The Tariff Act of 1842, 5 Stat. 548, provided that if the
appraised value of merchandise should exceed, by ten percentum or
more the invoice value, an additional duty should be imposed of
fifty percentum of the duty imposed on the same where fairly
invoiced.
The Act of 1846, 9 Stat. 42, reduced this additional duty to
twenty percentum.
Although this additional duty may have been considered as a
penalty, and as such, a moiety given to the officers of the custom
house under the act of 1842, and the same disposition of it would
have been made under the act of 1846, if there had been no other
legislation, yet the Act of February, 1846, 9 Stat. 3, declares
that it shall not be considered a penalty for the purpose of being
distributed.
Therefore, the additional duty of twenty percentum, levied by
the collector under the 8th section of the Act of July 30, 1846, is
not to be considered as a penalty one moiety whereof is to be
distributed amongst the officers of the custom house.
The facts of the case are stated in the opinion of the
Court.
MR. JUSTICE CURTIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes before us upon a certificate of division of
opinion of the judges of the Circuit Court of the United States for
the Southern District of New York. The certificate shows that a
suit in equity is pending in that court wherein persons who were
the naval officer and surveyor of the port of New York are
complainants and Hugh Maxwell, who was the collector of that port,
is respondent, and that the scope of the bill is to recover one
moiety of a large sum of money levied and collected as additional
duties, under the 8th section of the Tariff Act of July 30, 1846, 9
Stat. 43, during the time while the complainants held the offices
above mentioned. Upon the hearing of this cause, the judges were
opposed in opinion upon the following questions:
"Whether, upon a true construction of the revenue laws of the
United States, the additional duties of 20 percentum which have
been levied and collected by and paid to the defendant as collector
of the port of New York at the port of New York, as
Page 58 U. S. 148
stated in his answer, under and by virtue of the 8th section of
the act entitled 'An act for reducing the duties on imports, and
for other purposes,' passed July 30, in the year 1846, were to be
treated as penalties, and one moiety thereof divided between and
paid in equal proportions to and among the collector, naval
officer, and surveyor of the port of New York holding said offices
at the time of the levying, collection, and payment thereof in the
said port of New York, as claimed by the plaintiffs in their bill
in this cause."
The 8th section of the Act of July 30, 1846, after requiring the
collector to cause the dutiable value of the imports therein
referred to to be appraised, estimated and ascertained in
accordance with the provisions of existing laws, goes on to
enact
"And if the appraised value thereof shall exceed, by ten
percentum or more, the value so declared on the entry, then, in
addition to the duties imposed by law on the same, there shall be
levied, collected, and paid a duty of twenty percentum,
ad
valorem on such appraised value."
The question is whether the sums levied, collected, and paid
under this clause were by law distributable as penalties, one
moiety to the Treasury of the United States and the other moiety
among the collector, naval officer, and surveyor.
To render any sum of money collected for the government thus
distributable, it is not doubted that some act of Congress,
directing that distribution, must be found, and the complainant's
counsel has sought for such a law, by arguing that these additional
duties must be treated as penalties, levied for the offense of
undervaluation, against the directions and in contravention of the
requirements of the revenue laws, and that if they are penalties,
they are required to be distributed by different collection laws to
which he has referred, and which he urges have been made applicable
by Congress to the sums of money now in question. We do not find it
necessary to determine whether these additional duties might have
been deemed penalties, so as to come under the terms of either of
the collection laws which have directed the distribution of
penalties among certain officers of the customs; nor do we deem it
important to examine in detail the provisions of those collection
laws, and the manner in which they have been from time to time
rendered applicable in part or in whole to the different acts
levying duties and penalties.
Because, we are all of opinion that whatever may be the nature
of the sums levied as additional duties under the 8th section of
the Tariff Act of 1846, they are not distributable as
penalties.
To exhibit the reasons on which this opinion is founded, it is
necessary to refer first to the Tariff Act of August 30, 1842.
The
Page 58 U. S. 149
26th section of that act, provided that
"The laws existing on the 1st day of June, 1842, shall extend to
and be in force for the collection of the duties imposed by this
act &c., and for the recovery, collection, distribution, and
remission of all fines, penalties, and forfeitures, and for the
allowance of the drawbacks by this act authorized, as fully and
effectually as if every regulation, restriction, penalty,
forfeiture, provision, clause, matter, and thing in the said laws
contained, had been inserted in and re enacted by this act."
The 16th and 17th sections of the same act prescribe the manner
in which merchandise subject to
ad valorem rates of duty
shall be appraised and its dutiable value ascertained, and then the
17th section enacts
"That in all cases where the actual value to be appraised,
estimated, and ascertained, as hereinbefore stated, of any goods,
wares, and merchandise, imported into the United States and subject
to any
ad valorem duty, or whereon the duty is regulated
by or directed to be imposed or levied on the value of the square
yard or other parcel or quantity thereof shall exceed by ten
percentum or more the invoice value, then in addition to the duty
imposed by law on the same, there shall be levied and collected on
the same goods, wares, and merchandise fifty percentum of the duty
imposed on the same where fairly invoiced."
These being provisions of the Tariff Act of 1842, the
complainants' argument is that the additional duties levied under
its 17th section were made distributable by its 26th section; that
the 8th section of the act of 1846 only changed the amount of the
penalty in the cases it reached; that whereas, by the 17th section
of the act of 1842, if the appraisement should exceed the invoice
value ten percentum, fifty percentum of the duty was the penalty,
by the act of 1846, twenty percentum of the appraised value was to
be the penalty; that this was the only change made, although the
26th section of the act of 1842, which made penalties distributable
under the then existing laws, applied, in terms, only to the
penalties levied by that act, yet those laws of distribution are
applicable to this penalty under the act of 1846, which must be
considered as substituted in place of the penalty levied by the act
of 1842, and to be governed by the same provisions of law as were
applicable to the additional duty, by way of penalty, under that
act of 1842.
