Lawrence v. Allen

48 U.S. 785, 12 L. Ed. 914, 7 How. 785, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 374
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 48 U.S. 785 (Lawrence v. Allen) 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
Lawrence v. Allen, 48 U.S. 785, 12 L. Ed. 914, 7 How. 785, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 374 (1849).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WOODBURY

delivered, the. opinion of the court.

This was a writ of error to reverse a judgment in the Circuit Court for the Southern District of New York. That judgment was rendered in favor of Allen et al., the original plaintiffs, in a suit to recover back the. amount of duties which Lawrence, the defendant, as collector of the port of New York, had demanded and received on the importation of certain boxes of India-rubber shoes, in September, A. D. 1845, and which the importers claimed to be by law free. The duties were,, therefore, paid under protest; and at the trial, the court, among other things, ruled, that, on the facts proved, these shoes were not, in point of law, subject to any duty; and, consequently, a verdict was returned for the plaintiffs below for the amount which had been paid to the collector, and interest.

The facts proved or admitted, which appear material, were, that these shoes consisted wholly of India-rubber, and in different sizes, suited for men, women, and children; that no other work had been expended on them except to dip the. moulds or lasts into the milky íiquid, as procured from the India-rubber trees, and then dry them over a fire, -^performing this process several times, till a proper thickness was obtained. A small ornament was afterwards drawn on some of them, and a coarse stuffing inserted in others, and in this conditibn they had for many years been imported, and worn without any.essential change or addition here, unless in sqme instances slightly to trim' and stretch > them on a last. It was also proved that shoes, made in part from India-rubber and in part from cloth or 'leather, of a thinner and lighter fabric, had been- sometimes, imported from Europe, and-for several years had been extensively manufactured in this country.

*791 The law which governs the question whether these shoes ought, to pay a duty of thirty per cent, ad valorem, or be admitted free, is the act of Congress of August 30, 1842 (5 Stat. at Large, 555). In its fifth section, thirty per cent, is imposed “ on India-rubber oil-cloth, webbing, shoes, braces or suspenders, or other fabrics or manufactured, articles, composed wholly or in part of India-rubber.” And in the ninth.section, among other articles declared to be “ exempt from duty,” is “ India-rubber, in bottles or sheets, or otherwise unmanufactured.”

The court below entertained an opinion, that the clause in this law imposing a duty of thirty per cent, on India-rubber shoes referred to those made in a finished state from that material, after , being altered in Brazil from its liquid condition to the more solid state, and to the forms of sheets, shoes, bottles, &c:, and that this alteration was not a manufacturé, though into a shape designed for use without any material change, and hence, that shoes so miáde arid imported were not dutiable-. This view was, undoubtedly, correct to a certain extent, and in some aspects of the subject; but in others it seems to us to' involve some errors, which we think ought- to be corrected, and which require more extended explanations because overruling the judgment below. Thus, although this act of Congress clearly meant to impose a duty of thirty per cent, on shoes imported, which had been made in part from India-rubber after it had been hardened and fashioned into some crude shape in South America, yet we have no doubt it might likewise intend to impose this duty on shoes' made abroad wholly from India-rubber while in its liquid staip, and especially if, when so made, such shoes were in a condition to be worn without further material labor on them.here, and were made to be so worn, and were in this form often actually worn.

It is our opinion, therefore, that the jury should have been so • instructed; and if they were satisfied those shoes had been thus made to be so worn, and, in the language of commerce, if such shoes were called “ India-rubber shoes,” no less than those made here or in Europe in part from India-rubber and in a more finished form, that the duty of thirty per cent, ought to have been paid on them.

Some of our reasons for this opinion are briefly these.

The articles imported in this case manifestly come within the letter of the clause imposing a duty of thirty per cent, on “ India-rubber shoes.” They are “ India-rubber shoes.” Being thus provided for as shoes, the subsequent clause, making certain articles free which were unmanufactured, artd not enumerating shoes among them, cannot be presumed to embrace or refer to any thing already provided for. United States v. Clarke, 5 *792 Mason, C. C. 30. Indeed, these shoes were more emphatically India-rubber shoes, than those made only in part of that material, as are most, if not all, of those manufactured in.this country and in Europe. Again, to remove difficulty in many cases whether an article should come under the description of those liable to duty, there it is added, in the first clause, taxing them,. manufactured articles -composed wholly or, in part of India-rubber ” ; ánd, in this way, the duty extends to any shoes,, if a manufactured article^ whether they'be like these, composed wholly of India-rubber, or, like most others, composed only in part of it.

• Much more do the shoes in this case appear to come within this provision in the act of Congress imposing the duty of thirty per cent;, when’ we examine the spirit and object of that provision. To ascertain these with some degree of certainty, it may be useful, in the first place, to advert a moment, to the past, as well as subsequent, legislation of Congress on this subject.

The import of India-rubber, in any form, into- this country, does not appear to have attracted attention in the revenue laws, as a' separate and specific article* till 1832. Before that, and especially in the tariff acts of 1828, 1824, and 1816, all of which are usually conceded to have looked to protection as well as revenue, India-rubber is not enumerated eo nomine as free or dutiable, and hence was taxed generally, from twelve and a half to fifteen per cent., among the non-eniimerated articles (3 Stat. at Large, 310; 4 Stat. at Large, 29 and 590). But in 1832, when the policy had become changed to reduce an overflowing revenue, by leaving frqe such unmanufactured articles as furnished raw materials to our own manufacturers, and such manufactured articles as did not compete with any made here, the act of July 14th, 1832, § 3, exempted from duty entirely “ India-rubber (4 Stat. at Large, 590). In 1833, a like policy, for a like reason, was pursued, and so in 1841, by expressions in the former period placing India-rubber ” among the articles free from duty (4 Stat. at. Large, 630), and in the. latter, making “India-rubber” still excepted from duty, though several articles before free were then taxed (5 Stat. at Large, 463).

But in 1842, when the policy of the government again became adapted to protection no less than revenue, the act now under consideration was. shaped so as to tax whatever might compete with'our own manufacturers, and to admit free only articles in such shape; esc. 4orm' as were .not calculated to rival our own. Now beiorh 18'&,

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Bluebook (online)
48 U.S. 785, 12 L. Ed. 914, 7 How. 785, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-allen-scotus-1849.