The Act of June 10, 1890, "to simplify the laws in relation to
the collection of the revenue," 26 Stat. 131, c. 407, confers no
jurisdiction upon circuit courts of the United States, on the
application of dissatisfied importers, to review and reverse a
decision of a board of general appraisers ascertaining and fixing
the
dutiable value of imported goods when such board has
acted in pursuance of law and without fraud or other misconduct
from which bad faith could be implied.
The case is stated in the opinion.
The principal question presented by the record in this case is
whether, under the Customs Administrative Act of June 10, 1890, 26
Stat. 131, the circuit courts of the United States have any
jurisdiction to entertain an appeal by importers from a decision of
the board of general appraisers as to the dutiable value of
imported merchandise -- in other words, whether the circuit courts
of the United States have, under the provisions of said act, any
authority or jurisdiction, on the application of dissatisfied
importers, to review and
Page 148 U. S. 215
reverse a decision of a board of general appraisers ascertaining
and fixing the
dutiable value of imported goods when such
board has acted in pursuance of law and without fraud or other
misconduct, from which bad faith could be implied
The material facts of the case on which this question arises are
the following: in November, 1890, and July, 1891, the appellants,
Passavant & Co., imported into New York from France gloves of
different classes or grades, which were entered by the importers at
certain valuations. The collector of the port of New York, under
the authority conferred by section 10 of said administrative act,
caused the imported goods to be appraised, and upon such appraisal
their value was advanced or increased by the appraiser to an amount
exceeding by more than ten percent the value thereof as declared by
the importers upon entry. The importers being dissatisfied with
this advanced valuation, a reappraisement was made by one of the
general appraisers, and on further objection by the importers to
this valuation, the matter was sent to the board of general
appraisers, under and in accordance with the provisions of section
13 of the Customs Administrative Act. This board, after due notice
and examination of the question submitted, sustained the increased
valuation of the merchandise. Thereupon the collector of the port
levied and assessed upon the imported goods a duty of fifty percent
ad valorem, that being the rate of duty on the gloves
under paragraph 458 of the Tariff Act of October 1, 1890, and in
addition thereto a further sum equal to two percent of the total
appraised value for each one percent that such appraised value
exceeded the value declared in the entry, under and by virtue of
section 7 of said Act of June 10, 1890, which provides and directs
that
"if the appraised value of any article of imported merchandise
shall exceed by more than ten percentum the value declared in the
entry, there shall be levied, collected, and paid, in addition to
the duties imposed by law on such merchandise, a further sum equal
to two percentum of the total appraised value for each one
percentum that such appraised value exceeds the value declared in
the entry, and the additional duties shall only apply to
Page 148 U. S. 216
the particular article or articles in each invoice which are
undervalued."
The importers duly served upon the collector a protest against
his appraisement of duty for any and all excess above fifty percent
ad valorem, and upon any greater value than the declared
or entered value, for the alleged reasons that no legal
reappraisement had been made; that the board of appraisers had
declined to receive or entertain evidence offered by them as to the
true market value of the merchandise; that the board had determined
matters upon estimates or values furnished by agents of the
Treasury; that evidence of persons who were not experts, and had no
personal knowledge of the value of gloves in the markets of France,
had been taken and acted on; that the importers were given no
opportunity to controvert evidence against them; that the original
invoice was correct; that the duties should not be assessed upon
any greater amount, and that the action of the board was in all
respects illegal. The collector duly transmitted this protest, with
the papers in the case, to the board of general appraisers, who
adhered to the increased valuation, affirmed the action of the
collector, and held that the decision of the board as to such
valuation was final and conclusive under section 13 of said Act of
June 10, 1890, and could not be impeached or reviewed upon protest.
Thereupon, and within due time, the importers filed their
application in the United States circuit court for the Southern
District of New York for a review of the case, and a reversal of
the decision of the board of appraisers and the action of the
collector in assessing the duties on the basis of the increased
valuation placed upon the imported merchandise, and in imposing the
additional duty as provided by section 7, above referred to.
The petitioners, in their application, set forth and complained
of many alleged errors of law and fact on the part of the board of
general appraisers, which need not be specially noticed, as they
were manifestly not well founded, and have been abandoned. The
board of general appraisers, in pursuance of the usual order in
such cases, returned to the circuit court the record and evidence
taken by them, together with
Page 148 U. S. 217
a certified statement of the facts involved in the case and
their decision thereon, etc. From this return it appeared that the
proceedings as to the appraisement of the merchandise and the
determination of their dutiable value were in all respects regular;
that the board of appraisers duly examined and decided the case
after fixing a day and giving reasonable notice thereof to the
importers, who were allowed the opportunity to introduce evidence,
and to be heard on the matter submitted. It is stated in the
opinion of the board, which forms part of said return, that
"the appellants were served with reasonable notice of these
several hearings after a day fixed therefor, and were cited to
appear before this board and offer evidence to sustain the
contentions of fact alleged as the grounds of their protest. This
they failed to do, and the board accordingly adjudges all of said
issues against them as confessedly untrue. The decision of the
collector in each case is affirmed."
