Corkle v. Maxwell

6 F. Cas. 555, 3 Blatchf. 413, 1856 U.S. App. LEXIS 542
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJanuary 23, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 F. Cas. 555 (Corkle 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
Corkle v. Maxwell, 6 F. Cas. 555, 3 Blatchf. 413, 1856 U.S. App. LEXIS 542 (circtsdny 1856).

Opinion

INGERSOLL, District Judge.

Early in the year 1849, the plaintiff and Jackson, being desirous to engage in the business of storing dutiable merchandise, under the warehouse act of August 6th, 1846 (9 Stat. 53), made application to the secretary of the treasury to have the store No. 71 Greenwich street, in the city of New York, occupied by them, designated for that purpose. Upon such application, it was so designated, and, on the 14th of March, 1849, the plaintiff and Jackson entered into a bond to indemnify the government, the collector of the port, and all other officers of the customs, for any loss or damage which might happen to any goods which might be stored in such warehouse under the act. The secretary of the treasury, by his circular of February 17th, 1849, gave his instructions to all collectors, and other officers of the customs, by which the occupants or owners of all warehouses of a kind with that at No. 71 Greenwich street, were required to pay monthly to the collector a sum equivalent to the salary of an inspector, or, at their option, to pay monthly to the collector one half storage, at the rates charged in stores owned by the United States, or leased by them; and this election was to be determined before any goods were placed in the store. On the 14th of March, 1849, Jackson & Corkle were required, by the warehouse superintendent, to notify the collector, in writing, whether they would pay, for the use of the inspector required at their warehouse, the sum of $1,095 per annum, payable monthly, or one half of the amount .of storage accruing on goods in their warehouse, at public store rates. On the same day, Jackson replied thus to the letter of the warehouse superintendent: “I beg to inform you that, having the option of .choosing, I adopt that mode of paying the in-, spector’s salary, of three dollars per day.”

During the collectorship of Cornelius W. Lawrence, to wit, up to the 1st of July, 1849, Jackson & Corkle paid to him, for the use of the United States, three dolíais a day, monthly, towards an inspector’s salary, for his services at their warehouse; and, during the collectorship of the defendant, to wit, from the 1st of July, 1849, to the 1st of May, 1852, they paid to him, for the like services, the like sum of three dollars a day, at the end of each month. These several payments were handed over to the treasury of the United States. When the payment for September, 1849, was made, it was made under protest, the plaintiff claiming, in the protest, that the services of an inspector were of no value to him, by reason of an order prohibiting the receipt of bonded goods- at his warehouse, and also that the demand was contrary to the act of August 6th,. 1846. When the payment for November, 1851, was made, it was made under the following protest, dated December 1st, 1851, addressed to the defendant: “You are hereby requested to take notice that we make the payment of this month’s half storage (as inspector’s salary) for the use of our private bonded warehouse, number 71 Greenwich street, under protest, claiming that you and the government have no right to collect said exac-tions; that they are not a proper demand against us, under any law of the United States; that the rent and labor of said ware-, house is paid by us alone; that inspector’s salaries are properly and solely chargeable on the general revenue, and not on us, the owners of private bonded warehouses; and that our agreement heretofore made with you, to pay half storage or inspector’s salary, was compulsorily and illegally exacted from and imposed on us by you, under color of your office, as a condition of our enjoying the rights secured to us under the warehousing law's of the United States. We extend this protest to the present and all past and future similar exactions from us, and shall hold you and the government responsible for them in damages, and submit to such ex-actions temporarily, only to continue in the use of said warehouse. Jackson & Corkle.” This suit is brought to recover back the several sums so paid.

The plaintiff grounds his right of recovery upon bis establishing two propositions — First, that there was no law authorizing the government, through its agent, the defendant, to demand the payments which Jackson & Corkle made to the defendant; and, second, that such payments were not voluntary, but were made under such coercion that they can be recovéred back. It is admitted by the plaintiff, that if he fails in establishing either of these propositions, he must fail in this suit I will consider these two propositions in their reversed order.

Jackson & Corkle had no right to keep a [557]*557warehouse for the receipt and storage of 'dutiable goods, by any of the provisions of the act of August 6th, 184G, or by any provision of any other act of congress. Whatever right they had to keep a warehouse, was by virtue of an appointment from the secretary of the treasury. That appointment was subject to the will of the secretary. It is for no determinate time. The appointment could be revoked at pleasure, without violating any of their rights. It was subject to the will of the secretary. They had no right to continue to act as warehouse-keepers for the United States for any definite period of time. What they, had was only a privilege conferred upon them by the secretary of the treasury, and which was to continue so long ns he willed it should continue.

In considering the question, whether the payments made by Jackson & Corkle to the defendant were voluntary or not, or whether they were made under such coercion that they can be recovered back, it will be assumed, for the purposes of the argument, that neither the government nor the defendant had any legal right to demand the sums which were paid. But it is not every payment upon a demand which could not be enforced by law, that can be recovered back. If it was freely and voluntarily made, there Can be no recovery back. But, when the 'payment has been obtained by fraud, or by oppression or extortion, or when it has been made to secure a right which the party paying was entitled to without such payment, and which right was withheld by the party receiving the payment until such payment was made, such payment was not voluntary, and the money can be recovered back. And it may be said, that where the money was paid upon a wrongful demand, to save the party paying from some great or irreparable mischief or damage, from which he could not be saved but by the payment of the sum wrongfully demanded, it can be recovered back. In the case in question, there was no fraud practised by the defendant upon the plaintiff, or upon Jackson. The defendant received the money honestly, and in obedience to instructions from the secretary of the treasury, and paid the same over to the treasury. No fraud can be imputed to the defendant.

But it is said by the plaintiff, that the payments were made by him and Jackson for the purpose of protecting themselves in the right which they had to use, at a time future to the payments, the store No. 71 Greenwich street, as a warehouse for dutiable goods; that they had such right without such payments;' and that they made them in order that they might continue in the use of said warehouse. It has already been shown that Jackson & Corkle, at the time the payments were made, had no right to the future use of their store as a warehouse, and that they had only a privilege so to use it, so long as the secretary of the treasury willed that they should' so use it The payments were not made to secure them in a right which by law they were entitled to.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 F. Cas. 555, 3 Blatchf. 413, 1856 U.S. App. LEXIS 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corkle-v-maxwell-circtsdny-1856.