1. An action of debt cannot be maintained by the United States
to recover the penalties prescribed by the fourth section of the
act of Congress approved July 18, 1808 (14 Stat. 179), entitled "An
Act to prevent smuggling, and for other purposes." That act
contemplated a criminal proceeding and not a civil remedy.
2. Nor does sec. 3082 of the Revised Statutes authorize a civil
action.
3. A recital in a statute that a former statute was repealed or
superseded by subsequent acts is not conclusive as to such repeal
or supersedure. Whether a statute was so repealed is a judicial,
not a legislative, question.
4. A statute covering the whole subject matter of a former one,
adding offenses and varying the procedure, operates not
cumulatively, but by way of substitution, and therefore impliedly
repeals it. In the absence of any repealing clause, it is, however,
necessary to the implication of a repeal that the objects of the
two statutes are the same. If they are not, both statutes will
stand though they refer to the same subject.
5. The second section of the Act of Congress of March 3, 1823, 3
Stat. 781, entitled "An Act to amend an act entitled
An Act
further to regulate the entry of merchandise imported into the
United States from any adjacent territory,'" was supplied by the
fourth section of the Act of July 18, 1866, supra, and
thereby repealed. Stockwell v. United
States, 13 Wall. 531, reviewed.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE STRONG delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action of debt brought by the United States to
recover the amounts of several forfeitures or liabilities alleged
to have been incurred by the defendants in consequence of their
having received, concealed, and bought goods, wares, and
merchandise illegally imported, knowing them to have been illegally
imported and liable to seizure. The declaration contains thirty
counts. Of these, the first and every alternate odd numbered one is
founded on the Act of Congress of March 3, 1823. 3 Stat. 781, c.
588 sec. 2. They charge illegal importations at different times
between Dec. 1, 1871, and Sept. 1,
Page 97 U. S. 547
1873, inclusive; also receipts, concealments, or purchases of
the goods by the defendants between the first mentioned date and
Sept. 2, 1873, inclusive, with knowledge that the goods had been
illegally imported. All the other counts, those even numbered, are
founded upon the fourth section of the Act of July 18, 1866. 14
id. 179, c. 201, sec. 4. The importations, receipts,
concealments, or purchases charged in these counts are averred to
have taken place at the times designated in the odd numbered
counts.
To the entire declaration the defendants interposed a general
demurrer, upon which the circuit court gave judgment in their
favor. Whether this judgment was correct is the underlying question
we have now to consider. That the counts framed under sec. 4 of the
act of 1866 cannot be sustained is too clear for debate, and the
government very properly has abandoned them as unsustainable. That
act contemplated a criminal proceeding, and not a civil action of
debt. It imposed a penalty for receiving, concealing, buying,
selling, or in any manner facilitating the transportation,
concealment, or sale of goods illegally imported. The penalty was a
fine on conviction, not exceeding $5,000 nor less than $50, or
imprisonment, or both, at the discretion of the court. It is
obvious, therefore, that its provisions cannot be enforced by any
civil action, certainly not in an action of debt.
The single question left, then, is whether the counts founded on
the act of 1823 are sustainable. The second section of that act was
as follows:
"That if any person or persons shall receive, conceal, or buy
any goods, wares, or merchandise, knowing them to have been
illegally imported into the United States and liable to seizure by
virtue of any act in relation to the revenues, such person or
persons shall, on conviction thereof, forfeit and pay a sum double
the amount or value of the goods, wares, or merchandise so
received, concealed, or purchased."
