A collector of customs is entitled to retain, under the fifth
section of the Act of March 3, 1841, 5 Stat. at Large 432, a sum
not exceeding $2,000 per annum from his receipts as storage for the
custody and safekeeping of imported merchandise entered for
warehousing and stored in bonded warehouses.
The fifth section of the act of March 3, 1841, enacts that in
addition to the account required to be rendered by every
Page 72 U. S. 648
collector, every collector shall render a quarter-yearly account
to the Secretary of the Treasury of all sums of money received or
collected:
"For
rent and storage of goods, wares, or merchandise which
may be stored in the public storehouses, and for which a rent is
paid beyond the rents paid by the collector, and if from such
accounting it shall appear that the money so received in any one
year by any collector on account and for
rents and storage
as aforesaid shall in the aggregate exceed the sum of two thousand
dollars, such excess shall be paid into the Treasury of the United
States as part and parcel of the public money, and no such
collector shall on any pretense whatever hereafter receive, hold,
or retain for himself in the aggregate more than six thousand
dollars per year, including all commissions for duties, and all
fees for storage or fees or emoluments or any other
commissions or salaries which are now allowed and limited by
law."
With this act in force, the United States brought suit in the
Circuit Court for the District of Maine, on his official bond,
against Macdonald, collector of customs at Portland, and his
sureties for the recovery of $6,281 reported to be due the United
States on the adjustment of his accounts, and which he had refused
to pay into the Treasury. The rejoinder alleged that Macdonald
received, accounted for quarter-yearly, and retained this sum "by
virtue of his office, for storage of merchandise in bonded
warehouses from January 20, 1858, to April 18, 1861, inclusive, as
he lawfully might do," not more than two thousand dollars in anyone
year. The United States demurred, and issue was joined.
The question raised by the pleadings was touching the true
construction and effect of the above-quoted fifth section of the
Act of March 3, 1841 -- that is to say whether under it a collector
of customs might retain as compensation or emolument any portion of
the moneys which had accrued from the storing or custody of
imported merchandise in private bonded warehouses.
The court below considered the rejoinder good and gave
Page 72 U. S. 649
judgment for the defendants. The case was now here on error to
that judgment, the question here being the same as it was below,
the true meaning of the section.
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Principal question presented for decision in this case is
whether a collector of the customs is entitled to retain as
compensation a sum not exceeding two thousand dollars per annum
from his receipts as storage for the custody and safekeeping of
imported merchandise, entered for warehousing under the acts of
Congress upon that subject and stored in bonded warehouses.
First-named defendant was the Collector of Customs for the District
of Portland and Falmouth, and the other defendants were his
sureties. He was appointed collector prior to the twentieth day of
January, 1858, and between that day and the eighteenth day of
April, 1861, he received as storage for the custody and safekeeping
of imported merchandise, subject to duty and stored in bonded
warehouses the sum of six thousand two hundred and eighty-one
dollars, as appears by the pleadings. Due returns were made by the
collector, but he refused to pay over the moneys so received, and
the plaintiffs sued him and his sureties, declaring on his official
bond.
Defendants craved oyer of the bond and pleaded performance.
Replication of the plaintiffs alleged that the statement of the
collector's accounts, as adjusted and settled at the Treasury
Department, showed that he had received that amount of the moneys
of the plaintiffs and that he had neglected and refused to pay the
same into the Treasury. Rejoinder of the defendants alleged that
the sum specified in the replication of the plaintiffs accrued and
was received, accounted for quarter-yearly, and retained by the
collector in virtue of his office for storage of merchandise in
bonded
Page 72 U. S. 650
warehouses, from the twentieth day of January, 1858, to the
sixteenth day of April, 1861, inclusive, but not more than two
thousand dollars in any one year, as he lawfully might do.
Plaintiffs demurred, and the defendants joined in demurrer. Parties
were heard and the circuit court overruled the demurrer and
rendered judgment for the defendants, and the plaintiffs sued out
this writ of error.
