So long as the transcript of the record in the circuit court is
in the circuit court of appeals, the fact that a mandate from it
has gone down to the circuit court, affirming its decree, does not
affect the right of this Court to issue a writ of certiorari to the
court of appeals, to bring the record here.
An application for a writ of certiorari to bring here for review
a record and judgment entered after the final adjournment of this
Court, made at the next term and within a year after the original
decree, is made within time.
A foreign built vessel, purchased by a citizen of the United
States, and brought into the waters thereof, is not taxable under
the tariff laws of the United States.
Rev.Stat. § 970, which provides that,
"when, in any prosecution commenced on account of the seizure of
any vessel, goods, wares or merchandise, made by any collector or
other officer, under any act of Congress authorizing such seizure,
judgment is rendered for the claimant, but it appears to the court
that there was reasonable cause of seizure, the court shall cause a
proper certificate thereof to be entered, and the claimant shall
not, in such case, be entitled to costs, nor shall the person who
made the seizure, nor the prosecutor, be liable to suit or judgment
on account of such suit or prosecution:
provided that the
vessel, goods, wares or merchandise be, after judgment, forthwith
returned to such claimant or his agent,"
only affords the collector immunity against a judgment for
damages in cases where proceedings against the vessel were
instituted upon information filed by the United States, for a fine
or forfeiture incurred by the vessel itself.
A collector of customs who seizes a foreign built vessel
purchased by a citizen of the United States and brought by him into
their waters, and holds the same on the claim that it is taxable
for duties under the tariff laws, is not protected against a
judgment for damages by a certificate of probable cause.
Demurrage is a proper element of damages, but it can only be
allowed when profits have either actually been lost, or may be
reasonably supposed to have been lost, and their amount is proven
with reasonable certainty.
The best evidence of damage suffered by detention is the sum for
which vessels of the same size and class can be chartered in the
market, but
Page 166 U. S. 111
in the absence of such market value, the value of her use to her
owner in the business in which she was engaged at the time of the
collision is a proper basis for estimating damages for detention,
and the books of the owner showing her earnings about the time of
her collision are competent evidence of her probable earnings
during the time of her detention.
Testimony as to value may be properly received from witnesses
who are duly qualified as experts, but the jury, even if such
testimony be uncontradicted, may exercise their independent
judgment, and there is no rule of law which requires them to
surrender their judgment, or to give a controlling influence to the
opinions of scientific witnesses.
The testimony in this case falls far short of establishing such
a case of loss of profits as entitles the claimant to recover the
large sum awarded to him for the detention of his yacht.
Whether the other charges were proper or not was a matter for
the courts below to determine in the exercise of their best
judgment, and, as the commissioner found that they were proper, and
as both the district court and the court of appeals affirmed his
action in that regard, this Court is not disposed to disturb their
finding, although the amount seems large.
This was a libel by Frederick W. Vanderbilt to recover
possession of the steam yacht
Conqueror, of which he was
the owner, and which was alleged to be illegally detained by J.
Sloat Fassett, then collector of customs for the district of New
York.
The material facts of the case are as follows: in May, 1891,
Vanderbilt, who is a native-born American citizen, purchased of one
Bailey, or Kingston-upon-Hull, England, the yacht
Conqueror, a foreign-built vessel, for the sum of
�15,500, or about $75,000. The bill of sale was certified by
the United States consul at Liverpool, and the yacht was delivered
to Vanderbilt at Hull. The vessel was designed for pleasure only,
and has never been put to any other use. After a cruise to Norway,
Mr. Vanderbilt returned with her to England, and in June was
elected a member of the Royal Mersey Yacht Club of Liverpool,
thereby, it seems, obtaining the right to fly the blue ensign of
her majesty's fleet. He never did, however, fly a British flag, but
always carried the ensign of the New York Yacht Club, and her
enrollment in the Liverpool Yacht Club seems to have been with the
intent of claiming a special privilege of exemption from tonnage
tax, under Rev.St.
Page 166 U. S. 112
§ 4216, accorded to yachts belonging to foreign yacht
clubs.
Shortly after this the yacht crossed the ocean, and arrived at
New York about July, 6, 1891, where she was duly entered as a
vessel with the collector of the port, and paid the light money
levied upon her by the collector as a vessel, pursuant to Rev.Stat.
§ 4225. She also received from the deputy collector a
certificate to her bill of sale, describing her, stating that she
had been sold by Bailey to Vanderbilt, and that the latter was a
citizen of the United States. This entitled her to protection as an
American vessel, but did not authorize her to engage in commerce.
After cruising for some time about the coast, on August 27, 1891,
in obedience to instructions from the Treasury Department founded
upon an opinion of the Solicitor of the Treasury that the yacht
should be regarded as a dutiable importation, the collector took
forcible possession of her and held her until dispossessed by the
marshal under authority of the district court. On October 1st, Mr.
Fassett went out of office, and was succeeded by Francis Hendricks,
to whom the possession passed.
Meanwhile, on September 1, Mr. Vanderbilt filed his present
libel for possession of the yacht, alleging his citizenship, the
fact that the vessel was designed, intended, and constructed as a
pleasure yacht only, its purchase by the libelant, as well as other
facts hereinbefore set forth, and prayed for process against the
vessel and for a decree awarding him possession and condemning
Fassett in damages and costs. Process having been issued against
the yacht, the execution thereof by the marshal was restricted by
the customs officials, and it was not until an alias and pluries
process had been issued that the marshal succeeded in obtaining
exclusive and undisputed control of her. Fassett then applied to
this Court for a writ of prohibition, which was denied.
In re
Fassett, 142 U. S. 479.
Answers having been filed by Mr. Fassett, as late collector and
personally, and by Mr. Hendricks, as collector, praying for the
dismissal of the libel and for a decree of restitution of the yacht
to the collector, the cause came on for a hearing in
Page 166 U. S. 113
the district court, and resulted in a decree of restitution, 49
F. 99, a reference to a commissioner for an assessment of damages,
and a subsequent decree for damages in the sum of $15,000 as
demurrage for detention of the yacht from August 27th to February
3d and for other items sufficient to make up a total decree of
$21,742.34.
