Under the proviso of § 25 of the Act of Congress of August
27, 1898, 28 Stat. 509, 552, the Secretary of the Treasury is
authorized, when he has satisfactory evidence that the rupee price
of imported goods stated in the invoice does not mean rupees at
bullion value, but as a certain fraction of a pound sterling, to
order a reliquidation so as to make the value in United States
currency correspond with the actual value of the goods. In
determining when the Secretary of the Treasury exceeded his powers
under a statute, this Court may consider public facts that were
known to Congress when enacting the statute and must have been
before the Secretary's mind when acting thereunder, even though
such facts were not produced on the trial.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 197 U. S. 140
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
Whitridge, White & Co., the respondents, on June 18, 1900,
imported from India certain gunnies, invoiced in rupees. The
invoice contained a certificate from the American consul, dated
April 19, 1900, that the exchange value of the rupee at that date
was thirty-two cents, estimated in United States gold dollars. For
the purpose of ascertaining the
ad valorem duties under
the Act of July 24, 1897, 30 Stat. 151, c. 11, Schedule J., cl.
341, in July, 1900, the collector of the port of Baltimore
estimated the value of the merchandise at the date of the consular
certificate by converting the invoice value into dollars, taking
the rupees at thirty-two cents. The importers entered protest, and
the collector reliquidated the entry, taking the rupee at 20.7
cents. The Secretary of the Treasury, on June 6, 1901, wrote that
satisfactory evidence had been produced to him that the value of
the rupee was thirty-two cents at the date of the consul's
certificate, and directed a reliquidation at that rate. The
collector of the port reliquidated accordingly on June 12, 1901.
The importers (respondents) protested, and the matter was submitted
to the Board of General Appraisers in New York. Act of June 10,
1890, 26 Stat. 131, 137, c. 407, § 14. The Board found that
the exchange value of the rupee at the date of certification was
thirty-two cents, but that the metal value was 20.7 cents, as
estimated by the Director of the Mint and proclaimed by the
Secretary of the Treasury for the quarter year beginning April 1,
1900, and ruled that the latter rate should have been taken, and
directed a reliquidation on that footing. The collector appealed to
the circuit court and then to the circuit court of appeals, both of
which sustained the Board of Appraisers. 129 F. 33. The United
States then obtained a writ of
Page 197 U. S. 141
certiorari from this Court. The question is whether the
Secretary of the Treasury had power to order reliquidation at the
rate of thirty-two cents.
There is, to be sure, a preliminary question as to the
conclusiveness of the Secretary's action under the statute.
Technically, it does not appear that his decision was not based on
a finding as to the metal value of the rupee -- that is to say, as
to the value on April 19, 1900, in fractions of a gold dollar, of
the silver contained in the coin. If the decision were based on
such a finding, we may assume that it would not be open to review.
United States v. Klingenberg, 153 U. S.
93. But the greater part, at least, of the argument was
made on a different assumption, which, in view of our conclusion,
we shall adopt. We do so the more readily because, upon the public
and well known facts, it is not to be supposed that the imagined
finding as to the value of silver was made, and the policy of the
Treasury Department to adopt the exchange value of rupees was well
known and publicly declared. It would not be consistent with the
honor of the government to take the exchange value and then to
cover itself from correction, if it was wrong, by suggesting that
it had gone upon a different ground, when that ground could not
have been taken by anyone knowing the prices of the time. There is
another argument for the conclusiveness of the Secretary's action
which is so closely connected with the merits that we shall not
separate it from our general discussion of the act.
The power of the Secretary depends on the construction of the
Act of August 27, 1894, 28 Stat. 509, 552, c. 349, § 25.
