A direct appeal from the Circuit Court will not lie where the
only real substantial point is whether or not an officer of the
United States has misconstrued a statute.
The claim that the Secretary of the Treasury has exercised
legislative power in promulgating, pursuant to § 251, Revised
Statutes, regulations concerning the collection of duties under the
tariff law does not constitute a real and substantial dispute or
controversy concerning the construction or application of the
Constitution upon which the result depends, and a direct appeal
will not lie to this Court under § 5 of the Act of March 3,
1891, c. 517, 26 Stat. 826, 828.
The regulations of 1897, promulgated by the Secretary of the
Treasury, in regard to polariscopic tests of sugar to determine the
duty payable thereon, as provided in § 1, Schedule E, par.
209, of the Tariff Act of July 24, 1897, c. 11, 30 Stat. 168, could
have been enacted in terms by Congress without violating any
provision of the Constitution of the United States, and prior
decisions have determined that the Secretary properly construed the
statute.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 211 U. S. 157
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The tariff Act of July 24, 1897, provides (p. 168):
Page 211 U. S. 158
"Par. 209. Sugars not above number sixteen Dutch standard in
color, tank bottoms, syrups of cane juice, melada, concentrated
melada, concrete and concentrated molasses, testing by the
polariscope not above seventy-five degrees, ninety-five
one-hundredths of one cent per pound, and for every additional
degree shown by the polariscopic test, thirty-five one thousandths
of one cent per pound additional, and fractions of a degree in
proportion, and on sugar above number sixteen Dutch standard in
color, and on all sugar which has gone through a process of
refining, one cent and ninety-five one-hundredths of one cent per
pound; molasses testing above forty degrees and not above fifty-six
degrees, three cents per gallon; testing fifty-six degrees and
above, six cents per gallon; sugar drainings and sugar sweepings
shall be subject duty as molasses or sugar, as the case may be,
according to polariscopic test."
In October, 1897, the Treasury Department issued general
regulations
* (subsequently
modified in particulars not material here) governing sampling and
classification of sugars under the above-quoted paragraph, which,
among other things, declared:
"The expression 'testing . . . degrees by the polariscope,'
occurring in the act, is construed to mean the percentage of pure
sucrose contained in the sugar as ascertained by polarimetric
estimation."
It was further stated that changes of temperature affect the
indications of a polariscope, and to determine by means of it true
sucrose contents, apparent readings must be corrected as shown by a
table accompanying each instrument and embodying the results of
careful experiments therewith; when the thermometer is above
17.5� centigrade, the point of standardization, additions
must be made; when below, corresponding subtractions.
Page 211 U. S. 159
The interpretation of the statute and validity of the
regulations were at once challenged by importers, who claimed that
the reading of a polariscope is not affected by change in
temperature, and further that the term "polariscopic test" in the
tariff act of 1897, according to its well settled commercial use,
as well as by the language itself, requires testing only in the way
theretofore observed by merchants, and forbids any correction of
the result observed by the eye. These contentions were denied by
the collector.
The importers appealed to the Board of General Appraisers, and
in March, 1899, their protest was overruled in a considered
opinion. G.A. 4386.
Under the titles
Bartram Bros. v. United States, Howell v.
United States, and
American Sugar Refining Company v.
United States, appeal was taken to the Circuit Court, Southern
District of New York, which was decided May 4, 1903. 123 F. 327.
That court reversed the judgment of the General Appraisers, holding
that the term "testing by the polariscope" had a well settled
commercial meaning prior to 1897, and must be interpreted according
thereto. It declared, however, the preponderance of proof sustained
the contention
"that there is a variation in the reading of the polariscope
according to variations in temperature at the place where the sugar
is tested, and that the corrections and additions provided for by
the regulations merely consist in an addition of 3 percent for each
10 degrees centigrade of temperature above that at which the
polariscope is standardized, and that in this way the actual amount
of pure sucrose in each sample is more accurately determined than
was the case under the old eye test."
The circuit court of appeals (131 F. 833) reversed the circuit
court and sustained the General Appraisers. It held Congress
intended there should be a scientific determination, by means of
the polariscope, of sucrose contents, and that the method
prescribed by the Treasury regulations was proper in order to
secure the desired result.
