Cooper v. Dobson

157 U.S. 148, 15 S. Ct. 568, 39 L. Ed. 652, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2184
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 11, 1895
Docket179
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 157 U.S. 148 (Cooper v. Dobson) 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
Cooper v. Dobson, 157 U.S. 148, 15 S. Ct. 568, 39 L. Ed. 652, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2184 (1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shiras

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania by the firm of John and James Dobson against the collector of customs, to recover an alleged excess of tariff duties paid under protest. ~

The controversy was over the character of merchandise imported by the plaintiffs and claimed by them to be free from duty, but which was appraised by the officers of the government as subject to duty at the rate of ten cents a pound.

The question involves a construction of the tariff act of March 3, 1883, c. 120, 22'Stat. 487. The importers claim that the article imported by them was hair within the meaning of paragraph 717, page 519, which is in the following terms: “ Hai,r, horse or cattle, and hair- of all kinds, cleaned, or uncleaned, drawn or undrawn, but unmanufactured, not specially enumerated or provided for in this act,” to be free. ' *149 The collector classified the importation as goat hair under Schedule K, some of the terms of which were as follows:

“ All wools, hair of the alpaca, goat, and other like animals, shall be divided, for the purpose of fixing the duties to be charged thereon, into the three following classes:
“Class one, clothing wools.- — That is to say, merino, mestiza, metz, or metis wools, or other wools of merino blood.' etc. . . .
“ Class two, combing wools. — That is to say, Leicester, Cotswold, Lincolnshire, down combing wools, Canada long wools, or other like combing wools of English blood, and usually known by the terms herein used, and also all hair of the alpaca, goat, and other like animals.
“ Class three, carpet wools and other similar wools. — Such as Donskoi, native South America, Cordova, Valparaiso, native Smyrna, and including all wools of like character as have been heretofore usually imported into the United States from Turkey, Greece, Egypt, Syria and elsewhere.”

The schedule further provides that wools of the first class shall pay a duty of ten cents per pound} wools of the second class, and “all hair.of the alpaca, goat, and other like animals,” ten cents per pound; wools of the third class, two and a half cents per pound.

A duty was exacted against the importation in question under class two at the rate of ten cents per pound.

The case resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the importers.

At the trial there was evidence on both sides as to the true character of the hair. It appears that the goods were invoiced as white cattle hair, but were described in the protest as common goat hair. Samples were exhibited to the jury of various forms of wools under class two, including a sample of the goods in dispute. The witnesses on behalf of the importers did not all agree, but the most of them said that the goods were goat hair, or common goat hair.

James Dobson, one of the plaintiffs, testified, that he had been engaged for more than twenty years in handling • ahd manufacturing wool and hair, and that the goods in question, *150 in the present case, as shown by the sample, were common goat hair.

Assuming, then, as we have a right to do, that these goods were common goat hair, the problem is, under what clause of the act of 1883 is common goat hair to be classified.

The answer would be readily made if it is to be found in the terms of the statute: “ Class two, combing wools. — That is to say, ... all hair of the alpaca, goat, and other like animals ; ” and, in the taxing clause, “ all hair of the alpaca, goat, and other like animals, ” ten cents per pound.

But it is contended that, in designating what should be included in class two, Congress specified, not wools generally, but combing wools, and that the evidence shows that the article in question was not combing wool, nor was it anything that could be used for combing purposes; and of that view was the learned judge who tried the case below. He refused to charge as requested, that, if the jury found that the article in dispute was hair of the goat and under 30 cents per pound, their verdict should be for defendant, but charged that if the jury were satisfied that the article is what is called common goat hair, they should find for the plaintiffs, because if it were such, it is not to be classified under the section applied to it by the appraiser; and again, he charged that if the jury were not satisfied that the article was such as is known to the trade as common goat hair, they should inquire whether it was known to commerce as combing hair, and if not such, they should find for the plaintiffs.

It is, therefore, evident that the court below construed the statute as meaning that class two should consist wholly of articles that could be used for combing purposes, that is, as well hair of the goat as wools that were suseéptible of treatment by combing. To reach that construction the court was obliged to lose sight of some of the words in the statute. Thus in the leading clause of Schedule K: “All wools, hair of the alpaca, goat, and other like animals, shall be divided, for the purpose of fixing the duties to be charged thereon, into the three following classes,” and in class two, “ Combing wools. • — That is to say, Leicester, Cotswold, down combing wools, *151 or other like combing wools of English blood, and usually known by the terms herein used, and also all hair of the alpaca, goat, and other like animals.” So, in the taxing clause,. “ Wools of the second class, and all hair of the alpaca, goat, and other like animals.” Instead of reading the statute in the language in which it is written, viz., combing wools and all hair of the goat, the court below reads it thus: All combing wools and combing hairs, or combing wools and such hair of the alpaca, goat, etc., as are capable of being combed.

There is no apparent reason why Congress might not have thought fit to classify combing wools under the same head with all hair of the alpaca, goat, and other like animals. Such is the natural meaning of the language used, and no necessity is shown why it should be departed from.

In the tariff act of 1890 we find the leading clause thus expressed : “ All wools, hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, and other like animals, shall be divided, for the purpose of fixing the duties to be. charged thereon, into the three following classes;” and the second clause of classification is thus expressed: “Class two. That is to say, Leicester, Cotswold, Lincolnshire, down combing wools, Canada long wools, or other like combing wools of English blood, and usually known by the terms herein used, and also hair of the camel, goat, alpaca, and other like animals.”

This language of the act of 1890 has recently been construed by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the First Circuit in the case of United States v. Hopewell, 5 U. S. App. 137. The case arose on a decision of the board of general appraisers, affirming the collector of the port of Boston in .

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157 U.S. 148, 15 S. Ct. 568, 39 L. Ed. 652, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-dobson-scotus-1895.