Eager v. United States

32 Ct. Cl. 571, 1897 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 16, 1800 WL 2125
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 1, 1897
DocketNo. 19808
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ct. Cl. 571 (Eager v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eager v. United States, 32 Ct. Cl. 571, 1897 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 16, 1800 WL 2125 (cc 1897).

Opinion

Howry, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Under the provisions of an act entitled “An act to amend the customs-revenue laws and to repeal moieties,” approved June 22, 1874 (18 Stat. L., 186), the plaintiff seeks to recover $37,500 as one-half of the net proceeds resulting, as he alleges, from the detection and seizure of certain merchandise smuggled into the United States at the port and district of San Francisco, in the year 1891, by the firm of Neuberger, Eeiss & Co. The petition shows that the plaintiff was an acting inspector of customs at said port, duly appointed and qualified, and at the time mentioned was regularly assigned to receive and deliver unappraised and imported merchandise arriving at San Francisco overland in bond, and for such purpose was stationed at the freight depot of the Southern Pacific Eailroad Company in San Francisco.

It is further shown that the firm of Neuberger, Eeiss & Co. was a copartnership of merchants engaged in the business of importing and buying and selling at wholesale and retail foreign drygoods at said port and city; that on or about the 21st [573]*573day of September, 1891, while the claimant was in the discharge of his official duties, there was issued and delivered to him by the p>rop>er custom-house officers three x>ermits covering-consular invoices purporting to be invoices of cotton toweling imported by Neuberger, Eeiss & Co., entered at New Orleans for transportation in bond to San Francisco. Said permits authorized and ordered certain designated packages to be sent to the appraiser’s store for examination and all the other packages appearing upon the invoices and permits delivered to the importers. That while in the act of handling and delivering the merchandise in compliance with the terms of the permits the claimant, according to the allegations of the petition, discovered and detected through a damaged case or package of said merchandise that the contents of the broken case or package and of all of the cases appearing up)on said permits and invoices did not correspond with the description according to the permits and invoices, except the cases which had been designated and ordered to the appraiser’s store for examination. The discovery was then made, it is further alleged, that instead of containing cotton goods of any character, as noted on the jmrmits, the cases, and all of them, except those designated as aforesaid for examination, contained woolen, silk, or velvet goods of greater value and under the law bearing a higher rate of duty than the cotton goods contained in the cases ordered to the appraiser’s store for examination, whereby the firm of Neuberger, Eeiss & Co. was engaged in the act of smuggling merchandise into the United States and defrauding and attempting to defraud the revenues of the Government.

Having discovered the fraud, the claimant alleges that he immediately seized all of the merchandise, and that thereafter numerous other invoices of merchandise arrived at the port consigned to the same importers which, upon examination, were found to be in like condition as the invoices above described as to contents, and were likewise seized by order of the collector. Criminal prosecutions were thereupmn instituted against the smugglers, the claimant appearing as an important and necessary witness in behalf of the Government. Indictments were returned against Bernard Eeiss, a member of the firm of Neuberger, Eeiss & Co., for complicity in the frauds. Eeiss pleaded guilty to one of the indictments, and a maxi[574]*574mum fine of $5,000 was imposed by tbe court and paid by bim into tbe Treasury. Further criminal proceedings against Eeiss and tbe other members of the firm were discontinued upon tbe payment by them to tbe United States of tbe sum of $70,000, besides the duties on all tbe merchandise and in addition to tbe fine mentioned, tbe payments being made to tbe United States on or about March 2,1892.

Tbe claimant alleges that no other person besides himself detected the frauds and seized tbe merchandise mentioned while it was in tbe act and condition of being smuggled, and during the attempt to bring tbe merchandise into tbe United States with intent to defraud without passing tbe same through tbe custom-house, and without submitting tbe same to tbe officer of tbe revenue for examination, and that be presented bis claim, duly verified, to the Secretary of tbe Treasury, but that tbe Secretary rejected tbe claim in whole and refused to make any award of any sum to bim at all for tbe services thus alleged to have been performed.

By agreement of the parties, a copy of tbe letter of the Secretary of tbe Treasury to tbe collector of customs at San Francisco, dated April 13, 1893, and article 979 of the customs regulations of 1892 are made part of the petition, and tbe sufficiency of the demurrer of the defendants to the complaint will be determined as if all tbe facts set forth in said letter and article were incorporated in tbe petition as part of its averments.

Following is tbe letter of tbe Secretary, to wit:

“Treasury Department,
“Office of the Secretary,
“April 11,1893.
Collector of Customs, San Francisco, Gal.
“ Sir: Eeferring to tbe claim of T. O. Eagar for compensation as‘detector and seizor’in connection with seizure case Nos. 5492-3 of certain woolen dress goods, etc., at your port on September 28,1891, for violation of section 9 of tbe act of June 10, 1890,1 have to state that from tbe evidence submitted in this case, and more particularly from the reports of tbe inspector, John F. Murray, and that of Special Agent J. F. Evans, it does not appear that Mr. Eagar is entitled to compensation. From Mr. Murray’s report, under date of September 30,1891,it appears that, actingunder directions to exercise surveillance over the importations of certain merchants, Messrs. Neuberger, Eeiss & Co. being among tbe number, Mr. Murray [575]*575noticed the arrival of eighteen cases of goods by railroad, consigned to said firm, on September 21, and on the following day, learning that the goods had been entered duty paid, he went to the railroad station with a view of ascertaining whether the contents of the cases destined for the importer’s store were of' the same character as those ordered to appraiser’s store, and found upon arrival that one case of goods comprised in said importation, which had been broken en route, had been left there as the drayman had refused to receive it; that Mr. Murray called the inspector, T. 0. Eagar, who was in charge at the depot, to the fact that the aboved-named firm was under suspicion, and that honest importers had complained to the Department and to the custom-house that this firm was selling goods at prices which precluded competition. It appears further that said case of goods had been recoopered and would have been delivered to the drayman or to the agent of said firm if it had not been for the information given by Mr. Murray, and also a promise obtained from Inspector Eagar to examine the contents of said case before delivery.
“Special Agent J. F. Evans, who investigated this case, reports, under date of the 10th ultimo, that it being the gen.eral belief that several importing firms were avoiding payment of legal duties by substitution or other means, Inspector Murray was instructed to give special attention to importations of Messrs. Reuberger, Eeiss &

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32 Ct. Cl. 571, 1897 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 16, 1800 WL 2125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eager-v-united-states-cc-1897.