If this section was in force in 1871, 1872, and 1873, when the
illegal importations alleged in this case were made, it is not
denied that the odd numbered counts in the declaration have a
sufficient basis on which to stand, and that the demurrer
Page 97 U. S. 548
should have been overruled. But the defendants contend that the
section was repealed by the act of 1866 so far as it can affect
transactions occurring after the passage of the later act, and such
was the opinion of the circuit court. The act of 1866 did not
expressly repeal the second section of the act of 1823. The
forty-third section repealed several acts specified by it, some
prior and others subsequent to the act of 1823, and concluded with
the sweeping clause, "and all other acts and parts of acts
conflicting with or supplied" by it. If, therefore, it worked a
repeal of the said second section, it must be because it supplied
the provisions of that section or was in conflict with them. And
such supply and repugnance must plainly appear. The circuit court
placed some reliance -- their principal reliance, indeed -- upon
the action of Congress when the Revised Statutes were enacted in
1874. Those statutes undoubtedly repealed the act of 1823, if it
had not been repealed before. In sec. 5596 it was thus enacted:
"All acts of Congress passed prior to said first day of
December, 1873, any portion of which is embraced in any section of
said revision are hereby repealed, and the section applicable
thereto shall be in force in lieu thereof, all parts of such acts
not contained in such revision having been repealed or superseded
by subsequent acts, or not being general or permanent in their
nature."
As a portion of the act of 1823 was carried into the Revised
Statutes,
see sec. 3099, and the second section was not,
that section was covered by the repealing clause, unless it had
been repealed before. But that clause indicates a belief on the
part of Congress that it had been previously repealed, and
doubtless that it was repealed by the act of 1866. The indication
is found in the words that declare all parts of acts not contained
in the revision, but other portions of which are, to have been
repealed or superseded by subsequent acts. This, however, though
entitled to great respect, ought not to be considered as more than
an expression of opinion or a recital of belief. It is not in the
form of an enactment. It is not a declaration of congressional
will. It is not a rule for the future. It certainly is not
conclusive that the second section was repealed or superseded by
the act of 1866 or by any other act
Page 97 U. S. 549
prior to the enactment of the revision. Whether a statute was
repealed by a later one is a judicial, not a legislative, question.
And even a declaratory act or an act directing how a former act
shall be construed is inoperative on the past, though controlling
in future.
Postmaster General v.
Early, 12 Wheat. 136.
It is therefore still a question of judicial construction
whether the second section of the act of 1823 was in fact repealed
by the act of 1866 -- that is, whether it was in conflict with that
later act or supplied by it -- for as we have said, the act of
1866, while repealing expressly certain prior acts particularly
described (the act of 1823 not being one of them), repealed only
such other acts or parts of acts as were in conflict with it or
were supplied by it.
In
Stockwell v. United
States, 13 Wall. 531, the question was before us.
That was an action of debt brought by the United States to recover
double the value of certain importations alleged to have been
illegally made and received, concealed, or bought by the defendants
with knowledge that the goods had been illegally imported. The
action was founded on the second section of the Act of March 3,
1823, as are the counts we are now considering. The importations
were made and the goods were received and sold before the passage
of the act of 1866. We held that the action would lie, and, as the
jury found the defendants knew the goods had been illegally
imported, that they had incurred the liabilities imposed by the
second section of the act of 1823. Hence we gave judgment in favor
of the United States. We are still of the opinion that the judgment
was correct. for even if the act of 1823 was repealed by that of
1866, the liabilities incurred under it before its repeal were
preserved, if not by the forty fourth section of the repealing act,
certainly by the Act of Feb. 18, 1867, entitled "An Act
supplementary to an act to prevent smuggling, and for other
purposes," approved July 18, 1866. The first section of that act
enacted as follows:
"That the provisions of the Act of Congress approved July 18,
1866, entitled 'An Act to prevent smuggling, and for other
purposes,' shall be so construed as not to affect any right of suit
or
Page 97 U. S. 550
prosecution which may have accrued under any prior act of
Congress repealed or supplied by said act previous to July 18,
1866, and all such suits or prosecutions as have been or shall be
commenced under such prior acts for acts committed previous to July
18, 1866, shall be tried and disposed of, and judgment or decree
executed, as if said act of July 18, 1866, had not been passed,
anything therein contained to the contrary notwithstanding."
As the offenses charged in that case occurred before the act of
1866 was passed, they were within this declaratory act, and
therefore the act of 1823 was enforceable against the
offenders.