Upon appeal to the circuit court of appeals, this decree was
affirmed without an opinion, whereupon appellant applied for and
was granted the present writ of certiorari.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
Two questions are involved in the merits of this case: first,
whether this vessel was taxable under the tariff laws; second,
whether the award of damages was justified by the law and the
testimony.
1. A preliminary objection is made, however, by the appellee
that the case is not properly before the court, because the mandate
is not here, and because the case was in the district court, and
was brought here by a writ addressed to a court which had lost
jurisdiction of it before the writ had issued.
The fact that the mandate of the circuit court of appeals to the
district court, affirming the decree of that court, had gone down
is immaterial. The transcript of the record is still in the court
of appeals, and, if a writ of certiorari can be issued at all after
a final disposition of the case in that court, it could not be
defeated by the issue of a mandate to the court below. That
certiorari can issue, and indeed is ordinarily only issued, after a
final decree in the court of appeals was settled by this Court in
American Construction Co. v. Jacksonville, Tampa & Key West
Railway, 148 U. S. 372,
148 U. S. 384,
although it may be issued before if this
Page 166 U. S. 114
Court be of opinion that the facts of the case require an
earlier interposition.
The Three Friends, ante,
166 U. S. 1.
The only question worthy of consideration in this connection is
whether the writ of certiorari should not have been applied from
more promptly. The decree sought to be reviewed was entered June 6,
1893. The petition for certiorari was not filed until April 16,
1894. T he act does not fix the time within which application for a
certiorari must be made. As the decree was entered June 6th,
immediately after this Court had adjourned for the term, and as the
application must be made to the court while in session, no fault is
imputable to the government in not making the application before
the opening of the next term in October, and while we think such
application should be made with reasonable promptness, as it was
made during the term and within a year after the original decree,
we think it was within the time. We do not think the party
complaining is limited to the six months allowed by section eleven
of the Court of Appeals Act for suing out a writ of error from the
court of appeals to review the judgment of the district or circuit
court, and it would seem that he is, by analogy, entitled to the
year within which, by section six, an appeal shall be taken or writ
of error sued out from this Court to review judgments or decrees of
the court of appeals in cases where the losing party is entitled to
such review.
2. Was the
Conqueror dutiable under the Tariff Act of
October 1, 1890, 26 Stat. 567? This act requires duties to be
levied upon all "articles" imported from foreign countries and
mentioned in schedules therein contained, none of which schedules
mention ships or vessels
eo nomine. An abstract furnished
us of the corresponding clauses in all the principal tariff acts
from 1789 to the present date shows that duties are laid either
upon "articles," as in the present act, or upon "goods, wares and
merchandise" -- words which have a similar meaning. Indeed, the
words "articles" and "goods, wares and merchandise" seem to be used
indiscriminately, and without any apparent purpose of
distinguishing between them. While a vessel is an article of
personal property, and may be
Page 166 U. S. 115
termed "goods, wares and merchandise," as distinguished from
real estate, it is not within either class as the words are
ordinarily used. In all this class of cases, the meaning of the
words as used in the particular statute must be gathered from the
context and from the evident purpose of the act. Thus, in
Palmer's Ship Building & Iron Co. v. Claytor, L.R. 4
Q.B. 209, it was held that a ship was not an "article," within the
meaning of an act forbidding the employment of children to labor in
the manufacture of articles or parts of articles, but that an iron
plate was an article of metal, even though used in shipbuilding,
and the shaping of the plate was part of the manufacture.
Vessels certainly have not been treated as dutiable articles,
but rather as the vehicles of such articles, and, though foreign
built and foreign owned, are never charged with duties when
entering our ports, though every article upon them that is not a
part of the vessel, or of its equipment or provisions, is subject
to duty unless expressly exempted by law. If this yacht had been
brought here by a foreigner, it is not insisted that she would have
been subject to duty. Indeed, she might be navigated between our
ports for an unlimited time, provided only that she did not carry
passengers or goods for hire. If she be dutiable at all, it must
then be because she was bought by an American citizen. But why
should this make her dutiable? She is not imported or taken into
the country in the ordinary sense in which that term is used with
reference to other articles, does not become commingled with the
general mass of property, and is employed precisely as she might be
legally employed by her foreign owners, or by an American citizen
leasing her from such owner. Other articles are dutiable not
because they have been purchased, but because they are actually
imported and become the subject of sale and commerce within the
country. But if a yacht be dutiable when purchased, and only when
purchased, by an American citizen, we apply a test of dutiability
that we apply to no other article -- namely, the test of
ownership.
Not only is there no mention of vessels
eo nomine in
the tariff acts, but there is no general description under which
they
Page 166 U. S. 116
could be included, except as manufactures of iron or wood. But
it is only by straining the word far beyond its ordinary import
that we are able to apply the word "manufacture" to a seagoing,
schooner-rigged, screw steamship, 182 1/2 feet long, nearly 25 feet
wide, and of 372 tons burden. The term "manufacture" is as
inapplicable to such a vessel as it would be to a block of brick or
stone erected in the heart or a great city. A ship is doubtless
constructed of manufactured articles which, if imported separately,
would be the subject of duty, but which, put together in the form
of a ship, are taken out of the class of "manufactures" and become
a vehicle for the importation of other articles. Considering the
hundreds of foreign vessels which enter the ports of the United
States every day, it is incredible that, if Congress had intended
to include them in the tariff acts, it would not have made mention
of them in terms more definite than that of "manufactures."
