Cutler v. Kouns

110 U.S. 720, 4 S. Ct. 274, 28 L. Ed. 305, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1733
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 10, 1884
Docket187
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 110 U.S. 720 (Cutler v. Kouns) 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
Cutler v. Kouns, 110 U.S. 720, 4 S. Ct. 274, 28 L. Ed. 305, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1733 (1884).

Opinion

Me. Justice' "Woods

delivered the opinion of the court.

The errors assigned are, first, the refusal of the Circuit Court to direct a verdict for the defendant on the ground that the money sued for was lawfully exacted from the defendants in *724 error; and, second, its refusal to give a similar direction on the ground that the action was barred. ¥e think both these assignments are well founded.

It is not disputed that on June 6th, 1865, when the cotton was brought to New Orleans, the exaction by Cutler, the purchasing agent, of one-fourth its market value in the city of New York was lawful, and that under the statutes and the treasury regulations it was his duty to make it. The contention of the defendants in error is that by the proclamation of the President dated June 18th, 1865, the right of the purchasing agent to buy the cotton in question at three-fourths its market price in New York, or, what is in substance the same thing, to take possession of the cotton and hold it until one-fourth of its market value in New York was paid to him by the owner, was taken away, and that after that date the exaction of one-fourth the market price of the cotton was unlawful.

The material part of the proclamation of June 13th, 1865, was as follows:

“ Now, therefore, be it known that I, Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, do hereby declare that all restrictions upon internal, domestic and coastwise intercourse and trade, and upon the removal of products of States heretofore declared in insurrection, reserving and excepting only those relating to eontra-band of war, as hereinafter recited, and also those which relate to the reservation of the rights of ’ the United States to property purchased in the territory of an enemy, heretofore imposed in the territory of the United States east of the Mississippi River, are annulled, and I do hereby direct that theybe forthwith removed.” 13 Stat. 763.

As throwing light upon the question in hand, it should be stated that on June 24th, 1865, the President issued another proclamation, which, after reciting that, “ whereas it now seems expedient and proper to remove restrictions upon internal, domestic, and coastwise trade and commercial intercourse between and within the. States and Territories west of the Mississippi River,” proceeded as follows:

*725 Now, therefore, be it known that I Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, do hereby declare that all restrictions upon internal, domestic, and coastwise intercourse and trade, and . upon the purchase and removal of products of States and parts of States and Territories heretofore declared in insurrection,, lying west of the Mississippi (éxcept only, &c.), are annulled, and I do hereby direct that they be forthwith removed.” 13 Stat. 769.

The cotton, in this case was the product of a country west of the Mississippi-River. It was brought to New Orleans under authority of the act of July 2d, 1861. When it arrived on June 6th it was subject to the exaction enforced by the plaintiff in error. When the proclamation of June 13th was issued, a part of the money due the United States had been paid. If the defendants in error were relieved from the payment of the residue it was by virtue of that proclamation. Leaving out the parts not applicable to this case, it declared “ that all restrictions . . '. upon the removal of products of States . . . declared in insurrection . . . heretofore imposed in the territory of the United States east of the Mississippi River are annulled.” Its clearly expressed purpose was to annul the restrictions imposed upon the rémoval from- the territory east of the Mississippi River of the products of that territory.

If we adopt the view of the defendants in error it would follow that all cotton produced west of the Mississippi, which could only be transported to New Orleans by virtue of the act of July 2d, 1864, and on the condition that it was there to be sold to a purchasing agent, and to be subject to an exaction of one-fourth its value, would the nloment it arrived be relieved of all the conditions imposed on it-by the statute under authority of which it was removed. In other words, the law imposing restrictions upon the' removal of cotton' west of the Mississippi would have been nullified by a proclamation of the President which applied in terms only to the territory east of;the Mississippi.

The policy of the President was. not to remove, and he did not remove, the restrictions upon products of the country west of the Mississippi until'his proclamation of June 24th. But the defendants in error contend, in effect, that by transporting their - *726 cotton to a place east of the Mississippi, where they were under the implied obligation to pay the United States one-fourth its value, they can escape that exaction and get the benefit of the repeal of the restrictions upon cotton grown east of the Mississippi River. Rut until the restrictions upon the removal of cotton produced west of the Mississippi had been repealed, such, cotton, if removed from the place where it was grown, would, while the restrictions were in force, remain subject thereto, no matter what might be the regulations óoncerning the products of the place to which it was removed.

The proclamation of June 13th refers to places declared to be in insurrection, and annuls restrictions placed upon the removal from such places of the products thereof. The construction contended for by the defendants in error would apply it to a city not in insurrection but in the possession of the federal forces, and to a place where the product was not grown, and where no restrictions upon the removal of articles there produced were in force. Such, in our opinion, was not the effect of the proclamation of June 13th.

There is another view of the question which also appears to us to be conclusive. The money exacted by the plaintiff in error from the defendants in error was paid into the treasury by him. If he should be compelled to -return it to the defendants in error, the United States would in justice and honor be bound to make him whole. The suit is, therefore, in substance and effect, an action brought by the defendants in error against the government to recover the money collected by its officers and paid into its treasury, and is to be considered in that light.

We think the money sued for is the money of the United States. ■ When the cotton reached New Orleans on June 6th, it was subject to an exaction of one-fourth its market value in New York. The owners had been allowed to bring in their cotton upon the implied promise and understanding that they would sell it to the government for three-fourths the market price.- Upon its arrival in New Orleans the rights of the government in the cotton became fixed. One-fourth its value was as much the property of the government as the other three-fourths were the property of the defendants in error. No *727 proclamation of the President could transfer the property of the government to them. The purchasing agent, for the accommodation of defendants in error, had allowed them to pay the amount due the government in three instalments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 U.S. 720, 4 S. Ct. 274, 28 L. Ed. 305, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cutler-v-kouns-scotus-1884.