The allowance of three pence and five pence per gallon made
under 23 & 24 Vict., c. 129, and later acts of Parliament, on
exportation of certain British spirits, if not a "bounty," is a
"grant" within the meaning of Paragraph E of § 4 of the Tariff
Act of 1913, providing for a countervailing duty whenever any
country shall pay or bestow, directly or indirectly, any bounty or
grant upon the exportation of any article or merchandise dutiable
under the act.
Notwithstanding the facts that such allowances may be intended
merely as compensation to distillers and rectifiers for costs due
to British excise regulations and are not confined to cases of
exportation, they are, as applied to exports, governmental payments
-- "grants" -- made only upon exportation, which, by lessening the
burden of British taxation, enable the spirits to be sold more
cheaply here than at home, the situation against which Paragraph E
was intended to provide. P.
249 U. S. 37.
United States v. Passavant, 169 U. S.
16, followed.
7 Cust.App.Rep. 97 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion. For the decision of the Board
of General Appraisers,
see G.A. 7758, 29 T.D. 59.
Page 249 U. S. 35
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Writs of certiorari to review a judgment of the Court of Customs
Appeals, affirming a decision by the Board of General Appraisers,
which overruled the protests of petitioners against the action of
collectors of customs at Boston and New York assessing additional
or countervailing duties on whisky and gin imported from Great
Britain. 7 Ct.Cust.App.Rep. 97.
Paragraph E of § 4 of the Tariff Act of 1913 (38 Stat. 114)
reads as follows:
"E. That whenever any country, dependency, colony, province, or
other political subdivision of government shall pay or bestow,
directly or indirectly, any bounty or grant upon the exportation of
any article or merchandise from such country, dependency, colony,
province, or other political subdivision of government, and such
article of merchandise is dutiable under the provisions of this
act, then upon the importation of any such article or merchandise
into the United States, whether the same shall be imported directly
from the country of production or otherwise, and whether such
article or merchandise is imported in the same condition as when
exported from the country of production or has been changed in
condition by manufacture or otherwise, there shall be levied and
paid, in all such cases, in addition to the duties otherwise
imposed by this act, an additional duty equal to the net amount of
such bounty or grant, however the same be paid or bestowed. The net
amount of all such bounties or grants shall be from time to time
ascertained, determined, and declared by the Secretary of the
Treasury, who shall make all needful regulations for the
identification of such articles and merchandise and for the
assessment and collection of such additional duties."
The question in the case is the legality of the
countervailing
Page 249 U. S. 36
duty. It was determined and declared to be necessary under
paragraph E by reason of the allowance under the British
legislation of three pence upon plain British spirits and five
pence upon British compounded spirits. 23 & 24 Vict. c.
129.
The case is not of broad compass. The act of Parliament referred
to above levies a duty upon every gallon of spirits of a certain
strength which after certain designated dates were or should be
distilled within the United Kingdom, or which, having been
distilled therein, were on the designated dates in the stock or
possession of any distiller or in any duty-free warehouse, and
which after the named dates should be taken out for consumption
within the United Kingdom.
It is provided that, "in consideration of the loss and hindrance
caused by excise regulation in the distillation and rectification
of spirits in the United Kingdom," there shall be paid
"to any distiller or proprietor of such spirits on the
exportation thereof from a duty-free warehouse or on depositing the
same in a customs warehouse . . . the allowance of two pence per
gallon . . . and to any licensed rectifier who . . . has or shall
have deposited in a customs warehouse spirits distilled and
rectified in the United Kingdom the following allowances: . . .
Three pence per gallon, and on spirits of the nature of spirits of
wine an allowance of two pence per gallon. . . ."
Subsequent acts of Parliament repeat the provisions for
allowance upon exported spirits, adding some details, and are
replete with the regulations and provisions which the legislators
thought or experience had demonstrated were necessary. And there is
quite an enumeration of warehouses and their purposes which,
however necessary from the standpoint of the law, happily is not
necessary to our consideration of the questions in the case,
although counsel describe them and use them in display of the
options which
Page 249 U. S. 37
it is contended the law gives to a distiller -- that is, to
export, warehouse, or sell the spirits or use them under conditions
which would or would not result in an allowance. We do not find it
necessary to go into such confusing considerations. The question in
the case is more direct, and is whether the three pence and five
pence paid no account of export from the United Kingdom is the
bestowal "directly or indirectly" of a "bounty or grant upon the
exportation of any article or merchandise from such country," to
use the words of paragraph E.
Looking only at the paragraph and judging from the first
impressions of its words, the problem presented would seem to be
without difficulty. There is paid to an exporter of spirits from
the United Kingdom the sum of three or five pence a gallon, as the
case may be, and the instant conclusion is that the sale of spirits
to other countries is relieved from a burden that their sale in the
United Kingdom must bear. There is a benefit, therefore, in
exportation, an inducement to seek the foreign market. And thus it
would seem, if we regard the substance of things, that the
condition of the application of paragraph E obtains.
Counsel, however, resist this view in somewhat lengthy and
minute arguments, only the basic propositions of which we can give.
They dwell especially upon the purpose of the British act and the
differences, not only actual, as they contend, but recognized in
the administrative and legislative parlance of this country,
between the words "allowance," "bounty," "drawback" and "grant." In
support of the first contention -- that is, the purpose of the
British act -- it is urged that the allowance provided for is not a
"bounty" upon exportation, but "compensation" to the distiller and
rectifier for costs due to excise restrictions. In other words,
that the allowance is not a premium on exportation, but the
remission or reimbursement of the expense of manufacture to
accommodate the "peculiar
Page 249 U. S. 38
conditions and necessities" of the British fiscal policy. In
confirmation of this view, it is said that not all British spirits
when exported get the allowance, but only those that are warehoused
in a certain specified way, and that, besides, the allowance is
also paid when certain spirits go into domestic consumption. And
the British ambassador is quoted as saying of the allowances that
they "do not even compensate the loss they are intended to
reimburse, as is abundantly proved."
