In the forenoon of March 3, 1875, A. stamped, sold, and removed
for consumption or use from the place of manufacture certain
tobacco which, under sec. 3368 of the Revised Statutes, was subject
to a tax of twenty cents per pound. On the afternoon of that day,
the President approved the Act of March 3, 1875, 18 Stat. 339,
increasing the tax to twenty-four cents per pound, but providing
that such increase should "not apply to tobacco on which the tax
under existing laws shall have been paid when this act takes
effect."
Held that the increase of tax under that act did
not apply to the tobacco so stamped, sold, and removed.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE HUNT delivered the opinion of the Court.
The facts of this case, as agreed upon, were these:
That Burgess was collector of internal revenue for the Third
Collection District of Virginia, and in that capacity exacted from
and received of Salmon & Hancock, and paid into the Treasury of
the United States the sum of $377.80, as an additional tax of four
cents a pound on a quantity of tobacco belonging to them. It was
thus exacted on the third day of March, 1875, under the act of that
date, which provides as follows:
"That sec. 3368 of the Revised Statutes be amended by striking
out the words 'twenty cents a pound' and inserting in lieu thereof
the words 'twenty-four cents a pound. . . .
Provided that
the increase of tax herein provided for shall not apply to tobacco
on which the tax under existing laws shall have been paid when this
act takes effect."
18 Stat. 339.
The act contains also the provision following,
viz.:
"Every person who removes from his manufactory tobacco without
the proper stamp being affixed and cancelled . . . shall, for each
offence, be fined not less than $1,000 and not more than $5,000,
and be imprisoned not less than one year and not more than two
years. "
Page 97 U. S. 382
The tobacco in question was stamped, sold, and removed for
consumption or use from the place of manufacture, and beyond the
control of Salmon & Hancock, in the forenoon of March 3, 1875,
and the above-named act of Congress was approved in the afternoon
of that day, after the stamping and removal of this tobacco, which,
when removed, had been stamped at twenty cents a pound. Payment of
the additional four cents a pound was made under protest, and an
appeal to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue regularly taken and
overruled.
The manufacturers brought suit to recover back the amount and
recovered judgment in the court below. The collector thereupon sued
out this writ of error.
The case presents but a single point: can a manufacturer be
punished, criminally and civilly -- civilly here -- for the
violation of a statute when the statute was not in force at the
time the act was done? In other words, can a person be thus
punished when he did not contravene the provisions of the statute?
In still other words, can one be punished for offending against the
provisions of a statute from the effects of which he was expressly
exempted?
We are relieved by the agreed statement, to which reference is
made, from examining a question of importance and perhaps of
difficulty respecting the
punctum temporis when a statute
takes effect. Does it, as the collector contends, have operation in
the present instance on the third day of March, 1875, and cover the
whole of that day, commencing at midnight of March the second? If
the time may be inquired into to ascertain at what hour or what
fraction of an hour of the day the form of the law becomes
complete, is it to be ascertained by the court as a question of
law, or to be decided as an issue of fact?
It is agreed by the parties to the record that in fact the duty
of twenty percent had been paid on the tobacco in question, and it
had been removed from the storehouse, before the Act of March 3,
1875, took effect, and we content ourselves by acting upon that
agreement.
We are of opinion that the government must fail, upon the facts
agreed upon, to-wit, that the duty of twenty percent had
Page 97 U. S. 383
been paid and the tobacco had been removed before the act had
been approved by the President. The seventh section of Article I of
the Constitution of the United States provides that every bill
which shall have passed the House of Representatives and the Senate
shall, before it becomes a law, be presented to the President of
the United States. If he approve, he shall sign it, but if not he
shall return it, with his objections, to that House in which it
originated, . . . who shall proceed to reconsider it. If any bill
shall not be returned by the President within ten days (Sundays
excepted) after it shall have been presented to him, the same shall
be a law, in like manner as if he had signed it, unless the
Congress, by their adjournment, prevent its return, in which case
it shall not be a law.
In the present case, the President approved the bill, and the
time of such approval points out the earliest possible moment at
which it could become a law, or, in the words of the Act of March
3, 1875, at which it could take effect.
In
Lapeyre v. United
States, 17 Wall. 191, it was said
obiter,
"The act became effectual upon the day of its date. In some
cases, it is operative from the first moment of that day. Fractions
of the day are not recognized. An inquiry involving that subject is
inadmissible."
The question involved in that case was whether a proclamation
issued by President Johnson, bearing date of June 24, 1865,
removing certain restrictions upon commercial intercourse, took
effect on that day, or whether it took effect on the day it was
published and promulgated, which was on the 27th of the same month.
It was held by a majority of this Court that it took effect from
its date. The question was upon the 24th or the 27th of June, and
the point of the portion of a day was not involved. While the
general proposition may be true that where no special circumstances
exist, the entire day on which the act was passed may be included,
there is nothing in that case to make it an authority on the point
before us.
In
Matter of Howes, 21 Vt. 619, it appeared that the
Bankrupt Act was repealed March 3, 1843. Howes presented his
petition on that day, and it was held that he was too late, that on
questions of that nature there can be no divisions of a day.
Page 97 U. S. 384
In
Matter of Welman, 20
id. 653, the question
was the same, and decided in the same way. While stating the
general rule as above, the court said they agreed with Lord
Mansfield in
Coombs v. Pitt, 4 Burr. 1423, that in
particular cases, the very hour may well be shown when it need and
can be done.
Arnold v. United
States, 9 Cranch 104, is in affirmance of the same
general principle. The Act of July 1, 1812, there discussed,
provided
"That an additional duty of one hundred percent upon the
permanent duties now imposed by law . . . shall be levied and
collected on all goods, wares, and merchandises which shall, from
and after the passage of this act, be imported into the United
States from any foreign port or place."
The goods were brought into the Collection District of
Providence on the first day of July, 1812. The Court said,
"The statute was to take effect from its passage, and it is a
general rule that where the computation is to be made from an act
done, the day on which the act is done is to be included."
See the case of
Richardson, 2 Story 571,
decided by the same judge, sustaining the view just taken.
In the present case, the acts and admissions of the government
establish the position that the duties exacted by law had been
fully paid, and the goods had been surrendered and transported
before the President had approved the act of Congress imposing an
increased duty upon them.
To impose upon the owner of the goods a criminal punishment or a
penalty of $377 for not paying an additional tax of four cents a
pound would subject him to the operation of an
ex post
facto law.
An
ex post facto law is one which imposes a punishment
for an act which was not punishable at the time it was committed,
or a punishment in addition to that then prescribed.
Carpenter v. Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania, 17 How. 456.
Had the proceeding against Salmon & Hancock been taken by
indictment instead of suit for the excess of the tax, and the one
was equally authorized with the other, the proceeding would
certainly have fallen within the description of an
ex post
facto law.
In
Fletcher v.
Peck, 6 Cranch 87, it was decided that an
Page 97 U. S. 385
act of the legislature by which a man's estate shall be seized
for a crime which was not declared to be an offense by a previous
law was void.
In
Cummings v.
Missouri, 4 Wall. 277, it was held that the passage
of an act imposing a penalty on a priest for the performance of an
act innocent at the time it was committed was void.
To the same purport is
Pierce v.
Carskaden, 16 Wall. 234.
The cases cited hold that the
ex post facto effect of a
law cannot be evaded by giving a civil form to that which is
essentially criminal.
Cummings v. Missouri, supra;
Potter's Dwarris 162, 163, note 9.
Judgment affirmed.