The Tariff Act of March 3, 1851, 9 Stat. 629, repealed so much
of the former laws as provided that merchandise, when imported from
a country other than that of production or manufacture, should be
appraised at the market value of similar articles at the principal
markets of the country of production or manufacture at the period
of the exportation to the United States.
Page 59 U. S. 522
It must be appraised according to the value of the goods in the
principal markets of the country from which they are exported.
Therefore, cutch, which is a product of the East Indies only,
and the great market for which there is Calcutta, must he appraised
not according to its value there, but at London and Liverpool,
which are the principal markets of Great Britain, exclusive of
India, and not at Halifax, from which place it was brought into the
United States.
The word "country," mentioned above, embraces all the
possessions of a foreign state, however widely separated, which are
subject to the same supreme executive and legislative control.
It is for the merchant appraisers to decide what markets in
these dominions are the principal ones for the goods in question,
and their decision is final.
The penal duty of twenty percentum exacted by the 8th section of
the Tariff Act of July 30, 1846, 9 Stat. 43, is properly levied
upon goods entered at their invoice value if it is found to be ten
percent below the dutiable value, as well as those goods where the
importer makes an addition to the invoice value.
The case of
Bartlett v.
Kane, 16 How. 263, commented upon.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
Page 59 U. S. 524
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action for money had and received brought by the
plaintiffs, who are merchants resident and doing business at
Halifax, Nova Scotia, to recover of the defendant, the collector of
customs for the port of Boston, money alleged to have been
illegally exacted on payment of duties on fifty bags of cutch,
shipped by the plaintiffs at Halifax, consigned to Messrs. Clark,
Janes & Co. of Boston.
The invoice was dated at Halifax, November 10, 1853, and the
cutch was entered at the custom house, Boston, on the 16th of the
same month at the invoice value.
The value of the cutch, as appraised by the United States
appraisers, exceeded by ten percentum the invoice value, and the
plaintiff appealed, and a reappraisement was had by two merchant's
appraisers, and their appraisement also exceeded by ten percentum
the invoice value; whereupon the defendant assessed a duty of ten
percentum
ad valorem on the appraised value, and also an
additional duty or penalty of twenty percentum on the same value,
under the 8th section of the tariff Act of July 30, 1846.
Page 59 U. S. 525
It was proved that the cutch was the product of the East Indies
only, and that Calcutta was the great market of the country of
production. And it appeared on the trial that this fact was known
to the appraisers when the appraisement was made. It was also
proved that London and Liverpool were the principal markets of
Great Britain, exclusive of India, for said article, and so far as
appeared at the trial, this cargo was the only one known to have
been sold in or exported from Halifax.
It was also proved that the appraisers appraised the cutch at
its market value in London and Liverpool, and not at Halifax or
Calcutta, at the period of its exportation from the port of Halifax
to the United States.
The case coming on to be tried, it occurred as a question:
1. Whether the Tariff Act of March 3, 1851, repealed so much of
all former laws as provided that merchandise, when imported from a
country other than that of production or manufacture, should be
appraised at the market value of similar articles at the principal
markets of the country of production or manufacture, at the period
of the exportation to the United States.
On which question the opinions of the judges were opposed.
2. Whether, in estimating the dutiable value of the cutch, the
appraisers should have taken the value at the market of Calcutta,
or London and Liverpool, or Halifax, at the period of the
exportation from Halifax.
On which question the opinions of the judges were also
opposed.
3. Whether, if the appraisements were legally made, the
additional duty of twenty percentum, under the 8th section of the
Tariff Act of July 30, 1846, was rightfully exacted by the
defendant.
On which question the opinions of the judges were opposed.
Wherefore, upon the motion of the plaintiffs, the points were
certified to this Court for final decision.
The first question certified by the circuit court depends
altogether upon the construction of the Act of 1851, 9 Stat.
629.
The language of this act of Congress is general, and embraces
all importations of goods that are subject to an
ad
valorem duty, and directs that their value shall be estimated
and ascertained by the wholesale price at the period of exportation
to the United States in the principal markets of the country from
which they are imported. The time and the place to which the
appraisers are required to look when making their appraisement are
both distinctly specified in the law -- the time being the period
of exportation, and the place the country from which they were
imported into the United States. It makes no
Page 59 U. S. 526
reference to their value in the country of production, or the
time of purchase. And as there is no ambiguity in the language of
the act, and it embraces all goods subject to an
ad
valorem duty, the court would hardly be justified in giving a
construction to it narrower than its words fairly import.