While there has been no direct adjudication upon the question of
the taxability of foreign vessels under the tariff laws, it was
held in
United States v. A Chain Cable, 2 Sumn. 362, that
a chain cable was not taxable which was purchased at Liverpool by
the master of the ship
Marathon to supply the place of a
hempen cable which had become unseaworthy before the arrival of the
ship at Liverpool if the cable were purchased
bona fide
with the intention of using it for that ship, and not to sell as
merchandise. It was said by Mr. Justice Story that the words
"goods, wares and merchandise" used in the tariff act included only
such as were designed for sale, or to be applied to some use or
object distinct from their
bona fide appropriation to the
use of the ship in which they are imported. And in
The
Gertrude, 2 Ware 181,
s.c., 3 Story 68, it was held
that the tackle, apparel, and furniture of a foreign vessel wrecked
upon our coast and landed and sold separately from the hull, were
not goods, wares, and merchandise imported into the United States
within the meaning of the revenue laws. The opinion was delivered
by Judge Ware, briefly affirmed on appeal to the circuit court by
Mr. Justice Story, and the case put upon the ground that the
rigging and apparel of the ship are a part of the ship, and
therefore not
Page 166 U. S. 117
merchandise in any other sense of the word than that in which
the ship herself is. "If," said he,
"we look through the whole of the numerous acts of Congress
laying duties on merchandise imported, as well as those regulating
the collection of the same, we shall find they uniformly
contemplate the cargo; they refer to articles having the quality of
'merchandise' in the ordinary and most popular sense of the word.
They refer also to goods intended to be introduced into the country
for sale and consumption or for the general purposes of
commerce."
While neither of these cases is directly in point, each of them
would probably have been differently decided if the court had been
of opinion that a foreign vessel arriving in this country, and sold
here, were the subject of duty.
The fact that, in a particular case such as that of
The
Geneva, 20 Stat. 473, Congress may have seen fit to impose
duties as a condition to the granting of an American registry to a
foreign-built steamboat, is fully met by a very large number of
similar cases in which no such requirement is made. In the
following, taken from a single volume (28 Stat.), it appears that
foreign-built vessels were admitted to registry or nationalized
without any such requirement:
The Oneida, p. 43;
The
Goldsworthy, p. 216;
The Astoria, p. 217;
The
Oceano, p. 219;
The S. Oteri, p. 277;
The
Skudesnaes, p. 508;
The Claribel and Athos, p. 625;
The Empress, p. 626;
The Linda and Archer, p.
626;
The James H. Hamlen, p. 643. Doubtless an examination
would reveal an equally large number in other volumes. In fact, the
case of
The Geneva seems to have been wholly exceptional.
As bearing upon this, by the Act of December 23, 1852, 10 Stat.
149, reproduced in Rev.Stat. § 4136, the Secretary of the
Treasury is authorized to
"issue a register or enrollment for any vessel built in a
foreign country, whenever such vessel shall be wrecked in the
United States, and shall be purchased and repaired by a citizen of
the United States, if it shall be proved to the satisfaction of the
secretary that the repairs put upon such vessel are equal to
three-fourths of the cost of the vessel when so repaired."
We do not undertake to say that the same rule applies to canoes,
small boats, launches, and other undocumented vessels,
Page 166 U. S. 118
which are not used or are not capable of being used as a means
of transportation on water, as the word "vessel" is defined in
Rev.Stat. § 3. While these vessels have a limited capacity for
transportation, they are ordinarily used for purposes of pleasure,
and are not considered of sufficient importance to require them to
be entered at the customhouse or to be entitled to the special
protection of the flag. They are treated like other similar
vehicles used upon land, and there are reasons for saying that
these boats, which do not ordinarily come of themselves into the
country, but are imported or brought upon the decks of other
vessels, are mere manufactures or other "articles," and are within
the description of the tariff acts.
But the decisive objection to the taxability of vessels as
imports is found in the fact that, from the foundation of the
government, vessels have been treated as
sui generis, and
subject to an entirely different set of laws and regulations from
those applied to imported articles. By the very first act passed by
Congress in 1789, subsequent to an act for administering oaths to
its own members, a duty was laid upon "goods, wares and
merchandise" imported into the United States, in which no mention
whatever is made of ships or vessels; but by the next act, entitled
"An act imposing duties on tonnage," a duty was imposed "on all
ships or vessels entered in the United States" at the rate of six
cents per ton upon all such as were built within the United States,
and belonged to American citizens, of thirty cents per ton upon all
such as should thereafter be built within the United States,
belonging to subjects of foreign powers, and of fifty cents per ton
upon all other ships or vessels, with a proviso that no American
ship or vessel employed in the coasting trade or fisheries should
pay tonnage more than once in any year. This distinction between
"goods, wares and merchandise" and "ships or vessels" has been
maintained ever since, although the amount of such duties has been
repeatedly and sometimes radically changed. At the time of the
arrival of the
Conqueror, tonnage duties were imposed
under the Act of June 26, 1884, as amended by section eleven of the
Act of June 19, 1886, with a proviso that the
Page 166 U. S. 119
President of the United States might suspend the collection of
them in certain specified cases. In addition thereto, there was, by
Rev.Stat. § 4225, a duty of fifty cents per ton, denominated
"light money," levied and collected on all vessels not of the
United States which might enter the ports of the United States,
although, by § 4226, there was a provision that this tax
should not be imposed upon any unregistered vessel
"owned by citizens of the United States, and carrying a sea
letter or other regular document issued from a custom house of the
United States proving the vessel to be American property."
It would seem that under this section and in virtue of the
collector's certificate to her bill of sale stating that her owner
was an American citizen, the
Conqueror would not
thereafter be subject to the payment of light money.
The
Miranda, 51 F. 523.
There is no provision of law preventing foreign-built vessels
from being purchased, owned, and navigated by citizens of the
United States, although they are not entitled to registry or to
enrollment and license as American vessels, because not built in
the United States. Sections 4132, 4311, 4312.
The privilege, however, of owning foreign vessels is usually of
comparatively little value, since in order to carry on a foreign
trade, the coasting trade, or the fisheries, they must be entitled
either to registry or to enrollment and license -- a privilege, as
above stated, not granted to foreign-built vessels, though owned by
American citizens, Rev.Stat. §§ 2497, 4131, 4311;
The Merritt,
17 Wall. 582.
The privilege, then, of owning foreign-built vessels and of
navigating them under the protection of the American flag is
practically confined to vessels used for the purposes of pleasure,
which is probably the reason why the question presented in this
case has never arisen before, since the only way in which
foreign-built vessels can be made available as American vessels for
purposes of trade and commerce is by a special act of Congress
permitting them to be registered or enrolled as American
vessels.
