Page 146 U. S. 79
signed by all three of its members, it is said that if the
importation was simply one of gunstocks, without the gunbarrels
required to make a complete firearm, and the case rested there, the
articles could not be regarded as completed guns, so as to be
dutiable under paragraph 170; that the testimony of Daly disclosed
the facts that the firm of Schoverling, Daly & Gales had
imported the gunstocks in question, and had made an agreement with
another firm by which the latter were to order the barrels, with
the mutual expectation that the stocks and barrels, after arriving
at New York, were to be put together so as to make complete guns;
that Schoverling was a member of both firms thus colluding
together; that such a mode of evading the payment of duties could
not be tolerated, and that the decision of the collector was
affirmed.
On the 6th of January, 1891, the importers, under § 15 of
the Act of June 10, 1890, applied to the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Southern District of New York for a review of
the questions of law and fact involved in such decision of the
board of general appraisers, by filing in the office of the clerk
of said court a statement of the errors of law and fact complained
of, which were that the duty had been assessed on the articles at
$1.50 each and 35 percent
ad valorem, while it should have
been assessed, under paragraph 215 at 45 percent
ad
valorem, only. On the filing of the application, the circuit
court made an order that the board of general appraisers return to
the court the record and the evidence, with a certified statement
of the facts involved and their decision thereon.
Page 146 U. S. 80
On the 22d of January, 1891, the board of general appraisers
filed in the court their return, embodying the protest of November
15, 1890, the assistant appraiser's report of November 28, 1890,
the collector's communication of December 16, 1890, the testimony
of Daly, and the opinion and decision of the board. The case was
argued before the circuit court, held by Judge Lacombe, which
entered an order, on March 20, 1891, reversing and setting aside
the decision of the collector and that of the board of general
appraisers, and adjudging that the merchandise should have been
classified and assessed with duty at the rate of 45 percent
ad
valorem, under paragraph 215 of the act, as "manufactures,
articles, or wares not specially enumerated or provided for in this
act, composed . . . in part of iron or steel." The opinion of the
circuit court is reported in 45 F. 349. It stated that there was no
evidence that the articles were ever assembled or brought together
with the gunbarrels on the other side; that there was no finding to
that effect by the appraisers; that, if there were such a finding
of fact, the court would be constrained to reverse it, because
there was no evidence in the record to support it; that, for all
that appeared, the gunstocks might have been bought from one
manufacturer, and the gunbarrels from another; that the tariff act
laid a duty upon "sporting, breech-1oading shotguns," and laid a
separate and different duty upon the parts of which such shotguns
were composed, as manufactures in whole or in part of metal; that
it could be fairly assumed that Congress, by that terminology,
meant to allow importers who chose to do so to bring in fragments
of a combination article by different shipments, and then to employ
domestic labor in putting them together; that it might have been
intended to induce importers to employ to that extent the labor of
this country, instead of having the article combined abroad; that,
under the language of the statute, there was nothing in the
shipment in question except gunstocks mounted, articles which were
properly described in the act only by the phrase "manufactures
composed wholly or in part of metal," and that therefore they
should pay that duty, and no other.
Page 146 U. S. 81
On March 20, 1891, the Attorney General of the United States,
under § 15 of the Act of June 10, 1890, applied to the Circuit
Court for the allowance of an appeal to this Court from the
decision and judgment of the circuit court. On the same day the
application was granted, the appeal was allowed, and it has here
been heard.
We are of opinion that the judgment of the circuit court must be
affirmed. The contention on the part of the United States is that
the transaction, as conducted, was a fraud upon the statute. But
the question was solely as to the gunstocks.
Sampson v.
Peaslee, 20 How. 571. There is not in the statute,
in paragraph 170 or elsewhere, any imposition of duty on parts of
breech-1oading shotguns, except the provision in paragraph 215.
There is no duty otherwise imposed on materials for such guns.
In the Act of October 1, 1890, in paragraph 154, a duty is
imposed on "axles, or parts thereof;" in paragraph 165, on
"penknives or pocketknives of all kinds, or parts thereof;" in
paragraph 185, on "wheels, or parts thereof," and "tires, or parts
thereof;" and in paragraph 210, on chronometers, "and parts
thereof."
