Jaffray v. Murphy

13 F. Cas. 285, 19 Int. Rev. Rec. 143
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1874
DocketCase No. 7,172
StatusPublished

This text of 13 F. Cas. 285 (Jaffray v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jaffray v. Murphy, 13 F. Cas. 285, 19 Int. Rev. Rec. 143 (circtsdny 1874).

Opinion

WOODRUFF, Circuit Judge

(charging Jury). I shall not deem it my duty in this case to enter very largely into the discussion of the testimony, but hope to be able, to present to you the rules of law applicable to the case in a form which will be intelligible to you. I shall go so far by way of illustration, and refer to some testimony, perhaps, as may be sufficient to enable you to apply those rules to the particular case in question. The plaintiffs here paid to the United States, upon the specific goods which are in controversy, a duty of sixty per cent, ad valorem. They claim that thirty per cent only should have been exacted. No question is made here now that they protested against the exaction in due season, and complied with all the preliminary steps which are prescribed by the statute to entitle them to come into this court and assert their claim to a reimbursement; and they are, therefore, in a situation to claim reimbursement, and to have your verdict for the amount it legally exacted, if such exaction be upon the evidence as you shall find it an illegal one. The defendant comes in answer, to this claim to justify the exaction of the duty of sixty per cent; and upon the defendant is the burthen •of justifying that exaction by proving, to your satisfaction, facts which, according to the law as it shall be expounded to you by the court, entitled him to require sixty in place of thirty per cent. And for that purpose the defendant refers to the statute, to the terms of which I will call your attention. It is founded in the eighth section of the act of June 30, 1864 [13 Stat. 210), in these words: “On and after the day and year previously mentioned in the act, in lieu of the duties heretofore imposed by law on the articles hereinafter mentioned, there shall be levied, collected, and paid on the goods, wares, and merchandise enumerated and provided for in this section imported from foreign countries the following duties and rates of duty; that is to say, on all silk vestings, pongees, shawls, scarfs, mantillas, pelerines, handkerchiefs, veils, laces, shirts, drawers, bonnets,” and other articles which I need not •dwell upon, sixty per cent, ad valorem. “Silk laces”, are the important words in question in this case.

Now, gentlemen, that statute, and those words of that statute, are in form general •on “silk laces.” Its words are apt to include all laces made of silk. Its language is intelligible; it is comprehensive; it is a part of a statute which contains classifications of goods according to the material of which they are made. The statute is not exclusively occupied in classifying by material, but many of Its clauses classify the subject of duty by the material of which it is made; and this section does not purport to specify or particularize the kinds of laces made of silk which it defines. It is “on silk laces,” without discrimination, without pointing at all to the name by which they are known in commerce, and without specifying at all any of the different kinds of laces made of silk of which the witnesses have spoken; and it is my duty to say to you, gentlemen, that the mere fact that silk laces are divided into kinds, which in trade and commerce are designated by descriptive names which are known as designating different kinds of silk laces, is not enough to take any goods out of these comprehensive terms. Nor does the fact (if it be proved) that some laces made of silk are made by machinery, and some laces made of silk are made by hand, of itself withdraw any of them from the general designation of silk laces which is employed in this section of the statute.

The. tariff acts generally, as I have said of this particular act, employ two modes of designating the subjects of duty; perhaps more, but two in particular which are pertinent to the discussion which has been had before' you, and which may be important, perhaps, when you come to apply what I have to say to you to the evidence, and to the consideration of this case. One is, as I have suggested, the classification with reference to the material of which the goods are made, and another is by specific technical names given to specific articles. Now, gentlemen, when the goods which are subjects of duty are designated by the material of which they are made or composed, the statute is to be construed as presumptively including such goods by .whatever subordinate or specific name- they may be known; and though all in the commercial world are in the habit of using the specific name when they speak of the particular article in question. For example, to illustrate; If we have a tariff act which imposes a particular duty on cotton goods, if that designation alone is used in the legislation pertaining to the subject of duty upon the importations, it presumptively includes all cotton goods, even though importers, merchants, dealers, and customers ■ all the country through, when they speak of a particular kind of goods made of cotton, always give the special name of the article; as, for example, under this attempted illustration, muslin, cambric muslin, cotton drilling, cotton shirting, cotton sheeting. Doubtless the list might be .largely increased, providing that customers wanting cambric muslin never go into a store and ask for cotton goods, or providing that importers importing cambric muslin never advertise or speak of It among themselves or import it, or deal in it with customers, under the name of cotton goods, but deal in it and speak of it as cam-[287]*287brie muslin, or that parties who deal in or are in the habit of selling or using cotton drilling use that as' the appropriate commercial name, would not tend to withdraw those goods — would not withdraw those goods from the general designation in a’statute wherein a duty was imposed upon cotton goods, they being made of cotton, which I have assumed for.the purposes of my illustration. In such cases, gentlemen, the terms of the statute include all the subordinate or special kinds of cotton goods, notwithstanding that dealers and others — men in trade and commerce— when they speak of the goods they want, or the goods they offer for sale, or the goods they wish to buy, describe them by the specific name of the article which they wish to buy, sell, advertise, or import.

A similar illustration might be supposed in regard to silk goods. These suggestions are hypothetical, and are only given to you that you may understand the view which the court takes of the law. I say a similar illustration might be supposed in regard to silk goods and their various subordinate names; for instance, suppose there is a duty on silk goods, and nothing else in a statute or prior legislation to limit or control the signification, then, as I have before said, the term would indicate all goods made of silk. Possibly, also, it might include some goods that contained part cotton, if such were in use and were made, imported, and known in trade and commerce as silk laces. But leaving that point out of view, as it is not material here, it is sufficient to say that it would include all goods made of silk. Now, I say,- the fact that customers and dealers, importers, traders, and commercial men at large, or the whole world, were in the habit of asking for taffeta when they wanted taffeta, or advertising taffetas if they had taffetas for sale, and that taffetas were therefore known as descriptive of the particular article among commercial men throughout the country — or lute-strings or any of those terms which are descriptive subordinate designations of a kind of silk goods. I say that evidence that the importer had introduced them into the market and entered them by their specific name would not withdraw them from the general designation of silk goods.

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. Cas. 285, 19 Int. Rev. Rec. 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaffray-v-murphy-circtsdny-1874.