Peacock & Co. v. United States

2 Ct. Cust. 305, 1911 WL 20004, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 184
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 22, 1911
DocketNo. 642
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Ct. Cust. 305 (Peacock & Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peacock & Co. v. United States, 2 Ct. Cust. 305, 1911 WL 20004, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 184 (ccpa 1911).

Opinion

Martin, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Under the tariff act of 1897 the appellants imported from Kobe to Honolulu 500 casks of sake, which is an intoxicating beverage made [306]*306from rice by a process somewhat akin to brewing, and which possesses some slight resemblance to still wines.

The United States gauger found that 475 of the imported casks were full to their capacity, that 7 of them-were entirely empty, and that 18 of the casks were partly empty. These latter casks had a net capacity of 166 and a fraction gallons, but contained in fact only 81 and a fraction gallons, leaving them 85.1 gallons short of their net capacity, after deducting the 2\ per cent of allowable outage. The invoice failed to state the quantity of sake which was in' the casks when they were exported. It has therefore been properly accepted as a fact throughout this litigation that the casks were filled to their capacity at exportation.

The collector classified the importation by similitude with still wines containing more than 14 per cent of absolute alcohol, and assessed the same with duty at 50 cents per gallon under paragraph 296 of the act of 1897.

It appears from the printed record and from the official documents in the case, which are forwarded therewith, that the duty upon the cargo was thereupon liquidated at the rate of 50 cents a gallon, computed upon the actual contents of the casks as ascertained and reported by the gauger. The full casks were assessed upon their capacity; the empty casks were not assessed at all; and the partly empty casks were assessed upon the ’ actual contents thereof, which was 85.1 gallons less than then- entire capacity.

About- three months after this liquidation, however, the collector was directed by the department to reliquidate the entry above stated, in so far as it related to the 18 partly empty casks, by requiring an additional payment from the importers, so as to make the entire payment equal to the duty at 50 cents a gallon computed upon the full capacity of the casks, less only the 2\ per cent of allowable outage. The result of this, of course, was to require payment of duty by the importers upon the 85.1 gallons net shortage in the 18 partly empty casks. Acting upon this authority, the collector reliquidated the entry by requiring the payment of, the additional duty required thereby.

■ The importers duly filed their protest to this order of reliquidation, and contended that the gauger's finding correctly stated the quantity of sake which had reached port, and that duty should therefore be assessed upon that quantity alone and not upon the quantity which had been exported. They contended that the shortage in the 18 casks had resulted -from leakage at sea in transit, and that no duty should1 be collected upon the 85.1 gallons of sake thus actually failing of importation..

[307]*307This protest was heard by the Board of General Appraisers and was overrruled. The importers now pray for a reversal of that decision of the board.

As has already been noted, the collector classified the imported sake by similitude with still wine under paragraph 296 of the act of 1897 and assessed duty accordingly. This classification is no longer open to controversy; the final word of a long history of litigation upon that subject was spoken by the Supreme Court in the case of Komada v. United States (215 U. S., 392). The controversy in this case does not therefore relate to the classification of the importation nor to the rate of duty assessed pursuant thereto, but it relates solely to the quantity upon which the rate of duty should be assessed in the matter of the 18 partly empty casks.

Two' questions present themselves as parts of this issue. One relates to the facts and the other to the law. How much sake, according to the record, did actually reach port ? And if the quantity which actually reached port was less than the quantity exported because of leakage in transit, should the duty be assessed upon the quantity exported or only upon that part of it which actually reached port?

Taking up the question of fact first, it is conceded that the casks were full when they were shipped at Kobe, and that the only evidence concerning their contents upon importation is that contained in the report of the gauger and the statements in the official documents above mentioned in connection therewith. It appears therefrom that when the' vessel was unloaded at Honolulu the 18 casks in question were found to be lightweight, and -in accordance with instructions from the collector were set aside for the gauger’s inspection. The gauger made the inspection and found them to contain the quantities set forth in his report, the only direct evidence of leakage being the varying quantities of liquor found in the various short-weight casks. The gauger filed his report setting out the finding as first above noted. The first liquidation was thereupon made upon the basis of that finding and report.

This evidence is somewhat meager, and yet it seems to be much more consistent with the theory of a loss by leakage before importation than with any other theory. It is a matter of common knowl- . edge that losses do sometimes occur by leakage of liquors from casks while in shipment. • It is evident that both the gauger and the collector were satisfied at the time of the first liquidation that such a loss had happened in this case. The matter was then fresh in their attention, and this was the impression made upon their minds by what they saw. The importers must have been then and there given to understand that there was no dispute about the facts. It is [308]*308apparently conceded even yet that this finding was correct in so far as it related to the 7 casks which were wholly empty. They, too, had been full at exportation, but they were found to be wholly empty when examined by the gauger. Even in the reliquidation subsequently directed no duty was assessed upon the sake which was in these casks when they were exported, evidently because it was still accepted as a fact that their contents had been wholly lost by leakage at sea before they reached port. The same evidence, however, exists concerning the shortage of the 18 partly empty casks. It is true that the leakage in both cases may possibly have occurred after the vessel reached port and before it was unladen, in which event of course the shortage should not be allowed, but it is highly probable that a leakage so recent could have been detected and located as such. Under all the circumstances, therefore, the natural conclusion seems to be that the shortage resulted from leakage which totally emptied some casks and partly emptied others while the consignment was in shipment prior to importation. Furthermore it may be noted that in the direction given by the department to the collector for reliqui-dation the foregoing question of fact in relation to the contents of the casks at importation was not set out as the basis of the ruling, but only the question of law above suggested. It does not seem to have been denied even then that the leakage in question had occurred before the vessel reached port. The collector was, however, referred to preceding rulings of the department to the effect that no allowance should be made for leakage of sake while in transit, because the law prohibited such allowance even if the shortage occurred before importation.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ct. Cust. 305, 1911 WL 20004, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peacock-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1911.