Grover Melvin Mungo, Samuel Harris and Daniel Simms, Jr. v. United States

423 F.2d 1351, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 9870
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 1970
Docket13143_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 423 F.2d 1351 (Grover Melvin Mungo, Samuel Harris and Daniel Simms, Jr. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grover Melvin Mungo, Samuel Harris and Daniel Simms, Jr. v. United States, 423 F.2d 1351, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 9870 (4th Cir. 1970).

Opinion

BOREMAN, Circuit Judge.

Appellants Mungo, Harris and Simms appeal from their convictions by a jury *1352 on charges of willfully removing, breaking and injuring a fastener on a container then in customs custody and containing 650 cases of Scotch whiskey; of transporting one case of this whiskey knowing that it had been unlawfully removed from customs custody; and of stealing and unlawfully taking and carrying away one case of the whiskey when moving as part of a foreign shipment of freight. Mungo was sentenced to eighteen months, Harris to sixteen months, and Simms to fifteen months, portions of the terms to be suspended. However, prior to the pronouncement of sentence, appellants moved to set aside the guilty verdicts and for judgments of acquittal, which motions were denied. We affirm the judgments below.

This prosecution was based upon the alleged illegal acts of appellants subsequent to the arrival, on February 22, 1968, at the Imperial Docks, Norfolk, Virginia, of a ship’s container loaded with whiskey imported from Scotland. The container had been removed from the ship and placed on a flat-bed trailer which was parked adjacent to Imperial’s warehouse. The container was not placed in a bonded warehouse or terminal for receipt or storage of goods within customs control.

Customs agents, maintaining surveillance of the container, checked it on February 26, at 7:15 p. m., determined that it was locked and observed that there were no cardboard cartons on the ground in the immediate area. The agents concealed themselves until they were relieved by two other customs agents at 11:50 p. m. At 12:35 a. m., on February 27, two agents then on duty observed two men who entered the parking area and proceeded to the rear of the container where they remained for a short time. The agents testified that these two men then ran in a semi-crouching position to a public street where they entered a Ford automobile. The Ford proceeded along the street, followed by a Pontiac which pulled out of a nearby service station. The two cars stopped side by side some distance down the street and remained in that position for approximately one minute before advancing out of the agents’ view. Both automobiles returned a few minutes later and two occupants of the Ford, who appeared to the agents to be the same men who had earlier entered the car, got out. One of the men walked to the Pontiac and then rejoined his companion. The agents observed these two men running in a semi-crouching position to an area near the container, that one of the men went to the rear of the container, partially disappeared from view but shortly reappeared behind the container. The man was observed waving his arm and then walking toward the middle of the parking area where he blinked a flashlight, apparently signaling the driver of the Pontiac. The Pontiac, with lights turned off, proceeded to the rear of the container where the trunk of the car was opened.

Upon being suddenly alarmed, the two men closed the trunk and hastily entered the Pontiac, which started to leave the scene, still without lights. A government automobile, with its lights flashing, gave chase and the driver of the Pontiac, who was later identified as Mungo, accelerated in an apparent attempt to escape. The agents’ automobile was maneuvered into a blocking position and a collision ensued, after which Mungo made a further effort to escape by placing the Pontiac in reverse and backing up some distance. He was thwarted when one of the agents went to the driver’s side of the Pontiac and arrested the occupants, Mun-go, Harris and Simms, who were in the front seat. A search of the car disclosed a lug wrench lying on the floor and a later spectrochemical analysis established that metal smears on the end of the steel wrench were an aluminum alloy similar to the door of the container. However, the amount of aluminum on the wrench was so small that it was impossible to determine whether its composition was the same as that of the container door.

After the arrests, appellants and the agents returned to the container. A case of whiskey was discovered on the ground *1353 and one of the doors to the previously locked container was found open. Appellants were taken to customs headquarters where they were interrogated. They signed statements in which they asserted that they, being ships’ cargo checkers, had observed that the whiskey container door was open, that they had investigated, and that they were leaving to report the situation to the police when they were arrested.

A “consumption entry” form for the whiskey had been filed properly with the Customs Service and the estimated duty was paid on February 26, 1968. The form was examined by a customs import specialist who, assuming that the information set forth in the form was correct and that the duty had been estimated properly, determined that entry could be made after the contents of the container had been inspected. Notations which the customs specialist made on the form indicated that one case from each of the three lots of whiskey in the container was to be examined, gauged and inspected to see that stamps denoting payment of the tax on distilled spirits had been affixed properly to the bottles before shipment in foreign commerce. A copy of this form was delivered to a customs inspector after payment of the estimated duties had been received by the customhouse cashier on February 26. The customs inspector performed the required inspection sometime after coming on duty at 8:00 a. m. on February 27. He signed the consumption entry form indicating that he had examined the whiskey, and sometime during the afternoon of February 27 notified the terminal manager that the merchandise had been released from customs custody and control.

On appeal, appellants attack the jurisdiction of the lower court as to counts one and two which charged violations of 18 U.S.C. § 549 1 by asserting: (1) that the Customs Service never had custody of the whiskey; and (2) that even if the Customs Service did have custody, payment of the estimated duties on February 26 terminated such custody prior to the alleged offenses. Also, appellants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence as to count three, which under 18 U.S.C. § 659 2 charged that appellants stole and unlawfully carried away one ease of the whiskey which was moving as part of a foreign shipment.

In challenging jurisdiction as to counts one and two, appellants contend that 19 U.S.C. § 1490 3 provides the only method *1354 by which the Customs Service may gain custody of imported goods. This section provides that whenever entry of imported merchandise is not made in accordance with law or whenever the estimated duties are not paid, the customs collector shall take the merchandise “into his custody” and send it to a bonded warehouse or public store to be held at the risk of the consignee until there has been compliance with the regulations or until bond has been posted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
423 F.2d 1351, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 9870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grover-melvin-mungo-samuel-harris-and-daniel-simms-jr-v-united-states-ca4-1970.