Oldfield v. Marriott

51 U.S. 146, 13 L. Ed. 364, 10 How. 146, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1459
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 11, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 51 U.S. 146 (Oldfield v. Marriott) 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
Oldfield v. Marriott, 51 U.S. 146, 13 L. Ed. 364, 10 How. 146, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1459 (1851).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WAYNE

delivered thé opinion of the court.

This cause was tried and decided in the Circuit Court, upon a. statement of facts made by the parties.

The question arising from it is, whether or not the vessels of Portugal are within that clause of the act of the. 30th of July, 1846, to reduce duties on imports, in which, it is said coffee and tea are exempt from duty when imported direct from the place of their growth or production in American vessels, or in foreign vessels entitled by reciprocal treatiés to be exempt from discriminating duties, tonnage, and other charges.

It is contended that Portuguese vessels are within the act, upon a proper, construction of it in connection with the second article of 'the treaty with Portugal.

This article is in these words: — “Vessels of the. United States of America arriving, either laden or in ballast, in the ports of the kingdom and possessions of Portugal, and; reciprocally, Portuguese vessels arriving, either laden or in ballast, in the ports of the United' States of America, shall be treated on their en? trance, during their stay, and at their departure, upon the same footing as national vessels coming from the same place, with respect to the duties of tonnage,- lighthouse duties, pilotage, port charges, as'well as to the fees of public officers, and all other duties and charges, of whatever kind or. dénomination, levied upon vessels of commerce in the name or to the profit of the government, the local authorities, or of any public or private establishment whatever.” Its meaning is,' that there shall be an entire reciprocity of duties and charges upon, the vessels of the two nations in their respective ports; that ia, that Portuguese vessels in our ports shall pay no other charges than American vessels do, and that American vessels in Portuguese ports shall -be charged with the same duties as Portuguese vessels may be liable to pay. ' What these duties may be shall be determined by each nation for its own ports.

There is not a word in the article relating to the duties upon . the cargoes-of the vessels of either nation. Nor is there a provision in the treaty, — as we shall show there is in other treaties between the United States and other nations, — restricting either nation from levying discriminating duties upon cargoea carried by the.'vessels of either into the ports of the other, *158 when they are made up. of articles, merchandise, or manufactures the growth or production, of a different nation than that to which the vessel carrying it belongs, or when the. cargo shall not be the production either of Portugal or of the. United States.

This is the view which both nations have taken of the second article, and of the other parts of the treaty relating to the cargoes of -vessels.

The Queen of Portugal, in October, 1841, m less than six months after the ratification of the treaty had-been proclaimed by the United States, promulgated a decree of the general Cortes, imposing a discriminating duty upon, goods imported in foreign vessels which were not the production of the countries to which' such vessels might belong. . The object of it was to secure to Portuguese vessels the direct carrying-trade of such merchandise to the ports of Portugal.

The United States did the same by the eleventh section of the act of the 30th August, 1842, two years after the treaty was made. It plaeed an additional duty of ten per centum above the rates of duty fixed in the act; “ upon goods,, on the importation of vybich, in American or foreign vessels, a specific discrimination between them is not made in the aef, which shall •be imported in ships not .of the United States.”

This legislation was acted upon by'both nations without any complaint, or even suggestion, that it was not in conformity with the treaty stipulations between them. It shows that the .views of both were that the vessels of both were to pey in their respective ports the charges their own vessels were subjected to, and no more, and that the duties upon goods, not of American or Portuguese production, imported into the ports of either nation by the vessels of the other, might be. made liable to such discriminating duties as either might think would give to their own vessels the direct trade of such articles.

We will now show that'this practice of both nations was. exactly what the treaty itself had provided for between them.

The third, fourth, fifth, and sixth articles of the treaty relate to the introduction of merchandise into the two countries, and are all that do so. The seventh and eighth exclude, frtfm the operation of those before them the coastwise trade of both nations, and the ports and qountries in the kingdom and possession of Portugal where foreign corhmerce and navigation were not admitted. And the thirteenth article is a mutual, undertaking, if either nation shall grant to any other nation a particular favor in.navigation or commerce, that it shall become common to the other party, upon the same terms upon which the grant may be made. The third article provides that the *159 productions of either nation shall be admitted into their respective ports upon payment of the same duty as would be payable on the same merchandise if it. were, the growth of any other foreign- country. No prohibition can be put upon the importation or exportation of'the produce of either nation which shall not extend to all other foreign nations; nor shall there be áhy higher or other duty in eithér country, upon the exportation of articles to either from the: other, than is put. upon the' like articles exported to any other foreign country. As yet nothing has been said about the' transportation of commodities from one nation to the other, or from foreign, states. That-is provided for in the fourth, fifth, and sixth articles. By the fourth, both nations can carry in their vessels the productions of each into the ports of the other upon the same terms, — the produce and manufactures of Portugal and the United States, it must be remembered, not the produce or manufactures of any foreign country; for the stipulation in the fifth article in .respect to the transportation of these permits it to be done only whenever there may be lawfully imported into any'or all of the ports of either nation, in vessels of any foreign country, articles which are the growth, produce, or manufacture of a country other than that to which the importing vessel shall belong. By the sixth article, the vessels of both nations may export and re-export from the ■ ports of each all. kinds of merchandise which can be lawfully exported or re-exported from the ports of either, without paying higher or other duties or charges than the same articles pay when exported or re-exported in the vessels óf either nation..

From all this it must be seen that neither nation has a right by the treaty to carry in its vessels to the ports of the other the produce of foreign countries, except upon the payment of such duties, discriminating and otherwise,, as each nation may impose.

So stood both nations under the treaty from the time of its ratification, and under their respective legislation afterwards relating to' duties upon cargoes of foreign produce, without any misapprehension by. either, or by the merchants of either, of the privileges of commerce- conferred by the treaty. Indeed, there could have been none.

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Bluebook (online)
51 U.S. 146, 13 L. Ed. 364, 10 How. 146, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oldfield-v-marriott-scotus-1851.