*
Page 197 U. S. 142
It is argued for the respondents that the Secretary must derive
his power from the proviso, if from anything, that the value dealt
with in this section is the same thing throughout, and being
declared to be that of the pure metal of the coin in the body of
the section, must be the same in the proviso, and that therefore
the Secretary is not authorized to order a reliquidation unless it
appears to him that the pure metal in the invoice coin was worth
ten percent more or less in American gold than the value
proclaimed. This argument is thought to derive some support from
the history of legislation and from the history of the times, which
latter is thought to show that fluctuations of silver bullion, not
fluctuations of exchange values, were what Congress was likely to
have had in mind. It is suggested further that the government
reading makes the proviso revolutionize the body of the section and
the practice of a hundred years.
On the other side, we start with the consideration that, to an
ad valorem tax, it must be an object to ascertain the true
value of the thing taxed at the time as of which it is taxed, and
that the invoice price is referred to only to that end. The history
of the statutes shows a series of continually closer approximations
to it, and, to our mind, helps the contention of the government,
not that of the other side. The statutes began by fixing the rates
for specified coins absolutely. Then, in 1873, they provided in the
language of the first part of § 25, quoted above, for an
annual estimate by the Director of the Mint, and a proclamation.
Act of March 3, 1873, 17 Stat. 602, c. 268, Rev.Stat. § 3564.
In 1890, the estimate was required to be quarterly, instead of for
the year. Act of October 1, 1890,
Page 197 U. S. 143
c. 1244, § 52. Finally, on August 27, 1894, the statute
received its present form, with the proviso from which the
Secretary derives his clearest grant of power. The general purpose
of this proviso undeniably is to secure a closer approximation
still. In construing it, we must bear this obvious purpose in mind.
While no doubt the grammatical and logical scope of a proviso is
confined to the subject matter of the principal clause, we cannot
forget that, in practice, no such limit is observed, and when, as
here, we are dealing with an addition made in new circumstances to
a form of words adopted many years before, the general purpose is a
more important aid to the meaning than any rule which grammar or
formal logic may lay down.
Georgia Railroad & Banking Co.
v. Smith, 128 U. S. 174,
128 U. S.
181.
If the proviso were a separate subsequent act, we should note
that the case in which the Secretary is authorized to order a
reliquidation is not confined in terms to a difference in the value
of standard coins in circulation, but exists whenever there is such
a difference in the value of the foreign money specified in the
invoice. The invoice is required to be made out in the currency of
the country of export or the currency actually paid, which may not
be coins at all. Act of June 10, 1890, 26 Stat. 131, c. 407, §
2. It is true that the difference referred to in the proviso is a
difference from the proclaimed value, and that the proclaimed value
has reference to standard coins. Whether, in view of this fact and
of Rev.Stat. § 2903, the words would cover a difference in
value between paper expressed in terms of current coin and current
coin, if paper were the currency shown by the invoice or the
consul's certificate to be the currency to which the invoice
referred, need not be considered. That question did not arise in
Cramer v. Arthur, 102 U. S. 612.
However that may be, suppose that the currency mentioned in the
invoice, although coined, was a token currency having by
legislative fiat the value of a fraction of some current coin of
universal worth, but itself having no such worth derived from the
metal it contained. Such a
Page 197 U. S. 144
token might vary in value much below or above the fraction of
the coin by which it purported to be measured. Suppose that the
value of the latter coin only had been proclaimed. It would be
going far to say that the Secretary could not order a reliquidation
upon a variance of more than ten percent between the value of the
token currency in the invoice and the proclaimed value of the
governing coin.
The case last put is the case at bar, except that it is not
admitted that the rupee was technically a mere token, and that the
value of the rupee itself had been proclaimed, subject to a note --
"value of the rupee to be determined by consular certificate." At
that time, although it was not noted until a little later in the
year by the Director of the Mint, India was on a gold basis. As the
rupee had a legally fixed ratio to another coin also valued by the
Director -- the gold pound -- it is plain that the value of the
rupee as so much silver and its value as a fraction of a pound
might fall apart, and yet both be given by the Director's tables.
It would be giving a very literal construction to the body of
§ 25 to say that it forbade the Secretary to take the fraction
of the pound, rather than the silver bullion, as the measure of the
value of goods, if the former represented the unit of actual cost.