A special provision is made for yachts by Rev.Stat. § 4214,
as amended by the Act of March 3, 1883, 22 Stat. 566,
Page 166 U. S. 120
under which
"the Secretary of the Treasury may cause yachts used and
employed exclusively as pleasure vessels, or designed as models of
naval architecture, . . . to be licensed on terms which will
authorize them to proceed from port to port of the United States,
and by sea to foreign ports, without entering or clearing at the
custom house."
By § 4216,
"yachts, belonging to a regularly organized yacht club of any
foreign nation which shall extend like privileges to the yachts of
the United States, shall have the privilege of entering or leaving
any port of the United States without entering or clearing at the
custom house thereof or paying tonnage tax."
It was probably under this section, and for the purpose of
exempting her from payment of a tonnage tax, that Mr. Vanderbilt
had
The Conqueror enrolled as a member of the Royal Mersey
Yacht Club, although it may be open to question whether this
section was not intended as a mere reciprocity of courtesy, or has
any application to foreign-built yachts belonging to American
citizens. Certainly no such question can arise since the passage of
the Act of January 25, 1897 -- not yet officially published -- by
the first section of which Rev.Stat. § 4216, is reenacted,
with a proviso
"that the privileges of this section shall not extend to any
yacht built outside of the United States, and owned, chartered or
used by a citizen of the United States, unless such ownership or
charter was acquired prior to the passage of this act."
By the second section of the same act, it is further provided
that the previous Act of June 19, 1886, exempting yachts from
tonnage taxes, is repealed, "so far as the same exempts any yacht
built outside of the United States, and owned, chartered or used by
a citizen of the United States."
It is worthy of notice in this connection that this act, which
was evidently passed with reference to this case or this class of
cases, and for the express purpose of subjecting foreign-built
yachts hereafter purchased or chartered by American citizens to
tonnage fees, makes no mention whatever of duties. It is scarcely
possible that if Congress had chosen to impose duties upon such
yachts, or had supposed them subject to duty as imported articles,
it would have also discriminated against them by requiring them to
pay tonnage fees. In this, the
Page 166 U. S. 121
latest expression of the legislative will, Congress seems to
have recognized the theory, which we have already gathered from the
prior course of legislation, that vessels should be treated as a
class by themselves, and not within the general scope of the tariff
acts.
In view of the elaborate opinion of the district judge upon this
branch of the case, it is unnecessary to extend this discussion
further. We think that the liability of ships and vessels to
tonnage dues and to light money, except where a certain class of
vessels is specially exempted, shows that it was not the intention
of Congress to treat them as dutiable articles. So far as the court
below awarded restitution of the vessel to the libelant, its decree
was right, and will be affirmed.
3. The question of damages remains to be considered. Upon the
rendition of the decree, the court granted the usual certificate
that the collector acted "therein under direction of the Secretary
of the Treasury, and there was probable cause for said acts done by
him." The certificate was made upon application of the collector,
and was not opposed by the libelant, who, however, reserved the
right to move to vacate the same in case the judgment was not paid
out of the Treasury within a reasonable time. This certificate was
granted pursuant to Rev.Stat. § 970, which provides that
"when, in any prosecution commenced on account of the seizure of
any vessel, goods, wares, or merchandise, made by any collector or
other officer, under any act of Congress authorizing such seizure,
judgment is rendered for the claimant, but it appears to the court
that there was reasonable cause of seizure, the court shall cause a
proper certificate thereof to be entered, and the claimant shall
not, in such case, be entitled to costs, nor shall the person who
made the seizure, nor the prosecutor, be liable to suit or judgment
on account of such suit or prosecution:
provided that the
vessel, goods, wares, or merchandise be, after judgment, forthwith
returned to such claimant or his agent."
This section is claimed by the government to afford the
collector complete immunity against any judgment for damages. Its
language, broadly construed, might justify this position, although
the fact that the certificate is only authorized
Page 166 U. S. 122
when judgment is rendered for the
claimant would
indicate that it was properly applicable only in cases where
proceedings against the vessel were instituted, upon information
filed by the United States, for a fine or forfeiture incurred by
the vessel itself. This construction is also supported by the final
words of the section, declaring that neither the person who made
the seizure nor the prosecutor shall be liable to suit or judgment
on account of such suit or prosecution, and that the vessel shall
be forthwith returned to the
claimant. The word "claimant"
in all admiralty proceedings
in rem is used to denote the
person who makes claim to the property seized as the owner thereof,
and by virtue of such ownership, or other interest therein, is
admitted to defend the suit. Gen.Adm.Rule, 26. In a broader sense,
however, it might be used to designate the owner of property,
whether prosecuting or defending his right to such property, though
this does not agree with the ordinary legal meaning of the word
"claimant."
But if it were conceded that the statute be somewhat ambiguous,
we are authorized to refer to the original statutes from which the
section was taken, and to ascertain from their language and context
to what class of cases the provision was intended to apply.
United States v. Bowen, 100 U. S. 508;
United States v. Myer Car Co., 102 U. S.
1,
102 U. S. 11;
United States v. Lacher, 134 U. S. 624. The
protection of the collector by a certificate of probable cause
appears first in the Act of July 31, 1789, § 36, 1 Stat. 47,
to regulate the collection of duties upon the tonnage of ships, and
upon goods, wares, and merchandise imported. The act is not a
tariff act imposing duties and tonnage, but is one for the
administration of the tariff laws and the collection of duties. By
this act, the country was divided into collection districts, ports
of entry and delivery established, the duties of the collector and
other customs officers defined, the obligations of vessels arriving
with cargoes laid down, and the method of collecting such duties
prescribed, with certain penalties for the nonperformance of its
provisions. By section 36,
"all penalties accruing by any breach of this act shall be sued
for and recovered with costs
Page 166 U. S. 123
of suit, in the name of the United States, . . . by the
collector of the district, . . . and such collector shall be, and
hereby is, authorized and directed to sue for and prosecute the
same to effect."