It is true, as urged by the counsel for the plaintiff, that in
the previous laws upon the same subject, the country of production
or manufacture was the place to which the appraisers were referred
in order to ascertain their value. And undoubtedly the previous
acts of Congress, and the policy which they indicate, are proper to
be considered in interpreting the act of 1851, and might influence
its construction if its language was found to be ambiguous. But
that is not the case in the present instance. The law taken by
itself will admit of but one construction -- and that is the
appraisement must be made by the value of the goods in the
principal markets of the country from which they are exported at
the time of such exportation to the United States. And so far as
these provisions are inconsistent with the provisions of previous
laws, they show that Congress had changed its policy in this
respect, and intended to repeal the laws by which it had been
established.
As regards the second point certified, the word "country" in the
revenue laws of the United States has always been construed to
embrace all the possessions of a foreign state, however widely
separated, which are subject to the same supreme executive and
legislative control. The question was brought before the Treasury
Department in 1817, and on the 29th of September in that year
instructions were issued by the department, in a circular addressed
to the different collectors in which the construction above stated
is given to the word. The practice of the government has ever since
conformed to this construction, and it must be presumed that
Congress, in its subsequent legislation on the subject, used the
word according to its known and established interpretation.
Apart, however, from this consideration, we regard the
construction of the Treasury Department as the true one. Congress
certainly could not have intended to refer to mere localities or
geographical divisions, without regard to the state or nation to
which they belonged. For, if the word "country were" used in that
sense, the law furnishes no certain and fixed limits to guide the
appraisers in determining what are its principal markets, and it
would often be difficult to decide whether the market selected by
appraisers to regulate the value was actually within the limits of
the country from which the exportation was made. And moreover, if
the construction contended for by the plaintiff could be
maintained, it would soon be found that goods would
Page 59 U. S. 527
not generally be exported directly to the United States from the
principal market where they were procured, but sent to some other
place where they were not in demand, to be shipped to this country
and invoiced far below their real value. The case before us shows
what may be done to evade the payment of the just amount of duty,
and neither the words of any revenue law nor any policy of the
government would justify a construction alike injurious to the
public and to the fair and honest importer.
It follows, therefore, as the cutch in question was shipped and
invoiced from Halifax, that it was the duty of the appraisers to
estimate and appraise it according to its value in the principal
markets of the British dominions. What markets within these
dominions were the principal ones for an article of this
description was a question of fact, not of law, and to be decided
by the appraisers, and not by the court. They, it appears,
determined that London and Liverpool were the principal markets in
Great Britain for the goods in question, and appraised the cutch
according to its value in these markets. And as the appraisers are
by law the tribunal appointed to determine this question, their
decision is conclusive upon the importer as well as the
government.
The third point presents a question of more difficulty.
By the Act of Congress of 1842, 5 Stat. 563, it was provided
that in cases where goods purchased were subject to an
ad
valorem duty if the appraisement exceeded the value at which
they were invoiced by ten percent or more, then in addition to the
duty imposed by law on the same, there should be levied and
collected on the same goods, wares, and merchandise fifty percent
of the duty imposed on the same when fairly invoiced.
It would seem, however, that this provision was found by
experience to operate in some instances unjustly upon the importer,
and that it sometimes happened that under favorable opportunities
of time or place, goods were purchased in a foreign country for ten
percent less than their market value in the principal markets of
the country from which they were imported into the United States.
And if they were so invoiced, the importer was liable for the
above-mentioned penal duty although he was willing and offered to
make the entry at their dutiable value. The fact that the invoice
value was ten percent below the standard of value fixed by law
subjected him to the penal duty, and he had no means of escaping
from it.
The 8th section of the Tariff Act of 1846 was obviously intended
to relieve the importer from this hardship. It provides that the
owner, consignee, or agents of imports which have been actually
purchased, may, on entry of the same, make such
Page 59 U. S. 528
addition in the entry, to the cost or value given in the invoice
as in his opinion may raise the same to the true market value of
such imports in the principal markets of the country whence the
importation shall have been made or in which the goods imported
shall have been originally manufactured or produced, as the case
may be, and to add thereto all the costs and charges which under
existing laws would form a part of the true value at the port where
the same may be entered, upon which the duties should be assessed.
And the section further provides that if the appraised value shall
exceed by ten percent or more the value so declared on the entry,
then in addition to the duties imposed by law there should be
levied a duty of twenty percentum
ad valorem on such
appraised value -- with a proviso that in no case should the duty
be assessed upon an amount less than the invoice value.
The difficulty has arisen upon the construction of this act. It
appears that the goods in question were entered at the value stated
in the invoice, without any addition by the importer. That value,
upon the appraisement, was found to be more than ten percent below
their dutiable value. And it has been argued on behalf of the
plaintiff that the penal duty imposed by this law is incurred in
those cases only in which the importer makes an addition to the
invoice value, and that this provision does not embrace cases in
which the goods are entered at the invoice cost or value, although
that value should be more than ten percent below the
appraisement.
