1. Under § 3450, Rev.Stats., which declares,
inter
alia, that every carriage, or other conveyance whatsoever,
used in the removal or for the deposit and concealment of goods
removed, deposited or concealed with intent to defraud the United
States of any tax thereon shall be forfeited, an automobile, so
used by a person who had it on credit from an owner who retained
the title, is subject to libel and forfeiture, although the owner
was without notice of the forbidden use. The statute treats the
thing as the offender. P.
254 U. S.
509.
2. So construed and applied, the statute does not deprive the
owner of property in violation of the Fifth Amendment.
Id.
3. Section 3450, in this respect, is not modified or affected by
§§ 3460 and 3461. P.
254 U. S.
512.
Affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 254 U. S. 508
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
By an act of Congress passed July 13, 1866 (now § 3450,
Revised Statutes, and we shall so refer to it), it was enacted
that:
"Whenever any goods or commodities for or in respect whereof any
tax is or shall be imposed, . . . are removed, or are deposited or
concealed in any place, with intent to defraud the United States of
such tax, or any part thereof, all such goods or commodities, . . .
shall be forfeited, and in every such case all the casks, vessels,
cases, or other packages whatsoever, containing, or which shall
have contained, such goods or commodities, respectively, and every
vessel, boat, cart, carriage, or other conveyance whatsoever, and
all horses or other animals, and all things used in the removal or
for the deposit or concealment thereof, respectively, shall be
forfeited."
In pursuance of this enactment, a libel was filed against a
Hudson automobile of the appraised value of $800, and it charged
that the automobile before its seizure was used by three persons
who were named, in the removal and for the deposit and concealment
of 58 gallons of distilled spirits upon which a tax was imposed by
the United States, and had not been paid.
Plaintiff in error, herein referred to as the Grant Company,
was, on its petition, permitted to intervene and to give bond and
replevy the automobile.
The company subsequently answered, alleging the facts
hereinafter mentioned, and in addition, pleaded against a
condemnation and forfeiture of the car, the Constitution of the
United States, especially Article V of Amendments, which prohibits
the deprivation of life, liberty, or property without due process
of law.
The case was to a jury upon an agreed statement of facts, which
recited that the Grant Company was a
Page 254 U. S. 509
seller of automobiles and was the owner in fee simple of the
automobile used in this case, and sold it, retaining the title for
unpaid purchase money, to J. G. Thompson (he was named in the
libel), who was a taxicab operator, and W. M. Lamb, who was in the
newspaper business; that the car was used by Thompson in violation
of § 3450, Rev.Stats., but that such use was without the
knowledge of the company or of any of its officers, nor did it or
they have any notice or reason to suspect that it would be
illegally used.
The court charged the jury to render a verdict finding the car
guilty overruling a motion of the Grant Company to direct a verdict
for it on the grounds: (1) that § 3450, Rev.Stats., was in
violation of Article V of Amendments of the Constitution of the
United States in that it deprived the Grant Company of its property
without due process of law; (2) that the section was not to be
construed to forfeit the title of a third party entirely innocent
of wrongdoing, and that the proper construction of the section was
that it contemplated forfeiting only the interest or title of the
wrongdoer; (3) that the title reserved by the company for the
balance of the purchase money had never been divested, and
therefore could not be condemned, and that only the interest of
Thompson and Lamb could be condemned.
The jury found the car guilty, and, in pursuance of the verdict,
a judgment of condemnation and forfeiture was entered, but, as a
bond with security had been given for the car, it was adjudged that
the United States recover from the Grant Company as principal and
J. W. Goldsmith, Jr., as security, the principal sum of $800 and
costs. Execution was awarded accordingly.
Motion for a new trial was denied, and this writ of error was
then prosecuted.
This statement indicates the questions in the case and, as we
have seen, involves the construction of § 3450 and
Page 254 U. S. 510
its unconstitutionality if it be not construed as contended by
the Grant Company.
If the case were the first of its kind, it and its apparent
paradoxes might compel a lengthy discussion to harmonize the
section with the accepted tests of human conduct. Its words, taken
literally, forfeit property illicitly used though the owner of it
did not participate in or have knowledge of the illicit use. There
is strength, therefore, in the contention that if such be the
inevitable meaning of the section, it seems to violate that justice
which should be the foundation of the due process of law required
by the Constitution. It is hence plausibly urged that such could
not have been the intention of Congress; that Congress necessarily
had in mind the facts and practices of the world, and that, in the
conveniences of business and of life, property is often and
sometimes necessarily put into the possession of another than its
owner. And it follows, is the contention, that Congress only
intended to condemn the interest the possessor of the property
might have to punish his guilt, and not to forfeit the title of the
owner who was without guilt.