The section then provides for the manner of prosecuting for a
forfeiture, how claim shall be made for the property seized, and
under what circumstances it shall be delivered to the
claimant. The section terminates with a provision for a
certificate of probable cause if judgment shall be given for the
claimant or claimants. Through this entire section, the
word �claimant" is obviously used in its technical sense, to
stand for the owner of the property seized for a penalty or
forfeiture, under previous sections of the act. Indeed, the act is
so clear in this particular that scarcely any room is left for any
other construction. This act was repealed by the Act of August 4,
1790. 1 Stat. 145, to provide more effectually for the collection
of the duties on goods imported and upon tonnage. The later act is
practically a reenactment of the former, with many amendments and
enlargements of its scope, and, in § 67, § 36 of the
prior act is repeated, with the same provision for a certificate of
probable cause. The act of 1790, however, was repealed March 7,
1799, 1 Stat. 627, by a further act "to regulate the collection of
duties on imports and tonnage," wherein the whole subject was again
reconsidered, and a new act, still further amending and enlarging
the prior ones, adopted. Section 89 of this act again repeated the
provision for a certificate of probable cause. These acts limited
the granting of such certificates to seizures made for fines or
forfeitures under the provisions of the particular act.
Subsequently, however, other acts were passed authorizing seizures
of vessels and goods for other offenses, but in none of these acts
was protection given to the officer making the seizure with
probable cause. 1 Stat. 289, § 4; 1 Stat. 63, § 29; 1
Stat. 381, c. 50; 2 Stat. 379, c. 29. To extend to the collector
the protection of a certificate of probable cause, where
forfeitures were incurred under these acts, a short act was passed
on February 24, 1807,
Page 166 U. S. 124
2 Stat. 422, permitting the court to grant such certificate
wherever a seizure was made by any collector or other officer under
any act of Congress authorizing such seizure. This act was
substantially reenacted in Rev.Stat. § 970.
We think this legislation, however, was intended to be confined
to cases where the collector makes a seizure, followed by a suit or
prosecution in the name of the United States for a penalty or
forfeiture arising from an illegal act of the persons in charge of
the vessel, and was not intended to be applied where a vessel is
simply detained under § 2964 for a nonpayment of duties. As
was observed in
In re Fassett, 142
U. S. 485:
"Section 2964 provides that in all cases of failure or neglect
to pay the duties within the period allowed by law to the importer
to make entry thereof, the merchandise shall be taken possession of
by the collector, and deposited in the public stores, there to be
kept, subject at all times to the order of the importer on payment
of the proper duties and expenses. Section 2973 provides that if
the merchandise shall remain in public store beyond one year
without payment of the duties and charges thereon, it is then to be
appraised and sold by the collector at public auction, and the
proceeds, after deducting for storage and other charges and
expenses, including duties, are to be paid over to the
importer."
Of course, the yacht
Conqueror was not such an article
as could have been deposited in public stores within the language
of the section, but if it had been subject to duty at all, the
collector could not be considered in default for having detained
her in the manner he did for its payment. His seizure, however, is
not such a one as is contemplated by the above statutes concerning
certificates of probable cause.
The case, instead of being covered by Rev.Stat. § 970,
seems more properly to fall within the provisions of § 989, by
which,
"when a recovery is had in any suit or proceeding against a
collector . . . for any act done by him . . . in the performance of
his official duty, and the court certifies that there was probable
cause . . . or that he acted under the directions of the Secretary
of the Treasury, . . . no execution shall issue against such
collector
Page 166 U. S. 125
or other officer, but the amount so recovered shall, upon final
judgment, be provided for and paid out of the proper appropriation
from the Treasury."
Upon the whole, we are of opinion that the collector was not
protected by the certificate of probable cause from a judgment for
damages.
4. The main question in this case turns upon the proper measure
of damages. In the amount of $21,742.24 awarded by the final decree
of the district court was included the sum of $15,000 "for loss of
use of boat while detained by the respondent, from August 27, 1891,
to February 3, 1892 at $100 per day." This is the principal item of
damage to which objection is made in this Court.
That the loss of profits or of the use of a vessel pending
repairs or other detention arising from a collision or other
maritime tort, and commonly spoken of as "demurrage," is a proper
element of damage, is too well settled both in England and America
to be open to question. It is equally well settled, however, that
demurrage will only be allowed when profits have actually been, or
may be reasonably supposed to have been, lost, and the amount of
such profits is proven with reasonable certainty. In one of the
earliest English cases upon this subject,
The Clarence, 3
W.Rob. 283, it was said by Dr. Lushington that,
"in order to entitle a party to be indemnified for what is
termed in this Court a 'consequential loss,' being for the
detention of his vessel, two things are absolutely necessary --
actual loss and reasonable proof of the amount. . . . It does not
follow as a matter of necessity that anything is due for the
detention of a vessel while under repair. Under some circumstances,
undoubtedly such a consequence will follow -- as, for example,
where a fishing voyage is lost, or where the vessel would have been
beneficially employed."
To same effect are
The Black Prince, Lush. 568;
The
City of Peking, 15 App.Cas. 438;
The Argentino, 14
App.Cas. 519.
The first case in which demurrage was allowed by this Court for
the detention of a ship under a libel for tortious seizure was that
of
The Apollon, 9
Wheat. 362, which was a suit brought by the master of a French ship
against the
Page 166 U. S. 126
collector of St. Mary's for damages occasioned by an illegal
seizure of the ship and cargo while lying within the territories of
the King of Spain. In this case, demurrage was allowed at the rate
of $40 per day, although the court had expressed its opinion that
the probable profits of a voyage, either upon the ship or cargo,
could not furnish any just basis for the compensation of damages,
the court observing that "every other method of adjusting
compensation" than that of demurrage "would be merely speculative,
and liable to the greatest uncertainties."
Smith v.
Condry, 1 How. 28, was a common law case wherein a
vessel laden with a cargo of salt received injury by a collision in
the port of Liverpoll. Upon the trial, plaintiffs offered to prove
that if the ship had been able to sail upon her voyage upon the day
named, she would in due course have arrived in Georgetown in time
for the sale of her cargo in the fishing season of the Potomac
River, when there was a great demand for salt; but, owing to the
delay, she did not arrive until the season was over, and thereby
lost ten cents per bushel upon the value of the salt. The court,
acting upon the analogy of insurance cases, held that this
testimony was properly refused admission. It is quite obvious,
however, that this was not a case where damages were claimed for
the use of the vessel pending her repairs, but for the loss of
anticipated profits pending the sale of her cargo, and therefore
falling within the rule stated in
The Apollon that profits
upon the sale of the cargo are excluded. There is no conflict
between this case and that of
Williamson v.
