Pierson v. Lawrence

19 F. Cas. 677, 2 Blatchf. 495
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 F. Cas. 677 (Pierson v. Lawrence) 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
Pierson v. Lawrence, 19 F. Cas. 677, 2 Blatchf. 495 (circtsdny 1852).

Opinion

BETTS, District Judge.

This cause was decided by the court at the last term, but, at the instance of the counsel for the plaintiffs, the opinion of the court was withheld, and leave was given to the plaintiffs to apply to the court at the present term for a re-hearing, upon the suggestion that important facts had been overlooked by the court, or had not been properly presented to their' attention. The court consented to receive an argument on paper and to reconsider the case. The United States attorney declined offering any further argument The counsel for the plaintiffs has presented his views in a carefully prepared statement of facts and law, and the court has reviewed, with close attention, these suggestions. The result is, that we have not been able to discover any error in our conclusions at the last term.

The case upon the facts is this: On the 7th of May, 1849, the plaintiffs made an entry, at the custom house in New-York, of S70 bundles of hoop iron, valued at £174 10s. 9d. sterling, commissions, 2% per cent., £4 7s. 3d, and charges, £1 Is. 5d., total, £179 19s. 5d., with an affidavit of one of the plaintiffs that the invoice accompanying the entry was true. That invoice is dated March 14th, 1849, and is from the Coalbrookdale Company to the plaintiffs. The iron was imported from Liverpool to New-York in the ship St. Lawrence, and the date of the invoice, for the purposes of this ease, may be taken to be the time of the departure of the ship from Liverpool, and that of the entry the time of her arrival in New-York. On the 9th of May, 1849, one of the principal appraisers wrote on the face of the invoice: “Add 10s. per ton, to make market value, with chgs. and corns, as per invoice.” This raised the entry to £191 2s. 3d., upon which sum duties were exacted. On the 10th of May. 1849, the plaintiffs wrote upon the face of the entry the following protest, addressed to the defendant; “We hereby protest against the payment of 30 per cent, duty on £191 2s. 3d., charged on S70 bundles of hoop-iron contained in this entry, claiming that, under existing laws, said goods are only liable to a duty of 30 per cent on £179 19s. 5d., because that was the actual cost of the goods, and was the full market value at the time of purchase, and, if any delay occurred in the shipment it was contrary to our express wishes and directions and owing to circumstances entirely beyond our control. We pay the amount exacted, in order to get possession of the goods, claiming to have the difference refunded.”

Another entry was made by the plaintiffs, the same day, of 346 bundles of hoop-iron and 175 bundles of bar-iron, invoiced by the Coalbrookdale Company, March 14th, 1S49, imported in the ship Blanche, from Liverpool, invoiced and entered at £120 7s. 0d., and, as in the preceding case, raised by appraisement to £12S 4s. Sd. On the 10th of May, 1849, a protest, in the same terms as in that case, was written by the plaintiffs on the entry. The oath of the owner and the order of the appraiser were the same in this instance as in the preceding one.

On the same day, a third entry was made, in like manner, by the plaintiffs, of 974 bars [678]*678and 40 bundles of Iron, imported in the ship E. E. Perkins, from Liverpool, invoiced by the Coalbrookdale Company, March 10th, 1849, at £10S Os. 2d. As in the preceding cases, the invoice valuation was raised by appraisement to £22o 10s. Sd. The duties imposed thereon were paid by the plaintiffs under a written protest, dated May 10th, 1849, in the same terms as the one before set forth.

On the 21st of May, 1S49, three other entries were made by the plaintiffs. One was of 839 bundles of bar-iron, imported in the ship N. H. Wolfe, invoiced March 27th. 1849, by the same company, at £200 7s. 8d., and raised by appraisement to £233 7s. 6d. The second was of 3,449 bars and 20 bundles of iron, imported in the ship Liberty, invoiced April 19th, 1S49, at £277 7s. 3d., and appraised at £329 12s. Od. The third entry was on two invoices from the same company, one dated April Gth. 1S49, the other dated April 12th, 1849, imported in the ship Garrick. The joint invoice value was £780 os. 4d. The appraised value was £800 6s. 9d. Duties were imposed and paid on the appraised values in all the cases, and like written protests were made by the plaintiffs.

On the trial, the plaintiffs proved the purchase-price or actual cost of the iron, by giving in evidence a correspondence between themselves and the Coalbrookdale Company, of Liverpool, by which it appeared that the iron charged in the invoices was ordered by the plaintiffs, by letters dated in New-York in the months of November and December, ■1S48. and January, 1S49, with specifications of the description and quality of the iron required. When those orders were received in Liverpool, the Coalbrookdale Company booked them, charging the various kinds of iron specified at the then current prices, and advised the plaintiffs that the orders were accepted. It was proved that this constituted a purchase, in the usage of the trade. The vendors then proceeded to prepare the iron conformably to the orders, and, when it was shipped, the invoices were made out at the prices prevailing at the time the orders were received, and without regard to the price or market value when the iron was delivered or shipped. Ordinarily, on the purchase of iron from manufacturers, some time elapses after the iron ordered is booked, before it can be rolled and prepared for •shipping. Manufacturers are not accustomed to keep large stocks on hand await-iiig orders, but to manufacture it to conform to the description ordered. The iron in the present case was ordered previously to the period it was expected to be shipped, to give time to have it manufactured. It is to be assumed that the appraisement made by the appraisers exhibits the true market value of the iron at the times it was invoiced and shipped, for there is no evidence contradicting that valuation.

The plaintiff's protested against the duties exacted on the valuations of the appraisers, claiming that the iron was subject to duty only on the invoice prices, because (hese represented the actual cost and full market value at the time of purchase. They now insist that the evidence produced by them on the trial proves that the market value and purchase-prices of the iron were according to the charges on the invoices and entries; and, further, that they have now made it evident, that the action of the appraisers and collector, in valuing the iron and imposing the additional duties, were irregular and without authority of law.

In support of the latter branch of this proposition, the counsel for the plaintiffs has gone into a minute and labored analysis of the provisions of the revenue laws in relation to the entry and appraisement of goods, and assumes, in maintenance of the first branch, as a principle of law, that, under the correspondence between the plaintiffs and the Coalbrookdale Company, there was a purchase of the iron by the plaintiffs at the time their orders were booked by the company at Liverpool. »

This latter position was the one most considered by the court on the former argument, and we disposed of it adversely to the claim of the plaintiffs. We supposed that the re-argument was intended chiefly to reinforce the views of the plaintiffs and remove the difficulties of the court on that point; bul we are no less ready to review both points, under the advantage of the present argument, than if the same relative importance had been maintained between them as on the previous hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. Cas. 677, 2 Blatchf. 495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierson-v-lawrence-circtsdny-1852.