It is a general rule that provisions in statutes imposing
taxation, though not in terms mandatory, are to be regarded as such
if necessary for the substantial protection of the taxpayer.
The customs laws, however, give to the complaining importer an
ample remedy, only putting him to the inconvenience of seeking it
in a legal tribunal.
In an action to recover duties alleged to have been illegally
exacted, the burden is on the importer to overcome the presumption
of a legal collection by proof that their exaction was
unlawful.
Although the appraisement of goods by customs officers is not
ordinarily open to judicial review, that rule does not apply when
the value is determined by a classification made by the
officer.
The provision in Schedule F, of the Act of March 3, 1883, c.
121, 22 Stat. 488, 503, imposing a duty upon leaf tobacco evidently
requires that 85 percent of half leaves are to be of the requisite
size and necessary fineness of texture for wrappers, or, in other
words, that each of 85 half-leaves
Page 155 U. S. 125
out of 100 half leaves must contain a portion sufficiently fine
in texture, of the requisite size to make at least one wrapper.
The further provision in that schedule "of which more than 100
leaves are required to weigh a pound" refers to whole leaves, in
their natural state.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendants in error commenced this action in the Superior
Court of the City of New York on May 6, 1889, against Joel B.
Erhardt, collector of the port of New York, to recover the sum of
$32,040.60, which amount they alleged had been unlawfully exacted
from them by that officer as customs duties on leaf tobacco. The
case was removed by certiorari into the Circuit Court of the United
States for the Southern District of New York, in which court the
complaint was filed and the case proceeded to trial before the
court and a jury.
As appears by the bill of exceptions, the defendants in error,
partners as Schroeder & Bon, on November 5, 1888, imported from
Amsterdam and entered at the port of New York for warehouse 429
bales of leaf tobacco, described in the invoice as Sumatra tobacco.
The protest filed in this case related to 398 of those bales, but
on the trial a recovery was abandoned of duties paid on such bales
of the invoice as were withdrawn before May 6, 1889, for the reason
that those duties had been paid to the predecessor in office of the
defendant.
On that day, as the bill of exceptions further shows, the
importers withdrew from warehouse five bales of the tobacco, upon
one of which they paid duty at the rate of 75 cents a pound on 125
pounds of the tobacco in the bale, and 35 cents a pound upon 54
pounds thereof, and upon four of which bales they paid a duty of 75
cents a pound. On the following day,
Page 155 U. S. 126
they withdrew five more bales, upon all of which they paid duty
at the rate of 75 cents a pound.
The importers, contending that they should have been compelled
to pay but 35 cents a pound on all of the ten bales, asserted that
the amount constituting the difference between duties at that rate
and at the rate of 75 cents a pound had been exacted from them
unlawfully by Erhardt, and that amount, with interest, or $708.12,
was sought on the trial to be recovered.
The evidence introduced by the importers showed that within ten
days after the liquidation of their warehouse entry, they had filed
with the collector a protest against his decision, assessment, and
liquidation of the duties; that within thirty days from the
liquidation of the entry they had duly appealed to the Secretary of
the Treasury, and that, that officer having decided against them on
appeal, they had within ninety days after his decision brought suit
to recover the duties alleged to have been erroneously exacted.
It appeared from the invoice and the testimony of the examiner
of tobacco at the appraisers� stores, called as a witness
for the importers, that upon the entry of the tobacco the collector
had designated five of the 429 bales for examination at the public
stores; that subsequently, upon the request of the appraiser,
twenty-five additional bales, and no more, had been sent to the
public stores for examination; that of the plantation lots, about
thirteen in number, of which the invoice was composed, four
plantation lots, containing respectively ten, twenty-seven, twenty,
and ten bales, were represented in the ten bales in controversy --
two of these four lots being represented by four bales from each,
and two of the four lots by one bale from each; that among the
thirty bales sent to the public stores was one bale from each of
the said four plantation lots; that one of the bales there examined
was, and that the other three were not, among the ten bales in
controversy, and that this one bale belonged to one of the
plantation lots containing ten bales, and was the bale upon which
the importer paid duty at the rate of 75 cents a pound upon 125
pounds thereof and 35 cents a pound upon 54 pounds thereof.
Page 155 U. S. 127
Other testimony was introduced to show the actual character of
the tobacco.