Barrett, 13 How. 101, wherein the Court held, upon
the authority of
The Gazelle, 2 W.Rob. 279, that the
plaintiffs were entitled to recover for the use of their boat, by
which
"we understand what she would have produced to the plaintiffs by
the hiring or chartering of her to run upon the river in the
business in which she had been usually engaged;"
in other words, the market price of the hire of the vessel. This
ruling has been repeatedly affirmed in this Court,
The
Potomac, 105 U. S. 630; in
England,
The Betsey Caines, 2 Haggard 28;
The
Inflexible, Swabey 200;
The Star of India, 1
Page 166 U. S. 127
P.D. 466;
The City of Buenos Ayres, 1 Asp.Mar.L.C. 169,
and in France,
Sibille, De l'Abordage, sec, 411;
De
Fresquet, Des Abordages, pp. 48-49;
Caumont,
Dict.Mar. Title Abordage, sec. 224.
The difficulty is in determining when the vessel has lost
profits, and the amount thereof. The best evidence of damage
suffered by detention is the sum for which vessels of the same size
and class can be chartered in the market. Obviously, however, this
criterion cannot be often applied, as it is only in the larger
ports that there can be said to be a market price for the use of
vessels, particularly if there be any peculiarity in their
construction which limits their employment to a single purpose.
In the absence of such market value, the value of her use to her
owner in the business in which she was engaged at the time of the
collision is a proper basis for estimating damages for detention,
and the books of the owner, showing her earnings about the time of
her collision, are competent evidence of her probable earnings
during the time of her detention.
The May Flower, 1
Brown's Adm. 376;
The Transit, 4 Ben. 138;
The
Emilie, 4 Ben. 235.
The mere opinions of witnesses, unfortified by any data, as to
what the earnings would probably have been are usually regarded as
too uncertain and conjectural to form a proper basis for
estimation, though in a few cases they seem to have been received.
The damages must not be merely speculative, and something else must
be shown than the simple fact that the vessel was laid up for
repairs. Thus, if a vessel employed upon the Lakes should receive
damages by collision occurring just before the close of navigation,
and she were repaired during the winter, no demurrage could be
allowed, since no vessel upon the Lakes can earn freight during the
winter.
The Thomas as Kiley, 3 Ben. 228.
In
The R. L. Maybey, 4 Blatchford 439, it was said by
Mr. Justice Nelson upon the subject of damages that
"a good deal of the testimony was general, and turned upon mere
opinion as to the probability of employment in the towing business,
and the amount of the earnings, if employed. This
Page 166 U. S. 128
kind of proof is too speculative and contingent to be the
foundation of any rule of damages. It is, at best, but
conjecture."
On appeal to this Court, the decree was affirmed.
Sturgis v.
Clough, 1 Wall. 269, Mr. Justice Grier observing
that
"the charge for demurrage allowed by him [the commissioner] was
not justified by the evidence, although there was testimony to
support it, such as can always be obtained when friendly experts
are called to give opinions. Besides, the libelant withheld the
best evidence of the profits made by his boat, which would be found
in his own books, showing the receipts and expenditures before the
collision."
The testimony is not set forth in the report of the case, but,
on referring to the original record, we find that it was much
stronger in favor of an allowance of demurrage than the testimony
in this case. Five witnesses were sworn by the libelant, who
testified that there was a demand in the port of New York for the
services of steam tugboats such as the injured vessel was, and that
the value of such a boat was about $100 per day. Four witnesses
testifying for the claimant did not deny that there was a demand
for such vessels, but put the value of her services at a much lower
sum. So, in the case of
The Isaac Newton, 4 Blatchford 21,
Mr. Justice Nelson rejected the allowance for demurrage founded
simply upon the evidence of the master and the mate, as a matter of
opinion, treating the allowance as conjectural and speculative.
In
The Cayuga, 2 Ben. 125, a ferryboat injured by a
collision was withdrawn for repairs, her place being supplied by a
boat taken from another ferry belonging to the libelants, whose
place was, in turn, supplied by a spare boat. It was not shown that
the injured boat could have been chartered for any sum for the time
she was laid up, but proof was given as to the value of her use
based upon her receipts while running on the ferry. It was held
that a judgment as to her charter value, given by man having
experience upon the ferries, founded upon their knowledge of the
business, was a proper basis for the allowance of demurrage. This
case was affirmed by the circuit court, 7 Blatchford 385, and
also,
Page 166 U. S. 129
upon further appeal, by this Court,
81 U. S. 14 Wall.
270. Of same purport is
The Favorita,
18 Wall. 598.
There are two cases reported in which demurrage was allowed for
the detention of a yacht. In one of these,
The Walter W.
Pharo, 1 Lowell 437, the total allowance was but $80, and in
the other,
The Lagonda, 44 F. 367, the yacht had been
detained eight days while undergoing repairs, and was allowed by
the commissioner $48, as interest upon $36,000, the cost of the
yacht. Upon exceptions by the libelant, the court held that the
testimony seemed to justify the conclusion that the yacht could
have been chartered by her owner for a season of three months for
the sum of $6,000, that, under such a charter, the vessel would
have earned for her owner in eight days the sum of $552, and gave a
decree for that sum.
Upon the other hand, however, in the recent case of
The
Emerald 1896, P.D. 192, decided by the English Court of
Appeals, the question was whether demurrage could be allowed for
detention pending the repairs of a vessel (
The Greta
Holme) used by a body of public trustees for the purpose of
dredging and raising wrecks in Liverpool Harbor. The court held
unanimously that demurrage could not be allowed to the board of
trustees, because the vessel was not a source of profit to them. In
delivering the opinion, Lord Esher observed:
"It has been pointed out, and I think quite fairly, that you
cannot recover by way of damages on account of something which you
call profit, but of which profit there is no evidence. . . . Then
they talk of letting her go to Preston, and that the Preston people
would have given �100 a week probably. It is all
imagination. . . . The dredger is not kept for the purpose of being
let to anyone else. . . . To say that at some indefinite and future
time, they could have let her if they had not wanted her is too
remote for anybody to act upon in giving them compensation for the
loss of the dredger by way of damages. It seems to me that the
damages were too shadowy and too remote to be the proper subject
matter of damages in the collision."
