The purchaser of an imported article in bond, pending an appeal
from the assessment of duties upon it which is subsequently
overruled, can, on paying the duties as assessed, maintain an
action in his own name against the collector to recover an excess
in the payment exacted.
Hager v. Swayne, 149 U. S. 241,
distinguished.
Tobacco scrap, consisting of
"clippings from the ends of cigars and pieces broken from the
tobacco, of which cigars are manufactured in the process of such
manufacture, . . . not being fit for any use in the condition in
which the same are imported, and their only use being to be
manufactured into cigarettes and smoking tobacco,"
was, under the Tariff Act of March 3, 1883, c. 121, subject to a
duty of 30 percent
ad valorem as unmanufactured tobacco,
and not to a duty of 40 cents per pound as manufactured
tobacco.
The defendant in error (plaintiff below) sued to recover duties
which he claimed had been illegally exacted on certain importations
of tobacco. The case, by stipulation, was submitted without the
intervention of a jury. The court found
Page 153 U. S. 33
the facts to be as follows: The Rayner & Baxter Cigar
Company imported the tobacco in question, which consisted of
"clippings from the ends of cigars, and pieces broken from the
tobacco of which cigars are manufactured, in the process of such
manufacture, the said clippings and pieces not being fit for any
use in the condition in which the same are imported, and their only
use being to be manufactured into cigarettes and smoking
tobacco."
The collector assessed upon the tobacco a duty of forty cents
per pound, under Rev.Stat. § 2502, as amended by the Act. of
March 3, 1883, c. 121, 22 Stat. 488, 491, 503, which took effect on
March 3, 1883, including it within the terms of the fifth paragraph
of Schedule F of that act, which reads as follows: "Tobacco,
manufactured, of all descriptions, and stem tobacco, not specially
enumerated or provided for in this act, forty cents per pound."
The importer seasonably protested, contending that the tobacco
was not dutiable under the above paragraph of Schedule F, but was
so under the seventh paragraph of the same, which reads as follows:
"Tobacco, unmanufactured, not specially enumerated or provided for
in this act, thirty percentum
ad valorem."
From an adverse ruling of the collector, an appeal was duly
brought to the Secretary of the Treasury. Pending this appeal, the
importer sold the tobacco in bond to the plaintiff below, who, upon
the affirmance of the collector's ruling by the secretary, paid the
duties, and in due time brought this suit to recover.
Upon the facts thus found, the defendant asked the court to rule
first that the plaintiff, as purchaser pending the decision of the
secretary, could not maintain the suit; second, that the defendant
was, as a matter of law, entitled to a judgment. Reserving these
questions, which were adversely decided, the defendant brings the
case here.
Page 153 U. S. 34
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, after stating the case, delivered the opinion
of the
Court.
That a stranger, suing solely on an assignment of a claim from
those who did not see fit to prosecute it themselves, cannot
recover duties averred to have been illegally assessed, is settled
by
Hager v. Swayne, 149 U. S. 242.
That case, however, has no application to the present one, because
the facts of the two are different. Indeed, in
Hager v.
Swayne, reference was made to this case as then reported, 40
F. 531, and we said:
"Castro had purchased the merchandise of the importer while it
was in bond, and pending an appeal, and after the decision of the
appeal paid the duties assessed, in order to obtain possession of
the property, and thereupon brought the suit. . . . The purchaser
obtained an interest in the thing itself"
-- thus plainly distinguishing between the case of an assignment
of a claim, as exemplified in
Hager v. Swayne, and the
case of an assignment of the thing, such as is here involved.
Whether such tobacco as that with which we are here concerned is
"manufactured" in the sense of the word as used in the Tariff Act
of 1883 is a question which has given rise to some contrariety of
opinion. Attorney General Brewster, on January 25, 1884, held that
it was, reaching his conclusion by a comparison of the provisions
of the tariff act with those of certain internal revenue laws,
holding that the two were
in pari materia, and hence that
the classification of tobacco scraps as manufactured tobacco in the
internal revenue laws must be taken to indicate the intention of
Congress to include them under the head of manufactured tobacco in
the tariff law. 16 Ops.Attys.Gen. 646. On the other hand, in
Cohn v. Spalding, 24 Fed.19, decided May 26, 1885, the
Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illinois decided that
scrap tobacco was not manufactured within the meaning of the Tariff
Act of 1883. And in a still later case, which arose under the
provisions of the Tariff Act of 1890.
Sheldon v. United
States, 55 F. 818, it was held by the Circuit Court of Appeals
for the Seventh Circuit that scraps like those
Page 153 U. S. 35
now in question were manufactured tobacco within the meaning of
that act, the court calling attention to the fact that these scraps
had a commercial value, and were the subjects of importation in the
way of business.
It seems to us, however, that both the meaning of the word
"manufactured" and the analogy of the internal revenue provisions
require us to hold that these scraps are not manufactured tobacco.
The court below found in this case that the scraps were
"clippings from the ends of cigars, and pieces broken from the
tobacco of which cigars are manufactured, in the process of such
manufacture; that said clippings and pieces are not fit for any use
in the condition in which the same are imported, and that their
only use is to be manufactured into cigarettes and smoking
tobacco."
It is thus evident that the clippings are the mere waste
resulting from a process of manufacture, and not in themselves
manufactured articles. In
Lawrence v.
Allen, 7 How. 785,
48 U. S.
794-795, the process of manufacturing was defined to be
"making an article entirely by hand or machinery into a new form,
capable of being used, and designed to be used, in ordinary life."