I. 1. All controversy as to the material facts of the case, so
far as they are set forth and well pleaded in the rejoinder of the
defendants, is closed. Applying that well known rule to the case,
it follows that the demurrer admits that the whole amount retained
by the collector, as alleged in the replication, accrued and was
received by that officer in virtue of his office as storage of
imported merchandise in bonded warehouses, and that he never
received from that source during the period embraced in this
controversy more than two thousand dollars in anyone year. Views of
the defendants are that the collector had a right, under the fifth
section of the Act of the third of March, 1841, as construed by
this Court, to retain to his own use all sums received from
storage, not exceeding two thousand dollars in anyone year, as
compensation for his services. [
Footnote 1] By the fifth section of that act, collectors
are directed to render a quarter-yearly account,
in addition to
the account previously required by law, and to include in it
all sums collected for fines, penalties, and forfeitures, or from
seizures of merchandise, or on account of suits for frauds against
the revenue, or for rent and storage in the public storehouses for
which a rent is paid beyond the rents paid by the collector.
2. Construction of that section, as given by this Court, was
that collectors must include all sums received for rent and storage
in the public stores beyond the rents which they paid, in their
quarterly accounts, and if it appeared from such accounting that
the aggregate sums so received in any one year exceeded two
thousand dollars, they must pay the excess into the Treasury, as
part and parcel of the public
Page 72 U. S. 651
money. Such excess, under that law as construed, belongs to the
Treasury, but if the sums received from that source in any one year
did not exceed two thousand dollars, the court held that collectors
might retain the whole amount to their own use, as additional
compensation for their services. [
Footnote 2]
3. Sources of their compensation prior to that time were certain
fees or emoluments, commissions and allowances, to which was added
a prescribed sum, called salary, which was much less than the
compensation to which such officers were at all times entitled.
They were also entitled to certain proportions of fines, penalties,
and forfeitures, but were never before obliged to embrace such
receipts in their quarterly accounts.
Statement of the court in that case was, and it was undoubtedly
correct, that the bill, as originally reported, not only required
that the sums so received should be included in the quarterly
accounts of collectors, but if the aggregate from all those
sources, including fines, penalties, and forfeitures, exceeded two
thousand dollars in any one year, collectors were required to pay
the excess into the Treasury.
Radical amendments, however, were made in the bill during its
passage essentially changing its character in that respect. Fines,
penalties, and forfeitures, as it passed into a law, are not
required to be included in the aggregate of the accounts from which
to deduct the two thousand dollars in order to ascertain the excess
to be paid into the Treasury, and inasmuch as fees and emoluments
were previously required to be included in the quarterly accounts
of collectors as the principal source of their compensation, under
such previous laws, the court held, and well held, that there was
nothing left for that part of the section which directed the
payment of the excess into the Treasury to operate upon except the
sums received from rent and storage. Conclusion of the court
therefore was -- and it was a unanimous conclusion -- that
collectors might, if the office earned so much, retain to their own
use, as an addition to the compensation
Page 72 U. S. 652
allowed to them by previous laws, the sum of two thousand
dollars per annum for rent and storage, but that all excess beyond
that sum must be paid into the Treasury as public money.
II. 1. None of these principles is controverted by the
plaintiffs, nor do they contend that the fifth section of that act
has been repealed. Storehouses used for the storing of imported
merchandise were such at that date as were owned by the United
States and such as were leased by the collectors under the
direction of the Treasury Department. Imported merchandise might in
certain cases be stored for a limited time without the payment of
duties unless sooner withdrawn for consumption. Where the entry of
merchandise was incomplete, the fifty-second section of the act of
the 28th of February, 1799, required that the importation should be
conveyed to some warehouse or storehouse to be designated by the
collector, there to remain, with due and reasonable care, at the
expense and risk of the owner or consignee under the care of some
proper officer until the invoice was exhibited and the value was
ascertained by appraisement.
2. Goods damaged during the voyage were also required to be
deposited in some warehouse or storehouse to be designated by the
collector in the same manner and subject to the same conditions as
where the entry of the goods was incomplete, to be kept until the
extent of the damage could be ascertained in the same way.