On the trial, after all the testimony on both sides had been
introduced, the collector moved the court to direct a verdict in
his favor on the ground that the importers had not established
facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, which motion was
denied. The collector excepted to this ruling, and asked to be
allowed to go to the jury generally upon the issues of the case,
and upon the court's refusal of this request, the collector asked
that the case might to go the jury upon the question whether there
had been one package examined of the bales in controversy, claiming
that, although there was not one bale in ten of the entire invoice
sent to the public stores, yet, as there were only ten bales in
question, representing four plantation lots, and as four bales
representing those ten bales had been actually examined at the
public stores, there was a sufficient compliance with the statute.
The court refused to submit this question to the jury, to which
refusal the collector excepted. The importers then moved for the
direction of a verdict in their favor, and the court granted the
motion, and directed a verdict for them for the sum of $708.12, to
which action of the court the collector excepted. Judgment in favor
of the importers, for the said amount, was duly entered on June 20,
1890, and subsequently the collector brought the case to this Court
by a writ of error.
The protest filed by the importers contained, among other
things, an allegation that there had been no legal appraisal of the
tobacco, for the reason that the provisions of section 2939 of the
Revised Statutes had not been complied with. That section is as
follows:
"The collector of the port of New York shall not under any
circumstances direct to be sent for examination and appraisement
less than one package of every invoice, and one package at least
out of every ten packages of merchandise, and a greater number
should he, or the appraiser, or any assistant appraiser, deem it
necessary. When the Secretary of the Treasury, however, from the
character and description of the merchandise, may be of the opinion
that the examination
Page 155 U. S. 128
of a less proportion of packages will amply protect the revenue,
he may, by special regulation, direct a less number of packages to
be examined."
It seems, from the nature of a part of the evidence introduced
on the trial, that the importers contended in the court below that
the effect of the examination by the customs officers of less than
one bale in ten of the invoice had the effect of invalidating the
assessment of the higher tax upon the tobacco, provided for in
paragraph 246 of the Tariff Act of 1883, and made it dutiable at
the lower rate, as prescribed in paragraph 247 of that act.
The same ground of contention is presented in this Court, the
collector asserting that the provisions of section 2939 of the
Revised Statutes are in the nature of instructions to the officers
of the customs, intended solely for the protection of the revenue,
and therefore that no benefit from a violation of the statute could
be taken by an importer. The importers insist, on the other hand,
that inasmuch as the examination may have the effect of fixing a
higher duty upon a given invoice of tobacco than that collectible
upon leaf tobacco of the kind more extensively imported, the
importer might be injured if the characteristics of the tobacco
necessary to justify the exaction of the higher tax were determined
by an examination different from that prescribed by section 2939,
which enactment therefore they believe to be intended as well for
the protection of the importer as the government, and hence
mandatory. Collateral to the argument upon this point is the
discussion by the parties as to whether the incident of the actual
examination in this case of one of the ten bales in controversy,
and the examination of one bale from each of four plantation lots
represented by the ten bales, was equivalent to a substantial
compliance with the statute.
Whether a statute is mandatory or directory is frequently a
question of a great deal of importance to taxpayers for the reason
that errors in taxation are often susceptible of correction only by
pointing to the nonobservance of some law which, strictly followed
by an officer, might have prevented the errors complained of. The
acts of assessors, for instance,
Page 155 U. S. 129
in matters relating to general municipal and state taxation,
are, if legally performed, usually conclusive upon the taxpayer
unless some means of relief has been provided by the legislature,
and often this relief is narrow. Very rarely, if ever, is there
power in the judiciary to enter into all the questions affecting
the legality of a charge for taxes, and therefore, in general, a
statute, even though not in express terms mandatory, is treated as
being so if its literal observance might afford substantial
protection to the party complaining, and a failure of such
observance by an officer is considered to render his act void.
French v.
Edwards, 13 Wall. 506,
80 U. S.
511.
In the case of customs duties, however, a party dissatisfied
with the classification of imports may apply to the courts to have
examined and reviewed everything involving the legality of the
demand which has been made upon him by a collector, and statutes
containing directions to government officials as to the manner in
which they shall become informed of the dutiable character of
merchandise afford importers an altogether different kind of
protection from that just mentioned. At most, a neglect of such
provisions operates to no greater disadvantage to a party than to
subject him to the necessity of bringing an action which he might
not have felt impelled to bring if the tax had been ascertained in
the manner prescribed. The unlawful demand of the duty does not
conclude his rights, but, at the most, merely lays upon him the
inconvenience of going before a tribunal in which those rights will
be declared.
