MEREDITH v. United States

38 U.S. 486, 10 L. Ed. 258, 13 Pet. 486, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 454
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by92 cases

This text of 38 U.S. 486 (MEREDITH v. United States) 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
MEREDITH v. United States, 38 U.S. 486, 10 L. Ed. 258, 13 Pet. 486, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 454 (1839).

Opinion

.Mr. Justice- Story

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a writ of error to the Circuit Court for the district of Maryland; The original action was assumpsit brought by the United States against the plaintiffs in error, who were the original defendants, to recover from them,as assignees' under a general assignment of the property of the firm of Smith and Buchanan, the .amount of certain duties alleged, to be due from the said firm upon certain importations in the. brig Unicorn and. the ship Brazilian, out of the funds in the hands of the assignees, upon, the ground of an asserted .right of priority of the United States to payment out of the same funds.

At. the trial,.upon the general issue, the material’facts'appeared as follows. ■ In the-. y,ears 181,8. and 1819' Smith and Buchanan, and Hollins and M^áir,’.two separate commercial firms, in Baltimore,imported, orpthéir’own account as owners, a quantity of goods from Calcutta irf Jhe brig Unicorn and ship Brazilian above mentioned, *492 on which, the .present duties were claimed. Smith and Buchanan were the importers and owners of two-thirds of the cargo of the ship, and five-ninths of that'of the Brig; and that proportion went to their possession and use, The remainder of both cargoes belotaged to Hollins. and. M£Blair. The entries of both cargoes were, made at the customhouse at Baltimore by John S. Hollins, óne of the firm, of Hollins and M£Blair, as imported in the vessels, respectively, by Hollins and M£Blair, and Smith and Buchanan; and Hollins gaye bonds for- the duties in .the common form im.his. own name'; .and James A. Buchanan, of . the firm of Smith and-Buchanan, and Lemuel Taylor, who is admitted to be a mere-surety, also executed the same bonds. The condition . of the bonds .was for the payment of the dutieis on the goods “entered by the above bounded John S. Hollins, for Smith and Buchanan, and Hollins and M£Blair, as imported” in the ship and brig respectively. Upon these bonds the United-States afterwards instituted actions against each , of the obligors, and recovered judgments in the Circuit Court for the. District of Maryland. These judgments have, been revived, and are now in full force and unreversed. Smith and Buchanan became insolvent; and after the rendition Of the -judgments, Taylor; lalso became insolvent under the insolvent laws of Maryland. One Rose well L. Colt- became the trustee of Taylor; and afterwards, under the treaty of. indemnity with "France, a large sum of money was awarded to him by the commissioners; and a largé sum of money Was. also awarded ' to Smith and Buchanan, which has béen received by the Original defendants as their assignees,, and is more than sufficient to pay.the sums now claimed by the United States,.but not enough to pay the partnership debts of the firm of Smith arid Buchanan. Taylor applied'to the treasury department for the, usual certificates granted to claimants by the awards underdhe treaty,; but they were refused by the department upon the ground of Taylor’s indebtment to the United State? upon the aforesaid bonds and judgments. Since that period an arrangernerit has been made between the government and C.olt, the trustee, by, which a sufficient, sum of .the moneys so due by Taylor - is reserved in the treasury to secure the amount of the judgments. on' the bonds against -Taylor,.-and the residue has been paid over to the trustee. And the present action has been brought by the United States for the benefit of Taylor’s trustee, in order to give to-the latter the-full.-rights and remedies of the ■•'United States to a priority of payment out of the moneys.of Smith and' Buchanan, in the hands of the defendants as their assignees. To repel the supposed equity in Taylor, as .a surety, the defendants offered-to prove that at the period of the application of. Taylor for the benefit of . the insolvent laws, he .was largely indebted-to Smith g.nd Buchanan, and in a sum' more than sufficient ■ to coyer,- the whole amount due úpon the duty bonds aforesaid, and still remained s'O indebted. The Court rejected.the evidence, and to this rejection the defendants excepted.. And this" constitutes the first bill of ex *493 .ceptions. Upon this We have no more to. say than that we think the ruling of the Court was clearly right. Whatever might- be the merits of-such an equitable claim in any suit brought by .Taylor or his assignee against Smith and Buchanan, or their .assignees;' if could have no proper place in a suit brought by the United States-to recover demands justly due to them for duties.. It was, as .to them, res inter alios- acta; and ..the United States were'not'called upon to engage in or to' unravel any of the accounts and set-offs ex-' isting between those parties,, in a.suit at law like the present. "

Afterwards-the United States asked an instruction to ..the jury, which was given to the jury, to which the defendants excepted. The defendants then prayed certain instructions to the jury, which the Court refused to give ;' -to which refusal the defendants also excepted. These exceptions are spread at large upon the record, and. constitute the second bill of. exceptions.. It is unnecessary to recite, them at large, as they are all resolvable into the leading points which have been so dully argued at the bar; and we shall, therefore, proceed at once 'to the consideration of these points.

The first question is¿ whether. Smith and Búcharián'were ever personally indebted for- these duties; . or,, in other words, whether the- importers of goods do, in virtue of the importation thereof, become personally indebted to the United .States for the duties due thereon;' or the remedy of the United States is exclusively confined to the lien on the goods, and the. security 6f the bond1 given for the duties. It appears to us clear upon principle, an well, as upon the obvious import of the provisions of the various aets of Congress on this .subject, that.the duties due upon all goods imported constitute a-personal debt due-to the United States from the importer, (and-the consignee fi this purpose is-treated as. the owner and importer,) independently of any lien on the goods, and. any bond given for the duties,' The language of .-the. duty act.of the 27th óf April, 1816,. ch. 107, tinder. Which -the present importations, were .made, declares that “ there shall be levied, collected, and paid,” the several duties prescribed by the act on goods imported into, the'United States. And this is a common fpfmulary in.other. acts laying duties. Now, 'in the exposition of statutes laying duties, it has been a commoti ride of interpretation derived from the principles of the, common law, that where the duty is charged., on the goods, the. meaning is that it is a personal , charge1 óñ thq owner by reason of. the goods. So it was held' in Attorney-general vs. ___, 2 Anst. R. 558, wheré: a duty was laid on wash in. a still.; and it was said by the' Court that where -duties are charged ón any articles in a revenue act, the word “ charged’.’ means that the owner shall be .debited with-the sum; and that, this rule prevailed even when the article was actually, lost or destroyed before -it became available to the owner.. Nor is there any thing new in. this doctrine; for it has ,Iotw*been held that, in all such cases an action of debt lies in favour bf. the government against the importer, for the duties, whenever by *494 áccident, mistake,- or fraud, no duties, or short duties have been paid.

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38 U.S. 486, 10 L. Ed. 258, 13 Pet. 486, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meredith-v-united-states-scotus-1839.