But, supposing that the fraction of the pound was the unit of cost,
it seems to us that, at least under the proviso, if not under the
body of the section, the Secretary could order a reliquidation on
the basis of the units actually used. It would be simply a
correction in conformity with the truth and the actual meaning of
the words of the invoice. The other argument for the conclusiveness
of the Secretary's action, to which we referred at the outset, was
that, for all that appears, this may have been what happened. The
gold which the rupee represents is one shilling and four pence, or
about thirty-two cents. But, as in this case the exchange value and
the value as a fraction of a pound were the same, it does not
matter to our decision whether we say that, in such circumstances,
the action of the Secretary was conclusive or say that it was
right.
Page 197 U. S. 145
We have shown that, in our opinion, the proviso, if not the body
of § 25, would have warranted the action of the Secretary if
it had been a later independent statute. We are of opinion that it
is not to be construed differently because of its form. In addition
to the considerations which we have mentioned, we are confirmed, in
our view, by the facts which were known at the time. It is true
that the most conspicuous recent event was the fluctuation in the
value of silver. But the movement of silver, especially after the
repeal of the Sherman Act on November 1, 1893, 28 Stat. 4, had been
downward, and the proviso contemplated at least equally a possible
rise in the foreign money with which it dealt. On the other hand,
there was before Congress the Herschell report on the coinage of
silver in India, of which six thousand copies had been ordered to
be printed by a resolve of the Senate, concurred in by the House,
28 Stat. App. p. 5, and which had been printed in 1893. This report
recommended the closing of the mints against the free coinage of
silver, and predicted as a consequence the divergence between the
intrinsic value of the rupee and the value of its ratio to the
pound as fixed, taken hypothetically as one shilling and four
pence. It contemplated even a raising of the ratio as possible. The
report was followed by the closing of the mints in the same year,
and the result predicted came to pass. However small may have been
the imports from India in 1894, the fact predicted by the Herschell
report was one of the most striking incidents in the recent
financial history of the world, and we cannot suppose that it was
not considered when the proviso was passed. Before the date of this
export, gold was adopted as the standard, and the ratio of the
rupee fixed at fifteen to one, or one shilling and four pence, in
1899. The exchange value did not change very much, remaining at
near the conventional ratio, but the decline in bullion made the
divergence referred to more marked. It was objected that some of
the facts which we have mentioned were not proved in the case, but
they are public facts, and when we are asked to declare that the
Secretary
Page 197 U. S. 146
exceeded his powers, we have to consider what might have been
before his mind.
As we have said, it would be only by a very literal construction
of the earlier part of § 25 that the collectors would be bound
to estimate the value of a cargo invoiced in rupees by the bullion
of the rupee when, in the invoice, rupee meant a certain fraction
of a pound. But, however that may be, we are of opinion that, when
the Secretary has satisfactory evidence of that state of facts,
under the proviso he is authorized to order a reliquidation in
order to make the value in United States currency correspond with
the actual value of the goods. It is not necessary to consider any
wider problems as to the power of the Secretary. We confine our
decision to the particular case.
Decree reversed.
*
"That the value of foreign coin as expressed in the money of
account of the United States shall be that of the pure metal of
such coin of standard value, and the values of the standard coins
in circulation of the various nations of the world shall be
estimated quarterly by the Director of the Mint, and be proclaimed
by the Secretary of the Treasury immediately after the passage of
this act, and thereafter quarterly on the first day of January,
April, July, and October in each year. And the values so proclaimed
shall be followed in estimating the value of all foreign
merchandise exported to the United States during the quarter for
which the value is proclaimed, and the date of the consular
certification of any invoice shall, for the purposes of this
section, be considered the date of exportation:
Provided,
That the Secretary of the Treasury may order the reliquidation of
any entry at a different value, whenever satisfactory evidence
shall be produced to him showing that the value in United States
currency of the foreign money specified in the invoice was at the
date of certification at least ten percentum more or less than the
value proclaimed during the quarter in which the consular
certification occurred."