These cases, argued and submitted together, involve the
appraisement of sugars imported from Brazil. The sugars were
shipped "green" -- that is, contained moisture, a certain portion
of which drained on the voyage, whereby they became more valuable.
Duties were levied and collected by the collector upon the
increased valuation, against the protest of the importers.
Held that the appraisement so made was legal.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
These two cases were argued and submitted together. They involve
the appraisement of certain sugars imported from Brazil. The sugars
were shipped "green" -- that is, contained moisture. A certain
percent of this moisture drained on the voyages, and the sugars
became thereby more valuable. In other words, as the sugars
diminished in weight, they increased in value, being worth as much
here as the original quantity shipped in Brazil. This is always
true of Brazilian sugars, and is recognized by the trade, and is
made a basis of settlement between vendor and vendee. The
"settlement test" was used by the appraisers in ascertaining the
value of the sugars in Brazil in
Page 181 U. S. 611
the condition they arrived here. Mr. Sharretts, a member of the
General Board of Appraisers, testified in No. 236 (and there was no
opposing testimony) as follows:
"The price paid for sugars of this description from Brazil is a
conditional one, the stipulation being that they will give a
certain price, with a proviso that the decrease or loss of weight
in decreased moisture shall not exceed a certain point. Therefore,
in determining what the real price to be paid for that sugar was,
it was necessary to determine what the test was in the United
States. By an agreement between the Board of General Appraisers and
the government, on the one side, and the importers, on the other,
we accepted in all cases the settlement test as controlling -- that
is, the test upon which the commercial transaction was made was the
test which we accepted as the controlling one in determining the
quantity or percentage of sugar on which duty was to be paid. In
this particular case, the board found or the board made a return
upon the settlement test. On that settlement test they made the
report, and found the value to be equal to 11
s.
11
d. per 100 kilos or per ton, the equivalent for this
sugar of the same test as that which arrived in the United States,
in the country of exportation. In other words, they held that the
diminished quantity of sugar arriving in the United States was
worth just as much as they paid for the original quantity as
shipped from Brazil. We therefore found it on the basis of the
settlement test to be 11
s. 11
d."
Duties were levied by the collector upon the increased valuation
of the sugars. The importers protested, claiming that the duties
were illegally exacted. The action of the collector was affirmed by
the Board of General Appraisers, and successively by the circuit
court and the circuit court of appeals. The cases were then brought
here.
Under section 182 1/2 of the Tariff Act of 1894, the rate of
duty was fixed at forty percent; but upon what valuation? Counsel
for petitioner says:
"In each of these importations the appraiser ascertained that
the market value of the sugar when shipped was a certain amount per
hundredweight. To this valuation, in each case, he made an addition
of a certain further amount per hundredweight
Page 181 U. S. 612
to represent a supposed increase of its value during the voyage
owing to drainage. Duty was accordingly assessed at forty percent,
not of the value of the sugar per hundredweight 'at the time of the
exportation to United States,' 'on the day of actual shipment,' and
'in the condition in which such merchandise is there bought and
sold for exportation to the United States,' but at forty percent of
its greater value per hundredweight in its condition when
landed."
It is apparent that the increase in value offsets the decrease
in weight -- that is, the total value of the invoice was not
increased. Where, then, was there injury to petitioner? The claim
is that duties should have been levied according to the condition
in which the sugars had been bought in Brazil, but the claim
ignores one element of that condition -- the very element which
made the condition,-and ignoring it the claim is attempted to be
justified by section 19 of the Customs Administrative Act of 1890.
The section provides as follows:
"That whenever imported merchandise is subject to an
ad
valorem rate of duty, or to a duty based upon or regulated in
any manner by the value thereof, the duty shall be assessed upon
the actual market value or wholesale price of such merchandise as
bought and sold in usual wholesale quantities at the time of
exportation to the United States, in the principal markets of the
country from whence imported, and in the condition in which such
merchandise is there bought and sold for exportation to the United
States, or consigned to the United States for sale. . . . That the
words 'value' or 'actual market value,' whenever used in this act
or in any law relating to the appraisement of imported merchandise,
shall be construed to mean the actual market value or wholesale
price as defined in this section."
We do not think the statute is very obscure. Passing by the
consideration of section 23, (inserted in the margin),
* we may say, as
was decided in
Marriott v.
Brune, 9 How. 619, and
Page 181 U. S. 613
United States v.
Southmayd, 9 How. 637, imported merchandise is that
which arrives in this country, and it is upon that duties are to be
paid. Those cases passed on imports of sugars which had lost weight
by drainage on the voyages. The controversy was whether duties
should be levied upon the weight of the sugars when shipped, or
upon their weight when they arrived, which was less on account of
drainage and waste to the extent of five percent, than when they
were shipped. The Court sustained the latter view, saying:
"The general principle applicable to such a case would seem to
be that revenue should be collected only from the quantity or
weight which arrives here. That is what is imported -- for nothing
is imported until it comes within the limits of the port."
The evidence in those cases also showed what the quality of the
sugars was less on account of the drainage. "Nor is his sugar
improved in quality," the court said, "by the drainage, so as to
raise any equity against him (the importer) by it."
The evidence in the case at bar is that the sugars had improved
in quality -- becoming a higher grade of sugar, and necessarily,
under the principle of the cited cases, it was that grade which was
imported. Why, then, should they not have paid duty according to
that grade? It was that grade, to use the language of
Marriott
v. Brune, which went "into the consumption of the country" --
it was that grade which went "into competition with our domestic
manufactures."
But it is contended that was not their condition when shipped.
In one sense, it was not, nor did the importers seek to pay duty on
the sugars in the condition in which they were shipped. An element
of that condition escaped, and it was calculated that it would
escape, and the price to the importer was to be adjusted by it.
With no decrease in the value of its sugars, petitioner claims a
decrease of duties which the law fixes by value. The petitioner
wants the benefit of the weight of the old condition and the
benefit of the quality of the new.
Page 181 U. S. 614
To dwell upon the relative conditions of the sugars is
misleading. They are really not the same articles, and it is upon
the imported article the duty must be laid. This is the purpose of
the statute. It is "such merchandise" which is imported and which
is subject to an
ad valorem duty according to its market
value from whence it has come. And the practical justness of the
rule is illustrated by this case. It is true that a witness
testifying generally as to drainage from sugar cargoes said "it
(the drainage) might be worth more, and it might not be worth
much." But what it was worth in the present case was not testified
to. Whatever it was worth, it was petitioner's property, and
whether it was worth reclamation was for petitioner to judge.
Besides, the ultimate valuation of the appraisers is not contested.
Their authority is to make it. As the court of appeals said, "the
legality of the appraisement is questioned, not its accuracy or its
equity." We have no doubt about its legality, and the
Judgments are affirmed.
*
"SEC. 23. No allowance for damage to goods, wares, and
merchandise imported into the United States shall hereafter be made
in the estimation and liquidation of duties thereon. But the
importer thereof may, within ten days after entry, abandon to the
United States all or any portion of goods, wares, and merchandise
included in any invoice, and be relieved from the payment of the
duties on the portion so abandoned, provided the portion so
abandoned shall amount to ten percentum or over of the total value
of quantity of the invoice."