Baxter v. Maxwell

2 F. Cas. 1054, 4 Blatchf. 32, 1857 U.S. App. LEXIS 514
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedApril 21, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 F. Cas. 1054 (Baxter v. Maxwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baxter v. Maxwell, 2 F. Cas. 1054, 4 Blatchf. 32, 1857 U.S. App. LEXIS 514 (circtsdny 1857).

Opinion

HALL, District Judge.

Looking only to the testimony, as stated in the case, I should infer that the jury must have found that the commercial name of the article in question is “hemp carpeting,” and not that it is “a manufacture of hemp.” If it is, in fact, “a manufacture of hemp,” it should be classed under Schedule E, which embraces “manufactures of hemp, not otherwise provided for,” and be deemed an enumerated article, chargeable with a duty of 20 per cent. If it is not “a manufacture of hemp,” (even though, by a long continuance of an original misnomer, it had acquired the commercial name of “hemp carpeting,” and might be properly classed as such,) then it must be deemed a non-enumerated article, and be chargeable with a like duty of 20 per cent., under the third section of the act. If the verdict had found, in express terms, that it was “a manufacture of hemp,” or that it was not a manufacture of hemp, but its commercial name or designation was “hemp carpeting.” though manufactured wholly of jute, there would have been little ground for controversy. But I do not understand, from the language of the case, that the verdict was special upon these two points, and I am left to infer the finding of the jury in respect thereto, from the evidence stated in the case, the charge of the judge, the general verdict of the jury, and the admissions of the counsel upon the argument of the case.

The case sets forth, that the court, in charging the jury, stated that it was their province to ascertain the commercial name of the article in question, and how it was bought and sold in commerce; that they were to find whether it belonged to the 30 per cent, schedule, as Wilton, Brussels, Aubusson, or other carpeting of similar fabric, or to the 20 per cent, schedule, as a “manufacture of hemp;” that, if it was known as “hemp carpeting,” and not by any other name, then it belonged to the 20 per cent, schedule; that, if the evidence did not satisfy the jury that the article came under the head of “a manufacture of hemp,” nor under the head of “wool carpet-ings,” then it was not known by any denomination in the act; that the case was resolved into a question of fact for the jury; and that, if the article was not known as “hemp carpeting,” and if they found it had no commercial name, then they were to find it to be a non-enumerated article. The case then adds: “The jury, under the instructions of the court, rendered a verdict for the plaintiffs for $1900, subject to adjustment at the custom-house, and subject also to the opinion of the court as to the sufficiency of the protests.”

[1056]*1056Tlie concluding portion of the charge is evidently not fully and correctly set forth in the case; and the verdict, if correctly set forth, is silent upon the question as to whether the jury deemed the article to be “a manufacture of hemp,” and therefore properly classed under Schedule E, or to he “hemp carpeting,” or “jute carpeting,” and therefore properly dutiable as a non-enumerated article. .It was, apparently, assumed, on the part of the defendant, on the argument, that the jury had found it to be “a manufacture of hemp,” though no hemp entered into its composition; and the charge of the court, as stated, may, perhaps, justify the inference, that the jury understood the court as ruling, that if the true commercial name of the article in question was “hemp carpeting,” they might properly find it to be “a manufacture of hemp,” although it was incontestably proved that no hemp was used in its manufacture, and that they were simply to say whether it was “a manufacture of hemp,” or embraced within the description of “carpeting” as defined in Schedule C. If the question were now before me for decision, I should, whilst recognizing the principle that the denomination of articles in tariff laws must be construed according to the commercial understanding of the terms used, and that, if the term “hemp carpeting” had been used in the tariff act of 1S40, it would, under the evidence stated in the case, have included the article in question in this suit, although it had been conclusively proved that it was manufactured from a fibre entirely different from, and never classed as, hemp, have great difficulty in adopting the opinion, that when the term, “a manufacture of hemp,” is used, it can properly include any article in the manufacture of which no material has been used which, in its raw state, or in the state in which it existed before its introduction into the particular manufacture, is, in fact, or in commercial parlance, embraced within the generic term, “hemp.” But this question is not directly before me, and I am inclined to think that, under the peculiar circumstances of the case, and me course adopted by the counsel upon the argument, it is not even incidentally in controversy.

The only question reserved by the case is that of the sufficiency of the protests. On the argument, it was conceded by the counsel for the defendant, that the protests upon seven of the entries were sufficient. It was, in like manner, conceded by the counsel for the plaintiffs, that there were no specific protests in respect to seven others of the entries, and that the plaintiffs had no right of action in respect to ■ the payment of duties on those entries, or any of them, unless the prospective portion of the protests on two of the first mentioned seven entries could be extended to and made to embrace entries subsequently made. The particular protests in regard to the sufficiency of which there was an argument at the hearing, were those i made in the cases of the Lady Franklin, the Columbia, the Ocean Queen, the American Eagle and the Invincible.

In the case of the Lady Franklin, the entry was of eleven bales, containing linens; and, in the invoice presented at the time of the entry, two of the packages were invoiced as “padding,” and the others as “carpeting.” The custom-house marks on this entry and invoice indicate, (as I understand them), that the contents of all the packages were returned, or denominated by the appraisers, as “jute carpeting,” and subjected to a duty of 30 per cent. The protest is “against paying 30 per cent duty on the ‘jute carpeting,’ contained in this entry, claiming that, by the act of 30th July, 1846, [9 Stat. 44, 45,] said goods are considered a non-enumerated article, and, as such, liable to a duty of 20 per cent.” This protest must, I think, be held to be insufficient. It claims that the article invoiced is non-enumerated, and that its true commercial designation is “jute carpeting,” while the jury have, as I think I am bound to assume, found it to be “a manufacture of hemp.” If they have found that it was “a manufacture of hemp,” (as the counsel on both sides have assumed,) it was an enumerated and not a non-enumerated article. Indeed, the parties have, by their counsel, deliberately agreed, that the protests which claim the article to be “a manufacture of hemp,” are sufficient; and this agreement necessarily involves the admission, for the purposes of the questions here presented, that it is a manufacture of hemp, and an enumerated and not a non-enumerated article. I therefore hold, that the protest in the case of this entry is not sufficient, and that the plaintiffs cannot recover in respect to any excessive payment made upon it.

The protest in respect to the payments under the entry'by the Columbia, is based upon the claim, that the article is a “manufacture of jute;” and, for the reasons just given, this protest must be held to be insufficient.

The protest in respect to the payments under the remaining tliree entries are severally based upon the claim that the article entered is “manufactured hemp,” which is a non-enumerated article.

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33 F. 336 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1887)

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Bluebook (online)
2 F. Cas. 1054, 4 Blatchf. 32, 1857 U.S. App. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baxter-v-maxwell-circtsdny-1857.