Caldwell v. United States

49 U.S. 366, 12 L. Ed. 1115, 8 How. 366, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1678
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 23, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 49 U.S. 366 (Caldwell v. United States) 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
Caldwell v. United States, 49 U.S. 366, 12 L. Ed. 1115, 8 How. 366, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1678 (1850).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

We shall direct the reversal of the judgment of the Circuit Court in this case, on account of three erroneous instructions which were given to the jury. The prayers upon which those instructions were given are the fifth, sixth, and seventh.

*379 They involve the question, as-to the time when the right of forfeiture attaches upon the entry of goods invoiced at less than their value at the place of exportation, under a statute which declares in such a case, that either the goods, or the value of them, shall be forfeited.

The instructions were' given by the learned judge in the court below, upon the supposition that they were required by the decision which this court made in "Wood’s case, 16 Peters, 342, particularly upon account of a sentence in the opinion at the three hundred and sixty-fifth page of the volume.

It was supposed to be a repetition in that case of what had been adjudged by the court, in the cases of The United States v. 1960 Bags of Coffee, and in The Brigantine Mars, 8 Cranch, 398, 417. Or that those cases did not permit instructions to be given to the jury as they were asked by the counsel for the claimants, and did permit the court to give the following: — That the title of the United States vested in the goods entered upon an undervalued invoice, at the time the fraud was committed, and the law authorized the United States to seize the goods wherever they might be found.

Neither of the cases mentioned authorizes such a conclusion. There is a sentence in Wood’s case, from which it may be made, unless it is carefully considered in connection with the last of the paragraph and with the first part of the next. That sentence is, — “ But under the sixty-sixth section no such allegations would be necessary or proper, as the forfeiture immediately attaches to every entry of goods falsely and fraudulently invoiced, without any reference whatever to the mode or the circumstances under or by which it was ascertained.”

The sixty-sixth section of the act to regulate the collection of duties upon imports and tonnage, (1 Statutes at Large, 677,) is, “ that if any goods, wares, or merchandise, of which entry shall have been made in the office of a-collector, shall not be invoiced according to the actual cost thereof at the place of exportation, with design to evade the duties thereupon, or any part thereof, all such goods, wares, and 'merchandise, or the value thereof, Jo be recovered from the person making the entry, shall be forfeited.”

It cannot be correctly said, when the declaration of forfeiture is disjunctively one or the other, of either the goods or their value, that the forfeiture upon the fraudulent entry necessarily and compulsively comprehends the first, to the exclusion of the value of the goods, which is also said may be a forfeiture ■— that is, that the goods are forfeited with a right in the government to assert a forfeiture of the value too, where the pen *380 alty for the fraud committed can only be One of them, and not both; or that when this court said in Wood’s case, speaking of the sixty-sixth section, that “forfeiture immediately attaches to every entry of goods falsely and fraudulently invoiced,” it was not intended to embrace either or both penalties, between which the United States might make its election for the punishment of the fraud.

That such is the meaning of the sentence already cited from Wood’s case is shown by the court’s recognition,..in the next, of the alternative forfeiture of the value of the goods, to be recovered of the person making, the false entry; and, also, by the use it makes of it, to show that the sixty-sixth section had not been repealed, because no such provision exists in the acts of 1830 or 1832, and no subsequent act covers all the cases provided for by it. The point in discussion in that part of the opinion was, whether the sixty-sixth section of the act of 1799, ch. 22, had been repealed, or whether it was in full force. The court, arguing against the repeal, used the alternative forfeiture in it of the value of the goods, and the want of the same in other acts, to show that it was still in full force; in that way satisfactorily establishing that the words, “ the forfeiture immediately attaches to every entry of goods falsely and fraudulently invoiced,” apply to the entry; not to make the goods a vested forfeiture in the United States, but to show that the right in the United States to either forfeiture is coexistent with the commission of the fraud.

But if the explanation given of that part of Wood’s case shall not bé as satisfactory to others as it is to ourselves, though we think it will be so to all .persons, we then say, that the point there in discussion, concerning the sixty-sixth section, is altogether different from that which we are here considering under the same section; and that any declaration concerning it used argumentatively, only to show a difference between it and other statutes in a point of pleading, as is the fact in that part of the opinion, cannot be an applicable authority, much less controlling, when the inquiry under the • same statute is its meaning in. respect to the attachment of penalties in it for its violation.

In Wood’s case, the point in discussion is, that the United States aré not entitled to recover under the third count in that information, because the sixty-sixth section of the act of Congress, passed' the 2d of March, 1799, entitled “an act to regulate the collection of duties on imports, &c.,” was not in force when the goods mentioned in the count were imported.

The point we. are now considering, arising under the same *381 section, is, Are goods entered upon an invoice not according to the value thereof at the place of exportation, with design to evade the duties thereon or any part thereof, eo instanti upon the false entry a forfeiture to the United States, so as to avoid an intermediate sale of them to a bona fide purchaser, or one altogether ignorant of the fraud, and in no way connected with the perpetrator of it, except in buying the goods from him for a fair price ? The claimants in this case contended, in the trial in the Circuit Court, that neither under the sixty-sixth nor .the sixty-eighth section were the goods, eo instanti upon the commission of the fraud, forfeited to the United States, “ if the goods seized had been fairly and bond fide purchased by them, without any knowledge by them of their being liable to seizure, and were, at the time of the,seizure, openly exposed by them for sale in their stores, though the goods had been ifraudulently or falsely invoiced or entered,- provided the claimants were in no way parties thereto.” And, that though the goods in question had been invoiced at less than actual cost of them at the place of exportation, with design to evade the duties thereon, the United States had no title in the goods until they made their election, either to recover the goods themselves, or the value thereof. And that any rights in said goods acquired bond fide by third persons in the mqan time are protected against the right of forfeiture under the sixty-sixth section.

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Bluebook (online)
49 U.S. 366, 12 L. Ed. 1115, 8 How. 366, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-v-united-states-scotus-1850.