Upon the record as thus presented, the assistant United States
attorney moved the court to dismiss the application or appeal for
want of jurisdiction to entertain the same. This motion was
sustained, and the circuit court thereupon certified to this Court,
under the fifth section of the Act of March 3, 1891, c. 517, 26
Stat. 827, the question whether said court had any jurisdiction to
enter upon, hear, and decide the issues sought to be raised by the
allegations of the petition, which are specially set out in the
certificate, but need not be here enumerated, as they are embraced
in the two general claims or propositions, hereinafter stated,
which are relied on by appellants before this Court.
In addition to the certification of the question of
jurisdiction, the circuit court, upon dismissing the petition
allowed the importers an appeal from the order or judgment of
dismissal, which was taken. But this appeal although general in
form, does not and could not bring up for review anything more than
the question of jurisdiction certified by the lower court. An
ordinary appeal from a final judgment of the circuit court lies,
since the Act of March 3, 1891, to the court of appeals, and not to
this Court.
Hubbard v.
Soby, 146 U.S.
Page 148 U. S. 218
56. The certificate and the appeal therefore present
substantially the same question, and need not for that reason be
separately considered. It is not claimed or alleged in either the
protests made by the importers as to the appraisement of the
merchandise or in their application to the circuit court to review
and reverse the decision of the board of general appraisers that
there was any wrongful or erroneous
classification of the
gloves, or improper rate of duty levied thereon, under the Tariff
Act of October 1, 1890, but the substantial complaint is that the
dutiable value of the imported goods was not greater than
the value mentioned in the invoice and declared in the entry, and
that the advanced appraisement was therefore erroneous, and also
that the merchandise was not liable for any additional or penal
duty such as the collector levied and imposed thereon under section
7 of the Act of June 10, 1890, by reason of the advanced or
increased valuation placed upon the same by the appraisers.
Can a complaint of this character be entertained and considered
by the circuit courts of the United States in a case like the
present, where the board of general appraisers has, upon the appeal
of the importers, ascertained and decided that the imported article
actually possesses a value greater than that stated in the invoice
or entry? Can the decision of the board on the question of the
dutiable value of the merchandise be reviewed by the courts under
the provisions of section 15 of the customs administrative act?
This is the real question presented, and we are clearly of the
opinion that no such jurisdiction is conferred by this statute or
any other provision of law. It is provided by section 15 of the
act
"that if the owner, importer, consignee, or agent of any
imported merchandise, or the collector, or the Secretary of the
Treasury, shall be dissatisfied with the decision of the board of
general appraisers, as provided for in section 14 of this act, as
to the construction of the law and the facts respecting the
classification of such merchandise, and the rate of duty imposed
thereon under such classification, they, or either of them, may,
within thirty days next after such decision, and not afterwards,
apply to the circuit court of the United States within the district
in which
Page 148 U. S. 219
the matter arises for a review of the questions of law and fact
involved in such decision."
It was said by MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD, speaking for the Court in
Ex Parte Fassett, 142 U. S. 479,
142 U. S. 487,
that
"the appeal provided for in section 15 [of said act] brings up
for review in court only the decision of the board of general
appraisers as to the construction of the law, and the facts
respecting the classification of imported merchandise, and the rate
of duty imposed thereon under such classification. It does not
bring up for review the question or whether an article is imported
merchandise or not, nor, under § 15, is the ascertainment of
that fact such a decision as is provided for. The decision of the
collector from which appeals are provided for by § 14 are only
decisions as to 'the rate and amount' of duties charged upon
imported merchandise, and decisions as to dutiable costs and
charges, and decisions as to fees and exactions of whatever
character."
The appeal to the court in the present case seeks to review no
such decisions as are thus enumerated as falling within its
jurisdiction under said sections. On the contrary, the decision of
the board of general appraisers sought to be reviewed and corrected
by this application to the court relates to the reappraisement of
the imported goods. By section 13 of the act, the decision of the
board on that matter is declared to "be final and conclusive as to
the
dutiable value of such merchandise against all parties
interested therein." On such valuation, the collector, or the
person acting as such, is required to ascertain, fix, and liquidate
the rate and amount of duties to be paid on such merchandise and
the dutiable costs and charges thereon according to law.
