Woven cotton cloth, the groundwork of which was uniform, and
upon which were figures or patterns woven into it by means of a
Jacquard attachment contemporaneously with the weaving of the
fabric, and which was known as Madras mull, being imported into the
United States in 1886, became subject to the specific duties
imposed by Schedule I (paragraphs 319, 320, 321 in the customs
enumeration) of the Tariff Act of March 3, 1883, c. 121, 22 Stat.
488, estimated by the number of threads to the square inch, and not
to the
ad valorem duty imposed by the same schedule on
manufactures of cotton not specially enumerated.
This was an action at law against the collector at the port of
New York, to recover duties alleged to have been illegally imposed
upon importations of cotton cloth. Under direction of the court the
jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, on which judgment was
entered. To that judgment the defendant sued out this writ of
error. The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 151 U. S. 521
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action brought by William Robertson, the defendant
in error, in the United States Circuit Court for the Southern
District of New York, to recover from the plaintiff in error,
Edward L. Hedden, collector of customs at the port of New York, the
sum of $1,016.34, alleged to have been illegally exacted in excess
of lawful duties on a number of importations of cotton cloths
brought into the port of New York in the year 1886 by the defendant
in error.
The alleged illegal duties were levied by the collector under
the provisions of Schedule I, pars. 319-321, of the Tariff Act of
1883. These paragraphs are similar so far as concerns the present
question, and the language of 320 alone is necessary to be quoted.
It reads as follows:
"On all cotton cloth, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained,
painted, or printed, exceeding one hundred and not exceeding two
hundred threads to the square inch, counting the warp and filling,
three cents per square yard; if bleached, four cents per square
yard; if dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, five cents
per square yard: provided, that on all cotton cloth not exceeding
two hundred threads to the square inch, counting the warp and
filling, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed,
valued at over eight cents per square yard; bleached, valued at
over ten cents per square yard; dyed, colored, stained, painted, or
printed, valued at over thirteen cents per square yard, there shall
be levied, collected, and paid a duty of forty percentum
ad
valorem."
The defendant in error claimed that the cotton cloth imported by
him should not be classified under the provisions of either of
these paragraphs, but that the goods were dutiable only under
paragraph 324, which reads as follows:
"Cotton cords, braids, gimps, galloons, webbing, goring,
suspenders, braces, and all manufactures of cotton not
specially
Page 151 U. S. 522
enumerated or provided for in this act, and corsets, of whatever
material composed, thirty-five percentum
ad valorem."
It was shown by the evidence that the difference in the rate of
duty exacted by the collector and that claimed by the importer was
$983.93.
The goods in question were called Madras mull, and consisted of
woven cotton cloth, the groundwork of which was uniform, and upon
which were figures or patterns woven contemporaneously with the
weaving of the fabric. These figures or patterns were woven into
the groundwork by means of a machine called a "Jacquard
Attachment." When the fabric was taken from the loom, it was not in
a finished state. The threads forming the weft or filling,
furnished by the Jacquard attachment, used entirely for the figures
or patterns, loosely connected the figures in a horizontal line and
were raised above the smooth surface of the groundwork. In order to
bring out the figure or pattern more distinctly, the whole fabric
was run through a clipping machine two or more times, and the loose
threads, together with the raised parts of the pattern, were cut
off, so as to make the fabric smooth and even. After stating the
method of weaving the cloth, and thereafter clipping it, so as to
bring out the figures, the manufacturer, Nicol Paton Brown, a
witness of the plaintiff below, thus described the fabric:
"In the groundwork of the fabric, as distinguished from the
figure or pattern, the number of threads to the square inch is
uniform throughout the fabric; but when the fabric leaves the loom,
and before it goes into the clipping machine, the count of the
fabric as a whole differs from the count after it has been passed
through the clipping machine. Before the fabric is put in the
clipping machine, the number of threads to the square inch in the
groundwork of the fabric, as distinguished from the colored threads
which form the figure, is uniform throughout the fabric, so that if
in any of these fabrics a square inch is selected for the purpose
of the count, in which there is no figure or part of a figure, the
number of threads in that square inch will be the number of threads
in any
Page 151 U. S. 523
square inch of the groundwork of the fabric. The terms 'weft'
and 'filling' are synonymous, and I have so used them in my
testimony. The Jacquard machine gives the indication to the threads
of the warp which forms the figure, but the loom is instrumental in
leaving both the groundwork and the figure. . . . The weft threads
make the figure, but require to be woven in by the warp in order to
retain them in position in the fabric when being passed through the
clipping machine after being woven."
The warp threads, which lock into the weft threads, are
continuous from end to end throughout the fabric, but the weft
threads, after the fabric has gone through the clipping process, do
not extend continuously from side to side, or selvage to
selvage.
The number of threads to the square inch are counted by the use
of a magnifying glass. In the goods in question, the number of
threads to the square inch was determined by counting the threads
in a square inch of the groundwork alone, and there is no dispute
that the groundwork of the cloth, independently of the figures,
contained the number of threads designated in the provision of the
statute which warranted the duty imposed thereon by the
collector.
The defendant in error claimed, however, that the goods
imported, although composed of cotton and constituting cotton
cloth, were dutiable only at the rate of thirty-five percentum
ad valorem, as "manufactures of cotton not specially
enumerated or provided for."
The duties imposed by the collector were paid under protest, and
the importer thereafter made due and timely appeal to the Secretary
of the Treasury, who affirmed the decision of the collector. The
importer, within the time prescribed by law, brought his action
against the collector to recover the duties which he claimed to
have paid in excess of the amount required by the Tariff Act of
1883. His complaint set out the fact of the payment of the duties,
his protest, and the adverse decision of the Secretary of the
Treasury, and that the sum alleged to have been improperly exacted
from his had never been repaid.
