1. Dutiable goods cannot lawfully be imported in the foreign
mail under the International Postal Treaty of Berne of Oct. 9,
1874. 19 Stat. 577.
2. Such goods are, in the hands of the receiver of them from the
post office, subject to seizure, and the fact that there was no
intent on the part of the sender or the receiver of them to defraud
the United States of the duty does not render the customs officer
liable to an action for making the seizure.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a suit commenced before a justice of the peace by the
plaintiff in error against the defendants for seizing and
converting to their own use a flexible woolen scarf or shawl of the
value of four dollars. It was removed into the circuit court of the
United States by a writ of certiorari on the ground that Nazro was
collector of customs of the United
Page 107 U. S. 216
States for the port of Milwaukee, and that what was done in
seizing the shawl was in the performance of his duty as such
collector. On the trial in that court, it appeared that the article
in question came in a closed or sealed envelope by foreign mail
from Germany, and the proper officer of the customs at Milwaukee,
being notified to be present when the letter was delivered to and
opened by plaintiff, seized it as forfeited under the customs laws
of the United States. The jury being requested to make a special
verdict, answered the questions propounded to them by the court as
follows:
"
Question 1st. Was the article in question sent from a
foreign country by mail, enclosed in a sealed envelope addressed to
the plaintiff at Milwaukee, and was it transmitted by mail, thus
enclosed, to its point of destination?"
"
Answer. Yes."
"
Q. 2d. Were the contents of the package disclosed by
any writing placed upon it by the sender?"
"
A. Yes."
"
Q. 3d. Was the package received at the post office in
Milwaukee, and, if so, was the collector of customs for this
district notified of its receipt?"
"
A. Yes."
"
Q. 4th. Was the package placed in the hands of the
plaintiff by a clerk in the post office, in the presence of the
deputy collector, and did she open it?"
"
A. Yes."
"
Q. 5th. Did the deputy collector of customs then seize
the article in question after it was opened?"
"
A. Yes."
"
Q. 6th. Did the collector thereafter cause said
article to be appraised by the appraiser for this collection
district, and did he refuse to surrender it to the plaintiff
without payment of the amount of such appraisal?"
"
A. Yes."
"
Q. 7th. Was the article sent by mail for the purpose
or with intent on the part of the sender or the plaintiff to avoid
the payment of duties thereon."
"
A. No. "
Page 107 U. S. 217
"
Q. 8th. What was the value of said article on the
twenty-first day of May, 1877?"
"
A. Four dollars."
And on this verdict the circuit court rendered a judgment for
defendants, with costs.
A bill of exceptions is signed embodying all the evidence in the
case, from which it appears that there was no little ill feeling in
the case on the part of plaintiff and her attorneys, who refused to
make application to the Secretary of the Treasury for a remission
of the penalty, and that the seizure was reported to him and to the
proper law officers by the collector. But as no ruling of the court
was made on the admission or rejection of this evidence, and as no
instructions of the court were given or asked, and no exceptions
taken to any ruling of the court at the trial, the bill of
exceptions is of no value here. The plea to the action was the
general issue, and we must look alone to the special verdict to see
if it justified the judgment of the court. The letter containing
this scarf came from Germany to the United States under the
international postal system, established by the treaty of Berne of
October 9, 1874. The twenty-fifth article of the protocol to that
treaty, which, under the signatures of the plenipotentiaries who
negotiated it, is declared to be of the same force as if it was
inserted in the treaty, provides that
"There shall not be admitted for conveyance by the post any
letter or
other packet which may contain either gold or
silver money, jewels, precious articles, or any article whatever
liable to custom duties."
19 Stat. 604, art. 25.
While some attempt in argument is made to show that, either by
treaty or by act of Congress, books, patterns of merchandise, and
perhaps other articles, may come through the foreign mail without
liability to forfeiture, it is sufficient to say that the article
seized in this case was not sent as a sample, nor is it a book or
other article asserted to be admissible. Its introduction into the
United States in this manner is therefore forbidden by the express
provisions of the postal treaty under which it came, which is the
law of the land, and is unauthorized by any act of Congress.
Page 107 U. S. 218
No question is made in this case that the shawl was dutiable, or
that the amount of the duty claimed on it was the proper duty.
Being dutiable, its introduction by mail into the United States was
forbidden by the treaty. The revenue laws of the United States
require that every owner or consignee of property imported from
other countries shall report the same to the customs officers
before it is landed from the vessel and shall furnish an invoice of
its character and purchase price, for valuation, or that it may be
seen if it is duty free, and all the vexatious and annoying
machinery of the custom house, and the vigilance of its officers,
are imposed by law to prevent the smallest evasion of this
principle.
