Dodge v. Hedden
This text of 42 F. 446 (Dodge v. Hedden) 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.
Opinion
(charging jury.) If there were no evidence in this case, if we had nothing here but the tariff act, and the meaning which the dictionary gives to the word “neroli,” namely, that it is the essential oil obtained from the flowers of the bitter orange, I should have to instruct you to find a verdict for the defendant, because it appears that the article imported by the plaintiff is not distilled from orange flowers. There is evidence, however, which was introduced under a general prin-[447]*447triple of interpretation of all these tariff acts, to-wit, that inasmuch as they deal with trade and commerce, it is supposed that their framers, when they used words and phrases, used the same with the meaning which traders and commercial men give to them. For that reason testimony was introduced touching the trade meaning of the words “oil neroli,’’and also touching the trade designation and recognition of the article here imported. The question, therefore, which comes to you to be determined as a question of fact, is whether prior to March 3, 1883, oil such as was imported by this plaintiff (that is, oil made not from the flowers, but from the leaves, twigs, and immature fruit of the orange tree, generally described as “petit grain”) was generally regarded and recognized in trade and commerce in this country as “oil neroli.” That is the question of fact to he determined by you. In determining that question there are certain suggestions which should he made to you. In the first place, we start with the presumption that the collector knew what his duty was, and did it; in other words, we start with the presumption that the collector’s determination was a correct one. That is a presumption which the plaintiff must overcome by affirmative proof. As the law expresses it, he has the burden of proof to show that the government’s agent made a mistake in assessing duty upon this particular article. He must overcome that presumption by affirmative proof. He must satisfy you by a fair preponderance of evidence that the collector was wrong. If he does not so satisfy you, or if he even brings the scales just even, and leaves you in such a frame of mind that you are unable to decide whether he has shown the collector to be wrong or not, then he has not borne the burden of proof which the law lays upon him, and has not made out his case. In weighing the testimony of witnesses in all cases, it is, of course, proper for the jury to take into consideration whatever interest it may appear from the evidence that they may have in the result of the litigation in which they are testifying, with a view to determine what probable or possible bias may be operating upon the mind of a witness to (unintentionally, perhaps) color his evidence. That is a matter appropriate for the jury always to take into consideration. Lastly, il)o trade usage which is to be determinative of the question must be a general one. It is not determined by finding out how an article is occasionally called by individual firms, or how it may be designated in some few particular localities, or even by some single branch of the trade, if that branch is only one of the many branches of the trade which deal in the article, and the other branches of the trade do not know it by the same designation. Of course, congress, in providing these tariff acts, considers the country at large and trade at large; and, in order to determine whether an article is or is not within a trade designation, you must be satisfied that the trade usage with regard to the use of the term and the classification of the article is a well-known and general usage. With these suggestions the question is submitted to you to determine what the the fact is; and, if you find that the article imported here is petit grain, made from the leaves, twigs, and immature fruit of the orange tree, and was generally regarded and recognized in the trade and commerce of this [448]*448country as oil neroli, then your verdict must be for the plaintiff; otherwise your verdict must be for the defendant.
The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
42 F. 446, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodge-v-hedden-circtsdny-1889.