Crowley v. Maxwell

6 F. Cas. 915, 3 Blatchf. 401, 1856 U.S. App. LEXIS 475

This text of 6 F. Cas. 915 (Crowley 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
Crowley v. Maxwell, 6 F. Cas. 915, 3 Blatchf. 401, 1856 U.S. App. LEXIS 475 (circtsdny 1856).

Opinion

INGERSOLL, District Judge.

The needles in question in this case were purchased by the plaintiffs in England at various times, between two and three months before they were shipped. Upon their arrival at New York, they were, by order of the collector, appraised by the appraisers, who valued them .at a sum much greater than that stated in the entry. They valued them as of the time when they were shipped from Liverpool. The plaintiffs, being dissatisfied with this appraisal, demanded a re-appraisal, which was accordingly had, and the re-appraisers valued them at a sum a little less than the sum fixed by the first appraisers, but exceeding, by more than 10 per cent., the value set down in the entry. The last appraisal was also based upon the value of the goods when shipped from Liverpool. The duties were collected upon the last appraisal, and an additional duty of 20 per cent., for the undervaluation, was also imposed and collected. The value set down in the invoice and entry was the price paid for the needles at the time they were purchased. But there is no evidence to show that the price at the time of the purchase was different from what it was at the time of the shipment from Liverpool. The invoice of. the needles, which was dated on the 9th of January, 1851, and exhibited at the custom-house, did not show that they had been purchased, or how they had been procured. The entry did not show this. And there was no document exhibited at the custom-house to show when they had been purchased.

Upon paying the duties demanded, the plaintiffs, in a letter addressed to the defendant, used the following language: “In making this payment, we reiterate our protest against the same, and against the illegal and oppressive appraisement which has been made, averring that our invoice states the fair.value of the needles when procured in England, and we notify you that we shall hold you and the government responsible in damages for this exaction of excess of duties.” After the two appraisements had been completed, the plaintiffs notified the defendant, by letter, under date of February 8th, 1851, that the needles were entered by them at the cost of about £271 2s. Id.; and they tendered to the defendant $204, which they claimed was the whole duty, with legal interest, actually due, according to the fair value of the goods when procured by them in England, and at which fair value they claimed to have entered them, and also the sum of $370 for increased duty, and notified the defendant that they should resort to all proper means to recover back the monies tendered exceeding the duties on the valuation at which the goods were entered. Upon the payment of the duties, on the 10th of February, 1851, they again protested, and notified the defendant that the invoice stated the fair value of the needles when procured in England, and protested that the two appraise-ments were illegal, but did not state in what particular they claimed them to be illegal, except that the invoice stated the fair value of the needles at the time they were procured in England. Neither of the protests, nor the invoice, nor the entry states when the goods were procured in England—whether they were procured at the time they were shipped, or at some previous time.

The proof offered on the trial was, that the needles were obtained by the plaintiffs in England, where they were manufactured, by purchase, two or three months before they were shipped; that the price which they paid for the same was the fair market value of the same in the chief markets in England, at the time the purchase was made; and that that price was the value as carried out and stated in the invoice. As has been [916]*916already said, tlie two appraisements made by the appraisers were based upon tbeir value at the time they were shipped. The 10th section of the act of August 30, 1S42 (5 Stat. 5G3), and which was in force when the duties in question were imposed, provides, that it shall be the duty of the collector to cause the actual1 market value or wholesale price of goods, when purchased in a foreign country and imported into the United States, at the time when purchased, in the principal markets of the country from which the same shall have been imported into the United States, to be appraised and ascertained. There was no appraisement under the direction of the collector, of the value of the needles at (he time when they were actually purchased. Indeed he had no document to show when they were purchased. Such ap-praisements as were made, were of their value at the time they were shipped. The price carried out in the invoice was the market value at the time they were purchased. Under these circumstances, if the collector had, before the imposition of the duties, been duly notified of the time of purchase, the plaintiffs would have been entitled to their goods upon the payment of duties based upon their value as set down in the invoice. Maxwell v. Griswold, 10 How. [51 U. S.] 242. And they would have a right, under such circumstances, to recover back the excess of duty and the penalty imposed and paid, provided they had made a proper protest. Id.

But it is claimed by the defendant, that the protest which the plaintiffs made was insufficient, on the ground that it did not state how and in what particular the ap-praisements made under the direction of the collector were illegal, nor when the needles were purchased; that, from any thing that appears in the protest, they might have been procured at the time they were shipped; and that, if they were procured at that time, the appraisements were legal.

The question presented by this claim of the defendant has, within a few years past, been frequently before this court. In the case of Pierson v. Maxwell [Case No. 11,159] the protests were “against the payment of duty on (the increased valuation specified) added to the entry value by the appraisers, because the original entry was the actual cost and full value at the time of purchase.” The court, in giving its opinion in that case, says; “The protests designate no time of purchase different from that indicated by the invoices.” “The plaintiffs cannot, under the protests, set up a different and long antecedent period of purchase; nor can they impugn the appraisement, by giving proof of any irregular acts of the appraisers ¿or other officers in making it Those particulars should have been distinctly and specifically pointed out to the collector by the protests, in order to enable him to rectify any thing erroneous in the manner of detcrmin-ing the value of the goods, or in the selection of the period at which that value was to be determined.” In the case of Cornett v. Lawrence [Id. 3,241], the court, in speaking of what it is necessary for plaintiffs to set forth in their protest, in order to make it available, says that they must “set forth the specific objections, and refer him” (the collector) “distinctly to the facts on which their objections rest, in order to be enabled afterwards to avail themselves of them, in an action against him.” In the case of Focke v. Lawrence [Id.

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Bluebook (online)
6 F. Cas. 915, 3 Blatchf. 401, 1856 U.S. App. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowley-v-maxwell-circtsdny-1856.