There is great force in this argument. The Tariff Act of 1846 is
an act fixing new rates of duty on imports. It does not contain any
provisions for the collection of those duties nor for the
collection or distribution of any penalties. It does not in terms
adopt the existing laws on those subjects nor declare that they
shall be deemed applicable to the duties and penalties which it
Page 58 U. S. 150
levies; yet it is obvious that it must have been intended that
those existing laws should be thus applied, and this can only be
effected by considering the duties and penalties levied by the act
of 1846 as substitutes for, and to be governed by the same rules
as, the corresponding duties and penalties levied by the act of
1842, which did, in terms, adopt and apply the existing laws for
the recovery, collection, and distribution of duties and
penalties.
We accede, therefore, to the positions that the additional duty
levied by the act of 1846 is only a substitute for that levied
under the act of 1842, and that whatever rule was in force when the
act of 1846 was passed concerning the distribution of the
additional duty levied by the 17th section of the act of 1842 is
also in force, and is to be applied to the additional duty under
the 8th section of the act of 1846, which is here in question. So
that the only remaining inquiry is what was that rule?
We think this question is answered by the 3d section of the Act
of February 11, 1846, 9 Stat. 3,
"That no portion of the additional duties provided for by the
17th section of the Act of August 30, 1842, entitled &c., shall
be deemed a fine, penalty, or forfeiture for the purpose of being
distributed to any officer of the customs, but the whole amount
thereof, when received, shall be paid directly into the
Treasury."
This enacts a rule concerning the distribution of the additional
duties under the act of 1842, and as the additional duties under
the act of 1846 are substitutes for and to be governed by the same
rules as to distribution as those levied under the former law, it
necessarily follows that they are not distributable.
It has been argued that this 3d section of the Act of February
11, 1846, is expressly limited to the additional duties levied
under the 17th section of the act of 1842, and therefore cannot
govern the distribution of those levied under the act of 1846. But
so the 26th section of the act of 1842, which adopts former laws,
applies them only to the duties and penalties levied under that
act, and this is the only authority for applying any laws to the
distribution of the penal duties now in question. The complainant
is obliged to argue that though limited in terms to that act, it
applies to rates of penal duty afterwards substituted by the act of
1846 in place of those prescribed by the act of 1842. We have
declared the argument sound, but it must be allowed its full and
just effect. The implication is not that the laws for the
collection and distribution of penalties, as they had existed at
some prior period, or as they had been applicable to other
penalties, were silently adopted by the act of 1846, but that the
laws for the collection and distribution of additional duties by
way of penalty, as those laws existed when the act
Page 58 U. S. 151
of 1846 was passed, must be deemed applicable to the new
additional duty by way of penalty prescribed by that act, and when
the act of 1846 was passed, the previous general law for the
distribution of penalties had been modified, and the additional
duty for which that in question is substituted, had been declared
not distributable. The consequence is that though the act of 1846
may be considered as providing for both duties and penalties,
subject, as to their collection and distribution, to existing laws,
yet as there was no law in force by which additional duties, levied
for undervaluation, were made distributable, there can be no
adoption of any existing law on that particular subject, and no
distribution can take place.
Perhaps this may be illustrated by supposing that the substance
of the 3d section of the Act of February 11, 1846, had been
incorporated into the 26th section of the act of 1842 by way of
proviso. So that at the same time when the act of 1842 adopted all
existing laws concerning the distribution of penalties, it had
declared that the additional duties to be levied under the 17th
section should not be distributable as penalties, but should be
paid into the Treasury. Certainly it could not then have been
argued that the act of 1846 had merely changed the rate of
additional duty, and had silently adopted the existing laws
concerning its distribution, and still that it was distributable.
Yet the effect of this subsequent enactment of February 11, 1846,
when made, upon the act of 1842 is the same as if it had been
incorporated therein. It is in
eadem materia, and both are
to be construed as one law, the last controlling and modifying the
first, as if it made a part of it.
The fallacy of the argument, on the part of the complainants
consists in going back to former laws concerning the distribution
of other penalties and considering them to be applicable to this
penalty, when the existing law, applicable in terms to a penalty
ejusdem generis, and for which this penalty is a
substitute, declares that it is not distributable.
Our opinion is that the first question certified by the circuit
court, must be answered in the negative.
There are other questions certified, but as the one above
decided necessarily disposes of the case, we do not deem it needful
to consider and respond to them.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern
District of New York, and on the points or questions on which the
judges of the said circuit court were divided in
Page 58 U. S. 152
opinion, and which were certified to this Court for its opinion
agreeably to the act of Congress in such case made and provided,
and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, it is the
opinion of this Court that the first question certified by the
circuit court in this case must be answered in the negative,
to-wit, that upon a true construction of the revenue laws of the
United States, the additional duties of 20 percentum which have
been levied and collected by and paid to the defendant, as
collector of the port of New York, at the port of New York, as
stated in his answer, under and by virtue of the 8th section of the
Act entitled "an act for reducing the duties on imports, and for
other purposes," passed July 30, in the year 1846, were not to be
treated as penalties and one moiety thereof divided between and
paid in equal proportions to and among the collector, naval
officer, and surveyor of the port of New York, holding said
officers at the time of the levying, collection, and payment
thereof, in the said port of New York, as claimed by the plaintiffs
in their bill in this cause.
And this Court is further of opinion that as the decision of the
first question in the negative necessarily disposes of the case, it
is unnecessary to consider and respond to the other questions
certified; whereupon it is now here ordered and adjudged by this
Court that it be so certified to the said circuit court.