Greenleaf v. Goodrich

101 U.S. 278, 25 L. Ed. 845, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1916
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 19, 1880
Docket127
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 101 U.S. 278 (Greenleaf v. Goodrich) 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
Greenleaf v. Goodrich, 101 U.S. 278, 25 L. Ed. 845, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1916 (1880).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Strong

delivered the opinion of the court.

That the goods imported by the plaintiffs were subject to a *279 duty of thirty per cent under the act of March 2, 1861, is not denied. They belonged to the class described in that act as “ manufactures, not otherwise provided for, composed of mixed materials, in part of cotton, silk, wool or worsted, or flax.” The controversy between the parties now is over the question what was added to that duty by the act of July 14, 1862.

By-the third item of sect. 13 of the act of 1861 a duty of twenty-five per cent ad valorem was imposed upon “ all delaines, cashmere delaines, muslin delaines, barege delaines, composed wholly or in part of wool, gray or uncolored, and on all other gray or uncolored goods of similar description; ” “ on bunting and on all stained, colored, or printed, and on all other manufactures of wool, or of which wool shall be a component mate- • rial, not otherwise provided for, a duty of thirty ’per cent ad valorem.”

By sect. 22 of the same act a duty of thirty per cent was levied in the mixed-material clause quoted above. A subsequent act, passed on the 5th of August, 1861, amended the third item of sect. 13 of the act of' March 2, 1861, by striking from it the word “wool” wherever it occurred, and inserting the word “ worsted ” in lieu thereof.

Thus stood the law when the act of 1862 was enacted. It was an act to increase the duties leviable under the act of 1861. . The ninth section enacted that in addition to the duties theretofore imposed there should be levied, collected, and paid “ on all. delaines, cashmere delaines, muslin delaines, barege delaines, composed wholly or in part of worsted, wool, mohair, or goat’s hair, and on all goods of similar description, not exceeding in value forty cents per square yard, two cents per square yard.

“ On bunting, worsted yarns, and on all other manufactures of worsted, or of which worsted shall be a component material, not otherwise provided for, five per cent ad valorem.”

A subsequent section of the act imposed an additional duty of five per cent ad valorem also on manufactures, not otherwise provided for, composed of mixed materials, in part of cotton, silk, wool or worsted, hemp, jute, or flax.

An examination of these provisions will reveal very plainly that the. classification of the articles made subject to an in *280 creased duty is not the same as it was in the act of 1861. The first clause of the third item of sect. 13 of the act of 1861, as amended in August, embraced only delames composed wholly or in part of worsted, and» goods of similar description, woven in the gray, or uncolored. - The act of 1862 grouped with them delaines made wholly or in part of wool, mohair, or goat’s hair, and also delaines composed wholly or in part of worsted, and goods of similar description, not in the gray or uncolored. It was, therefore, much more comprehensive, than the former act. So the second clause of Ahe third item of the thirteenth section of the act of 1861 differs much from the corresponding clause of the act of 1862.

Similar changes of classification appear when the. mixed-material clauses of the two acts are compared. • The changes were evidently not without a purpose.

Such were the statutory provisions when the plaintiffs’ importations were made. The collector exacted duties at the fate of thirty per cent ad valorem, and two' cents per square yard, claiming that the goods were goods of similar description to the delaines mentioned in the ninth section of the act of 1862, and did not exceed in value forty cents per square yard. On the other hand, the plaintiffs claimed that the goods, having been classed under the act of 1861, among manufactures of mixed materials, not otherwise provided for, and subjected to a duty of thirty per cent, continued in that class under the act of 1862, and were, therefore, chargeable only with a duty of thirty-five per cent. Accordingly, having paid.thte duty,exacted by the collector, under protest, they have brought this suit to recover the difference between thirty-five per cent ad valorem, and thirty per cent and two cents per square yard.

It appeared in evidence that the goods were known in trade and were bought and sold as poil de chevres, reps, plaids, lustres, Saxony dress-goods. They were always woven in colors, the yarns being dyed or colored before weaving. They never existed in the gray or uncolored condition. But they were made, as delaines are made, with a cotton warp and a worsted weft, the difference between them and delaines (as stated in the’plaintiffs’ protest) being that delaines are a fabric of all-wool, or cotton warp and worsted weft, and made of yarns not *281 dyed, the cloth being printed or dyed in the piece. It further appeared that as early as 1857 both the all-wool delaines and those with cotton warp and wool or worsted filling were known in trade by names changed from time to time, to suit the fancy of importers and purchasers. It also appeared that in several other particulars the goods of the plaintiffs differed from delaines. To these differences it is unnecessary now; to refer in detail.

Now, conceding, as we may, that the plaintiffs’ goods came under the mixed-material clause of the act of 1861, being excluded from the delaine clause, that embraced only goods woven in the gray, it is nqt perceived how that can throw any light upon the proper construction of the act of 1862, which obviously intended a different classification. Undoubtedly, acts of Congress in pari materia are to be construed with reference to each other. And it may be admitted that when, in a later act, Congress uses expressions that had a recognized meaning in a former act relating to the same subject, they intended to use them in the same sense in which they were first used, that is, with their recognized meaning. But this rule has no bearing upon a case iike the present. This is not a question respecting the meaning of terms. We cannot see, therefore, that the Circuit Court erred in refusing to affirm the plaintiffs’ first four points, and in declining to rule under what clause of the act of 1861 the imported goods fell. After all, the question for that court was the construction' of the act of 1862, and the construction given was, we think, correct. It could, not have been different if the court had undertaken to construe with it the clauses of the act of 1861. As we have said, the changes of classification and of phraseology made in the act of 1862 show an intention to take out of the mixed-material clause of the former act (which was limited to manufactures not otherwise provided for) some descriptions of goods which the act placed there, and by transferring them to another class, subject them to the additional duty prescribed for that class. If not so, what was the necessity for a reclassification ? Why change the language ? It would have been sufficient to declare what additional duty should be paid by each class as formerly arranged. The act of 1861, therefore, *282

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Bluebook (online)
101 U.S. 278, 25 L. Ed. 845, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1916, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenleaf-v-goodrich-scotus-1880.