We think this construction cannot be maintained. It is the duty
of the importer to enter his goods at their dutiable value --
ascertaining it according to the rules and regulations prescribed
by law. The entry required is not a mere list of the articles
imported. It must also state their value. And if he enters them at
the value stated in the invoice, it is a declaration on his part
that such and no more is the amount upon which the
ad
valorem duty is to be paid. It is the value declared on the
entry, as much so as if he had availed himself of the privilege
conferred by this act of Congress and entered them at a higher
value. He is consequently subject to the penal duty if the value
declared in the invoice is ten percent below the appraisement. And
this construction is strengthened by the proviso in the same
section, which directs that in no case should the duty be assessed
upon a less amount than the invoice value. This provision, it would
seem, was introduced upon the principle that the party having
admitted the value in the invoice which he produces, and which he
is bound to produce when he makes the entry, shall not be permitted
to deny the truth of the declaration he thus makes and enter them
at a lower value.
Page 59 U. S. 529
Indeed, the plain object and policy of the law would be defeated
by the construction contended for. It was evidently the purpose of
this section of the act of 1846 to relieve the importer from the
hardship to which he was exposed by the act of 1842, where the
undervaluation in the invoice arose from error, or from ignorance
of the mode of valuation prescribed by the revenue laws of the
United States. For while it gives him the privilege of relieving
himself from the penal duty by entering them at their true dutiable
valuation, it would, according to the construction claimed by the
plaintiff, hold out to him at the same time the strongest
temptation not to avail himself of it -- as a much higher penal
duty would be exacted, when he added to the value in the invoice,
if he still fell ten percent below the appraisement, than if he had
stood upon the invoice itself. For in the former case he would be
subject to a penal duty of twenty percent on the dutiable value of
the goods, and in the latter would be liable to only fifty percent
on the amount of duty which he would be required to pay. It would
be difficult to assign a reason for such a distinction, and we
think none such is made by the law and that the importer is liable
to the penal duty of twenty percent wherever the goods are
undervalued in the entry, and it matters not whether this
undervaluation is found in an entry made according to the value in
the invoice or in an entry at a higher valuation by the
importer.
The Treasury Department, in carrying into execution the act of
1846, has given to it the same construction that the Court now
places upon it, and the penal duty of twenty percent has been
constantly exacted for an undervaluation in cases where the entry
was according to the value stated in the invoice, as well as in
cases where an addition had been made by the importer.
In the case of
Bartlett v.
Kane, reported in 16 How. 263, the entry was at the
invoice price, and as that was found by the appraisers to be ten
percent below its dutiable value, the penal duty was exacted by the
government officers. A portion of the goods was warehoused, and
afterwards entered for exportation. And the owner demanded a return
of the twenty percent as a portion of the duty he had paid and
which he was entitled to have refunded upon the exportation of the
goods. The demand being refused, the suit above mentioned was
brought against the collector to recover it. But this Court held
that this penal duty was legally levied by the collector, and
legally retained, and the plaintiff failed to recover.
It will be observed that the right of the collector to demand
and retain this penal duty for an undervaluation in the invoice was
directly in question in that suit, and if the act of 1846 does not
embrace cases of that description, the plaintiff was
Page 59 U. S. 530
undoubtedly entitled to recover. But the point now made was not
suggested in the argument nor noticed in the opinion of the Court,
nor was any distinction in this respect taken between an
undervaluation in an entry at the invoice value and an
undervaluation where the importer added to the value.
We do not refer to this case as a judicial decision of the
question before us, because, although it was in the case, the
attention of the Court was not called to it. But it certainly may
fairly be inferred from it that in 1853, when this case was
decided, no doubt had been suggested as to the construction of the
act of 1846, and that the mercantile community, and the members of
the bar to whom their interests were confided, concurred with the
Secretary in his construction of the law. And after that
construction had been thus sanctioned impliedly in a judicial
proceeding in this Court and acted on for so many years by all the
parties interested, the Court thinks it ought to be regarded as
settled and that what has been done under it ought not to be
disturbed even if this construction was far more doubtful than it
is. We shall therefore certify to the circuit court:
1. That the Tariff Act of March 3, 1851, repealed so much of the
former laws as provided that merchandise, when imported from a
country other than that of production or manufacture, should be
appraised at the market value of similar articles at the principal
markets of the country of production or manufacture at the period
of the exportation to the United States.
2. That in estimating the value of the cutch, it was the duty of
the appraisers to determine what were the principal markets of the
country from which it was exported into the United States, and
their decision that London and Liverpool were the principal markets
for that article is conclusive.
3. The appraisement appearing to have been legally made, the
additional duty of twenty percent, under the 8th section of the
Tariff Act of July 30, 1846, was rightfully exacted by the
defendant.