Lord Justice A. L. Smith said:
"It is to be remarked that during all the
Page 166 U. S. 130
time that the dredger was sunk and under repairs, the harbor
board have not in fact lost one penny. . . . I agree with the
report of the registrar and merchants upon this point. They say
that"
"the harbor or conservancy board are clearly not in the position
of a trading company which is entitled to claim for loss of profit,
and, although their dredging operations were no doubt delayed by
the disabling of this dredger, it does not appear to us that the
plaintiffs have sustained any tangible pecuniary loss."
Lord Justice Rigby said:
"The board attempted to show that, in some circumstances, they
might let this dredger, but the evidence failed to fix any definite
time when the board would no longer require to use her. It seems to
me that the suggested damage which might be occasioned to the
Mersey docks and harbor board was mere speculation."
In the case under consideration, the only evidence of loss of
profits was that of three witnesses, one of whom (Samuel Holmes, a
steamboat broker) swore that the reasonable value of the use of the
yacht was $3,000 per month. He gave the only instance of such a
charter within his knowledge -- the charter of a boat of this size
about three or four years before, for about $9,000, for a winter
trip to the West Indies. "The circumstances were a little different
than this, though." What those circumstances were, what was the
character of the yacht, and how long the duration of the charter,
were not stated, and the illustration is of trifling value. The
next witness, Hughes, a yacht broker, stated simply that the
Conqueror was worth $100 per day, fortifying his testimony
by no fact whatever. The last witness, Thomas Manning, also a yacht
broker, stated the value of the
Conqueror from August 27
to February 3 to be about $20,000 for the boat itself, without the
crew, stating that there was more or less demand for those large
boats, but a great difficulty in getting them. Whether the demand
at that time was more or less than the average was not stated, nor
are any facts given in support of his testimony. The expression is
wholly indefinite and unsatisfactory.
Perhaps, if this testimony were taken literally, without reading
between the lines, considering other facts appearing in the
Page 166 U. S. 131
record, or bringing to bear upon it other considerations which
are matters of common knowledge, it might justify the construction
placed upon it by the court below that the libelant had been
deprived of the services of a vessel which might possibly have been
leased at $100 per day. But this is not the proper view to be taken
of this testimony. While there are doubtless authorities holding
that a jury (and in this class of cases the court acts as a jury)
has no right arbitrarily to ignore or discredit the testimony of
unimpeached witnesses, so far as they testify to facts, and that a
willful disregard of such testimony will be ground for a new trial,
no such obligation attaches to witnesses who testify merely to
their opinion, and the jury may deal with it as they please, giving
it credence or not as their own experience or general knowledge of
the subject may dictate. Indeed, the courts of New Hampshire at one
time, and until the rule was changed by the legislature, went so
far as to exclude the opinions of witnesses upon questions of value
altogether, and irrespective of any question as to their
qualifications.
Rochester v. Chester, 3 N.H. 349;
Peterborough v. Laffrey, 6 N.H. 462;
Beard v.
Kirk, 11 N.H. 397;
Robertson v. Stark, 15 N.H. 109;
Low v. Connecticut & Passumpsic Railroad, 45 N.H.
370.
The better opinion, however, is that testimony as to value may
be properly received from the mouths of witnesses who are duly
qualified to testify in relation to the subject of inquiry,
although the jury, even if such testimony be uncontradicted, may
exercise their independent judgment. In
Forsyth v.
Doolittle, 120 U. S. 73, which
was an action to recover compensation for services rendered by
plaintiffs in effecting the sale of certain lands in Indiana, and
in various legal proceedings concerning the title, the following
instruction to the jury was held to be correct:
"You are not bound by the estimate which these witnesses have
put upon these services. They are proper to be considered by you,
as part of the proof bearing upon the question of value, as the
testimony of men experienced in such matters, and whose judgment
may aid yours. But it is your duty, after all, to settle and
determine this question of value from all the testimony in the
case, and to award to
Page 166 U. S. 132
the plaintiffs such amount, by your verdict, as the proof
satisfies you is a reasonable compensation for the services which,
from the proof, you find plaintiffs rendered, after deducting the
amount the plaintiffs have already received for such services."
The proper rule upon the subject is nowhere better stated than
by Mr. Justice Field in delivering the opinion of the Court in
Head v. Hargrave, 105 U. S. 45, which
is also an action for professional services as attorneys:
"It was the province of the jury to weigh the testimony of the
attorneys as to the value of the services, by reference to their
nature, the time occupied in their performance, and other attending
circumstances, and by applying to it their own experience and
knowledge of the character of such services. To direct them to find
the value of the services from the testimony of the experts alone
was to say to them that the issue should be determined by the
opinions of the attorneys, and not by the exercise of their own
judgment of the facts on which those opinions were given. The
evidence of experts as to the value of professional services does
not differ in principle from such evidence as to the value of labor
in other departments of business, or as to the value of property.
So far from laying aside their own general knowledge and ideas, the
jury should have applied that knowledge and those ideas to the
matters of fact in evidence, in determining the weight to be given
to the opinions expressed, and it was only in that way that they
could arrive at a just conclusion. While they cannot act in any
case upon particular facts material to its disposition resting in
their private knowledge, but should be governed by the evidence
adduced, they may -- and, to act intelligently, they must -- judge
of the weight of the force of that evidence by their own general
knowledge of the subject of inquiry. . . . Other persons besides
professional men have knowledge of the value of professional
services, and, while great weight should always be given to the
opinions of those familiar with the subject, they are not to be
blindly received, but are to be intelligently examined by the jury
in the light of their own general knowledge. They should control
only as they are found to be reasonable. "
Page 166 U. S. 133
In short, as stated by a recent writer upon Expert Testimony,
the ultimate weight to be given to the testimony of experts is a
question to be determined by the jury, and there is no rule of law
which requires them to surrender their judgment or to give a
controlling influence to the opinions of scientific witnesses.