[
Footnote 3]
3. Persons importing teas also might pay or secure the duties
before a permit was granted for landing the same, on the same terms
as prescribed in respect to other imported merchandise, or they
might, at their option, give bond, without security, to the
collector of the district for the payment of the duties in two
years from the date of such bond; but the teas so imported in that
event are required to be deposited, at the expense and risk of the
importer, in one or more storehouses to be agreed upon between the
importer and the revenue officer of the port. [
Footnote 4]
Page 72 U. S. 653
4. Wines and distilled spirits might also, under the Act of the
20th of April, 1818, be warehoused "in such public or other
storehouses" as might be agreed upon between the importer and
surveyor or other public officer of the revenue where the wines or
other distilled spirits were landed. [
Footnote 5]
Whether deposited in the public or "other storehouses," under
either of those acts, the goods imported were to be kept under the
joint locks of the importer and inspector of the revenue, and no
delivery of the same could be made unless the duties were first
paid or secured, nor without a permit in writing under the hand of
the collector and naval officer of the port. [
Footnote 6]
Custody and control were the same whether merchandise was
deposited in the public or other storehouse, and whether in the one
or the other, the expenses of safekeeping were to be paid by the
importer, owner, or consignee. Importer and the proper revenue
officer might agree upon a store as the place of deposit other than
those few warehouses then owned by the United States, but when the
locks of the inspector and of the importer were affixed to the
doors of the same as required by law and the merchandise as
imported was deposited therein under the control of the collector,
it became a public storehouse for the purpose of securing the
importation until the duties should be paid or secured and the same
should be withdrawn by authority of law.
5. Provision was also made in the sixth section of the Act of
the 14th of July, 1832, that imported wool and the manufactures of
wool might, at the option of the importer, be placed in the public
stores under bond at the risk of the importer, subject to
the
payment of the customary storage and charges, and to the
payment of interest at the rate of six percent per annum while so
stored. [
Footnote 7]
Effect of that law was to diminish the compensation of
collectors, as it made large additions to the free list and to
increase the demand for storehouses for public use, as it
authorized the warehousing of a large class of importations never
before entitled to those privileges.
Page 72 U. S. 654
Resort was had by Congress to additional compensation acts,
passed annually for the period of eight years, to remedy the first
difficulty, and the second was overcome without legislation by
storing the merchandise as imported at the expense and risk of the
importer in storehouses designated by the collector or in such as
were agreed upon between the importer and the revenue officer or in
stores owned by private persons and leased for that purpose by the
collector for limited periods. Commerce and trade revived, and the
practice of leasing such storehouses at certain ports became
general, and "the customary storage" collected from the importers
at such offices greatly exceeded the amount paid as rent to the
owner of the stores, and, as there was no law of Congress requiring
collectors to account for the excess, it was retained to their own
use, and at some ports swelled their receipts beyond the standard
of a reasonable compensation.
III. 1. Such was the state of affairs in this behalf when
Congress passed the Act of the 3d of March, 1841, to which
reference has already been made. Express provision of that act was
that no collector shall, on any pretense whatsoever, hereafter
receive, hold, or retain for himself, in the aggregate, more than
six thousand dollars per year, including all commissions for duties
and all fees for storage, or fees or emoluments, or any other
commissions or salaries which are allowed and limited by law.
Collectors were required by the second section of the Act of the 2d
of March, 1799, called the Compensation Act, to keep accurate
accounts of all fees and official emoluments by them received and
to transmit the same to the Comptroller of the Treasury, but they
were allowed to retain to their own use the whole amount of
emoluments derived from those sources. [
Footnote 8]
2. Maximum rate of compensation was first prescribed by the Act
of the 30th of April, 1802, and the provision was that whenever the
annual emoluments of any collector, after deducting the
expenditures incident to the office, shall
Page 72 U. S. 655
amount to more than five thousand dollars, he shall account for
the surplus, and pay the same into the Treasury. [
Footnote 9]
Districts for the collection of the customs were, by the Act of
the 7th of May, 1822, divided into two classes, usually denominated
the enumerated and the nonenumerated ports, and the maximum rate of
compensation to collectors was diminished. Emoluments of collectors
for the seven enumerated ports might reach, under the provisions of
that act, the sum of four thousand dollars, but could not exceed
that amount under any circumstances.
Annual compensation allowed to the collectors of the
nonenumerated ports, of which Portland was one, might amount to
three thousand dollars, and the provision in respect to both
classes was, that the excess, after deducting the expenses incident
to the office, should be paid into the Treasury as public money.
