Luckemeyer v. Magone

38 F. 30, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2118
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJanuary 7, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 38 F. 30 (Luckemeyer v. Magone) 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
Luckemeyer v. Magone, 38 F. 30, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2118 (circtsdny 1889).

Opinion

Lacombe, J.,

(orally charging jury.) Before coming to the particular question which I shall submit to you, it is only right, in view of the great elaborateness and care with which this ease has been presented by counsel, that I should briefly state the reasons which lead me to the conclusion I have reached.

[32]*32What- the intent of congress was in enacting this particular paragraph seems reasonably plain from the common knowledge which we all possess, and from a comparison of it with the paragraph of the Revised Statutes, which was the law on the same subject immediately preceding the adoption of the act of 1883. -Of course, it is a matter of common knowledge that our tariff acts are devised for more than the single purpose of raising revenue. The creation, protection, and fostering of home industries, large, small, or yet unborn, is an element which is largely, considered by the law-makers when they frame these statutes. And that some such object was intended here seems to me plainly apparent upon a comparison of the two paragraphs, No. 365 of this act, and the corresponding clause in the Revised Statutes. By the act of June 22, 1874, all women’s and children’s dress goods, whether made of mixed materials, or made wholly of wool, were dutiable at 6 cents per square yard and 35 per centum ad valorem. The act of March 3, 1883, divided such articles into two groups, — the mixed goods, and the wholly wool goods. On the mixed goods it reduced the duty from 6 cents per square yard and 35 per centum ad valorem to 5 cents per square yard and 35 per centum ad valorem; but on the wholly wrnol goods it raised the duty very materially, viz., from 6 cents per square yard and 35 per centum ad valorem to 9 cents per square yard and 40 per centum ad valorem. The mere comparison of these two paragraphs seems plainly to indicate that there was an intention, in fixing this new rate of duty, to accord some measure of protection to the wholly wool goods. Taking that into consideration, the plain, first meaning which any one would draw from the closing part of the paragraph which begins with the words “if composed wholly of wool, worsted,” etc., is that congress intended to provide that if goods in reality of the wholly woolen class were so disguised as to masquerade as mixed goods, when in reality they were wholly of wool, they should not by that operation avoid the heavy discrimination which was laid against the wholly woolen goods. Although we may be quite well satisfied, however, that such was the intent of congress, and with due appreciation of the great lengths to which the courts have repeatedly gone in applying the doctrine of interpretation according to intent, I do not feel warranted in interpreting this last clause of the paragraph according to the intent expressed above unless we can find within the plain language used, when fairly construed, such words as will warrant the application of that interpretation. In what wray, then, do they provide for the goods which, although in reality of one class, may be claimed, in order to evade the operation of the tariff act, to be another? By the enumeration of certain kinds of goods in an excepting clause. First, the exception provides for “all such goods with selvedges made wholly or in part of other materials.” The use of the word “such,” and of the word “other,” turns us back to preceding words in order to find out what that, particular clause means. Turning to those words, we find the whole sentence to read thus: “If composed wholly of wool, worsted, etc., or of a mixture of them, 9 cents per square yard and 40 per centum ad valorem; but all such goods with selvedges made wholly or in part of [33]*33other materials,” etc. The only possible construction of that clause, standing by itself, seems to be that goods composed wholly of wool, worsted, or a mixture of them, shall pay 9 cents per square yard and 40 per cen-tum ad valorem, and that all goods composed wholly of wool, worsted, or a mixture of them, but which have selvedges made wholly or in part of other materials, (and to that extent are in fact of mixed material,) shall pay the same rate as provided further on. That disposes of the first clause of the exception. The other clause provides for all such goods * * * with threads of other materials introduced for the purpose of changing the classification.” This is the clause I shall leave to the jury. It is undisputed that the threads of the warp are composed of a mixture of ootton and woolen, and for that reason the defendant asks for a direction in his favor. In my opinion, however, the clause does not cover goods with threads of mixed material, i. e., if the mixture is not itself a mixture of threads. The word “other,” as we have seen above, means “other than wool, worsted,” etc., and the abrupt change in the same sentence from the phrase “wholly or in part of other materials,” descriptive of the selvedges, to the phrase “of other materials,” descriptive of the threads, seems explicitly to restrict the clause to threads into whose composition neither wool nor worsted enter.

Now, gentlemen of the jury, the question before you is perhaps a simple one, but the task before me, in leaving it to you, 1 find to be extremely difficult. When we get away from the domain of science and the strictly accurate phraseology which it employs, one of the hardest tasks that can be laid upon us is to give an accurate definition of any particular word. That with which you are here concerned is the word “thread.” It is a word which perhaps each of you uses more than once each day of his life. What are you to understand that word to mean when jou come to deal with the facts of this case? Of course, when we are challenged to find the meaning for a word, however familiar we may be with it ourselves, it is our custom to go to the dictionaries; and so we may, in this instance, turn to them. Now, lexicographers have several functions which they undertake to discharge. They deal not only ■with the eveiy-day meaning,- — the received meaning in common speech of any particular word, — but they hunt down its antecedents; they trace its origin and its growth: they find in some syllable, or combination of its letters, the root from which it has sprung; and in preparing their definitions they take all these elements into consideration. That should be remenibered whenever we turn to a dictionary for a meaning. The most comprehensive meaning which I have found in any of the authorities which have been submitted — and we had best begin with the most comprehensive meaning — the most comprehensive definition of the word “thread” which I have found, is in Worcester: “A small line or twist of any fibrous or filamentous substance, as flax, silk, cotton, or wool, particularly such as is used for weaving or for sewing; a filament; a small string. ” Turning to the same dictionary for a definition of the word filament ” we find it defined as “a substance like a thread; a long thread-like process; a slender fiber.” That is the most comprehensive and far-reach[34]*34ing definition of the word which I find in any of the dictionaries. It indicates that a thread is produced by some process or other which gives to its constituent parts a twist; and even the alternative word which is used, — “filament,”—which perhaps we would ordinarily, in common speech, not consider as necessarily importing a twist, — even the word used as its alternative by Worcester, — is defined as “a substance like a thread; a long thread-like process;” thus indicating some measure of twisting. Of course, the thread that we speak of in our every-day speech is not only twisted, but it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 F. 30, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luckemeyer-v-magone-circtsdny-1889.