Rogers on Expert Testimony § 207;
City of St. Louis v.
Ranken, 95 Mo. 189;
City of Kansas v. Butterfield, 89
Mo. 648;
Atchison, Topeka & &c. Railroad Co. v.
Thul, 32 Kan. 255;
Brehm v. Great Western Railroad,
34 Barb. 256, 272;
Williams v. State, 50 Ark. 511, 520;
Humphries v. Johnson, 20 Ind.190;
Goodwin v.
State, 96 Ind. 550;
United States v. McGlue, 1 Curtis
19;
United States v. Molloy, 31 F. 19.
Without imputing to the witnesses who were sworn in this case
upon the subject of damages any design to mislead the court, we are
bond to say that their testimony falls far short of establishing
such a case of loss of profits as entitles the libelant to recover
this large sum for the detention of his yacht. It is not the mere
fact that a vessel is detained that entitles the owner to
demurrage. These must be a pecuniary loss, or at least a reasonable
certainty of pecuniary loss, and not a mere inconvenience arising
from an inability to use the vessel for the purposes of pleasure,
or, as was said by Doctor Lushington in
The Clarence, 3
W.Rob. 286: "There must be actual loss, and reasonable proof of the
amount." In other words, there must be a loss of profits in its
commercial sense. In all the cases in which we have allowed
demurrage, the vessel has been engaged, or was capable of being
engaged, in a profitable commerce, and the amount allowed was
determined either by the charter value of such vessel or by her
actual earnings at about the time of the collision. The
Conqueror, however, did not belong to the class of vessels
which are engaged in commercial pursuits, or are ordinarily let to
hire. There is doubtless a class of pleasure boats that are let for
excursions, and become a source of pecuniary profit to their
owners, but the
Conqueror did not belong to that class.
She was purchased by her owner for his personal pleasure, and there
is not an atom of testimony tending to show that he
Page 166 U. S. 134
bought her for hire, or would have leased her if he had been
able to do so, even for the large sum of $100 per day fixed as her
value.
Again, the court may properly take judicial notice of the fact
that the yachting season in our northern waters practically comes
to an end before the first of November, and, as the
Conqueror was seized on August 27th, during more than
one-half the time for which demurrage was allowed, she probably
would have been laid up at her wharf. It is true there was a
possibility that her owner might have desired her for use in a
winter's cruise to tropical waters, but there was not the slightest
evidence of that, and the contingency of her being so used was too
remote to justify an allowance upon that basis.
The amount of demurrage allowed, too, was so great as if not to
shock the conscience, at least to induce the belief that it must
have been estimated by witnesses who were most friendly to the
owner. The yacht cost originally $75,000. The proposition that her
use for a little more than five months during the autumn and winter
should be worth to her owner $15,000 over and above all her
expenses, for which a separate allowance was made, is putting a
strain upon our credulity which we find ourselves quite unable to
bear. The truth is that estimates of value made by friendly
witnesses, with no practical illustrations to support them, are, as
observed by the various courts through which the case of
Sturgis v. Clough passed, too unsafe, as a rule, to be
made the basis of a judicial award unless it be shown, with much
greater certainty than it is in this case either that the vessel
was earning profits or that she belonged to a class of vessels for
which there was a steady demand in the market. We think the
testimony upon the subject of demurrage in this case should have
been held to be insufficient.
5. The other items of damage going to make up the aggregate
amount awarded included about $4,500 for the wages and provisions
of the crew, and also for wharfage, towage, night watchman, and
extra expenses in heating the vessel, all of which are claimed to
be unauthorized, in view of the
Page 166 U. S. 135
fact that, by Rev.Stat. § 829, the marshal is allowed, "for
the necessary expenses of keeping boats, vessels or other property
attached or libelled in admiralty, not exceeding two dollars and
fifty cents a day." While it is entirely true that the marshal is
thus limited, it does not follow that the libelant may not incur a
larger expense if, in his opinion, it is necessary for the proper
protection of the vessel, subject to the contingency of paying for
it himself if he be unsuccessful. It is easy to understand that an
expensive yacht like this would require a much larger outlay than
$2.50 per day to provide her with safe accommodations and to
maintain her in good condition and repair. The finding of the
commissioner in this connection was
"that the collector took possession of the yacht on the 27th of
August, 1891, by placing only one person on board of her; that from
this time till the end of September, the collector, through this
one representative, remained on board, claiming possession of the
yacht; that, during all this time, she lay in the stream off
Stapleton, where it was necessary to have a crew on board to keep
her safely, 'as no ship could be secure in any stream,' under such
circumstances, without such protection; that he considered that,
'while the vessel was in that position,' that it was necessary to
keep the crew to 'take care of' her, and that at no time did he
employ any more men than was necessary for that purpose. . . .
That, on the 29th of September, the collector, at the request of
the libelant, ordered the vessel placed in the Erie Basin, and the
marshal took partial possession, the collector having resisted, and
his representative still remaining on board. The vessel having been
thus removed from the stream where she had been at anchor, the
captain testifies that he took steps immediately to get rid of the
crew, and that they were discharged as fast as he could do so
consistently while preparing the vessel for being laid up. There is
nothing to contradict this testimony, and it seems to me that the
captain pursued a reasonable as well as judicious course -- one
consistent with his duty to take proper care of the vessel. As soon
as the marshal, under further process of the court, got exclusive
possession of the yacht, on the 8th of October, he put only one
man
Page 166 U. S. 136
aboard of her to represent him, and employed the captain and
four men to take care of the vessel, besides a night watchman. The
marshal's possession being a legal possession, he had the right to
take this course, and I do not find anything in the testimony or in
the circumstances of the case to warrant the conclusion that the
expenses of keeping such a vessel while in the collector's or the
marshal's possession were extravagant."
Whether these charges were proper or not was a matter for the
courts below to determine in the exercise of their best judgment,
and as the commissioner found that they were, and both the district
court and the court of appeals affirmed his action in that regard,
we are not disposed to disturb their finding, although the amount
seems large.
The decree of the court of appeals must be reversed, and the
case remanded to the district court for further proceedings in
conformity to this opinion.