The act of 1867 was not called to our notice when the case of
Stockwell v. United States was before us. If it had been,
it would have been unnecessary to consider at all whether the act
of 1866 had repealed any former acts. But in the absence of any
reference to it, we felt called upon to inquire whether the act of
1823 was repealed by the enactment of 1866, and we held that its
second section was not, certainly not so as to affect that suit,
brought to enforce liabilities incurred before the later act was
passed. It is true that in reaching this conclusion, we took
broader ground. We argued that the second section of the act of
1823 and the fourth section of the act of 1866 were not in conflict
with each other, and that the former was not supplied by the
latter. We regarded the first as a remedial provision intended to
secure compensation for interference with the rights of the United
States, and for that purpose giving a civil remedy, while the
second was, as we thought, strictly penal, and not at all remedial.
Our inference, therefore, was that the later act did not supply the
provisions of the former, and should not be regarded as a
substitute for them. A further consideration, however, and a more
extended examination than we were then able to give the subject,
have led us to doubt the correctness of the opinion we expressed
when the case of
Stockwell was before us, though not the
correctness of our judgment in the case. The real question is was
the act of 1866 intended by Congress to be a substitute for the
second section of the act of 1823? When it was enacted, Congress
had in view as well the offense described in the act
Page 97 U. S. 551
of 1823 as other offenses against the revenue laws. It mentions
in
ipsissimis verbis the offense created by that act. Its
provisions are also broader in their scope. It includes offenses by
importers. It adds to the offenses described in the act of 1823
selling the illegally imported goods and facilitating in any manner
their transportation, concealment, or sale after their importation,
knowing them to have been imported contrary to law, and for each of
these offenses, as well as for those described in the act of 1823,
it imposes a forfeiture of the goods and prescribes a fine on
conviction not exceeding $5,000 nor less than $50, or imprisonment,
or both, at the discretion of the court.
What, then, was its effect upon the prior statute? The
principles of legal construction to be applied to such a case are
well known. While repeals by implication are not favored and while
it is held that a statute is not repealed by a later one containing
no repealing clause unless the later statute is positively
repugnant to the former or is a plain substitute for it, supplying
its provisions, it is still true that repeal or no repeal,
substitution or no substitution, is a question of legislative
intention, and there are acknowledged rules for ascertaining that
intention.
In
Michell v. Brown, 1 El. & El. 267, it was ruled
in the Court of Queen's Bench that if a later statute again
describes an offense created by a former statute, and affixes a
different punishment to it, varying the procedure, &c., the
later operates by way of substitution, not cumulatively, and the
former statute is repealed. A similar rule was asserted by Baron
Bramwell in
Ex Parte Baker, 2 H. & N. 219. So in
Barry v. Croydon Gas Co., 15 C.B.N.S. 568, an act imposing
a penalty of �200 upon the undertaker of any gas works for
fouling any stream, &c., to be recovered by the person into
whose water the foul substance should be conveyed, was held to
repeal by implication a former act describing the same offense and
imposing the same penalty, to be sued for by any common informer.
The two penalties were held not to be cumulative. The principle of
these rulings has been frequently recognized by courts in this
country.
In
Norris v.
Crocker, 13 How. 429, it was said by
Page 97 U. S. 552
this Court,
"As a general rule, it is not open to controversy that, where a
new statute covers the whole subject matter of an old one, adds
offenses, and prescribes different penalties for those enumerated
in the old law, the former is repealed by implication, as the
provisions of both cannot stand together."
That was a case in most points much like the present. The older
statute had imposed a penalty for certain offenses -- namely,
obstructing a claimant in arresting a fugitive from labor, rescuing
the fugitive after his arrest, or harboring and concealing him with
knowledge that the was a fugitive, and the statute had enacted that
the claimant might recover the penalty for his own benefit, and
also reserved to him a right of action in damages for the actual
injuries he might have sustained, be they more or less. The later
statute imposed a greater penalty and added imprisonment for the
same offenses, gave no right to the claimant to recover the
penalty, but gave him a right to recover by way of damages the sum
of $1,000, for each fugitive lost by reason of the offenses. This
Court held that the two statutes were in conflict, and consequently
that the earlier was repealed.