An examination of one package in ten of the merchandise might
have shown to the satisfaction of the collector that the
importation was of the character the importer claimed it to be; the
examination of one package in fourteen may have given the collector
a different impression, to the disadvantage of the importer. But
the proceedings do not necessarily end with the collector's
decision, and the importer's rights are not finally fixed until the
character of the goods has been found by the court.
The protection of the convenience only of a taxpayer is not of
such a vital nature as to authorize a court to treat a statute
Page 155 U. S. 130
primarily directed to public officers for their guidance, and
the substantial protection of the government, as mandatory, and to
consider official acts not in strict conformity with the statute as
void. The protection must be substantial, and must be intended as a
guard of rights or property. Cooley on Taxation, pp. 215, 216.
In this view, it is apparent that the usual presumption of a
legal collection is not changed by the circumstances of this case,
and that the burden is upon the importer of overcoming this
presumption by proof that the exaction of the duties was
unlawful.
If the dutiable character of the goods in the present case were
to be determined by
value, the question of the effect of
section 2939 might be of consequence to the importers, since in
that event the value fixed by the appraisers, under section 2930
Revised Statutes, relating to appeals from appraisements, would be
final unless the appraisement were in some respect unlawful. The
question of the value of the goods could not be raised in an action
against the collector, and an attack upon the legality of the
appraisement, for the purpose of having it declared illegal at the
value stated in the invoice, would be at the value stated in the
invoice, would be the only means of redress by a court for an
illegal exaction of duties based upon an erroneous valuation. The
duty chargeable upon leaf tobacco was not fixed with reference to
its
value, but to certain prescribed characteristics of
size, fineness of texture, and weight. It seems to have
been the practice, under instructions issued by the Secretary of
the Treasury, for the appraiser, in addition to ascertaining the
value of goods, to ascertain the dutiable qualities of tobacco
imported, and this act of the appraiser seems usually to be
denominated an appraisement. At least that word is so used by
counsel on both sides of this case. Unless, however, this act of
the appraiser is an appraisement in the sense of being an
ascertainment of value, it would not be just to an importer to
regard it as an appraisement in this kind of a case.
Section 3011 Rev.Stat. provided that any person who had made
payment under protest, and in order to obtain possession
Page 155 U. S. 131
of merchandise imported for him, to any collector or person
acting as collector of any money as duties when such amount of
duties was not or was not wholly authorized by law might maintain
an action in the nature of an action at law, which should be
triable by jury, to ascertain the validity of such demand and
payment of duties, and to recover back any excess so paid. This
statute is general in its terms, and is subject to but one
qualification -- namely that in the action provided for, no
question can be raised as to the value of the merchandise except to
show that, because of some illegality in the appraisement, the
value fixed by the appraiser should not be taken as the basis of
the duties, but that the duties should therefore be fixed by the
invoice.
In the case of
Hilton v. Merritt, 110 U. S.
97, Mr. Justice Woods said, in delivering the opinion of
the Court:
"Considering the acts of Congress as establishing a system, and
giving force to all the sections, its plain and obvious meaning is
that the
appraisement of the customs officers shall be
final, but all other questions relative to the rate and amount of
duties may, after the importer has taken the prescribed steps, be
reviewed in an action at law to recover duties unlawfully exacted.
Questions frequently arise whether an enumerated article belongs to
one section or another. . . . In determining the rate and amount of
duties, the value of the merchandise is one factor, the question of
the schedule it properly falls under is another. Questions relating
to the classification of imports, and consequently to the rate and
amount of duty, are open to review in an action at law."
A common instance of the recognition of the right of a party to
review, in an action at law, a question of the classification of
imports is to be found in cases where there is no dispute as to the
character of the merchandise, but the contest is upon the name
properly applicable to it in the meaning of a statute. Many such
cases are cited in
Cadwalader v. Zeh, 151 U.
S. 171,
151 U. S. 176,
which case is itself a similar instance. In such controversies, the
question to be answered is what the article is. The question is the
same where there is no dispute over terms, but as to the qualities
or characteristics necessary
Page 155 U. S. 132
to bring the article within the statutory description. In either
case, the matter to be decided is the portion of the act under
which the article properly falls, and in all cases, eliminating
only the question of the value of the merchandise, the
classification may be reviewed in an action at law.