Page 211 U. S. 160
The rulings are correctly stated in the headnotes thus:
"In construing the provision in paragraph 209, Tariff Act July
24, 1897, c. 11, Sec. 1, Schedule E, 30 Stat. 168, regulating duty
on sugars according to the polariscopic test,
held that
the expressions therein 'testing by the polariscope' and 'shown by
the polariscopic test' are not used with any special trade meaning
that would confine them to a particular method of conducting such
test, but import an intention on the part of Congress that the
method adopted should be the one best calculated to make a
scientific determination."
"Under the general power of the Secretary of the Treasury to
make customs regulations not inconsistent with law, granted by
§ 251, Rev.Stat., it is competent for that officer to
prescribe the method of 'testing by the polariscope' the sugars
dutiable according to such test under Paragraph 209, Tariff Act
July 24, 1897, c. 11, § 1, schedule E, 30 Stat. 168,, and so
long as he acts in good faith, and it does not appear that his
regulations operate to make the polariscopic test less accurate
than when Congress adopted it, the courts should not interfere with
the administrative details confided to him."
"Where, for a period of years covering the operation of several
tariff acts, the Secretary of the Treasury has made regulations for
carrying out certain provisions in those acts, it is to be presumed
that subsequent legislation by Congress was enacted with reference
to such regulations."
At October Term, 1904, a petition for a writ of certiorari to
bring up these cases for review was presented to this Court, and
denied. 195 U.S. 635.
In the present cause, counsel stipulated:
"It is agreed that the sugars in question were tested and
classified in accordance with the Treasury regulations of October
27, 1897, and of February 17, 1899, and that the questions raised
are the same as those in the cases of
Bartram Bros. v. United
States,
Page 211 U. S. 161
Howell v. United States, and
American Sugar
Refining Company v. United States, reported in 123 F. 327 and
in 131 F. 833, and it is agreed that the evidence and exhibits in
those cases contained on pages 33 to 364, inclusive, and pages 373
to 734, inclusive, of the transcript of record in those cases
prepared for the Supreme Court of the United States and contained
in the volume filed herewith . . . are to be treated as duly taken
and introduced as evidence in this cause."
By § 6 of the Act of 1891, 26 Stat. 828, c. 517, the
judgments or decrees of the circuit courts of appeals are made
final in all cases arising under the revenue law, and can only be
carried to the Supreme Court by certificate, or on a certiorari. In
the aforementioned cases, there was no certificate for instruction
on any question or proposition of law, and the application for
certiorari was denied. The present direct appeal to this Court is a
mere attempt to obtain a reconsideration of questions arising under
the revenue laws and already determined by the circuit court of
appeals in due course. Such direct appeals, under § 5 of the
act of 1891, cannot be entertained unless the construction or
application of the Constitution of the United States is
involved.
This is conceded, and counsel for appellant attempt to sustain
the jurisdiction on the ground that the regulations assumed to add
something to the dutiable standard prescribed by the tariff act,
and that, in doing so, the Secretary exercised legislative power
confided by the Constitution solely to Congress. But this does not
constitute a real and substantial dispute or controversy concerning
the construction or application of the Constitution upon which the
result depends.
The admitted duty of the Secretary of the Treasury was to
construe as best he could the paragraph relating to collection of
duty upon sugars, and to promulgate regulations for carrying it
into effect. Rev.Stat. § 251. This and this alone he did. The
only real, substantial point involved is whether or not he
misconstrued the statute, and that gives this Court no
jurisdiction
Page 211 U. S. 162
upon direct appeal.
Sloan v. United States,
193 U. S. 614,
193 U. S. 620,
and cases cited;
United States ex Rel. Taylor v. Taft,
203 U. S. 461.
Undoubtedly Congress, without violating any constitutional
provision, could have in terms directed exactly what was prescribed
by the Treasury regulations, and prior decisions have held that the
statute was properly construed by the Secretary.
We concur with counsel for the government that, if the
construction or application of the Constitution of the United
States, within the meaning of § 5, act of 1891, is involved in
every case where one claims that, according to his interpretation
of a statute, excessive duty or tax has been demanded by executive
officers, the provisions of that act making decisions of the
circuit court of appeals in revenue cases final are of very limited
value, and this Court must entertain direct appeals from the
circuit courts in most tariff and tax controversies, which we
regard as out of the question.
Appeal dismissed.
* These regulations, as originally promulgated, will be found at
length annexed to Treasury Department Synopsis of Decisions No. 18,
508,
and see pars. 77
et seq.