Of what avail would it be that every passenger, citizen and
foreigner, without distinction of country or sex, is compelled to
sign a declaration before landing, either that his trunks and
satchels in hand contain nothing liable to duty or, if they do, to
state what it is, and even the person may be subjected to a rigid
examination, if the mail is to be left unwatched, and all its
sealed contents, even after delivery to the person to whom
addressed, are to be exempt from seizure, though laces, jewels, and
other dutiable matter of great value may thus be introduced from
foreign countries.
It is a violation of the law to introduce dutiable articles at
all in that mode, and articles so introduced are liable to seizure
for such violation.
But the jury found that the shawl was not sent by mail for the
purpose or with the intent, on the part of the sender or the
plaintiff, to avoid the payment of duties thereon, and it is said
that, under sec. 3082 of the Revised Statutes, the goods cannot be
seized or forfeited unless fraudulently or knowingly imported
contrary to law.
Rev.Stat. sec. 3082 provides:
"If any person shall fraudulently or knowingly import or bring
into the United States, or assist in so doing, any merchandise,
contrary to law, or shall receive, conceal, buy, sell, or in any
manner facilitate the transportation, concealment, or sale of such
merchandise after importation, knowing the same to have been
imported contrary to law, such merchandise shall be forfeited, and
the offender
Page 107 U. S. 219
shall be fined in any sum not exceeding five thousand dollars,
nor less than fifty dollars, or be imprisoned for any time not
exceeding two years, or both."
The language of this section is that if a person fraudulently
or knowingly brings into the United States, or assists in
so doing, any merchandise contrary to law, the goods shall be
forfeited and the offender punished by fine and imprisonment, and
while the jury negative the fraudulent intent, they do not negative
the knowledge of the sender that the goods were sent in violation
of law, or that they were dutiable goods.
This fraudulent and guilty knowledge, however, relates mainly to
the punishment of the offender by fine and imprisonment, and other
sections, as 3061, authorize and direct the seizure of any property
imported contrary to law, and the officer is to open envelopes for
that purpose, and, on reasonable ground to believe it subject to
duty or to have been unlawfully imported, he shall seize and secure
the same for trial.
In this case, the article was unlawfully imported in a sealed
envelope, and it was discovered and seized by the proper officer in
the hands of the owner after she had opened it.
There is no finding by the jury as to what he did with it,
except that he had it appraised. But the presumption is that he did
his duty, by notifying the officers whose business it was to
institute proceedings for condemnation, and though we may not
properly look at the bill of exceptions, which shows what he did
with it, this is unnecessary, for if the seizure was rightful,
there is no evidence whatever of a wrongful conversion.
It has been suggested that by reason of sec. 16 of the Act of
June 22, 1874, c. 391, and the finding of the jury that there was
no intention to defraud in this case, the defendants are liable.
But that section relates to actions brought by the government to
enforce the revenue laws by fine, forfeiture, and penalty, and
declares that in such cases, unless there is a verdict of the jury
or finding of the court that the alleged acts were done with an
actual intention to defraud the United States, no fine, penalty, or
forfeiture shall be imposed.
If the plaintiff in this case shall, in any proceeding in court
for its condemnation, appear and claim this property, or any
Page 107 U. S. 220
suit shall be instituted against her personally for a violation
of the revenue law, she can have the full benefit of this statute.
Or if she is impatient of the delay of the officers in instituting
such proceeding, she can, under sec. 3076 of the Revised Statutes,
cause such proceedings to be instituted, in which she can have the
same relief.
But if the present action be sustained on the ground of absence
of fraudulent intention on her part, the officer making the seizure
is held liable in the absence of such a proceeding though in such
case the court might have protected him by a certificate of
probable cause, and though he may have done his duty and been
guilty of no conversion. Such a construction of the statute
requires him to know the guilty or innocent intent of a party
violating the law at the hazard of personal liability for the
result.
It is to be observed also that all the trouble, cost, and
vexation of this suit could have been avoided by an application to
the Secretary of the Treasury under sec. 5293, and the rules
prescribed by that officer for such cases, when he would
undoubtedly have remitted the forfeiture, on what were the
undisputed facts of the case, on payment of the small sum assessed
as the duty.
We think that in making the seizure, the defendants only did
their duty, and, whatever the hardship to plaintiff, they are not
liable in this action on the facts found in the verdict of the
jury.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD did not sit in this case nor take any part in
deciding it.