It was certainly competent for Congress to create this board of
general appraisers, called "legislative referees" in an early case
in this Court,
Rankin v.
Hoyt, 4 How. 335, and not only invest them with
authority to examine and decide upon the valuation of imported
goods when that question was properly submitted to them, but to
declare that their decision "shall be final and conclusive as to
the
dutiable value of such merchandise against all parties
interested therein."
Page 148 U. S. 220
In
Hilton v. Merritt, 110 U. S. 97, it
was held that the valuation of merchandise made by the customs
officers under the statutes for the purpose of levying duties
thereon was conclusive on the importer in the absence of fraud on
the part of the officers. In this case, several sections of the
Revised Statutes of the United States relating to customs duties
were referred to, among them being section 2930, which prescribed
the method of appraising imported merchandise and provided that
"the appraisement thus determined shall be final and deemed to be
the true value, and the duties shall be levied thereon
accordingly." Under that provision, this Court held that the
valuation of imported merchandise made by the designated officials
or appraisers was, in the absence of fraud on the part of such
appraisers,
conclusive on the importer. The same rule was
reasserted in the recent case of
Earnshaw v. United
States, 146 U. S. 60, in
which it was held that a reappraisement of imported merchandise
under the provisions of section 2930, Revised Statutes, when
properly conducted, was binding. The earlier decisions of this
Court cited and referred to in
Hilton v. Merritt and
Earnshaw v. United States, establish the same general
rule. The provisions of the customs administrative Act of June 10,
1890, as to the finality and conclusiveness of the decision of the
board of general appraisers as to the valuation of imported
merchandise, when that question has been regularly submitted to and
examined by them, is expressed in clearer and more emphatic terms
than in former statutes. The language is so explicit as to leave no
room for construction. In the tariff legislation of the government,
Congress has generally adopted means and methods for a speedy and
equitable adjustment of the question as to the market value of
imported articles, without allowing an appeal to the courts to
review the decision reached. If dissatisfied importers, after
exhausting the remedies provided by the statute to ascertain and
determine the fair dutiable value of imported merchandise, could
apply to the courts to have a review of that subject, the prompt
and regular collection of the government's revenues would be
seriously obstructed and interfered with. The statute authorizes
no
Page 148 U. S. 221
such proceeding, and the circuit court can exercise no such
jurisdiction.
The appraised value of the merchandise having been conclusively
ascertained in the manner provided by law, and being found to
exceed by more than ten percentum the value declared in the entry,
the collector, as a matter of mere computation, under the direction
and authority of section 7 of said act, properly levied and
collected, in addition to the
ad valorem duty imposed by
law on such merchandise, a further sum equal to two percentum of
the total appraised value for each one percentum that such
appraised value exceeded the value declared in the entry.
Section 7 of said act is substantially similar to section 8 of
the Act of Congress passed on the 30th of July, 1846, 9 Stat. 42,
43, c. 74, which declared that if the appraised value of imports
which have actually been purchased should exceed by ten percentum
or more the value declared on the entry, then, in addition to the
duties imposed by law on the same, there should be levied,
collected, and paid a duty of twenty percentum
ad valorem
on such appraised value. In
Sampson v.
Peaslee, 20 How. 571, that provision was sustained
and enforced, except as to so much of the additional duty of twenty
percentum as was levied upon the
charges and
commissions. The court there say that the ruling of the
lower court, in confining the additional duty to the
appraised
value of the imports, was the correct interpretation of the
section.
As stated by Mr. Justice Campbell, speaking for the Court in
Barlett v.
Kane, 16 How. 274, such additional duties "are the
compensation for a violated law, and are designed to operate as
checks and restraints upon fraud." They are designed to discourage
undervaluation upon imported merchandise and to prevent efforts to
escape the legal rates of duty. It is wholly immaterial whether
they are called "additional duties" or "penalties." Congress had
the power to impose them under either designation or character.
When the dutiable value of the merchandise is finally ascertained
to be in excess of the value declared in the entry by more than ten
percentum, this extra duty or penalty attaches, and the collector
is directed
Page 148 U. S. 222
and required to levy and collect the same in addition to the
ad valorem duty provided by law. The importers in this
case cannot be heard to complain of this additional duty or
penalty, which was a legal incident to the finding of a dutiable
value in excess of the entry value to the extent provided by the
statute. They had full notice of the proceedings before the board
of general appraisers upon their appeal to said board, and ample
opportunity to be heard on the question of the market value of the
imported goods. It cannot, therefore, be properly said that they
have been subjected to penalties without notice or an opportunity
to be heard, or been deprived of their property without due process
of law.
The judgment of the circuit court dismissing the importers'
appeal to that court for want of jurisdiction must therefore be
Affirmed.