Dwight v. Merritt

140 U.S. 213, 11 S. Ct. 768, 35 L. Ed. 450, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2455
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 11, 1891
Docket281
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 140 U.S. 213 (Dwight v. Merritt) 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
Dwight v. Merritt, 140 U.S. 213, 11 S. Ct. 768, 35 L. Ed. 450, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2455 (1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lamar

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action by an importer, the testator of the present plaintiffs in error, against a late collector of the port *214 of New York, to recover an alleged excess of duty exacted on a cargo of iron rails imported from Pillau, Eussia, in June, ■ 1880.

The collector assessed a duty on- the merchandise at seventy cents per hundred pounds, under Schedule E, sec. 2504,- Eev. Stat., as “ iron bars for railroads or incline planes.” The importer claimed that the merchandise was dutiable at only $8 per ton, under the following provision of the same schedule: “Wrought scrap iron of every description: eight dollars per ton. But nothing shall be deemed scrap iron except waste or refuse iron that has been in actual use, and is fit only to be remanufactured.”

The importer paid the duties as assessed, duly protested against their exaction and appealed to the Secretary of the Treasury, who affirmed the ruling of the collector. Thereupon this action was brought to- recover. the difference between the duty exacted and what the importer claimed should have been exacted, amounting to $2880.65. The case was tried before Judge Shipman and a jury, resulting in a. verdict and judgment in favor of the collector. To review that judgment this writ of error is prosecuted.

The bill of exceptions shows the following facts: The rails in question were completed rails and were imported from Eussia by Waterman & Co., of Philadelphia, for the purpose of breaking them up and remanufacturing them in Waterman’s mill, at Danville, Pennsylvania. They were in fact so-disposed of. The rails were not suitable for use in this country, in the condition they were imported, being of too high a pattern to be safe, too short, and too heavy and expensive. They were fit in this country only for remanufacture. There was no evidence that they had ever been used for any purpose whatever, or had ever been laid on a railroad in Eussia, although they had been sent to that country for that purpose; and were, when imported, somewhere from three to eight years old and rusty.

The evidence of the plaintiff’s witnesses showed that the rails, as imported, were too expensive for profitable use on American railroads; and that at the time of their importation it *215 •would have paid better to import a new rail of this character, provided it could be entered under the scrap iron schedule, and remodelled for the purpose of making railroad rails, than to buy pig iron and manufacture the rails from that, because, for the purpose of making new iron rails, these rails were three processes further advanced than pig iron would be. Those witnesses also testified that they could not say whether or hot the rails in question had ever been in actual use prior to their importation.

The plaintiff offered to show by a witness who was familiar with the manufacture of iron, what the terms “ scrap iron ”• and “ waste iron ” usually meant in the trade, or in commercial usage, but the defendant objected; and the court sustained the objection, on the ground that those terms were defined by the statute. Whereupon the plaintiff saved an exception.

Another witness called by the plaintiff was allowed to testify, describing the different varieties of scrap iron, the manner in which it originated and the purposes for which it. was afterwards used.

The defendant’s witnesses testified, in substance, that the rails in question were all of the same length and weight, and were not broken on the edges or elsewhere; but, on cross-examination, they admitted that they varied in weight somewhat, there being sixty-three pounds difference between the heaviest and the lightest.

The court charged the jury that, under the evidence and the law of the case, the only question was whether the iron had been in actual use prior to its importation, for the requirements of the statute, in respect to actual use, applied as well to waste as to refuse iron; that the burden of proof was on the plaintiff to satisfy the jury, by a fair preponderance of tbe evidence, that the rails had been in actual use; and that, unless that fact were so proven, their verdict should be for the defendant. Counsel for the plaintiff excepted to those portions of the charge above mentioned, and the only real question to be determined here is as to the correctness of those instructions; for if they- were correct, the evidence' offered as *216 to the commercial designation of the term “ scrap iron ” was immaterial, and there was no error in excluding it from the jury.

The provision of the statute invoked by the plaintiff is found in Schedule E, sec. 2504, Rev. Stat., and, with its punctuation, as published in the second edition of the Revised' Statutes, is as follows: “Wrought scrap iron of every description: eight dollars per ton. But nothing shall be deemed scrap iron except waste or refuse iron that has been in actual use, and is fit only to be remanufactured.”

It is clear that the rails were dutiable either under the clause claimed by the collector to embrace them, or under the scrap-iron clause above quoted, invoked by the plaintiff in error, since no other provision of the metal schedule appears to have, or is claimed to have, any application to the question, and they were confessedly not on the free list.

The plaintiff in error contends that the action of the collector was illegal in assessing as “iron bars for railroads or inclined planes,” old iron rails which, it is admitted, were not adapted to any such use, nor imported for any such purpose, but. which were manifestly imported solely for remanufacture. It is urged in support of this view, that as the law stood prior to the enactment by Congress of the Revised Statutes of the United States, as shown by the act of March 2, 1861, 12 Stat. 180, the provision corresponding to the one under discussion was in the following words: “On all iron imported in bars for railroads or inclined planes made to patterns cmd fitted to be laid d-own upon such roads or planes withoutfurther manufacture and not exceeding six inches high, twelve dollars per ton; ” that this statute and phraseology were changed by the act of June 30, 1864, 13 Stat. 204, by omitting the limitation of height and substituting a rate by the pound for that of the ton, as follows: “ On all iron imported in bars for railroads and inclined planes, made to patterns and fitted to be laid down on such roads or planes without further manufaetiore, sixty cents per one hundredpoundsthat an additional ten cents per one hundred pounds was imposed under the pressure of financial necessity, by the act of March 3, 1865, 13 Stat. 493, “ on iron bars for railroads or inclined planes; ” and it is in *217 sisted that, as these two last-mentioned tariff acts are reproduced in this brief phrase of the Eevised Statutes, no meaning •should be attached to it different from that which obtains in those statutes. The argument is ingenious, but we cannot ■agree with the conclusion to which it conduces.

The Eevised Statutes are not a mere compilation and consolidation of the laws of Congress in force on the 1st of December, 1873.

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Bluebook (online)
140 U.S. 213, 11 S. Ct. 768, 35 L. Ed. 450, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dwight-v-merritt-scotus-1891.