Imported articles, used as head-coverings for men, invoiced as
"Scotch bonnets," and entered, some as "worsted knit bonnets," and
others as " worsted caps," and made of wool, knitted on frames,
were liable to duty as "knit goods made on knitting frames," under
"Schedule K, Wool and Woolens," of § 2502 of the Revised
Statutes, as enacted by § 6 of the Act of March 3, 1883, c.
21, 22 Stat. 509, and not under "Schedule N, Sundries," of the same
section, § 2502, p. 511, as "bonnets, hats and hoods for men,
women and children."
Testimony held competent, on the cross-examination of a witness,
as affecting his credibility, in view of contradictory statements
which he had made.
An exception to a copy of a paper is unavailing where both sides
treated it as a copy and no ground of objection to it as evidence
is set forth.
It was proper, in an action brought by the importer against the
collector to recover duties paid under protest, for the defendant
to show that the articles were not known, on or immediately before
March 3, 1883, in trade and commerce as "bonnets for men."
It was right on the evidence for the court to direct a verdict
for the defendant, especially as the plaintiff refused to go to the
jury on the question as to whether, on March 3, 1883, the word
"bonnet" had in this country a well known technical, commercial
designation such as would cover the goods in question.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action at law, brought by Lippman Toplitz and Herman
Schwarz, composing the firm of L. Toplitz & Co., against Edward
L. Hedden, late collector of the port of New
Page 146 U. S. 253
York, to recover the sum of $6,896.06 as an excess of duties
paid under protest by the plaintiffs on 24 importations made into
the port of New York from Glasgow, in Scotland, from July, 1885, to
December, 1885, both inclusive. The suit was commenced in the
Superior Court of the City of New York in July, 1886, and removed
by the defendant, by certiorari, into the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Southern District of New York. At the trial
before Judge Lacombe and a jury in January, 1888, the court
directed a verdict for the defendant, which was rendered, and
judgment was entered thereon against the plaintiffs in November,
1888, to review which the plaintiffs have brought a writ of
error.
In the invoices of the articles imported, they were described as
"Scotch bonnets," and in the entries thereon at the customhouse
they were in some described as "worsted knit bonnets," and in
others as "worsted caps." The collector assessed duties upon them
as "knit goods, made on knitting frames," under the following
provisions of "Schedule K -- Wool and Woolens," of § 2505 of
the Revised Statutes, as enacted by § 6 of the Act of March 3,
1883, c. 121, 22 St. p. 509:
"Flannels, blankets, hats of wool, knit goods, and all goods
made on knitting frames, balmorals, woolen and worsted yarns, and
all manufactures of every description, composed wholly or in part
of worsted, the hair of the alpaca goat or other animals (except
such as are composed in part of wool), not specially enumerated or
provided for in this act, valued at not exceeding thirty cents per
pound, ten cents per pound; valued at above thirty cents per pound,
and not exceeding forty cents per pound, twelve cents per pound;
valued at above forty cents per pound, and not exceeding sixty
cents per pound, eighteen cents per pound; valued at above sixty
cents per pound, and not exceeding eighty cents per pound,
twenty-four cents per pound, and, in addition thereto, upon all the
above-named articles, thirty-five percentum
ad valorem,
valued at above eighty cents per pound, thirty-five cents per
pound, and, in addition thereto, forty percentum
ad
valorem."
The goods were shown to be made of wool, knitted on frames.
The plaintiffs duly protested against the assessment of more
Page 146 U. S. 254
than 30 percent
ad valorem, claiming that the goods
were dutiable under the following provision of "Schedule N --
Sundries," of the same § 2502, p. 511:
"Bonnets, hats, and hoods for men, women, and children, composed
of chip, grass, palm leaf, willow, or straw, or any other vegetable
substance, hair, whalebone, or other material, not specially
enumerated or provided for in this act, thirty percentum
ad
valorem."
They contended that under that provision, the articles were
"bonnets for men." The court, in directing the verdict for the
defendant, gave its reasons for doing so, which are reported in 33
F. 617. Various errors are assigned.
(1) One of the plaintiffs, having been examined as a witness for
them, testified on cross-examination that he had had a suit against
the government other than the one on trial, under the old tariff,
and he was further asked, on cross-examination, "Was the claim then
that these goods are caps made on frames?" To this question the
plaintiffs objected on the ground that the record was the best
evidence of the claim. The court overruled the objection, and the
plaintiffs duly excepted. The witness answered: "Yes, I think that
is it. Similar goods were concerned in that."
The plaintiffs contend that the matter of a claim regarding
similar goods under the different phraseology of an earlier tariff
was immaterial. We think that the question was a competent one as
affecting the credibility of the witness. He had testified in this
case on his direct examination that the goods in question were
Scotch bonnets, were known in this country as "Scotch bonnets," and
sold as such, and that they were called "bonnets" more frequently
than "caps." It was proper to show on cross-examination of the
witness that he had made contradictory statements, oral or written,
on the subject, and if he wished to appeal to the prior record, to
refresh his recollection, he could call for it and do so. But the
evidence as offered was competent irrespective of the prior
record.
2. The same witness was asked on cross-examination whether he
remembered that in the summer of 1882, when a bill was pending
before Congress to amend the statutes by
Page 146 U. S. 255
excluding wool goods from the provision for caps and other
articles made on frames, his firm addressed a letter to Hon. S. S.
