In enumerating the ingredients of oleomargarine in § 2 of
the act of 1886 as amended in 1902, Congress included not only
those substances which, entering into its composition, make it
suitable for food and form its body, but also other ingredients
used only for coloring, the purpose being to prevent excluding from
the operation of the statute anything in its nature oleomargarine
by reason of the addition of a substance not really an ingredient,
but serving substantially only for coloring the product yellow.
Under §§ 2 and 8 of the act as amended, oleomargarine
colored yellow by a small amount of palm oil serving no purpose
other than coloration is artificially colored, and is subject to
the tax of ten cents a pound, and does not come within the proviso
to § 8, making the tax a quarter of a cent a pound when the
oleomargarine is free from artificial coloration that causes it to
look like butter of any shade of yellow.
One claiming that his oleomargarine is not subject to the higher
tax prescribed by § 8 of the oleomargarine act must make it
clear that his product is clearly within the scope of the exception
stated in the proviso.
The finding of a court upon a question of fact is as conclusive
as the verdict of a jury, and, when supported by testimony admitted
without objection, will not be disturbed by this Court.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
August Cliff was convicted in the District Court of the
Page 195 U. S. 160
United States for the Northern District of Illinois of a
violation of section 11 of the Act of August 2, 1886, 24 Stat. 209,
amended May 9, 1902, 32 Stat.193. A judgment for fifty dollars, as
prescribed by the section, was entered, with an order for
collection by execution. That judgment was brought directly to this
Court by writ of error. The constitutionality of the oleomargarine
legislation and the right to waive a trial by jury in petty
criminal offenses were affirmed in
McCray v. United
States, 195 U. S. 27, and
Schick v. United States, ante, p.
195 U. S. 65.
Nothing need be added to the opinions in those cases on these
questions.
There is in this case a further question. Section 2 reads:
"SEC. 2. That, for the purposes of this act, certain
manufactured substances, certain extracts, and certain mixtures and
compounds, including such mixtures and compounds with butter, shall
be known and designated as 'oleomargarine,' namely: all substances
heretofore known as oleomargarine, oleo, oleomargarine oil,
butterine, lardine, suine, and neutral; all mixtures and compounds
of oleomargarine oleo, oleomargarine oil, butterine, lardine,
suine, and neutral; all lard extracts and tallow extracts, and all
mixtures and compounds of tallow, beef fat, suet, lard, lard oil,
vegetable oil cannotto and other coloring matter, intestinal fat
and offal fat made in imitation or semblance of butter, or, when so
made, calculated or intended to be sold as butter or for
butter."
In section 8 is this provision:
"SEC. 8. That upon oleomargarine which shall be manufactured and
sold, or removed for consumption or use, there shall be assessed
and collected a tax of ten cents per pound, to be paid by the
manufacturer thereof, and any fractional part of a pound in a
package shall be taxed as a pound:
Provided, When
oleomargarine is free from artificial coloration that causes it to
look like butter of any shade of yellow, said tax shall be
one-fourth of one cent per pound."
By section 14, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue
"is authorized to decide what substances, extracts, mixtures,
or
Page 195 U. S. 161
compounds, which may be submitted for his inspection in
contested cases, are to be taxed under this act, and his decision
in matters of taxation under this act shall be final. The
Commissioner may also decide whether any substance made in
imitation or semblance of butter, and intended for human
consumption, contains ingredients deleterious to the public
health."
Defendant was charged with having knowingly purchased and
received for sale
"certain oleomargarine which had not been stamped according to
law -- that is to say, ten pounds of a mixture and compound
composed, as he, the said August Cliff, well knew, of oleo oil,
neutral lard, cotton-seed oil, milk, common salt, and palm oil
(which said last-named ingredient, to-wit, palm oil, produced an
artificial coloration in the said oleomargarine that caused it to
look like butter of a shade of yellow), which said oleomargarine
had then lately before, to-wit, on the day aforesaid, been
manufactured at Chicago aforesaid by William J. Moxley."
It was shown that the tax of ten cents per pound had not been
paid, that the package contained ten pounds, that its ingredients
and their proportions were: three pounds of oleo oil; one pound and
twelve ounces of neutral lard; two pounds of cotton-seed oil; one
pound and fourteen and one-half ounces of milk; one pound and four
ounces of salt; one and one-half ounces of palm oil. In other
words, out of one hundred sixty ounces, only one and one-half
ounces were palm oil. There was introduced in evidence a ruling of
the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, as follows:
"This office rules that where so minute and infinitesimal a
quantity of a vegetable oil is used in the manufacture of
oleomargarine as is proposed to be used of palm oil, and through
its use the finished product looks like butter of any shade of
yellow, it cannot be considered that the oil is used with the
purpose or intention of being a
bona fide constituent part
or element of the product, but is used solely for the purpose of
producing or imparting a yellow color to the oleomargarine,
Page 195 U. S. 162
and therefore that the oleomargarine so colored is not free from
artificial coloration, and becomes subject to the tax of ten cents
per pound."
