Wool of the third class was dutiable under § 1 of the Act
of March 2, 1867, c. 197, 14 Stat. 560 at three cents per pound if
its value at the last port or place whence exported into the United
States, excluding charges in such port, was twelve cents or less
per pound, and at six cents per pound if such value exceeded twelve
cents per pound. On January 5, 1874, such wool, bought in Russia in
October, 1873, the actual cost of which, exclusive of charges, was
below twelve cents per pound at the time and place of exportation
was entered at the custom house at the port of New York at an
invoice value stated in Russian silver rubles. The collector
computed the ruble at 77.17 cents under the authority of a
proclamation to that effect made by the Secretary of the Treasury
in December, 1873 in pursuance of an estimation of the value of the
ruble for the year 1874 made by the Director of the Mint as
required by the Act of March 3, 1873, c. 268, 17 Stat. 602. Prior
to that act, the value of the ruble had been fixed by statute at
seventy-five cents. If the ruble had been competed at seventy-five
cents, the invoice value of the wool would hate been less than
twelve cents per pound. Computing it at 77.17 cents raised such
invoice value above twelve cents per pound. The collector exacted a
duty of six cents per pound. In an action to recover back the
excess of duty over three cents per pound.
Held:
(1) The effect of the act of 1873 was to repeal the prior
statute.
(2) The requirement of § 7 of the Act of March 3, 18G5, c.
80, 13 Stat. 493, forbade the assessment of duty on an amount less
than the invoice or entered value.
(3) the collector was therefore required to compute the ruble at
77.17 cents, although the cost of the goods, computing the ruble at
seventy-five cents, was twelve cents or less per pound.
Page 120 U. S. 83
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
In October, 1873, the firm of Heinemann, Payson & Morgan
bought, paid for, and exported from Taganrog, in Russia, some
colored carpet wools, the actual cost of which, exclusive of
charges, was below twelve cents per pound at the time and place of
exportation. They were imported into the port of New York, and
entered at the custom house there January 5, 1874 at the invoice
value of 41,975.01 silver rubles. The collector reduced the amount
into United States money at 77.17 cents to the ruble. This made the
value of the wool greater than twelve cents per pound, and the
collector exacted a duty on it of six cents per pound. The
importers protested that the ruble should be computed at
seventy-five cents, which would have made the value twelve cents or
less per pound, and the duty would have been three cents per pound.
The tariff act in force at the time of the entry was § 1 of
the Act of March 2, 1867, c 197, 14 Stat. 560, which, as applicable
to the merchandise, which was wool of the third class, provided as
follows:
"Upon wools of the third class, the value whereof at the last
port or place whence exported into the United States, excluding
charges in such port, shall be twelve cents or less per pound, the
duty shall be three cents per pound; upon wools of the same class,
the value whereof at the last port or place whence exported to the
United States, excluding charges in such port, shall exceed twelve
cents per pound, the duty shall be six cents per pound."
The Secretary of the Treasury, on appeal, confirmed the action
of the collector, and the importers, after paying the duty exacted,
to obtain their goods, brought this suit against the collector to
recover the alleged excess.
Section 1 of the Act of March 3, 1843, c. 92, 5 Stat. 625,
provided
"That, in all computations of the value of foreign moneys of
account at the custom houses of the United States, . . . the ruble
of Russia shall be deemed and taken to be of the value of
seventy-five cents."
On the 3d of March, 1873, the following act was approved, 17
Stat. 602, c. 268:
Page 120 U. S. 84
"SEC. 1. That the value of foreign coin, as expressed in the
money of account of the United States, shall be that of the pure
metal of such coin of standard value, and the values of the
standard coins in circulation of the various nations of the world
shall be estimated annually by the director of the mint, and
proclaimed on the first day of January by the Secretary of the
Treasury."
"SEC. 2. That in all payments by or to the Treasury, whether
made here or in foreign countries, when it becomes necessary to
compute the value of the sovereign or pound sterling, it shall be
deemed equal to four dollars eighty-six cents and six and one-half
mills, and the same rule shall be applied in appraising merchandise
imported when the value is, by the invoice, in sovereigns, or
pounds sterling, and in the construction of contracts payable in
sovereigns or pounds sterling, and this valuation shall be the par
of exchange between Great Britain and the United States, and all
contracts made after the first day of January, 1874, based on an
assumed par of exchange with Great Britain, of fifty-four pence to
the dollar, or four dollars forty-four and four-ninths cents to the
sovereign or pound sterling, shall be null and void."
"SEC. 3. That all acts and parts of acts inconsistent with these
provisions be, and the same are hereby, repealed."
In pursuance of this statute, the Director of the Mint estimated
the value of the Russian ruble for the year 1874 at 77.17 cents in
the United States money of account, and the Secretary of the
Treasury thereafter, on the 20th of December, 1873, proclaimed, by
a circular addressed to the collectors of customs, that,
"from and after January 1, 1874, the following table of standard
values of foreign moneys, reduced to the moneys of account of the
United States, will, until otherwise provided for by law or
regulation, be taken at custom houses in computing the invoice
value of all imported merchandise expressed in such currency,
to-wit, Russian rubles of 100 copecks, silver, 77.17."
The foregoing facts appearing at the trial of the case before
the court and a jury, the plaintiffs contended that the wool was
purchased before the Act of March 3, 1873, took
Page 120 U. S. 85
effect, and that the value in United States money should have
been computed as of the time of exportation. These positions were
overruled by the court, and it directed the jury to find a verdict
for the defendant, which was done under the objection and exception
of the plaintiffs. To review a judgment for the defendant the
plaintiffs have brought this writ of error.
The decision of this Court in
Collector
v. Richards, 23 Wall. 246, establishes that the
effect of the act of 1873 was to fix the value of the Russian
silver ruble, in the money of account of the United States, for the
purpose of computing at the custom house, the amount of an invoice
of imported goods, and consequently to repeal the act of 1843.
See also Cramer v. Arthur, 102 U.
S. 612;
Hadden v. Merritt, 115 U. S.
25.
Evidence that the merchandise cost, exclusive of charges, less
than twelve cents per pound at the time and place of exportation,
could not affect the question, because, although the duty was
imposed according to the value of the goods "at the last port or
place whence exported to the United States," yet when that value
was stated in the invoice in the foreign silver currency, its
equivalent in the money of account of the United States could not
be computed for the purpose of the entry of the goods at the custom
house for duty at any sum less than the invoice or entered value.
Section 7 of the Act of March 3, 1865, c. 80, 13 Stat. 493, in
force at the time of this importation, provided that in all cases
where the duty imposed by law should be based upon the value of any
specified quantity of merchandise, the value upon which the duty
should be assessed should be its actual market value or wholesale
price at the period of exportation, in the principal markets of the
country of exportation, but that the duty should not be assessed
"upon an amount less than the invoice or entered value, any act of
Congress to the contrary not withstanding." This made it imperative
on the collector to compute the value of the silver ruble at the
time of the entry, according to that value as determined in
accordance with the act of 1873, which was 77.17 cents. The duty
was imposed by the statute, "according
Page 120 U. S. 86
to the
value' of the goods at the time and place of
exportation." The importer stated that "value," in the foreign
coin, in his invoice and entry. The statute as to computation
applied, as of the date of the entry, to such entered value. Hence
it could not affect the question to show that the "cost" of the
goods abroad, computing the ruble at a lower rate, as of the date
of exportation, was twelve cents or less per pound.
Judgment affirmed.