[
Footnote 10]
3. The contest in
Walker's Case was whether or not he
was entitled, as the collector of a nonenumerated port, to an
annual compensation of six thousand dollars. He claimed that he was
because, as he insisted, the maximum rate of compensation to the
collectors of those ports, as prescribed by the Act of the 7th of
May, 1822, was repealed, and consequently that he was entitled to
four thousand dollars under the ninth section of that act and two
thousand dollars from the receipts of his office for storage, as
allowed by the fifth section of the act under consideration. But
this Court held that the maximum rate prescribed in the prior law
allowed to the collectors of the nonenumerated ports was not
repealed, but was in full force as to all the emoluments of
collectors prescribed or recognized in that act.
Unanimous conclusion of the Court therefore was that collectors
of the nonenumerated ports might receive, as the annual
compensation for their services the sum of three thousand dollars
from the sources of emoluments prescribed and recognized in that
act, and in addition thereto might retain whatever sums came to
their hands within the year from
Page 72 U. S. 656
rent and storage, provided the storage did not exceed two
thousand dollars. Plaintiffs concede that such was the decision of
this Court in that case and they do not deny that it was correct,
but they contend that it does not control the present case because,
as they insist, the storage received in that case was storage in
stores leased to the government, for which rents were paid beyond
the rent paid by the collector.
4. Amount retained by the collector in this case accrued and was
received for storage of imported merchandise in bonded warehouses,
and the plaintiffs contend that bonded warehouses are not public
storehouses within the meaning of that act. They are mistaken,
however, in supposing that the amount retained by the collector in
that case was wholly received for storage of goods stored in the
public storehouses for which rents were received beyond the rent
paid by the collector. On the contrary, the bond of the collector
in that suit was dated the seventh day of September, 1850, more
than four years after the Act of the sixth of August, 1846,
establishing the warehouse system, was passed.
Date of the writ in that case was the twenty-first day of
November, 1856, more than seven years after the Treasury
regulations of the seventeenth of February, 1849, making provision
for bonded warehouses, were adopted and promulgated.
IV. 1. Importations of every kind might be entered for
warehousing under the first section of the act establishing the
warehouse system, and when so entered, the requirement was that the
goods "shall be taken possession of by the collector" and be
deposited in "the public stores or other stores" to be agreed on by
the collector and the importer, owner, or consignee. Public stores,
as well as the "other stores" are required to be under the joint
locks of the importer and the proper revenue officer, as provided
in the act respecting the deposit of wines and distilled spirits
and the "other stores," as well as the public stores, so called,
are expressly recognized
in the same section as public
storehouses, because it is there provided that if the goods so
deposited
Page 72 U. S. 657
shall remain "IN PUBLIC STORE
beyond one year, without
payment of the duties and charges thereon, then the goods" shall be
appraised and sold by the collector at public auction. [
Footnote 11]
Such goods are not only required to go into the possession of
the collector and be thus deposited under his control, but they are
also required to be kept by him in the place of deposit at the
charge and risk of the importer, owner, or consignee. Every
provision of the section assumes that the goods, whether deposited
in the public stores or the other stores therein mentioned, are in
the possession and under the control of the collector, and they
cannot be withdrawn for consumption without paying the duties, nor
for transportation or exportation without paying the appropriate
expenses.
2. Authority to make rules and regulations was conferred upon
the Secretary of the Treasury by the fifth section of that act.
Pursuant to that authority, he promulgated the regulations of the
seventeenth of February, 1849, and from that time it was the policy
of the department to discontinue leased stores as far as possible,
and substitute bonded warehouses in their place. Bonded warehouses,
under those regulations, were divided into three classes:
First. Public stores and stores leased by the
department prior to the date of the regulations.
Second. Stores in the possession and sole occupancy of
the importer, and placed under a customs lock and that of the
importer,
to be used only for the purpose of storing his
own importations. Such importers furnished their own stores, and of
course paid no rent, but they were required as importers to pay a
sum equivalent to the salary of an inspector, or
half-storage to the collector.
Third. Stores in the occupation of persons desirous of
engaging in the business of storing dutiable merchandise. Importers
storing goods in such stores paid rent to the owner, but they also
were required to pay a sum equivalent to the
Page 72 U. S. 658
salary of an inspector or half-storage to the collector, as in
the other class of stores.