Now the contention is that, Congress having by section 2 named
the possible ingredients of oleomargarine, the coloring given to a
compound of some or all by the use of one of the named ingredients
is a natural coloring, and not an artificial coloration, subjecting
to a tax of ten cents per pound. In order that the precise
contention may be understood, we quote the following from one of
the briefs filed for plaintiff in error:
"By parity of reasoning, when one is speaking of oleomargarine,
natural coloration means a coloration due to a natural ingredient
of oleomargarine, and to find out whether a certain ingredient is a
natural ingredient of oleomargarine, we turn to the statute which
defines the nature of oleomargarine. If the color-giving ingredient
be a natural, that is a statutory, ingredient of oleomargarine,
then how can it be truly said that the color caused by such
ingredient is 'artificial coloration' merely because the quantity
of such ingredient used is small or even minute, and the purpose of
its use is to impart the desired color? Howsoever minute may be the
quantity of palm oil used, it is nonetheless a vegetable oil, a
statutory, or, so to speak, a natural, ingredient of oleomargarine,
and displaces in the finished product an equal volume of some other
statutory ingredient of oleomargarine, as, for instance,
cotton-seed oil. The statute confers no power upon the Commissioner
to prescribe the formula for the manufacture of oleomargarine, or
the proportion of the different ingredients, or to exclude any
ingredient except upon the ground of its being deleterious to
health. But does not the government, in effect, assume such power
to be in the Commissioner when, by reason of his arbitrary
classification, based upon the quantity of palm oil used, it
requires a tax of ten cents per pound upon oleomargarine containing
a small or minute proportion of palm oil while, if the percentage
used of that oil were large enough to constitute what the
Commissioner would regard as a substantial
Page 195 U. S. 163
part of the finished product, it is conceded that the tax would
be only one-fourth of a cent per pound?"
We do not undervalue the force of this argument, but, as applied
to this case, hold that it cannot prevail. It is true that, under
the last clause of section 2, oleomargarine includes "all mixtures
and compounds" of the substances named "made in imitation or
semblance of butter, or, when so made, calculated or intended to be
sold as butter or for butter," and that palm oil is a vegetable
oil, one of those substances. But in this enumeration Congress
included not only those substances which, entering into the
composition of oleomargarine, make it suitable for food, and, so to
speak, form its body, but also others used only for coloring. After
naming some, it adds specifically, "and other coloring matter." The
purpose in so including "coloring matter" is obvious. It was to
prevent excluding from the operation of the statute anything in its
nature oleomargarine by the addition of a substance not in reality
an ingredient, but serving substantially only the purpose of
coloring the product to cause it to look like butter. The fact that
one of the ingredients of this compound is palm oil does not show
that such oil does anything else than color the product composed of
other ingredients, and if it does substantially only this, it is
rightfully styled an artificial coloration. Otherwise the proviso
practically nullifies the body of the section. For "other coloring
matter" includes all coloring matter -- at least all of the nature
of those named -- and hence the addition of any coloring matter
would produce only a natural, and not an artificial, coloration,
and thus relieve the product from the ten-cent tax. It will be
noted that the regular tax imposed upon oleomargarine by section 8
is ten cents a pound, the exception thereto being stated in the
proviso, and a party who claims the benefit thereof must make it
clear that his oleomargarine is within its scope. That exception is
"when oleomargarine is free from artificial coloration that causes
it to look like butter of any shade of yellow." Bearing in mind
also that one of the purposes of this legislation
Page 195 U. S. 164
was to prevent the sale of oleomargarine as and for butter, it
must be held that, when any substance, although named as a possible
ingredient of oleomargarine, substantially serves only the function
of coloring the mass, and so as to cause the product to "look like
butter of any shade of yellow," it is an artificial coloration.
Whether the Commissioner of Internal Revenue has all the
authority which is in terms committed to him by section 14 need not
be determined. The letter containing his ruling was admitted in
evidence without objection. Irrespective of such ruling, and upon
the other testimony, the judge who tried the case, and whose
decision must be considered as equivalent to the verdict of a jury,
could rightfully have found that this package of oleomargarine was
artificially colored by the small amount of palm oil used in its
manufacture. A witness testified that he called at the place of
business of the defendant,
"and found this ten-pound package of oleomargarine, which had
been colored with palm oil to a very decided shade of yellow, like
natural June butter, bearing a tax paid stamp of one-fourth of a
cent a pound."
Other witnesses testified to the exact percent of palm oil used
in the preparation of the package. One said that
"the article so manufactured was according to a formula used in
the course of business, with the exception of the palm oil. It is
what we call the 'Daisy grade' -- the lower grade. It is a
substitute for butter."
Another testified that
"a very small proportion of palm oil is necessary only to
produce what is considered a desirable color in oleomargarine. The
color of palm oil is a reddish yellow. Its natural color is such
that it may be used to make oleomargarine or white substances to
look like butter."
Further, the defendant offered quite an amount of testimony,
which was received by the court, and afterwards, on motion,
stricken out as irrelevant and immaterial. Included in this was
that of the secretary of the manufacturer, who testified that
"before July 1, 1902, we used only the Wells-Richardson improved
butter color to produce an artificial coloration. Since
Page 195 U. S. 165
that date, we have used the same article. We have used some palm
oil. We used that for a few days only, until the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue ruled that its use would subject the product to
the ten-cent tax."
The verdict of a jury is conclusive upon a question of fact
unless plainly against the evidence. The same weight, as we have
said, must be given to the finding of a court, and upon the
testimony received without objection a finding that this palm oil
served substantially only to color the product cannot be disturbed.
Indeed, the fact was made certain by the testimony offered by the
defendant, although that testimony was afterwards stricken out by
the court as immaterial.
We see no error in the record, and the judgment is
Affirmed.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, and MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM
dissented.