Chaffee & Co. v. United States

85 U.S. 516, 21 L. Ed. 908, 18 Wall. 516, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1326
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by125 cases

This text of 85 U.S. 516 (Chaffee & Co. 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
Chaffee & Co. v. United States, 85 U.S. 516, 21 L. Ed. 908, 18 Wall. 516, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1326 (1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice FIELD

delivered the opinion of the court.

The object of the demurrer to the declaration was to raise the question whether the penalty prescribed by the forty-eighth section of the Revenue Act of June 30th, 1864, was intended to apply to any persons except those in whose possession, custody, or control the goods seized are found, and who thén hold them for the purpose of sale, with design to. avoid the payment of the duties. That section authorizes the forfeiture of dutiable goods when held for sale with that design, and of the raw materials and tools intended for use in the manufacture of such goods, and imposes a penalty upon the person who, with that purpose and design, has the goods *537 iii his possession or custody, or under his control. It is the possession with the unlawful purpose that the act was intended to reach by a forfeiture of the goods found with the party, and the punishment of such party. The defendants contend that such possession must exist when the seizure is made; the government insists that it is immaterial when the possession existed, if it was accompanied at the time with the unlawful purpose.

When this case was argued the court consisted only of eight judges, and upon the question raised by the demurrer they are equally divided in opinion, and therefore no decision can be had thereon.

It does not appear by the record on what special grounds the motion in arrest of the judgment was made, but it was assumed in the argument of counsel that not only the question, which we have already mentioned as arising upon the demurrer, was presented ou the motion, but also the further question, whether the action, being debt against several, and the plea being nil debit, judgment could be entered against any less than the whole number surviving, except upon a plea of personal disability of the acquitted defendant, not inconsistent with the truth of the original declaration, such as coverture, infancy, or bankruptcy. The action was originally brought against four defendants, Highlaud Chaffee, Sidney Chaffee, William Chaffee, and Hutchins, who are described as late partners doing business under the firm name of II. D. Chaffee & Co. During the progress of the cause Highland Chaffee died. William Chaffee pleaded that he was not, at the time designated in the declaration, or at any other time, a member of the firm of H. D. Chaffee & Co., or interested in its business, and on the trial the plaintiffs abandoned their claim against him and allowed judgment to pass iii his favor. Sidney Chaffee and Hutchins pleaded both not guilty, and nil debet, and the verdict of the jury was that the defendants owed the plaintiffs the sum of two hundred and thirty-five thousand and six hundred and eighty dollars, in manner and form as they had complained, against them. Now the argument is, that as the declaration *538 alleges a joint liability of all the defendants, the plea of nil debet by two of them — that they were not indebted to the plaintiffs in manner and form as alleged — puts in issue such joint liability, and the finding against the two with the acquittal of the other, showed that the plea of nil debet was true, aud that there was no such joint liability, but the contrary established; and, therefore, the judgment should be arrested. The answer to the argument is, that the rule stated as to the effect of the plea of nil debet only'- applies where the action is debt upon a simple contract. The action of- debt lies for a ¡statutory penalty, because the sum demanded is certain, but though in form ex contractu, it is founded in fact upon a tort. The necessity of establishing a joint liability in such cases does not, therefore, exist; it is sufficient if the liability of any of the defendants be shown. Judgment may be entered against them aud in favor of the others, whose complicity in the offence, for which the penalty is prescribed, is not proved', precisely as though the action were in form as well as in substance ex delicto.

The testimony admitted on the trial, to which the defendants specially excepted, consisted of the certificate-books of certain collectors of foils on the Miami Canal. That canal extends from Cincinnati to Toledo, in Ohio, passing through Tippecanoe. The nearest collector’s office north of this place Avas at Piqua, the nearest south of it was at Dayton. Between these points there were four distilleries, thrfee besides that of the defendants. The canal belongs to the State, but was leased in 1861 to private parties for ten years, Avhieh term Avas extended, in 1867, for ten years more. The act of the legislature authorizing the lease provided that it should vest in the lessees such rights, privileges, and franchises then exercised by the State, as might be necessary to manage, control, and keep in repair the canal and collect tolls for its navigation, with the right to appoint superintendents and collectors, who should exercise the same power' and authority in the collection of tolls aud water rents and the levy of fines, as could then be exercised by similar officers and agents 'appointed by the State; and that the lessees *539 should be governed by the rules and regulations for navigating the canals then in force, subject to such alterations as might thereafter be established by law. By an act of the State then in force, passed in 1840, * no boat or float was allowed to start on a voyage on the canal without having a clearance from the collector at the nearest point of departure, or to pass any collector’s office on the canal without producing the clearance with its bills of lading. In order to obtain the clearance, the master of the boat or float was required to present the bills of lading to the collector, and before it could be issued, it was the duty of the collector to make out from the bills of lading, in a book to be provided for that purpose, a certificate containing a description of the articles composing the cargo of the boat or float, properly classified and designated with reference to the rates and amount of tolls chargeable thereon; and that certificate was to be signed by the master, and, if required, its correctness was to be attested by his oath or affirmation. On the arrival of the boat or float at its place of destination, no part of the cargo could be unladen, landed, or removed from the canal until the clearance and bills of lading were presented to the collector at the place and his permit obtained.

It was proved on the trial that, between the dates mentioned in the declaration, the defendants had paid taxes on over six thousand barrels of whisky manufactured by them. But the plaintiffs endeavored to prove that a larger quautity was transported by vessel or rail from Tippecanoe between these dates, and -that there was no other distillery at that place, except the one owned by the defendants, from which it could have been received; and thus show that the defendants had had in their possession or custody within that period, distilled spirits for sale with the design of avoiding the payment of duties thereon, as alleged in the declaration. For this purpose they gave in evidence, against the objection of the defendants, the certificate-books of the collectors of *540

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Bluebook (online)
85 U.S. 516, 21 L. Ed. 908, 18 Wall. 516, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaffee-co-v-united-states-scotus-1874.