Both of those classes are called private bonded warehouses
because they were the property of their owners and were not
formally leased to the United States, but no store could be
constituted such a warehouse unless it was a first-class fireproof
store according to the classification of insurance offices and was
first proved to be such to the satisfaction of the Secretary of the
Treasury, and was by him
authorized to be used for the
storage of dutiable merchandise. Until so selected by the Secretary
of the Treasury and the bond given by the owner as required, no
store of a private owner could be used for the storing of dutiable
importations, and when so selected and bonded and placed under the
customs locks, the store was under the control of the collector,
and was as much a public storehouse as one owned or formally leased
by the United States. [
Footnote
12]
3. Same regulations provide that all moneys received by
collectors from owners or occupants of private bonded stores in
payment
for half-storage or for the attendance of an
inspector at the premises will be accounted for
as receipts for
storage in their accounts with the department. Evidence is not
wanting to show that the department has constantly recognized the
subsisting operation of the provision under consideration in
relation to storage. Throughout the period since its passage, the
department has required collectors to include the sums received
from storage in their quarterly accounts, and if the provision is
in force for that purpose, it is difficult to see why it is not
also in force as authorizing the allowance to collectors.
Express recognition of its subsisting operation is also found in
one of the adjudications of the department in which it was decided
that where
"goods are stored under bond in a private store the importer
shall either make monthly payment of a sum equivalent to the pay of
an inspector placed in charge of the same, or
one-half the
amount which would
Page 72 U. S. 659
accrue as storage on the goods so stored if placed in
public store. [
Footnote
13]"
Implied recognition of the rule as here laid down is found in
the daily transactions of the department with the collectors of the
seven enumerated ports. They are not only required to return all
sums received as storage, but they are allowed six thousand dollars
per annum as compensation for their services, which is exactly two
thousand dollars beyond what they are entitled to receive, unless
the latter sum can properly be allowed from the amount which
annually accrues and is collected and returned by them as
storage.
4. Direct decision of this Court in the case of
Walker
was that they were not entitled to but four thousand dollars under
previous laws, and there has been no legislation upon the subject
since that time, except that the fortieth section of the Act of the
eighteenth of July, 1866, provided that all moneys received by
collectors for the custody of goods, wares, and merchandise in
bonded warehouses, shall be accounted for as storage under the
provisions of the act which is the foundation of the collector's
claim in this case.
Sums received for storage not exceeding two thousand dollars in
any one year, if duly included in their quarterly accounts, are as
much due to the collectors of the nonenumerated ports as to the
incumbents of the larger offices, and their right to the same rests
on the same foundation. Purpose of the act establishing the
warehouse system, and of the regulations which followed that
enactment, was to discontinue leased stores and to substitute
bonded warehouses in their place, and the leases of such stores
were accordingly required to be cancelled, by the subsequent act
extending the system, at the shortest period of their termination,
and the making of new leases was expressly forbidden at ports where
there were private bonded warehouses. [
Footnote 14]
5. Necessity has always existed since the Treasury Department
was established for more storehouses for the deposit and
safekeeping of imported merchandise than the
Page 72 U. S. 660
government owned, and it cannot be doubted that all such as have
been placed under the control of the collectors, and put under the
customs locks, and used for that purpose in conformity to law and
the regulations of the Treasury Department, were, during the period
they were so controlled, used, and occupied public storehouses
within the meaning of the provision requiring collectors to include
receipts for storage in their quarterly accounts and allowing them
to retain out of the same a sum not exceeding two thousand dollars
in any one year.
Judgment affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
5 Stat. at Large 432.
[
Footnote 2]
United States v.
Walker, 22 How. 299.
[
Footnote 3]
1 Stat. at Large § 52, p. 665.
[
Footnote 4]
Ibid., § 62, p. 673.
[
Footnote 5]
3 Stat. at Large 469.
[
Footnote 6]
1
id. 674; 3
id. 469.
[
Footnote 7]
4
id. 591
[
Footnote 8]
1 Stat. at Large 708.
[
Footnote 9]
2 Stat. at Large 172.
[
Footnote 10]
3
id. 693.
[
Footnote 11]
9 Stat. at Large 53.
[
Footnote 12]
Clark v. Peaslee, Massachusetts District, October Term
1862. Treas. Cir. and Dec. by Ogden, p. 118.
[
Footnote 13]
Cir. No. 4, 1857.
[
Footnote 14]
10 Stat. at Large 272.