblanque’s Treatise on Equity (page 495), speaking of the objects of a court of equity, in enforcing discovery, it is said: “It may also happen that the situation of the defendant may render it improper for the court to enforce a discovery, as when the discovery might subject the defendant to pains and penalties, or to a forfeiture, or to something in the nature of a forfeiture.” A reference is made to Mitford’s Treatise , on Equity, for a clear and comprehensive view of the same subject.
In the case of Harrison v. Southcote, 1 Atk. 528, the bill sought for a discovery of the defendant, whether S. was not a person professing the popish religion, before he conveyed the freehold and copyhold estates to the defendant,' as a purchaser thereof. The lord chancellor (page 538) says: “It is not pretended that the defendant is a papist himself, therefore no penalty could fall upon him on that account: but yet he insists, if he should discover the person, under whom he bought, was a papist, it would defeat his title. To be sure, in general, by the determination in the case of Smith v. Read [Id. 526], it is settled, where there is a plea of a title derived, voluntarily or by a devise, from a papist, and not suggested to be a colourable trust, that by reason of the penal law, which would attach upon him, from the incapacity of the devisor to devise, the defendant shall not be compelled to discover, whether the person, under whom he claims, is a papist.” The chancellor goes on to say: “The rule of law is that a man shall not be obliged to discover what may subject him to a penalty, not what must only.” Although it should not appear with' certainty whether the discovery would create a forfeiture, yet if it eventually may do so, it is sufficient to protect the party from a discovery. Thus it would seem that the penal consequences, which may fall upon the claimants, by the production of the invoice called for by the United States, make it a case not within the provisions of the act of congress.
There is another part of the act, which
On the 10th January, 1833, the case came on for trial. The evidence, on the part of the United States, consisted of the original report and manifest of the cargo of the Monongahela, delivered to the collector at Philadelphia on the 9th November, 1830, wherein the packages mentioned in the information were described as consigned to Cardwell and Potter; of a permit on the 27th November to land those packages (not being claimed) and take them to the custom house; and of a bill of the inspector on the same day, showing they had been accordingly landed and takerT there-. Witnesses were also called to prove that the packages had remained in store ever since, in the place appropriated to unclaimed goods; that no invoice thereof had been produced, or entry of them made at the custom'house; that a formal notice had been served on the attorney of the claimants on the 31st December, 1832, to produce at this trial the original invoice, which was not done. It was then testified, on behalf of the United States, by Edward Ewing, an assistant appraiser, that John Potter, one of the firm of Cardwell and Potter, by whom the claim was made in this-case, g*j behalf of Kirby, Beard and Kirby, had expressly declared, that he had the invoice in question, but would not produce it; that the value of the pins, as stated 'in the invoice, was similar to that stated in the invoice of the pins imported in the Alle-ghany, which were forfeited for a false valuation; and that these packages were of the same quality as those. It was also proved, that a subpcena duces tecum had been duly served on John Potter, requiring him to attend at this trial and bring the invoice with him; but he made default and never appeared. It was admitted, on the part of the United States, that they had no evidence of any other invoice of the goods in question, nor of the production of any invoice at the custom house, nor of any entry of the goods having been made or offered to be made. The claimants offered no evidence whatever on their part.
HOPKINSON, District Judge (charging jury). The goods described in the information were sent by the claimants Messrs. Kirby, Beard and Kirby, of London, to the United States, by the ship Monongahela, consigned to their agents, Cardwell and Potter of this city. The ship arrived at this port in November, 1830, having these goods on board. No invoice of them having been produced at the custom house, nor entry made, or offered to be made, within the time prescribed by law, the goods were taken possession of by the officers of the customs, and deposited in the public store house, where they now remain.
It has been testified by Mr. Edward Ewing, that Mr. Potter, one of the consignees, acknowledged to him in the spring of 1831, that he had an invoice of the pins imported by the Monongahela, but that he would not produce it until the other case was decided. The other case he alluded to was a previous importation of pins, sent by the claimants to the same consignees, by the ship Alleghany, which had been entered at the custom house, and were then under seizure for an alleged fraudulent undervaluation in the invoice..