It is, however, necessary to the implication of a repeal that
the objects of the two statutes are the same, in the absence of any
repealing clause. If they are not, both statutes will stand though
they may refer to the same subject. Maxwell on the Interpretation
of Statutes 153. This consideration had weight with us when
Stockwell v. United States was decided. We then regarded
the act of 1823 not so much punitive as remedial. This seemed to us
to be evinced by the fact that the amount recoverable under that
act by the United States was made proportional to the value of the
goods wrongfully concealed or bought, and not in the least
proportional to the degree of criminality of the act of receipt,
purchase, or concealment. Hence we regarded the claim for double
the value of the goods concealed, received, or bought as only a
claim for indemnity for abstracting goods forfeited for illegal
importation. And we thought the object of the act of 1866 was only
to punish the offense criminally. If this were truly the purpose of
the acts, their objects would not have been the same, and therefore
the second statute could not be regarded as repealing the
Page 97 U. S. 553
former. But a renewed and more careful examination of the two
statutes, aided as it has been by the argument of counsel, has
convinced us that Congress, in the act of 1866, had in view not
only punishment of the offense described, but indemnity to the
government for loss sustained in consequence of the criminal
conduct of those guilty of the offense. The later act denounces a
forfeiture of the goods concealed, &c., no matter in whose
hands they may be found. If the forfeiture of double the value of
the goods denounced by the act of 1823 was designed to secure
indemnity to the government for the wrong done, the forfeiture of
the goods themselves, declared in the act of 1866, must have been
intended for the same purpose, and the fine and imprisonment were
superadded as a vindication of public justice. If this is so, as we
now think it is, the act of 1866 supplied the provisions of the
second section of the act of 1823, and consequently would have
repealed them had it contained no repealing clause. But the
forty-third section of the act of 1866 expressly repealed "all
other acts and parts of acts conflicting with or supplied by it."
If the act of 1823 was not in conflict with the fourth section of
the act of 1866, it was supplied by it, as we now think, and it
was, therefore, repealed.
It follows that no suit can be maintained, by force of the act
of 1823, for any acts done after the enactment of the act of 1866.
The demurrer was therefore well sustained.
Judgment affirmed.
NOTE -- In
United States v. Claflin, error to the
circuit court of the United States for the Southern District of New
York, which was argued at the same time and by the same counsel as
was the preceding case, MR. JUSTICE STRONG, in delivering the
opinion of the Court, remarked:
The declaration in this case, to which the defendants demurred
generally, contained fourteen counts, the first and each alternate
odd count of which rests upon the second section of the act of
Congress of March 3, 1823, entitled "An Act to amend an act
entitled
An Act further to regulate the entry of merchandise
imported into the United States from any adjacent territory.'" 3
Stat. 781. These counts all charge that the defendants, at various
times between the fourteenth day of February, 1874, and the
seventeenth day of November, 1874, inclusive, received, bought, and
concealed goods, wares, and merchandise illegally imported into the
United States, knowing the goods to have been illegally imported,
and they assert the right of the United States to recover the
double value of the goods. That such a recovery cannot be had,
because the second section of
Page 97 U. S.
554
the act of 1823 was repealed by the act of July 18, 1866, we
have ruled in United States v. Claflin, supra,, p.
97 U. S. 546. So
far as those counts extend, therefore, the demurrer to the
declaration was properly sustained.
The counts 2, 4, 6, and 8 are based upon the fourth section of
the act of 1866, which, as we have seen in the case mentioned,
contemplated only a criminal proceeding, and not a civil suit, as
this is. Those counts, therefore, have no foundation. The remaining
counts, Nos. 10, 12, and 14, are based upon sec. 3082 of the
Revised Statutes, which is but a reenactment of the act of 1866. It
was therefore correct that the circuit court sustained the demurrer
to the entire declaration.
Judgment affirmed.