In the present case, the intent of the importers to put the
gunstocks with barrels separately imported, so as to make here
completed guns for sale, cannot affect the rate of duty on the
gunstocks as a separate importation.
Merritt v. Welsh,
104 U. S. 694.
In
Robertson v. Gerdan, 132 U.
S. 454, the statute had imposed a duty on musical
instruments, and had not imposed the same duty on parts of musical
instruments, and it was held that pieces of ivory for the keys of
pianos or organs, to be used exclusively for such musical
instruments, and made on purpose for such instruments, were not
dutiable as musical instruments, but were liable to a less duty, as
manufactures of ivory.
We do not think the decision in
Falk v. Robertson,
137 U. S. 225,
applies to the present case. It nowhere appears that these
gunstocks had formed part of completed guns in Europe, nor was the
question of the importation of the barrels
Page 146 U. S. 82
for the guns involved. In the present case, the dutiable
classification of the gunstocks imported must be ascertained by an
examination of them in the condition in which they are imported.
Worthington v. Robbins, 139 U. S. 337.
Reference is made by the counsel for the United States to the
provision of § 2 of the Act of January 29, 1795, 1 Stat. 411,
which reads as follows:
"Where any article is, by any law of the United States, made
subject to the payment of duties, the parts thereof, when imported
separately, shall be subject to the payment of the same rate of
duties,"
as not having been repealed. In 1 Stat. 411, opposite the act is
the word "[Obsolete.]" That provision is not embodied in the
Revised Statutes, and we think it was limited to the case of duties
then imposed by law, and did not apply to duties imposed by
subsequent tariff acts. Tariff acts passed subsequently to the act
of 1795 have provided that the duties theretofore imposed by law on
imported merchandise should cease and determine. If the provision
of the act of 1795 had been still in force when the Tariff Act of
1890 was enacted, it would have been wholly unnecessary in the
latter act to impose a duty on parts of articles, as well as on the
articles themselves, in cases where it was deemed proper to impose
such duty upon parts.
This appeal was prosecuted as against the firm, but this defect
may be cured by amendment, and the motion to that effect is
granted.
Estis v. Trabue, 128 U.
S. 225.
Judgment affirmed.
* Protest in the matter of importation of certain gunstocks by
Messrs. Schoverling, Daly & Gales. statement of Mr. Daly.
Examined by Gen. App. Somerville:
"Question. You are a member of the from of Schoverling, Daly
& Gales?"
"Answer. Yes, sir."
"Q. Where are you doing business?"
"A. In New York."
"Q. This importation, as I understand you, consists of this item
marked '225 here,' finished gunstocks, with locks and
mountings?"
"A. That is it."
"Q. Shotguns?"
"A. They are parts of shotguns, parts of breech-1oading
shotguns."
"Q. When did you make this order for this importation?"
"A. I telegraphed for it a short time before this invoice."
"Q. How many of these are there here?"
"A. Twelve of these finished gunstocks."
"Q. Did you at the same time order the other parts of these guns
to be sent?"
"A. I did not. That is all we received. We never received the
barrels."
"Q. You made no order for the barrels?"
"A. No, sir. (Reference made in the special report of the
appraiser to protests of Schoverling, Daly & Gales against the
assessment of duty at the rate of 35 percent, etc.)"
"Q. What we want to know is whether the barrels of these guns
have arrived by another shipment, within your knowledge."
"A. As a member of the firm of Schoverling, Daly & Gales, I
do not know it, because we have never received any invoice."
"Q. Never made any order?"
"A. No, sir."
"Q. Have you any agreement with any other firm that they were to
order the barrels of these guns?"
"A. Yes; we have."
"Q. With the expectation on your part that they were to be put
together here?"
"A. Yes, sir."
"Q. Have those other importations been received by the other
firms?"
"A. A good many of them, I guess, are in bond."
"Q. What firms did you have an understanding of this nature
with?"
"A. With A. Schoverling."
"Q. Is he a partner in your house?"
"A. Yes, sir; he is a partner in the firm of Schoverling, Daly
& Gales, and also runs a separate business. Mr. Tichenor."
"Q. Do you think the trade generally adopted this plan?"
"A. I think they all have received goods in the same way. We
have imported those stocks with the intention of putting them with
the other parts imported by these other parties."