The district attorney having given due notice to the counsel of the claimants to produce, on this trial, the invoice mentioned by the witness, was proceeding to prove its contents, when an objection was made on behalf of the claimants. It was, however, eventually agreed, by their counsel, that the invoice and its contents should be considered as before
The question arises on the construction of the fourth section of the act of May 28, 1830, “for the more effectual collection of the impost duties.” By this section it is enacted, “that the collectors of the customs shall cause at least one package out of every invoice, and one package at least out of every twenty packages of each invoice, and a greater number should he deem it necessary, of goods imported into the respective districts, which package or packages he shall have first designated on the invoice, to be opened and examined, and if the same be found not to correspond with the invoice, or to be falsely charged in such invoice, the collector shall order, forthwith, all the goods contained in the said entry to be inspected;- and if such goods be subject to ad valorem duty, the same shall be- appraised, and if any package shall be found to contain any article not described in the invoice, or if such package or invoice be made up with intent, by a false valuation, or extension, or otherwise, to evade or defraud the revenue, the same shall be forfeited.”
On the part of the claimants it is contended, that the invoice mentioned in this law, is an invoice which has been produced at the custom house, for the entry of the goods: and that when no invoice has been there produced, nor any entry of the goods made or attempted to be made, no forfeiture accrues, but the goods are to be proceeded with, according to the directions of the revenue laws, in all cases where no invoice is produced or entry made. On the other hand it is argued, on behalf of the United States, that the eases of the non-production of an invoice, provided for by the revenue laws, are those in which no invoice exists; or has not been sent with the goods by accident or mistake; but that in this case the invoice is proved to be in existence and in the possession of the agents of the claimants; and that if the United States can prove that this invoice was made up with intent to evade and defraud the revenue of the United States, the goods are liable to forfeiture, whether the invoice has or has not been produced at the custom house for an entry. The question, in short, is whether the forfeiture inflicted by the act applies generally to any and every invoice. made up to defraud the revenue; or whether the language and true meaning of the section embrace only, the cases in which the false invoice was actually produced at the custom house, and an entry made or attempted to be made by it. This is a case in which a court must be guarded to keep within the judicial pale; and not take a step into the legislative domain, under impulses given by the circumstances of the case. We must look closely and exclusively to what legislation has done on the subject, and be careful to do no more. The formation of a system of revenue laws is. necessarily, a work of progression, experiment and improvement It has to provide for a continual struggle between the law makers and the law breakers; between the officers of the government, whose duty it is to enforce the revenue laws, and the importers of foreign goods whose interest urges them to invent expedients to evade them. In such a state of things, deficiencies will be discovered by experience, which sagacity could not foresee; and new legislation will, from time to time, be required, to meet new devices of evasion. We accordingly see that, from the first organization of our government, congress have been repeatedly called upon to’ modify and amend their revenue laws; to add to the security of the revenue by new guards; to increase the penalties; to provide for omitted cases; and to cure doubts and ambiguities; so as to enable the courts to reach and punish the violators of the law. But the courts have never assumed the office of supplying legislative defects; and a judge should especially look to the limitations of his powers, when he approaches a case of evil aspect and bad fame.
The first rule in the construction of a statute is to look to the statute itself for its meaning and intention: and, if they be found clearly and unequivocally expressed, to go no farther. If they be not so, we may turn to other acts on the same subject, and by a full and fair view of the whole, fix and adopt a construction for a doubtful part. Our first duty, then, is to examine the law of May 23, 1S30. The information now trying is founded on it; it is laid in the words of the law, and must abide by the provisions of the law. The first three sections do not bear upon the question we are attending to. They relate to the appointment of appraisers, and the manner of making appraise-ments, without any reference to the invoices. Our case must be decided by the enactments of the fourth section. They are as follows: “That the collectors of the customs shall cause, at least, one package out of every invoice, and one package, at least, out of every twenty packages of each invoice of goods imported, which package or packages, he shall have first designated on the invoice, to be opened and examined, and if the same be found not to correspond with the invoice, or to be falsely charged in such invoice, the collector shall order, forthwith, all the goods contained in the same entry to be inspected: and, if such goods be sub
If the true meaning of the law be that which I have given to it, we are bound so to understand and execute it; and if inconvenient or injurious consequences result from it, the remedy must be found in another place. But let us, for a moment, inquire whether it is not right, and according to the sound principles of criminal law, that the act in question should be what I have supposed it to be. We will suppose, as was probably the case, that the invoice before us. was made up with intent to defraud the revenue, by a false valuation of the articles contained in it. Is this an offence punishable by our law?1 What is it but an intention to defraud; a design contemplated; a scheme formed, but not executed, for that purpose? It cannot be said that the attempt was made, but preparation for the attempt. The machinery was ready but its actual use was arrested by the consignee, to whom the operation was entrusted, but who, for such reasons as he thought good, declined to make the intended use of it. The invoice made up with intent to defraud the revenue was withheld, and no attempt to perpetrate the fraud with it was ever made. It never was used or produced, or, as far as we know, held by the consignee for any purpose connected with the revenue, or in any transaction in relation to these goods with the officers of the customs.