Regarded in this abstraction, the argument is formidable, but
there are other and militating considerations. Congress must have
taken into account the necessities of the government, its revenues
and policies, and was faced with the necessity of making provision
against their violation or evasion and the ways and means of
violation or evasion. In breaches of revenue provisions, some forms
of property are facilities, and therefore it may be said, that
Congress interposes the care and responsibility of their owners in
aid of the prohibitions of the law and its punitive provisions, by
ascribing to the property a certain personality, a power of
complicity and guilt in the wrong. In such case, there is some
analogy to the law of
deodand, by which a personal chattel
that was the immediate cause of the death of any reasonable
creature was forfeited.
Page 254 U. S. 511
To the superstitious reason to which the rule was ascribed,
Blackstone adds: "that such misfortunes are in part owing to the
negligence of the owner, and therefore, he is properly punishable
by such forfeiture." And he observed:
"A like punishment is in like cases inflicted by the Mosaical
law: 'If an ox gore a man that he die, the ox shall be stoned, and
his flesh shall not be eaten.' And, among the Athenians, whatever
was the cause of a man's death, by falling upon him, was
exterminated or cast out of the dominions of the republic."
See also The Blackheath, 195 U.
S. 361,
195 U. S.
366-367;
Liverpool, etc., Navigation Co. v. Brooklyn
Terminal, 251 U. S. 48,
251 U. S.
53.
But whether the reason for § 3450 be artificial or real, it
is too firmly fixed in the punitive and remedial jurisprudence of
the country to be now displaced.
Dobbins Distillery v. United
States, 96 U. S. 395, is an
example of the rulings we have before made. It cites and reviews
prior cases, applying their doctrine and sustaining the
constitutionality of such laws. It militates therefore against the
view that § 3450 is not applicable to a property whose owner
is without guilt. In other words, it is the ruling of that case,
based on prior cases, that the thing is primarily considered the
offender. And the principle and practice have examples in
admiralty.
The Palmyra, 12
Wheat. 1.
The same principle was declared in
United States v.
Stowell, 133 U. S. 1. The
following cases at circuit may also be referred to:
United
States v. Mincey, 254 F. 287 (1918);
Logan v. United
States, 260 F. 746 (1919);
United States v. One Saxon
Automobile, 257 F. 251;
United States v. 246 1/2 Pounds of
Tobacco, 103 F. 791;
United States v. 220 Patented
Machines, 99 F. 559.
Counsel resists the reasoning and precedent of these cases in an
argument of considerable length erected on the contention of the
injustice of making an innocent man
Page 254 U. S. 512
suffer for the acts of a guilty one, and the anxious solicitude
a court must feel and exercise, and which, it is said, it has often
expressed, and by which it has been impelled to declare laws
unconstitutional that offend against reason and justice.
The changes are rung on the contention, and illustrations are
given of what is possible under the law if the contention be
rejected. It is said that a Pullman sleeper can be forfeited if a
bottle of illicit liquor be taken upon it by a passenger, and that
an ocean steamer can be condemned to confiscation if a package of
like liquor be innocently received and transported by it. Whether
the indicated possibilities under the law are justified we are not
called upon to consider. It has been in existence since 1866, and
has not yet received such amplitude of application. When such
application shall be made, it will be time enough to pronounce upon
it. And we also reserve opinion as to whether the section can be
extended to property stolen from the owner or otherwise taken from
him without his privity or consent.
Counsel further urge that § 3450 should be read in
connection with §§ 3460 and 3461, and other sections of
the Revised Statutes, and should be construed to provide for the
forfeiture of no interest for which those sections offer
protection. We are, however, unable to concur with counsel that
they modify the requirement or effect of § 3450. They have no
relation to the latter section, nor is their remedy applicable to
cases under that section.
There is an intimation that in the prior cases there was
something in the relation of the parties to the property or its
uses from which it was possible to infer its destination to an
illegal purpose -- at any rate, the risk of such purpose and that
such relation had influence in the decision of the cases.
We are unable to accept the intimation. There may, indeed, be
greater risk to the owner of property in one
Page 254 U. S. 513
form or purpose of its bailment than in another, but wrong
cannot be imputed to him by reason of the form or purpose. It is
the illegal use that is the material consideration, it is that
which works the forfeiture, the guilt or innocence of its owner
being accidental. If we should regard simply the adaptability of a
particular form of property to an illegal purpose, we should have
to ascribe facility to an automobile as an aid to the violation of
the law. It is a "thing" that can be used in the removal of "goods
and commodities," and the law is explicit in its condemnation of
such things.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS dissents.