Page 151 U. S. 524
The answer of the collector denied that the plaintiff had paid
anything in excess of the proper and lawful duty.
Upon the hearing of the cause, the court directed the jury to
return a verdict for the plaintiff below for the sum of $983.93,
upon which verdict the court rendered a judgment for that amount,
with interest and costs, aggregating the amount of $1,044.06. 40 F.
323. From this judgment the defendant below prosecuted his present
writ of error.
The court below, while conceding that the goods in question were
"cotton cloth" within the meaning of that term, held that they did
not come within the countable clause of paragraphs 319, 320, and
321 of Schedule I, above quoted for the reason that those
provisions of the Tariff Act of 1883 implied that the cloth should
be homogeneous, so that the number of threads per square inch will
not differ in different parts of the fabric, and, inasmuch as this
was not true in reference to the figures of the fabric, the goods
did not come within the meaning of the above-mentioned paragraphs,
but came within the provision of paragraph 324 of the same schedule
relating to "manufactures of cotton not specially enumerated or
provided for."
We think this was not a correct view of the subject. The
provisions in question are substantially the same as those of
Schedule A of cotton and cotton goods, in section 2504, Revised
Statutes, which reads as follows:
"SEC. 2504. On all manufactures of cotton (except jeans, denims,
drillings, bed-tickings, ginghams, plaids, cottonades, pantaloon
stuff, and goods of like description) not bleached, colored,
stained, painted, or printed, and not exceeding one hundred threads
to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, and exceeding in
weight five ounces per square yard, five cents per square yard; if
bleached, five cents and a half per square yard; if colored,
stained, painted, or printed, five cents and a half per square
yard, and in addition thereto, ten percentum
ad
valorem."
"On finer and lighter goods of like description, not exceeding
two hundred threads to the square inch, counting the warp and
filling, unbleached, five cents per yard; if bleached, five and a
half cents per square yard; if colored, stained,
Page 151 U. S. 525
painted, or printed, five and a half cents per square yard, and,
in addition thereto, twenty percentum
ad valorem. . .
."
"Cotton braids, insertings, lace, trimming, or bobbinet, and all
other manufactures of cotton, not otherwise provided for:
thirty-five percentum
ad valorem."
In
Newman v. Arthur, 109 U. S. 132,
these provisions just quoted came before the court for construction
and application. The imported goods were cotton Italians, which
were twilled, and had upon them different figures and designs made
in the weaving. The goods had more than one hundred and less than
two hundred threads to the square inch, counting the warp and
filling. It was contended in that case, as in this, that the goods
were not dutiable under the countable clause of the statute, but
were dutiable as "manufactures of cotton not otherwise provided
for." This Court held, however, that the goods were dutiable under
the countable clause, although the number of threads constituting
the warp and woof could only be counted by cutting out a square
inch of the cloth and counting the unravelled threads. It was
sought to show by proof that it was not the custom of merchants to
buy and sell such goods, or to determine the value thereof,
partially or wholly by the number of threads to the square inch, as
ascertained by means of a magnifying glass or otherwise; but Mr.
Justice Matthews, speaking for the Court, said that such custom
would throw no light whatever on the meaning of the law,
"because the law fixes the rate of duty by a classification
based on the number of threads in a square inch, without reference
to the mode in which the count is to be made. It might be quite
convenient for dealers not to count the threads except when they
could do so without unravelling, but it is a pure conjecture that
Congress intended so to stop the count by collectors at the same
limit. There appears to be no difficulty in counting threads, no
matter how fine the fabric, as long as the goods are plain woven,
and the necessity of unravelling for the purpose of counting seems
to exist only in case of twilled goods, and yet this very act
requires a count of threads in the case of jeans, denims,
drillings, bed-tickings, etc., which are twilled, and bases a
difference
Page 151 U. S. 526
of duty upon them according to the number of threads to the
square inch so ascertained."
There is no such substantial difference between the act
construed in
Newman v. Arthur, and the provisions of the
act of 1883 now under consideration as would authorize the court to
place upon the latter a different construction from that placed
upon the former. The practice of determining the number of threads
in both cases was the same, and the acts are so nearly alike in
their provisions that a different interpretation cannot be given by
this Court to the last act, which contains no substantial change in
phraseology.
McDonald v. Hovey, 110
U. S. 620.
The provisions of the act of 1883, like the provisions of
section 2504, fix the rate of duty by a classification based on the
number of threads in a square inch of cotton cloth, without
reference to the mode by which the count shall be made, and without
regard to the incidental ornamentation of the fabric.
We have no authority, where the duty is thus specifically
declared, to make an exception, based upon something that might be
added to the cloth in the way of figures or patterns placed upon
the groundwork of the fabric. The groundwork being cotton cloth
within the terms and provisions of the statute, and the threads
thereof being countable, the goods were dutiable, by the express
language of the statute at the rate which was exacted by the
collector from the defendant in error.
The mode of weaving the goods, and of subsequently clipping the
fabric so as to bring out the figures, even though that operation
did pare the weft or filling at the figures, does not change the
character of the fabric so as to make it a manufacture of "cotton
not specially enumerated or provided for." In other words, the
ornamentation placed upon the groundwork of the fabric does not
change its character as cotton cloth, subject to the countable
clause of the statute, and dutiable under paragraphs 319, 320, and
321 of the act of 1883.
We are therefore of opinion that there was error in the action
of the court below, and that the undisputed facts of
Page 151 U. S. 527
the case establish that a verdict should have been directed for
the defendant.
The judgment of the court below is therefore reversed, and
the case remanded for further proceedings in conformity with this
opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER did not hear the argument in this case, and
took no part in the decision of the Court.