We are thus brought to the question of the actual character of
the tobacco with reference to the paragraph under which it was
properly dutiable. This question is raised by the following
allegation of the protest:
"We protest against the estimate of quality of the different
grades of said tobacco as made by the appraiser, and the assessment
of 75 cents per pound, as made by you, as unlawful, and as not in
accordance with the provisions of schedule F of the Act of March 3,
1883, claiming said tobacco to be dutiable under said provision at
only 35 cents per pound, because eighty-five percent of said
tobacco is not of the requisite size and of the necessary fineness
to be suitable for wrappers, and less than one hundred leaves are
required to weigh a pound."
The provisions of schedule F of the Tariff Act of 1883, under
which the duties in this case were exacted, were as follows:
"[246.] Leaf tobacco of which eighty-five percent is of the
requisite size and of the necessary fineness of texture to be
suitable for wrappers, and of which more than one hundred leaves
are required to weigh a pound, if not stemmed, seventy-five cents
per pound; if stemmed, one dollar per pound."
"[247.] All other tobacco in leaf, unmanufactured and not
stemmed, thirty-five cents per pound."
Diverse views were entertained by the parties concerning the
meaning of paragraph [246], the most important of which had
reference to the question whether the bale was to be treated as the
unit to which the percentage test was to be applied, or whether the
characteristics of the tobacco were to be ascertained by examining
a number of representative hands (which are small bundles of leaves
fastened together), and if certain of the examined hands should be
found to be dutiable at one rate, and the others at a different,
the bale should be assumed to contain tobacco of two different
grades, and the duties laid accordingly.
Page 155 U. S. 133
The proper answer to this question seems to depend upon the
particular circumstances of a given case. It appears in the
testimony on both sides of this case that leaf tobacco is divided
into two classes, known as the "wrapper class" and the "filler
class." Whether or not a bale of tobacco is of uniform character
seems to be easily ascertained. A dealer in leaf tobacco, one of
the witnesses for the collector, said:
"We never draw [from a bale] less than four hands, and it may
run four hands, six hands, eight hands, or ten hands, according as
we may find whether the bale has been packed honestly, as we term
it, or whether it has been packed mixed. If the first four hands
drawn should be entirely uniform, we probably would not draw any
more, and, in any event, we would be hardly likely to draw more
than ten hands."
If, then, a bale, or other separate and concrete quantity of
leaf tobacco, contained only leaves of such uniformity of character
as to be, in their collective form, of one class, the bale, or
other separate collection, would be the unit contemplated in the
percentage and weight tests of paragraph [246]. On the other hand,
if the bale contained tobacco of two classes, the unit would be the
ascertained quantity of either class. The leaf tobacco meant by
paragraph [246] is apparently a collection of leaves or half leaves
having the similarity caused by the circumstances of their having
grown in soil of the same general character, in the same climate,
and under the same general conditions of moisture or dryness, and
by such selection or assortment as it may be customary to make on
the plantation, yet having the differences which, despite the
similarity of habitat and environment, are to be found in all
natural products. Congress is, of course, presumed to be familiar
with the fact that leaf tobacco is divided into classes, or is
subjected, before being placed in bales, to some kind of an
assortment, and a knowledge of the similarities and differences
which are to be found in a collection of leaves of a class
doubtless furnished the reason for the adoption of the percentage
test.
All the tobacco in question in this case, as the evidence on
both sides shows, was raised in the same country, and was all
Page 155 U. S. 134
of the class known to the trade as "wrappers." Therefore any
bales, or indeed the whole invoice, if it might conveniently be
treated as a whole for the purpose, was just such a unit as was
intended by the statute. Any other view of this legislation would
make it meaningless, for the very term "percent" implies an
understanding that the tobacco to be taxed, even though of a
uniform grade, may contain some leaves possessing and some not
possessing the qualifications required for the higher tax. In such
a case, if separate hands, taken from a bale containing only leaves
of one class, were treated as units, the result might be an
inaccurate conclusion. Doubtless in the hands classed as containing
tobacco dutiable at the lower rate there would be leaves having all
the requisites of the higher grade, while in the hands ascertained
to be taxable at the higher rate would be leaves of the lower
grade. This might have the effect of making a division of tobacco
of one commercial class into two grades with respect to taxation --
a division which we do not believe to have been contemplated by the
statute. If the character of the tobacco is to be learned from an
examination of a representative quantity therefrom, such as ten
hands, the hands should be separated, and the statutory tests
applied to the general collection of all the representative leaves,
irrespective of their casual association in the separate hands.
