In a suit to recover back customs duties paid under protest,
where the only question tried was whether, in reappraisement
proceedings, the importer was denied rights secured to him by law,
held:
(1) It was proper to admit in evidence a protest filed by the
importer with the reappraisers, as a paper showing what rights the
importer claimed, and especially his claim that the merchant
appraiser was not qualified.
(2) A motion to directs verdict for the defendant was properly
denied, the court having ruled in accordance with the decision of
this Court in
Auffmordt v. Hedden, 137 U.
S. 310, and having instructed the jury fully and
properly, and there being no exception to the charge, and a
question proper for the jury.
Page 142 U. S. 677
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action at law, brought in the Supreme Court of the
State of New York, in June, 1886, by William E. Iselin, John G.
Neeser, and Alfred von der Muhl, against Edward L. Hedden,
collector of the port of New York, and removed by the defendant
into the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern
District of New York, to recover the sum of $2,124.14, with
interest from June 26, 1886, as an alleged excess of customs
duties, paid under protest, on the importation of silks by the
steamer
Normandie, entered June 20, 1885, and of satins
composed of cotton and silk, by the steamer
Belgenland,
entered June 18, 1885. The case was tried before Judge Wheeler and
a jury in December, 1886, and the jury found a verdict for the
plaintiffs for $2,124.14, on which a judgment was entered for them
for that amount and costs November 5, 1887. To review that
judgment, the defendant has brought a writ of error.
On the appraisement of the goods, they had been increased in
valuation more than ten percent above the invoice valuation, and,
additional duty and a penal duty being imposed in each case, the
importers asked for a reappraisement, pursuant to statute, before
the general appraiser and a merchant appraiser.
No question of the classification or rating of the goods
imported was presented, but the importers claimed that in the
reappraisement proceedings they were denied rights which were
secured to them by law. The court remarked, in its charge to the
jury: "The only question we have to try is whether there has been a
substantial reappraisement according to the law and according to
the rights of these importers,"
Page 142 U. S. 678
and the court stated the questions which it submitted to the
jury as follows:
"If the plaintiffs were not cut off from any substantial right,
and the appraisers followed their own judgment and discretion
fairly and really, then return a verdict for defendants. If the
appraisers were controlled by some outside influence, so that they
didn't act their own judgment, then return a verdict for the
plaintiffs. Or if the plaintiffs were cut off from their fair
chance to be there when the appraisal was made, from seeing their
goods, and pointing out the quality to the appraisers, then return
a verdict for the plaintiffs."
The first error alleged by the defendant is that the court erred
in admitting, under objection, a paper of protest filed with the
reappraisers during the proceedings in respect to the
reappraisement of the goods imported by the
Normandie. A
witness, Mr. Barnett, who had represented the plaintiffs in the
proceedings and had charge of the two importations throughout,
testified that at the time of the reappraisement, he delivered to
Mr. Brower, the general appraiser, a written paper addressed to the
latter and the merchant appraiser, a copy of which appears in the
bill of exceptions, stating that the importers demanded to be
present during the reappraisement and to present personally, as
well as by their employees and their agents, and also by witnesses
desired to be furnished, fully informed upon the subject matter,
testimony as to the true dutiable value of the importation by the
Normandie, and to have reasonable opportunity to
cross-examine witnesses and to test and disprove testimony to be
introduced against the correctness of the invoice, and alleging
that the merchant appraiser, Mr. Booth, was not qualified to act
under the statute. The defendant objected to the admission of that
paper in evidence as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, but
the objection was overruled, and the defendant excepted.
We see no error in receiving the paper in evidence. It was part
of the proceedings which took place before the reappraisers, and
appears to have been presented to them for the purpose of showing
what rights the importers claimed, and especially their claim that
the merchant appraiser was not qualified. It was objected to as a
whole, and it was not put
Page 142 U. S. 679
in as evidence that the importers had the rights which they thus
claimed, but merely to show that they had protested seasonably.
It is also assigned for error that the court ought to have
directed the jury to find a verdict for the defendant. At the close
of the plaintiffs' testimony, the defendant moved the court to
direct such a verdict. But the court declined to do so. The
defendant excepted and then put in his evidence, and at the close
of the evidence on both sides, he renewed his motion for the
direction of a verdict for him on the ground that, on the whole
evidence, the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover. That motion
was denied, and the defendant excepted.
The bill of exceptions does not state that it contains the whole
of the evidence. In denying the motion which was thus made at the
close of the plaintiffs' testimony, the court, having heard full
argument on the point on both sides, referred to a circular from
the Secretary of the Treasury, which had been read in evidence, and
is set forth at length in the bill of exceptions, dated June 9,
1885, and being No. 6957, on the subject of the reappraisement of
merchandise, and directed to the general appraiser at New York
City, the material parts of which are set forth at length on pages
137 U. S.
316-318 in the report of the case of
Auffmordt v.