It is, hence, asserted that the condition of the application of
paragraph E -- that is, a premium bestowed on an exportation from
another country -- is absent, and that, besides, the paragraph is
of limited scope, the word bounty not being used in its most
comprehensive sense, and that there is a wide difference between an
"indirect bounty" and "indirectly paying a bounty," and that for an
indirect bounty the paragraph does not provide. Counsel attempt to
justify the distinction and illustrate it by the citation of the
example of many acts of Congress by which "indirect" bounties were
legislated and also by the comments of legislators in discussion of
the purpose and effect of the use of the words "allowances," and
"rebates," and "drawbacks." And
United States v.
Passavant, 169 U. S. 16,
169 U. S. 23, is
quoted for a distinction between "the word "bounty" as
differentiated from the word "drawback" in tariff parlance" and
"the shades of meaning which Congress had in mind when enacting
paragraph E and provisions
in pari materia." In further
support of their distinctions, counsel cite the executive practice
of this country, and adduce the decisions of this and other courts
to show that such practice is a useful resolvent of the meaning of
words and of legislative intention.
We appreciate the strength of the argument, but the
circumstances are but aids to persuasion; they do not compel it.
Every new statute is individual, and presents its own problem. That
before us does, and, as we have
Page 249 U. S. 39
said, looking at its words alone, has no uncertainty of purpose.
Whenever any country "shall pay or bestow, directly or indirectly,
any bounty or grant upon the exportation of any article or
merchandise," there shall be levied and paid upon it, upon
importation, in addition to the regular duty, an additional one
"equal to the net amount of such bounty or grant, however the same
be paid or bestowed." The statute was addressed to a condition, and
its words must be considered as intending to define it, and all of
them -- "grant" as well as "bounty" -- must be given effect. If the
word "bounty" has a limited sense, the word "grant" has not. A word
of broader significance than "grant" could not have been used. Like
its synonyms "give" and "bestow," it expresses a concession, the
conferring of something by one person upon another. And if the
"something" be conferred by a country "upon the exportation of any
article or merchandise," a countervailing duty is required by
paragraph E.
There can be therefore but one inquiry: was something -- bounty
or grant -- paid or bestowed upon the exportation of spirits?
Counsel's answer we have given; ours is different. They dwell upon
the meaning of one word and the necessary adjustments of the
British revenue legislation; we regard all of the words, the fact
of payment and the event -- the fact that the grant is made at the
time of exportation and only upon exportation (of course, we mean
of the spirits destined for the United States) -- the event, that
the spirits may be sold cheaper in the United States than in the
United Kingdom, and necessarily there may be that aid to their
competitive power. We do not think that it is a repelling answer to
say that they are sold here at the same price that they would be
sold for in the United Kingdom if the latter imposed no tax -- that
is, sold here as if they had not been taxed at all, and therefore
sold not below their natural cost. This is mere speculation of the
effects of a different situation. We have the
Page 249 U. S. 40
fact of spirits able to be sold cheaper in the United States
than in the place of their production, and this the result of an
act of government because of the destination of the spirits being a
foreign market. For that situation paragraph E was intended to
provide. What legislation some other situation might require or
receive we are not called upon to conjecture.
Our conclusion is supported, we think, by
United States v.
Passavant, supra, a case from which counsel have adduced some
argument. An importation of goods from Germany was the subject of
the decision. That country imposed a tax upon merchandise when sold
by the manufacturer thereof for consumption or sale in the markets
of Germany. Upon exportation of the merchandise, the tax was
remitted. The remission was called "bonification of tax," as
distinguished from being refunded as a rebate. The merchandise
could be purchased in bond for exportation in the principal markets
of Germany at the net invoice price and without paying the
so-called German duty. The merchandise with which the case was
concerned was so purchased.
Upon importation of the merchandise, it was determined by the
collector and customs appraiser that its value was the net invoice
value with the German duty added. This ruling was contested by the
importer, and the Board of General Appraisers reversed it. The
Circuit Court, to which the case had been carried, affirmed the
decision of the Board of General Appraisers. Upon appeal to the
circuit court of appeals, that court asked of this Court whether
the German duty had been lawfully included by the collector and
customs appraiser in their estimate of the dutiable value. We
answered in the affirmative, and said, through Mr. Chief Justice
Fuller, that
"the laws of this country in the assessment of duties proceed
upon the market value in the exporting country, and not upon the
market value less such remission or amelioration
Page 249 U. S. 41
as that country chooses to allow in accordance with its own
views of public policy."
And this conclusion was reached upon the effect of the remitted
tax, and not upon the word used to designate it. In other words,
the decision was not determined by a consideration of costs of
manufacture or their reimbursement nor by the requirements of the
policies of the exporting country. It regarded the fact and effect
of the remitted excise.
Downs v. United States, 187 U.
S. 496, is a like example, and direct and indirect
bounties are illustrated. As an instance of the former, the amount
paid upon the production of sugar under the act of Congress of
October 1, 1890 is adduced, and also the "drawback" (the word of
the statute is used) upon certain articles exported; as instances
of the latter, that is, of indirect bounties, the remission of
taxes upon the exportation of articles which are subject to a tax
when sold or consumed in the country of their production is given,
and, as another example, the laws permitting distillers of spirits
to export the same without payment of an internal revenue tax or
other burden.
We consider further discussion unnecessary, and the judgment of
the Court of Customs Appeals is
Affirmed.