Cox, a member of Congress from the City of New York, protesting
against the passage of that law. The plaintiffs objected to that
question as immaterial, and because the witness had no right to
state the contents of the letter, and because the letter itself
would be the best evidence. The court overruled the objection, and
the plaintiffs duly excepted. The witness answered that his firm
wrote such a letter. He was then shown what purported to be copy of
that letter, and asked if it was a copy. This was objected to on
the ground that the original was not produced, but the objection
was overruled, and the plaintiffs duly excepted. The defendant then
offered the copy in evidence, and the plaintiffs objected; but the
court overruled the objection, and the plaintiffs duly excepted.
The copy was then read in evidence, and is set forth in the
record.
The plaintiffs contend that the copy was read in evidence
without any proof that it was a copy. What was before said as to
the first assignment of error is applicable here also. The
objection that there was no proof that the copy was a copy is not
taken in the bill of exceptions. The copy was treated by both sides
as a copy, and the bill of exceptions merely states that when the
defendant offered the copy in evidence, the plaintiffs objected,
but no ground of objection is set forth. The exception therefore is
unavailing.
Camden v.
Doremus, 3 How. 515;
United
States v. McMasters, 4 Wall. 680;
Burton v.
Driggs, 20 Wall. 125;
Evanston v. Gunn,
99 U. S. 660.
It appeared from the letter to Mr. Cox that it was written when
the Tariff Act of 1883 was pending before Congress; that the letter
related to woolen knitted caps, worn by men, and that it protested
against the existing duty on such articles and against any increase
of duty upon them. It appears by the record that Mr. Schwarz, one
of the plaintiffs, appeared before the tariff committee in October,
1882, and made a statement with regard to the duties on those
articles, as an importer of "Scotch caps," "to speak in regard to
the tariff
Page 146 U. S. 256
on worsted and knitted goods," and stated that L. Toplitz &
Co. were importers of "worsted knitted caps," which were "classed
as worsted and knitted goods." It also appeared that the sign over
the plaintiffs' place of business in New York city was "Importers
of Scotch Caps."
3. The defendant called a witness, who was asked on direct
examination the following question: "Please state by what name, on
the 3d of March, 1883, or immediately prior thereto, these goods
were known in trade and commerce." The plaintiffs objected to that
question on the grounds first, that Congress, in the enactment, did
not have reference to commercial designation, and second, that the
time to which the question referred should be stated more
definitely. The court overruled the objections, and the plaintiffs
excepted. The witness answered, "Scotch caps." The following
question was then put to him: "Please state whether, on the 3d of
March, 1883, or immediately prior thereto, these goods were known
in trade and commerce as
bonnets for men.'" The plaintiffs
objected to that question as immaterial, and for the same reason as
before the objection was overruled, the plaintiffs excepted, and
the witness answered, "No, sir." The same course of examination was
pursued in regard to several witnesses introduced by the
defendant.
It is contended by the plaintiffs that the phrase, "Bonnets,
hats, and hoods for men, women, and children" is not a commercial
designation, but is only descriptive, and the case of
Barber v.
Schell, 107 U. S. 617,
107 U. S. 621,
is cited. But we think no error was committed in admitting the
testimony, and that it was important to ascertain the commercial
name of the article in question. If no such term as "bonnets,"
applicable to head coverings for men, was known or used in this
country in March, 1883, and if, even though known before, the term
was then obsolete, it would follow that it could not have been
intended to apply the term to goods which were specifically
described elsewhere in the act as "goods made on knitting frames."
If the commercial designation of the article gave it its proper
place in the classification of the statute, resort to the common
designation was unnecessary and improper.
Page 146 U. S. 257
Arthur v. Lahey, 96 U. S. 112,
96 U. S. 118;
Barber v. Schell, 107 U. S. 617,
107 U. S. 623;
Worthington v. Abbott, 124 U. S. 434,
124 U. S. 436;
Arthur v. Butterfield, 125 U. S. 70,
125 U. S. 75;
Robertson v. Salomon, 130 U. S. 412,
130 U. S.
415.
The evidence shows that the goods in question were known
commercially in the United States as "caps," and not as "bonnets,"
and that "caps" was also the common designation. It cannot be
properly said that the statute uses the phrases "bonnets for men."
The language is, "bonnets, hats, and hoods for men, women, and
children." That expression is fully answered by the words "hats for
men."
The circuit court in its opinion said correctly:
"Words used in these tariff statutes, when not technical, either
as having a special sense by commercial usage or as having a
scientific meaning different from the popular meaning -- in other
words, when they are words of common speech, are within the
judicial knowledge, and their interpretation is a matter of
law."
The court held on the evidence set forth in the bill of
exceptions that the word "bonnet" in the Act of March 3, 1883, was
not sufficiently broad to cover the goods in question unless it was
made so by having affixed to it at the time Congress passed the act
some peculiar technical trade meaning which coupled it in the minds
of the legislators with those particular goods or goods similar to
them, and that there was no proof of that.
Moreover, at the close of the trial, both parties asked for the
direction of a verdict. The court denied the plaintiffs' motion,
and they duly excepted. They then asked the court to submit the
case to the jury, but the court refused to do so; but it offered,
however, to submit to the jury the sole question whether, at the
time of the passage of the tariff Act of March 3, 1883, the word
"bonnet" had in this country a well known technical, commercial
designation such as would cover goods of this kind. The plaintiffs
disclaimed any desire to go to the jury on that question alone, but
asked leave of the court to go to the jury generally. The court
refused such leave, and the plaintiffs excepted. Thereupon a
verdict for the defendant was directed, and the plaintiffs duly
excepted. It seems to us
Page 146 U. S. 258
that this action of the court was correct, and that it offered
to submit to the jury the only question which the plaintiffs could
properly ask to have submitted.
4. The other assignments of error are either immaterial or are
covered by what had been already said.
Judgment affirmed.