Bartram v. Robertson

15 F. 212
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 F. 212 (Bartram v. Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartram v. Robertson, 15 F. 212 (S.D.N.Y. 1883).

Opinion

Wallace, J.

The demurrer to the complaint presents the question whether the plaintiffs are entitled to recover duties alleged to have been illegally exacted by the defendant, as collector of the port of New York, upon the following facts: The plaintiffs, in March and April, 1882, imported several invoices of sugars and molasses, which were the produce and manufacture of the island of St. Croix, a part of the dominions of the king of Denmark, upon which the defendant exacted and collected duties at the rates imposed on sugars and molasses by the act of congress of July 14, 1870, as amended by the acts of December 22, 1870, and March 3, 1875. These acts prescribe the duty to be collected upon all sugars and molasses of designated grades.

[213]*213Since 1857 there has existed a treaty between the United States and Denmark, one stipulation of which is as follows: “No higher or other duties shall be imposed on the importation into the United States of any article, the produce or manufacture of the dominion of his majesty the king of Denmark, * * * than are or shall be payable on the like articles being the produce or manufacture of any other foreign country.”

In 1875 a treaty was concluded between the United States and the Hawaiian islands whereby several specified articles, among them being sugars and molasses, but “being the growth, manufacture, or produce of the Hawaiian islands,” were to be admitted to all the ports of the United States free of duty. This treaty was not to take effect until a law to carry it into operation should have been passed by congress. In 1876 the necessary legislation was passed, and, upon due proclamation by the president, the treaty became operative and has ever since remained in force.

The plaintiffs duly protested against the exaction of duties upon their importation, insisting that, by force of the treaties and legislation referred to, their importations, being the produce and manufacture of the dominions of Denmark, were exempt from duties, and no other or higher duties could lawfully be imposed upon them than were payable upon like articles when the growth, manufacture, or produce of the Hawaiian islands. Having taken all the requisite preliminary steps required by statute, plaintiffs brought this action to recover the duties exacted by the defendant. They now rely upon the position that the Danish treaties operates to limit the duties on Danish products to the amount collectible under the Hawaiian treaty upon Hawaiian sugar and molasses.

The consideration of the case will be simplified by assuming, without extended discussion, that the stipulation of the Danish treaty is operative and controlling, except so far as it has been annulled by the subsequent laws of congress. When the provisions of a treaty by their terms, or by reasonable implication from their subject-matter, require legislative action to carry them into effect, they do not operate of themselves. The Danish treaty contained two stipulations, in separate articles, that required the payment of money on the part of the United States. The other stipulations, including the one under consideration, could execute themselves. Congress made the necessary appropriation for the payment of the moneys promised. 11 St. at Large, 261. No further action on its part seemed necessary, and its silence when the subject was before it is significant as a leg[214]*214islative construction that it was not required to speak. ' That congress had the power to annul this treaty, s'o far as it might have validity as a rule of municipal law, is not disputed. Both treaties- and acts of congress are, under the constitution, the supreme law of the land, and each are of equal authority within the sphere of the • constitutional power of the respective departments of the government by which they are adopted; therefore the treaty or the act of congress is paramount, according as it is the latest expression of the will of the law-making power. Ropes v. Clinch, 8 Blatchf. 304; Taylor v. Morton, 2 Curt. C. C. 454; Gray v. Clinton Bridge, Woolw. 150; Cherokee Tobacco, 11 Wall. 616.

Assuming the stipulation of the Danish treaty and that also of the Hawaiian treaty to be completely operative, the question in the case may, in one aspect, be considered as one of construction, to ascertain the meaning and result of several laws, adopted at different times, relating to the general subject of duties to be imposed on importations-from foreign countries. By the earliest law, the Danish treaty, all importations, the product of the Danish dominions, are to be free from the payment of higher duties than may be imposed upon products when imported from any other foreign country. By a later law—the several acts of congress imposing duties—specific duties are laid upon enumerated articles, irrespective of the countries whence they are imported; and by the latest law—the Hawaiian treaty—importations, the products of the Hawaiian islands, are exempted from duty. This question would certainly be presented in a light the most favorable to the plaintiffs by viewing their case as though the Danish treaty being in force, congress had subjected all sugars and molasses to specified duties, excepting the sugars and molasses the product of the Hawaiian islands.

It cannot be fairly, claimed that the Hawaiian treaty has more vigor than this would concede to it. Giving it this effect, an authority directly in point and adverse to the plaintiffs is found in Taylor v. •Morton, supra. In that case a treaty between the United States and Russia contained a stipulation in the identical language of the Danish treaty, (8 St. at Large 446,) and by the tariff act of 1842 congress imposed a duty of $40 per ton on all hemps, “excepting Manilla, Suira, and other hemp3 of India,” on which a duty of $25 only was laid. The collector of the port having exacted a duty of $40 per ton upon hemp imported from Russia, an action was brought to recover the difference between that duty and the duty collectible on the hemps of India, upon- the ground that by force of the Russian [215]*215treaty no higher duty could be exacted than was leviable upon the hemps of India. It was urged that the tariff act should be read as though the Russian hemp were excepted as well as the Indian hemp. The court refused to sanction the suggestion, stating “that it would do violence to the language of the act, and would force into it an exception which it does not contain.”

Irrespective of the authorities of Taylor v. Morton, and considered as an original proposition, there would seem to be no reasonable foundation for the plaintiff’s contention. By the legislation of congress passed subsequent to the Danish treaty, the duties on importations from Denmark, as well as on all other importations, were imposed as congress had the right to prescribe them. It is not for the court to say that congress did not intend to prescribe the duties it laid, or incorporate an exception into the legislation which was not expressed. The court cannot assume that congress was ignorant of the stipulation in the Danish treaty, and cannot undertake to decide whether Congress meant to ignore that stipulation or to recognize it. The judiciary must take the legislation as it finds it. It may interpret and construe, when the language of legislation permits, but here its powers and duty end. Grant that every intendment should be implied in favor of the observance of treaty obligations, hero is an explicit enactment which leaves no room for implication.

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartram-v-robertson-nysd-1883.