Andrae v. Redfield

1 F. Cas. 856, 12 Blatchf. 407, 1875 U.S. App. LEXIS 1169
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York
DecidedJanuary 19, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 F. Cas. 856 (Andrae v. Redfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrae v. Redfield, 1 F. Cas. 856, 12 Blatchf. 407, 1875 U.S. App. LEXIS 1169 (circtndny 1875).

Opinion

WOODRUFF, Circuit Judge.

The bill of complaint herein is filed by the several plaintiffs in sixty separate actions at law, each brought to recover from the defendant an alleged excess of duty, illegally- exacted by the defendant while collector of the port of New York. The payment of the various amounts exacted in excess of duty is alleged to have been made under protest, by the respective plaintiffs in the actions at law, dt various dates in the years 1853, 1854, 1855, 1856 and 1857. It is not stated in the bill on what precise day the said several sixty actions at law were commenced, but it is inferrible, from what is stated, that they were commenced in May, 1864, about seven years after the defendant went out of office, as such collector, which was July 1st, 1857. In November, 1866, he pleaded, in those actions, among other defences, the statute of limitations. To the replications to those pleas demurrers were interposed, but issue was finally joined in April, 1872, and the cases were in apparent readiness for trial [857]*857for several terms, bat were postponed from term to term: In March, 1874, this bill was filed, the several plaintiffs in those actions at law uniting herein as complainants. The defendant has filed a general demurrer. The only relief sought by the bill is an injunction, to restrain the defendant “from prosecuting or maintaining, upon the trial of any of the said sixty suits, his plea of the statute of ■limitations, and from claiming or insisting, on said trials, upon any defence thereunder, and from, in any way or manner, claiming or pretending, in said sixty actions, or any of them, that the statute of limitations is a bar thereto.”

The alleged excess of duty consists of two items or particulars: 1st. That, in ascertaining the dutiable value of the goods imported, the defendant erroneously included the expense of transportation from’ the principal market in the country from which they were imported, to the place of shipment; 2d. That he also erroneously included in such dutiable value a higher rate of commissions than the usual or customary rate for purchases made at the places from which the importations were made.

The bill is liable to some criticism for want of clearness, certainty and definiteness in many particulars; and it introduces many matters which occurred after the defendant ceased to be collector, to which he was not a party, which, even if they tend to show that the duties were illegally assessed, as matter of law, ought not, in any manner, otherwise to prejudice the defendant, nor to affect his right to defend the said actions by any legal defence. It may be gathered from the bill, that the facts relied on as grounds for- the injunction are, that, at some time, the bill does ■ not state when, though its language may, perhaps, warrant the inference that it was prior to February 1st, 1856, the circuit court of the United States for the southern district of New York and the circuit court of the United States for the district of California, in suits, in like cases, brought by other importers, decided that similar exac-tions were illegal; that the amounts of the exactions in those cases were refunded by the secretary of the treasury; that, on the 1st of February, 1856, the secretary of the treasury published a general regulation, declaring that freight or transportation from the foreign port of shipment to the port of importation, or from the place of production or manufacture to another port, for shipment or transhipment to the United States, is not a dutiable charge; that, on the 4th of October, 1S56, the secretary of the treasury addressed a letter to this defendant, in these words: “Sir — On application being made to you by Messrs. A. Iselin & Co. and others, of New York, you are authorized and directed to cause to be prepared the usual certified statements for return of ‘duty on freight,’ in such cases where the same has been found to have been paid in excess, as decided by this department in general regulations, No. 63, p. 22, and under written protest, and transmit same to this department, for its consideration;” and that, on the 27th of. May, 1S57, the secretary of the treasury addressed another letter to the defendant, in the following terms: “Sir — I am in receipt of your letter of the 26th inst., transmitting a report of the U. S. appraisers in relation to-the “usual commissions’ charged in China, Sweden, Norway, Holland and German ports, and have to state, in reply, that you will cause to be prepared and transmitted to this department the usual certified statements of return of the duty exacted in errojfc in all cases where it is found that the said duty has been on a rate of commission greater than the usual rate chargeable in the above named countries.” It is not averred, in the bill, that any of the goods imported by the complainants in this suit were imported from either of the countries named in this letter, nor are the terms of general regulation No. 63 stated, so as to show specifically that the claims of these complainants in the several actions at law were embraced within the said letter of the- previous 4th of October. These facts are, however, assumed as at least recognizing the principle claimed by the complainants, and the bill avers, that these letters determined and established the complainants’ right to the return of the excess of moneys “so paid by them severally for duties,” though it is not alleged that these letters were communicated to them by the secretary of the treasury, as a guide to their conduct in bringing suits, or otherwise, or were written or intended for the purpose of influencing them in that matter. If, however, it were conceded that the rights of the complainants to have returned to them the moneys so paid, or the moneys for which they ultimately brought their said several actions, were thereby determined and established, it is not very obvious that these letters constituted an excuse to the plaintiffs for not bringing suit within six years after their causes of action accrued, which should deprive the defendant of his defence, unless it be on the ground that a court of equity should, in all cases, enjoin a defendant from setting up the statute of limitations as a bar, if it appear clear that the cause of action was originally good and valid, as to which the observations of the court, touching the purpose and policv ^ ■¡•“n tutes of limitations as statutes of repose, in Levy v. Stewart, 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 249; U. S. v. Wiley, Id. 513; and Leffingwell v. Warren, 2 Black, [67 U. S.] 599, — are of some significance. The power of a court of equity cannot be invoked to annul statutes of limitation on any such ground.

The bill then avers, that the complainants furnished to the auditor of the New York custom house statements of particulars, to enable him to prepare the certified state-[858]*858meats called for by the aforesaid instructions of the secretary of the treasury, and that, before November 1st, 1859, all the particulars of their claims were furnished to ■such auditor. The occurrences which — if it be- conceded that the plaintiffs had, prior thereto, valid causes of action — alone bear on the question, whether the complainants give such reasons as should move a court of equity to exercise the extraordinary power of enjoining the defendant from availing himself of his legal defence to suits brought against him, are, in substance, as alleged in the bill, the following: That, in the summer of 1859, the plaintiff’s attorney suggested to such auditor, Mr. S. G.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 856, 12 Blatchf. 407, 1875 U.S. App. LEXIS 1169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrae-v-redfield-circtndny-1875.