Examining the evidence in this case, we find that one of the
importers gave testimony, based upon an examination of samples from
the bales in controversy, tending to show that two of the
plantation lots which were represented by five of those bales
contained tobacco of which 85 percent neither of the surface of the
leaves nor of the quantity thereof, as estimated by the weight of
the bale, was of the requisite size for wrappers; that the other
two lots, represented by the other five bales in controversy,
contained tobacco of which 85 percent of the surface, but not 85
percent of the weight, was suitable for wrappers. He further
testified that 85 percent of the tobacco was suitable for wrappers
in respect to fineness of texture.
Considered with regard to fitness for wrappers, each leaf of
Page 155 U. S. 135
tobacco is divided, by what is called the "stem," into two
distinct portions. It is matter of common knowledge that in making
wrappers, the stem is not used, but is removed, with the result of
dividing the leaf into separate pieces. From these pieces only are
wrappers made, and their size and fineness of texture determine
their suitability for wrappers, for if one piece is of insufficient
size, it cannot be aided in usefulness as a wrapper by the portion
on the other side of the stem. If tobacco is imported with the
stems removed, each piece, or "side," as it appears to be called by
dealers and manufacturers, would of necessity be treated as
independent, for there would be no means of knowing with certainty
what parts were originally together in one leaf. In applying the
test of size, therefore, the size of either side of the leaf is to
be looked to, and the evident requirement of the statute is that
eighty-five percent of half leaves, or eighty-five out of one
hundred, are to be of the requisite size and necessary fineness of
texture for wrappers. In other words, each of eighty-five half
leaves out of one hundred half leaves must contain a portion,
sufficiently fine in texture, of the requisite size to make at
least one wrapper. Eighty-five to make at least one face of the
single leaf is not intended, for in that view any single leaf large
enough for a wrapper would be, in respect to
size, one
hundred percent or entirely of the requisite size for wrapper
purposes, or, if one wrapper could be made from it, the leaf would
have, as to size, no percentage of suitability. Hence, any leaf
would be required to be treated simply as fit our unfit -- four
hundred percent suitable in size or not suitable at all -- and no
general percentage test would be applicable.
The importers call attention to their testimony to the effect
that in none of the four lots mentioned by them was there
eighty-five percent of the weight of the tobacco suitable for
wrappers, and suggest that, "as the commodity was bought, sold, and
dutied by the pound, the weight must be the test to which the
percentage rule applies." There is a practical objection to this
view, however, which renders it not acceptable. It might often
happen that a half leaf which was suitable, according to the
required test, would be joined, in
Page 155 U. S. 136
an unstemmed leaf, to one which was unsuitable, in which case
the weight of the respective parts could not be ascertained. The
most natural interpretation of the paragraph in question is to
consider eighty-five percent of half leaves, or suitable half
leaves eighty-five in number out of half leaves 100 in number, as
the requirement, and to regard the proportion of the weight of the
suitable half leaves to the weight of all the leaves as
immaterial.
A further requirement of the act is that the leaves of the
collection must be of such average lightness that more than one
hundred are required to weigh a pound -- that is to say, if the
collection should weigh 160 pounds it must contain more than 16,000
leaves, or, if some smaller collection, taken as representative of
the whole, such as ten hands, should weigh four pounds, this
representative collection must contain more than four hundred
leaves. Here we are separate parts of the leaves, other test, the
separate parts of the leaves, for the language of the act expressly
provides for the condition that "100 leaves are required to weigh a
pound." The word
leaves plainly means leaves in their
natural state, or whole leaves.
Assuming that the importers, in testifying concerning the size
and fineness of texture of the tobacco, had in mind the proper test
when speaking of the percentage of the surface suitable for
wrappers, we must take their evidence to mean that only five of the
ten bales in controversy contained tobacco of which less than
eighty-five percent fulfilled, as to the size and fineness of
texture, the demands of paragraph 246. It would seem, therefore,
that the court below was in error in directing a verdict for the
importers, and that the judgment of that court ought to be
reversed, and the case remanded with directions to set aside the
verdict, and to order a new trial, in order that a jury may pass
upon the real character of the tobacco contained in the ten bales
withdrawn by the importers.
Judgment reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER did not sit at the argument or take part in
the decision.