Hedden, 137 U. S. 310. The
court said in its remarks denying the motion for a verdict for the
defendant that, in conformity with the views of the secretary,
expressed in the circular, the reappraisers were not a court to
hear witnesses and counsel; that the importers would have a right
on the reappraisement to attend, to see that the reappraisers had
their goods, and to call attention to any of the qualities of the
goods; that the court expressed no opinion as to whether the
importers would have the right to see such testimony in writing,
applicable to the value of the goods, as the reappraisers might
take; that on the testimony of the witness Barnett, the jury might
think that the importers were cut off from a fair right to be there
when their goods were examined, not when the reappraisers were
deliberating as to the value of the goods, and that the question of
fact as to
Page 142 U. S. 680
whether, under that view, there had been a proper reappraisement
ought to go to the jury.
If the finding of the jury was against the weight of the
evidence, the remedy was by a motion for a new trial, which does
not appear to have been made, and this Court cannot exercise a
function which was that of the jury.
It appears by the record that the importers, in September, 1885,
had protested to the collector, in the case of the
Belgenland, against the employment of Mr. Roberts, the
merchant appraiser, on the ground that he was not a discreet and
experienced merchant, familiar with the character and value of the
merchandise; that they made the protest before mentioned in the
case of the
Normandie against Mr. Booth, the merchant
appraiser in that case; that Mr. Booth was a manufacturer of silk
goods at Paterson, New Jersey, of the same general description as
those imported by the plaintiffs on the
Normandie; that
there was a competition between such goods as were imported by the
plaintiffs by the
Normandie and those manufactured by Mr.
Booth; that Mr. Roberts had expressed himself personally to Mr.
Barnett, in conversation at different times, in language showing
strong prejudice against importers generally of silk goods, and had
specifically stated that he thought most of them were foreigners in
league with foreigners on the other side for the receipts of
merchandise at the port of New York at a price a great deal less
than the goods were worth on the other side; that it could only be
through a combination that they could get the goods in that way,
and that he thought the whole thing was a fraud.
It does not appear by the bill of exceptions that the defendant
excepted to any part of the charge of the court to the jury, but he
presented to the court seventeen separate requests to charge the
jury, in regard to which the bill of exceptions states that "the
court declined to charge otherwise than as already charged, and
denied each of such requests, except as charged," and that the
defendant excepted to each of such rulings.
It is assigned for error that under the charge and the rulings
of the court, the jury was permitted improperly to find
Page 142 U. S. 681
that the reappraisers did not act upon their own judgment, but
were controlled by outside influences.
The eleventh request to charge was as follows:
"That the statute empowers the Secretary of the Treasury to
establish rules and regulations, not inconsistent with the laws of
the United States, to secure a just, faithful, and impartial
appraisal of all merchandise imported into the United States."
The court substantially so ruled in its remarks on the denial of
the first motion to direct a verdict for the defendant, and it
ruled nothing to the contrary in its charge to the jury. Judge
Wheeler was the judge, who afterwards ruled to the same effect in
Auffmordt v. Hedden, which ruling was affirmed by this
Court in that case, in
137 U. S. 137 U.S.
310. The judgment in the case of
Auffmordt v. Hedden was
entered in the circuit court in July, 1887. The present case was
tried in December, 1886, and judgment was entered November 5, 1887.
Our decision in
Auffmordt v. Hedden was rendered December
8, 1890.
We see nothing in the conduct of the trial in the present case
which is contrary to the rulings of this Court in
Auffmordt v.
Hedden. The court, in its charge to the jury, sustained the
instructions of the Secretary of the Treasury of June 9, 1885, and
did not say anything to the contrary of what were afterwards the
rulings of this Court in
Auffmordt v. Hedden, and said
that the importers had no right to say that certain witnesses
should be produced before the reappraisers, and that, although the
importers had the right to have a fair opportunity to show their
goods and to make suggestions in regard to them, they had no right
to be there to examine witnesses, or to explore the sources of the
information of the reappraisers, or to have counsel there, as such,
to cross-examine witnesses and argue the case. It also charged the
jury that the reappraisers had a right to read the regulations.
The general appraiser, Mr. Brower, and the merchant appraisers,
Messrs. Booth and Roberts, were examined as witnesses at the trial.
The instructions in the circular of June 9, 1885, appear to have
been regarded by the reappraisers as guiding instructions in
principle. But the question submitted to and passed upon by the
jury, and found in favor of the plaintiffs, was whether the
reappraisers "were controlled by some outside influence, so that
they didn't act their own judgment."
Judgment affirmed.