Hooper v. Fifty-One Casks of Brandy

12 F. Cas. 465, 6 N.Y. Leg. Obs. 302
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedDecember 15, 1848
StatusPublished

This text of 12 F. Cas. 465 (Hooper v. Fifty-One Casks of Brandy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hooper v. Fifty-One Casks of Brandy, 12 F. Cas. 465, 6 N.Y. Leg. Obs. 302 (D. Me. 1848).

Opinion

WARE, District Judge.

The proceeds of' the forfeiture having been paid into the reg[466]*466istry, there is no doubt that the court has the authority to determine to whom they belong, and to order the money to be paid out to those who are legally entitled to receive it. Westcott v. Bradford [Case No. 17,429]; The Langdon Cheves [Id. 8,064]; U. S. v. La Jeune Eugenie [Id. 15.551]. It is an authority that results to the court as an incident to its possession of the principal cause. McLane v. U. S., 6 Pet. [31 U. S.] 404. The petitioners claim the informer's share of the forfeiture, under the general collection law of March 2, 1799. The 91st section of that act provides, that all fines, penalties, and forfeitures, recovered by virtue of this act, shall be disposed of as fol*lows, one moiety to the United States and the other to be divided between the collector, naval officer, and surveyor, in equal shares, or among such of these officers as may be in the district. Then follows a proviso in these words, under which the petitioners claim: “In all cases when such penalties, fines, and forfeitures shall be recovered in pursuance of information given to such collector, by any person other than the naval officer, or surveyor of the district, the one-half of such moiety (that is, of the officer's) shall .be given to such informer, and the remainder thereof shall be disposed of between the collector, naval officer, and surveyor, in manner aforesaid.” The answer admits that the seizure was made and proceedings instituted in pursuance of the information communicated by the petitioners, which resulted in a decree of forfeiture. The only question presented by the demurrer is, whether the petitioners are precluded from claiming as informers, on account oí their being at the time inspectors of the customs. The language of the proviso is so plain that, had I not been informed at the argument that a different construction is put on the act, by the officers of the treasury department at Washington, I should not have supposed their right would admit of doubt. They cannot be included under the exception of naval officers, and surveyors, and when the information, in pursuance of which a forfeiture is recovered, comes from any other person, he is entitled to the informer's share. On what ground, then, can they be debarred from a claim which is open to every other person except the naval officer and surveyor V

It is true, as was suggested at the bar, that the inspectors are employed for the special purpose of preventing frauds on the revenue, and that in seizing smuggled goods, and communicating information of violations of the laws, they are only in the performance of their ordinary duties for which they receive a regular stipend. The argument is, that being thus paid, it is not to be presumed that an additional compensation is provided by law for services for which they are already fully paid. Certainly the courts can make no such presumption; but the inquiry is, whether the legislature has not offered them additional reward. It may be remarked that if this were a sufficient reason to exclude them from an extra reward, the same objection might be made to the claim of any other revenue officer. All are equally bound for all vigilance in protecting the revenue against frauds, and receive the regular emoluments attached to their offices, which are deemed an adequate compensation for their services. No presumption, therefore, arises from this circumstance, if they come fairly within the words of the law. But the enforcing of fines and forfeitures is always attended with more or less odium, and sometimes with danger, and though every man is supposed to be ready to do his whole duty, the legislature has thought it expedient to stimulate the activity and quicken the diligence of the revenue officers in doing what is sometimes an ungrateful service, by offering them a share in the forfeitures, which are recovered by their agency. The motive is to insure a more perfect execution of the fiscal laws, an object not only important to the government, but to every fair and correct merchant, who pays duties on his own importations; and it may be added, to the general morals of the community. There is scarcely anything more corrupting to the morals and industrious habits of a people than the practice of smuggling. It diverts men from the pursuits of regular industry, by the prospects of easily acquired illicit gains, and the transition from bold and desperate smuggling, to the more atrocious crimes of robbery and murder, has been found, by the experience of all nations, both natural and easy, and not very unfrequent. If the diligence of any officers of the revenue is to be encouraged by the offer of extra rewards, to whom would the offers be more naturally made than to the inspectors? They constitute the principal preventive police of the customs. They are employed for the express purpose of preventing and detecting frauds. They are the out-door guard, patrolling the streets, visiting the wharves and traversing the waters of the harbor, while the collector, naval officer, and surveyor, by the nature of their duties, are confined to their bureaus within doors. If extra vigilance and fidelity are anywhere to be sought by the offer of special rewards it would seem that they could nowhere be offered, where they would be more likely to accomplish the objects of the government than to the inspectors.

Another objection is made to the claim of the petitioners, and to me it seems to be the only one that can overcome the plain words of the statute. If it be well-founded it is a bar to the claim set up in the petition. It is this, that the inspectors are the agents and servants of the other officers, that their acts and information are the acts and information of the collector and surveyor. The collector, it is true, is authorized to em-[467]*467pley inspectors, but not on his sole authority. It is only with “the approbation of the principal officer of the treasury department” that he can employ them. If they were the mere servants of the collector, it is hardly supposable that his nomination would require the confirmation of the secretary of ■the treasury. Again, the surveyor is authorized to direct and superintend the inspectors, weighers, etc., in the course of their duties. St. 1799, § 91. But this 'no more makes them the agents and servants of the collector and surveyor, than when any other subordinate officer is placed under the ■direction and control of his superior. An inspector may seize goods which he suspects to be illegally introduced into the country. If he seizes them without probable cause, the owner may have a remedy for the wrong in an action of trespass. If the collector adopts the seizure, he makes it his own, and he will be liable; but will it be pretended that, if he repudiates it, he will be responsible for the tortious act of an inspector? Yet this consequence will follow if the inspector is the mere servant of the collector. For there is no principle of law more firmly established than that the principal is responsible for- the wrongful acts of his agent done within the scope of his agency. Story, Ag. § 542; Domat, Lois ;Civiles, liv. 1, tit. 1G, § 3, No. 1. And yet I hold it to be quite clear that, unless he .adopts the seizure of an inspector, he is no more name for it than the postmaster-gen■eral is liable for losses individuals may sustain from the misconduct of his deputies. Dunlop v. Munro, 7 Cranch [11 U. S.] 242; Whitfield v. Lord Le Despencer, Cowp. 754. Inspectors are in fact public officers, com.missioned and sworn as such, and are in the employment of the government, and not in rthe private employment of .the collector and .surveyor. They are so described in the law (St.

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12 F. Cas. 465, 6 N.Y. Leg. Obs. 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooper-v-fifty-one-casks-of-brandy-med-1848.