Barber v. Schell

107 U.S. 617, 2 S. Ct. 301, 27 L. Ed. 490, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1256
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 19, 1883
Docket1126
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 107 U.S. 617 (Barber v. Schell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber v. Schell, 107 U.S. 617, 2 S. Ct. 301, 27 L. Ed. 490, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1256 (1883).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blatchford

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit commenced in 1863, by the members of the firm of S. Cochran & Co., against the collector of the port of New York. As tried in the Circuit Court it involved the recovery back of duties paid on cotton laces and' cotton insertings imported from abroad in 1857,1858,1859,1860, and 1861, and of fees paid at the custom-house. Thé laces and insertings were composed wholly of cotton, and were “ either bleached or dyed.” The collector charged a duty on them of twenty-four per cent ad valorem, the importers claiming that the'proper duty was nineteen per cent ad valorem. At the trial the court *618 instructed tlie jury that the duty was correctly assessed and that the plaintiffs could not recover.

The question as to the fees involved four items. On the presentation of an invoice and an entry, the collector, before he would receive them as collector, impressed on each invoice, for the convenience and security of himself and the government, a stamp or certificate, certifying in the name of a deputy collector that the invoice was presented “on entry” on such a day. On each entry, one of the plaintiffs was requii’ed to make and subscribe before the collector or his deputy the owner’s or consignee’s oath. For each of such stamps the collector exacted twenty cents, and for each of such' oaths twenty cents. He also exacted a fee of twenty cents for' each permit to land the merchandise embraced in each entry on which the duties had been paid or secured, such permit being signed by the collector and the naval officer. Said three fees of twenty cents were paid with the duties, and otherwise no permit for the landing and delivery of the goods could be obtained. The permit to land covered all the goods embraced in the entry; but at least one package of each invoice, and. one package in every ten packages of each invoice, were, by order ’óf the collector, designated on each invoice, and each entry, and also on the permit, to be sent, and were sent, to the public store for examination and appraisement; and, after they bad been examined and appraised and reported on, an order was required by the plaintiffs’ firm, signed by the collector alone, to the storekeeeper, to deliver such examined packages to the plaintiffs’ firm. For every such order, without which the examined packages could not be obtained, the collector exacted a fee of twenty cents. At the trial, the plaintiffs conceded that the fee for the permit was legal. The court directed a verdict for the plaintiffs for the amounts exacted for the other three fees, with interest, being $1,734.80,-and, after a judgment for the plaintiffs therefor, with costs, the plaintiffs sued out a writ of error based on their failure to recover the alleged excess of duty exacted on the laces and insertings, and the defendant sued out a writ of error based on the recovery for the three alleged illegal fees.

• By schedule D of the act of July 80, 1846, c. 74, a duty of twenty-five per cent ad valorem was imposed on “ cotton laces, *619 cotton insertings, ■ cotton trimming laces, cotton laces and braids,” and “ manufactures composed wholly of cotton, not otherwise provided for.”

By sect. 1 of the act of March 3, 1857, c. 98, it was enacted that after July 1, 1857, ad valorem duties should be imposed in lieu of those then imposed on imported goods, as follows: “ Upon the articles enumerated in schedules A and B ” of the tariff act of 1846, a duty of thirty per cent, “ and upon those enumerated in schedules O, D, E, F, G, and H of said act,” the duties of twenty-four, nineteen, fifteen, twelve, eight, and four per cent, respectively, “ with such exceptions as are hereinafter made.” The schedules above mentioned respectively imposed duties of one hundred, forty, thirty, twenty-five, twenty, fifteen, ten, and five per cent.

Thus far cotton laces and cotton insertings, being in schedule D of the act of 1846 at twenty-five per cent, were reduced by the act of 1857, with the other articles in schedule D, to nineteen per cent. But sect. 2 of the act of 1857 provided “ that all manufactures composed wholly of cotton, which are bleached, printed, painted, or dyed, and dela.ines, shall be transferred to schedule C.” Under this provision it would seem very plain that the goods in the present case were subject to a duty of twenty-four per cent, and not of nineteen per cent. If sect. 1 of the act of 1857 had merely reduced from twenty-five per cent to nineteen per cent the duty on the articles specially mentioned in schedule D of the act of 1846, without exception, the duty on the goods in question would have been reduced to nineteen per cent. But the enactment was distinct that there should be excepted out of the reduction “ all manufactures composed wholly of cotton, which are bleached, printed, painted, or dyed, and delaines,” and that they should go into schedule C, the twenty-four per cent schedule.

The contention for the plaintiffs is, that as cotton laces and cotton insertings were made dutiable by those names in the act of 1846, they are not to be affected by the subsequent general provision as to manufactures composed wholly of cotton.

Schedule C of the act of 1846 imposed a duty of thirty per cent on “ cotton cords, gimps and galloons,” and on “ manufactures of cotton, ... if embroidered or tamboured in the loom, *620 or otherwise, by machinery, or with the needle, or other process.” Schedule E imposed a duty of twenty per cent on “ caps, gloves, leggins, mits, socks, stockings, wove shirts and drawers, made on frames, composed wholly of cotton, worn by men, women, and children,” and on “ velvet, in the piece, composed wholly of cotton.” These provisions, and the one in schedule D as to cotton laces, &c., relate to goods made of cotton entirely. Those goods are all of them goods to which, as “ manufactures composed wholly of cotton,” sect. 2 of the act of 1857 applies, transferring them, when bleached, printed, painted, or dyed, to the twenty-four per- cent schedule, schedule C. The duty on them liad been thirty, twenty-five, and twenty per cent respectively. But for such transfer the new duty on those in schedules D and E would "have been nineteen and fifteen. A new uniform rate of twenty-four was imposed, and while the thirty was reduced by six per cent, the twenty-five was reduced by only one, and the twenty was increased by four. This indicates an intention, in the act of 1857, to impose, in general, on manufactures composed wholly of cotton, when bleached, printed, painted, or dyed, a relatively higher duty as compared with other articles named in the act of 1846.

The expression “ manufactures composed wholly of cotton ” is not found in the act of 1846. It is in that act qualified by the words “ not otherwise provided for.” In the act of 1857 the expression is,“ all manufactures composed wholly of cotton, which are bleached,” &c. If the words “ manufactures composed wholly of cotton,” unqualified, and the words “ cotton laces” and “cotton insertings,” had all of them been found in the act of 1846, as the general expression would not have embraced, the specific terms in that act, for dutiable purposes, though including them in general language, it would be reasonable to say that the general expression in a later act would not include the specific terms for dutiable purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
107 U.S. 617, 2 S. Ct. 301, 27 L. Ed. 490, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-v-schell-scotus-1883.