The case of U. S. v. Riddle, 5 Cranch [98 U. S.] 311, appears to me to have been a better one for the United States than this. The
While we are bound to take the law as we find it, and the legislature must provide a remedy for any evils that may have been overlooked, we may ask, will the construction I have put upon the act of 1830, expose the revenue to losses by fraud? I think not; the revenue laws afford an ample protection against any injury from this -construction of that act. We are to remember that the sole object of these laws is the full payment and collection of the duties.on foreign goods: they are not intended to be a criminal or moral code, for the punishment. of crimes and immoralities. In the case of U. S. v. Sixty Pipes of Brandy, 10 Wheat. [23 U. S.] 425, the supreme court declares “that the government had nothing in view but the security of its own revenue, without interfering with those devices of the mercantile world, which look only to individual profit, without defrauding the government.” Can the revenue be injuriously affected by such a transaction as we have before us? Can it, in any way, be defrauded or diminished? It may be increased, inasmuch as the appraised value, made by the officers of the customs, with a view to the duties to be estimated on it, may put that value too high; it is hardly probable that they will fall into the fault or error of an undervaluation. What is the course of proceeding in the custom house when no invoice is produced, or entry made of goods imported?. It is one that precludes any possibility of. fraud upon the revenue, and probability of loss to it. On the contrary, not only is the payment of all the duties fully secured, but also of all costs and charges which may attend the collection.
The first section of the act of April 20, 1818 (3 Story’s Laws, 1679 [3 Stat. 433]), enacted that no goods should be admitted to an entry, unless the original invoice was produced; but such goods, that is, the goods of which the invoice was not produced, were to be deposited in the public warehouse at the expense and risk of the owner; and if the invoice was not produced within the times limited by the act, the goods were to be appraised, and the duties estimated in the manner directed by the act. The act of March 1, 1823 (3 Story’s Laws, 1881 [3 Stat. 729]), enacts that no goods subject to an ad valorem duty, shall be admitted to an entry, unless the true invoice of the same be presented to the collector at the time of entry, or unless the same are admitted in the mode authorised and prescribed in the next section of the act. The next section enacts that when no invoice has been received of goods subject to ad valorem duty, and the consignee shall make oath of the same, the collector may, if in his judgment the circumstances of the ease render it expedient, admit them to entry, on an appraisement thereof. Bonds are to be given with sufficient sureties, to produce the invoice within given periods and to pay the amount of the duties. The third section provides that when goods, imported into the United States, shall not have been entered in pursuance of this or any other act regulating imposts and tonnage, the same shall be deposited, according to existing laws, in the public warehouse, until such invoice be produced. If, after they have re
The second section of this act of March 1, 1823, contains a provision not found in the law of April 20, 1818. By the latter the secretary of the treasury is authorised, if he thinks it expedient, to direct the collector to admit goods to an entry, without an invoice, on an appraisement, taking bonds to produce the invoice and pay the duties. The act of March 1, 1823, refers this subject to the judgment of the collector, but not in any cáse of non-production of the invoice, as in the former law, but only “when no invoice has been received;” and the consignee makes oath of that fact. We thus see that the .requisition of an invoice for an entry is positive and indispensable, as a general provision; but it may be dispensed with in a given case and under certain restrictions; that is, when no invoice has been received by the consignee, and he makes oath of that fact. He is then permitted to make the entry, without the invoice, as an indulgence to a presumed accident or mistake. This indulgence can be allowed only when the non-production of the invoice is owing to the fact that it has not been received, under the promise and expectation that it will afterwards be received and produced according to law. What, then, is to be the course of proceeding with goods of which The invoice has not been produced, nor accounted for in the manner mentioned, nor any promise or bond given for its production at a future day? Clearly, they are not to be admitted to an entry; they are not to be delivered to the consignee or importer, as in the other case, but they are to be deposited in the warehouse, to be disposed of in the manner already described. This is the only difference of treatment X can discover between the non-production of an invoice because it has not been received, and its non-production because it does not exist, is not expected to be received, or is withheld for any cause or reason the importer or consignee may choose to act upon. If he will not produce the invoice, he will not be permitted to enter the goods, and they will remain subject to all the consequences and proceedings provided by the law in such cases.
It is my opinion, therefore, that if the invoice mentioned had been produced, it would not make out the case of the United States, however false it may be, and with whatever intent it was made up, as it is admitted by the district attorney that he is unable to offer any proof that it, or any other invoice of the goods in question, was produced at the custom house for the purpose of making an entry.
The jury found a verdict for the claimants.
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- UNITED STATES v. TWENTY-EIGHT PACKAGES OF PINS
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