Chung Yune v. Kelly

14 F. 639, 8 Sawy. 415, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2801
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 F. 639 (Chung Yune v. Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chung Yune v. Kelly, 14 F. 639, 8 Sawy. 415, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2801 (uscirct 1882).

Opinion

Deady, D. J.

This action is brought to recover from the defendant the sum of $423.96, alleged to have been unlawfully collected by him from the plaintiff as duties on certain merchandise entered at this port by the latter. It is alleged in the complaint that on September 20, 1879, the plaintiff entered at the custom-house in Portland 148 boxes of merchandise," weighing 11,684 pounds, of the value of $367.20, as sago flour, an article exempt from duty under the laws of the United States, upon which the defendant, as collector of said port, imposed and collected a duty of $423.96, which the plaintiff was thereby compelled to pay, and that the plaintiff duly appealed from the decision of the defendant to the secretary of the treasury, [640]*640•who affirmed the same, whereupon the plaintiff brings this action, etc. The defendant, by his answer, admits the allegations of the complaint, but denies “that said merchandise was or is sago flour,” or exempt from duty; and, as a further defense, alleges that said merchandise was not “in fact sago flour, ” but “was starch not made from corn or potatoes, but some material to the defendant unknown, and as such starch was and is subject” to the duty collected thereon by the defendant. The case was tried with a jury, and there was a verdict and judgment for the defendant. The plaintiff moved for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence.

A number of similar cases were pending against the defendant, and one — Tond Duck Chung v. Kelly — had been tried by the court, with a finding for the plaintiff on April 23, 1879, and afterwards retried with a jury, with a verdict for the plaintiff on January 13, 1880. The court not deeming the evidence produced on the trial by either party, as to the identity of the article in question, as satisfactory as it should be, for want of some known or admitted sample of sago flour with which to make a microscopic comparison of the granules of the former, postponed the consideration of the motion for a new trial until the trial of one of the other pending cases, before which it was expected that the parties would procure some samples of sago from Singapore, the place where the plaintiff claims that his flour came from, as a standard of comparison. Since then the case of Chung Yune v. Kelly, has been tried with a. jury, and a verdict found for the defendant on December 8, 1882.

On the trial of this latter case it satisfactorily appeared, from the testimony of a witness sent to Singapore by the treasury department during the past summer, that sago flour is made in Singapore from the pith of the sago palm, (sagus Rumphii,) grown there on plantations for that purpose; and that a root flour is made there from the root of a species of the genus manihot, also grown there on plantations for that purpose. The flour made from this root is called by the Chinese, who are principally employed in the plantations and factories, ling fane, root, or wood flour. It is also known in the books and in commerce as cassava meal, from which is made the tapioca of commerce, sometimes called Brazilian arrow-root, from the fact that it is probably indigenous to Brazil, from whence it has been introduced into other parts of tropical America, Florida, Africa, and the Bast Indies. Amer. Cyelo.- “ CassavaNat. Dis. Stille & Maisch, “Tapioca.” Its early use and origin is suggested by a provision con[641]*641tained In an agreement made early in the sixteenth century between Andres Nino and the king of Spain, by which that royal adventurer agreed to aid the latter in an expedition to the South sea — the Pacific ocean west of Panama — for “gold, silver, pearls, and precious stones,” by furnishing for its use, at Jamaica, among other things, “2,000 loads of cassava root and 500 hogs.” 1 Ban. His. P. S. 480, No. 2. But whether the cassava was intended as food for the “people” of the expedition or the “hogs” does not distinctly appear — probably for both. Samples of the flour or meal of the palm and the cassava, thus obtained from the plantations on the island of Singapore, were produced in court on the trial, and the article in question was subjected to a microscopic examination and comparison with these, and the evidence of the experts was unqualifiedly to the effect that, judging from the size and shape of the starch granules, the article imported by the plaintiff is not sago flour, and is cassava or root flour. And upon a personal examination of the granules of the three articles with the aid of the microscope, the difference in size and shape and the location of the hilum between those of the Singapore sago and the article in question was very marked, while the resemblance in those particulars between the granules of the latter and the cassava was equally manifest.

In the present case, as well as that of Chung Yune v. Kelly, the issue to be tried arose upon the allegation of the plaintiff that the article imported was sago flour, and the denial of the same by the defendant.

The goods were entered by the plaintiff as sago flour, and he protested against the payment of duties upon that ground alone. His right to maintain this action at all depends upon the statute, (section 3011, Eov. St.,) and he cannot recover under it unless he protested in writing against the payment of the duties, stating therein, “distinctly and specifically,” the grounds of such protest. Nichols v. U. S. 7 Wall. 126; Mason v. Kane, Taney, 176; Thomson v. Maxwell, 2 Blatchf. 385; Warren v. Peaslee, 2 Curt. 235.

The burden of proof is upon the plaintiff, and before he can recover lie must prove the truth of his allegation and protest that this article is sago flour. And therefore it is that it is of no avail to the" plaintiff in this action that it now appears that this article is not dutiable, and ought not to have been charged with duty, because root flour, tapioca, and cassava are all on the free list as well as sago. Rev. St. 488, 489.

[642]*642An issue was also made in the pleadings as to whether this article is “starch” made from some material other than potatoes, corn, or rice, and, as such, liable to pay a duty of three cents per pound and 20 per centum ad valorem, under schedule M, page 481, of the Revised Statutes. This issue was tendered by the defendant, and in the trial of it the burden of proof is upon him. It is probably an immaterial issue, as it is not apparent how any finding upon it could control or affect the final judgment in the case. But evidence and argument was given and made to the jury upon it at the trial without objection; and in the case of Chung Yune v. Kelly, it being manifest that there must be a verdict for the defendant upon the ground that the merchandise was not sago flour, the court, to enable the parties to have the benefit of the trial on this point, if the same should in any way become material hereafter, instructed the jury, if they found a ' verdict for the defendant, to find the answer to the following question, then submitted to them in writing, (Or Code Civil Proc. § 212), — “Is the article in question, and imported and entered by the defendant, a starch known to commerce as such, and made and intended to be used primarily by laundrymen in the stiffening and polishing of clothes” — to which the jury answered “No.”

This answer is undoubtedly according to the law and the fact.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 F. 639, 8 Sawy. 415, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chung-yune-v-kelly-uscirct-1882.