A like view of what constitutes an article of manufacture had been
previously announced by the Court of King's Bench: "The word
manufacture' has been generally understood to denote either a
thing made, which is useful for its own sake, and vendible as
such," etc. Rex v. Wheeler, 2 B. & Ald. 349. In
Holden v. Clancy, 58 Barb. 590, the test of whether an
article was manufactured is thus defined:
"A manufacture is defined as the process of making anything by
art or of reducing materials into a form fit for use by the hand or
by machinery, and it seems to imply a proceeding wherein the object
or intention of the process is to produce the article in question.
The residuum or refuse of various kinds of manufactories is more or
less valuable for certain purposes, and may be, and often is, the
subject of sale; but it is not expected that the skill and
attention of the manufacturer is to be devoted to the quality of
the refuse material. This is not the object of the process, and its
quality is wholly subordinate and disregarded when attention to it
would interfere with the most profitable mode or material to
Page 153 U. S. 36
be used in the process which is the main object of the
manufacturer."
Tested by either of these definitions, the tobacco in question
is unmanufactured. To speak of it as "partly manufactured" and
deduce a contention therefrom is simply to assume the question at
issue. It is equally unsound to divide the finding of fact so as to
make it designate two distinct kinds of tobacco, thus: first,
"clippings from the ends of cigars," and second, "pieces broken
from the tobacco of which cigars are manufactured, in the process
of such manufacture." The words "in the process of such
manufacture" qualify the whole sentence.
Resort to the provisions of the internal revenue laws regarding
tobacco seems to us to strengthen, rather than to militate against,
our conclusion. Various provisions of these laws have been brought
to our attention. Revised Statutes, § 3244 (ninth) and §
3368, and the Act of March 1, 1879, c. 125, § 14, 20 Stat.
345, providing a substitute for Revised Statutes, § 3362.
These are asserted to be
in pari materia, and to show that
the tobacco in question was manufactured, within the meaning of the
tariff statute, without regard to the general understanding of the
word "manufacture." We think the position unsound. The internal
revenue laws referred to sought to accomplish two objects: first
the taxation of all forms of manufactured tobacco, including also
the waste or scrap arising therefrom, and second the complete
accounting by the manufacturer for all the product of his factory,
including the waste. As waste was necessarily embraced in both
objects, it was included in the provisions of the laws relied on. A
detailed examination of the statutes will accentuate these views.
The first of these provisions is that of § 61 of the Act of
July 20, 1868, c. 186, 15 Stat. 125, 153, which reads as
follows:
"That upon tobacco and snuff which shall be manufactured and
sold, or removed for consumption or use, there shall be assessed
and collected the following taxes: . . . on all refuse, scraps, and
sweepings of tobacco, a tax of sixteen cents per pound."
Here is an obvious distinction taken between tobacco, etc.,
"manufactured and sold," on the one hand, and "refuse, scraps, and
sweepings," on the other,
Page 153 U. S. 37
albeit the tax is the same on both. Its object, too, is plainly
to tax tobacco of the various kinds named, in connection with their
sale and removal "for consumption and use." The context of the
section enforces this view. The tax is upon all tobacco
manufactured, sold, or removed from the factory, and the provision
as to refuse, scraps, etc., necessarily contemplates the regulation
of the business of the factory, and not the grading of the
tobacco.
The next section relied upon is section 62 of the same act,
which is as follows:
"That . . . all manufactured tobacco shall be put up and
prepared by the manufacturer for sale, or removal for sale or
consumption, in packages of the following description, and in no
other manner: . . . all smoking tobacco, all fine cut shorts which
is passed through a riddle of thirty-six square meshes to the
square inch, and all refuse scraps and sweepings of tobacco, in
packages containing two, four, eight, and sixteen ounces each."
15 Stat. 152, 153. This section evidently has the same object as
the first. The fact that it directs the manner in which the scraps
and refuse shall be put up in the factory affords no evidence of a
legislative determination that the scraps themselves are
manufactured articles. Nor does section 59 of the same act justify
the interpretation which is sought to be placed upon it. On the
contrary, it distinguishes scraps by fair implication from both
manufactured and partially manufactured tobacco. Its language
is:
"Every person whose business it is to manufacture tobacco or
snuff for himself, or who shall employ others to manufacture
tobacco or snuff, whether such manufacture shall be by cutting,
pressing, grinding, crushing, or rubbing of any leaf or raw
tobacco, or otherwise preparing raw or leaf tobacco or manufactured
or partially manufactured tobacco, or snuff, or the putting up for
use or consumption of scraps, waste, clippings, stems, or deposits
of tobacco, resulting from any process of handling tobacco, shall
be regarded as a manufacturer of tobacco."
The interpretation of this section, which would hold that scraps
were manufactured tobacco, would render the provision
Page 153 U. S. 38
of the section which relates to them absolutely useless. It
would be a construction which would read out of the section by
necessary implication, as unnecessary, the provision as to the
waste or scrap tobacco found therein. Manufactured tobacco and
partially manufactured tobacco had been already provided for. The
waste or clippings must have been considered neither manufactured
nor partially manufactured, since they were specially provided for
after the manufactured and partially manufactured tobacco had
already been regulated by the terms of the section. It follows,
therefore, that if, under the rule of
pari materia, we
interpret the provision of the Tariff Act of 1883 along with the
provision of the internal revenue acts thus quoted, we could not
hold the scraps or waste to be a manufactured article, unless we
said that that which is neither manufactured nor partially
manufactured was yet a manufactured article. We think the context
of these sections makes it clear that their general purpose and
object was to regulate the manufacture and disposition of all
classes of tobacco, and that they conform, by a fair construction
and interpretation, to the view that the scraps are neither a
manufactured nor a partially manufactured article. We are here
dealing with the waste or the scraps not from the internal revenue
point of view, but as an article of commerce, separate from the
manufacturer and the factory.
The judgment below is
Affirmed.