Psaki Bros. v. United States

3 Ct. Cust. 479, 1913 WL 19705, 1913 CCPA LEXIS 2
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 20, 1913
DocketNo. 937
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 3 Ct. Cust. 479 (Psaki Bros. 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
Psaki Bros. v. United States, 3 Ct. Cust. 479, 1913 WL 19705, 1913 CCPA LEXIS 2 (ccpa 1913).

Opinion

Barber, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The entry in this case was liquidated on the 16th day of January, 1908. The tenth day thereafter fell- upon Sunday. An envelope [480]*480inclosing the protest and a letter on behalf of protestants, in which letter it was stated that "we find the protest desk at the customhouse closed at this time on Saturday afternoon, and are accordingly mailing the protest to you,” was addressed to the collector and sent to him by special delivery, and was deposited in the mail at 4.30 p. m. of Saturday. It was received at the customhouse by a watchman then on duty at 6.48 p. m. Saturday and found its way into the correspondence room of the customhouse, where it was opened by the proper officer and stamped "Received, January 27, 10.17 a. m.,1908, correspondence room, N. Y. customhouse.” In receiving this letter the watchman followed a long-established custom of receiving letters after the customhouse closed. When so received the custom was to leave the letters on a window sill or desk and the following morning to turn them over to some one else, whose custom or duty presumably was to deliver the same to the persons to whom they were addressed or their representatives. While the record is silent in this respect, we assume such was the procedure in, this case, and in this manner the letter came to the proper desk Monday morning and was then stamped as above stated.

Section 14 of the customs administrative act of June 10, 1890, then in force, provides in relation to protests that the protestan! "shall within ten days * * * give notice in writing to the collector” of the material and essential facts necessary to constitute a legal protest, and the question in this case is, Was this notice seasonably given ?

The facts stated readily suggest that the determination of the issue involves two considerations:

(1) When the tenth day provided for giving such notice falls upon Sunday may the notice be given on the next secular day ?

(2) If not, was the protest in this case filed with the collector in contemplation of law on Saturday, for it is tacitly agreed that such notice could not be effective if given to or lodged with him on Sunday.

As to the first point, a reargument of this case was ordered by the court sua sfonte.

Upon the question of whether, when the last of a certain number of days allowed by statute for the doing of some act falls upon Sunday, the act may nevertheless be performed on the folio-wing secular day, there is a great wealth of authorities and much difficulty in reconciling the same. We have not undertaken to do this so far as the decisions of State courts are concerned.

One of the earliest applicable cases to which our attention has been called in the Federal courts is Shefer v. Magone (47 Fed., 872), decided in the Circuit Court for the Southern District of New York in 1891. Judge Lacombe in his oral opinion, as reported in that case, said in substance that inasmuch as there was no statute extending [481]*481tiie time within, which the protest might be filed, provided the last day of the statutory period for the filing fell upon Sunday, it was settled by the weight of authority that the protest could not be served on the following Monday, and it appears that the authorities were somewhat reviewed by the learned judge in giving his opinion.

The Shefer case, supra, seems to have been followed in Hermann v. United States (66 Fed., 721), decided in the same Circuit Court in 1895, in which case Judge Coxe gave an oral opinion, although the question involved was not that of protest, but related to the giving of an order to the importer by the collector for the return of goods to the public stores. It was held that when the last of 10 days within which such order might be given expired on Sunday the order could not be given on the next secular day, and it was said that the precise point was determined in the Shefer case.

The Board of General Appraisers appear to have uniformly followed and adhered to this view of the law. See In re Pollman (T. D. 16723), decided in 1895; Mowat’s case (T. D. 21628), decided in 1899; and Bolognesi’s case (T. D. 26414), decided in 1905.

These authorities afford convincing evidence that the precise question before us, whenever it has been before the courts or other tribunals, has been uniformly decided contrary to the appellants’ contention. The fact that the question has been litigated demonstrates that the administrative officers having charge of the enforcement of the customs laws have uniformly contended for the same interpretation as they claim here. That such has actually been the departmental construction of the statute is clearly shown by a reference to the rulings in T. D. 3139 (1877); T. D. 7858 (1886); and the Customs Regulations — 1884, article 363; 1892, article 938; 1899, article 1460; 1908, article 1069.

Not only this, but in Johnson v. Myers (54 Fed., 417), decided in the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals in 1893, and in Myers v. Hot Springs Co. (169 Fed., 628), decided in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in 1909, involving motions to dismiss appeals upon the ground that the same were not taken within six months, it was held upon a somewhat careful review of the authorities, that when the last day of the six months fell upon Sunday the appeals must be taken the preceding day. In substance, the law was said to be that, when the statute prescribed a limited time for the doing of an act, the courts were without power to extend the time so fixed, where in a given case the last day of the prescribed time happened to fall on Sunday.

In the latter of these two cases, the Shefer and Johnson decisions, supra, were cited in support of the court’s conclusion.

It must be admitted that such a uniform departmental practice in that regard and a consistent construction of the statutes by the [482]*482courts for tiro length of time shown are of great weight in determining the question before us; and especially is this so when it is considered that since Judge Lacombe’s decision at least two important tariff acts have been placed upon the statute books with no suggestion therein that the Congress intended to correct an erroneous construction or interpretation thereof, which it was charged with knowledge had obtained, or to extend the time of filing the protest when the last day of the time fixed therefor by the statute fell on Sunday.

The case of the Monroe Cattle Co. v. Becker (147 U. S., 47) is relied upon by the appellants as an authority for the right to file this protest on Monday following the expiration of the 10 days' limit.

This case arose under the laws of Texas, wherein, in substance, it was provided that an applicant foi’ the purchase of certain public lands must make his first payment therefor within 90 days from the date of his application; that if he failed in this respect the land should be again treated'as for sale by the proper State officer, who was authorized to receive new applications for its purchase; and that another application to purchase should not be entertained until the said official authorized to receive it had been notified of the forfeiture on the pending application.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ct. Cust. 479, 1913 WL 19705, 1913 CCPA LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/psaki-bros-v-united-states-ccpa-1913.