Ring v. Maxwell

58 U.S. 147, 15 L. Ed. 25, 17 How. 147, 1854 U.S. LEXIS 503
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 14, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 58 U.S. 147 (Ring v. Maxwell) 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
Ring v. Maxwell, 58 U.S. 147, 15 L. Ed. 25, 17 How. 147, 1854 U.S. LEXIS 503 (1854).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CURTIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case comes before us, upon a certificate of division of opinion of the judges of the circuit court of the United States for the southern district of New York.. The certificate shows that a suit in equity is pending in that court, wherein persons who were the naval officer and surveyor of the port of New York, are complainants, and Hugh Maxwell, who was the collector of that port, is respondent, and that the scope of the bill is to recover one moiety of a large sum of money levied and collected as additional duties, under the 8th section of the tariff act, of July 30,1846, (9 Stats, at Large, 43y) during the time while the complainants held the offices above-mentioned. Upon the hearing of this cause, the judges were: opposed in opinion upon the following questions: —

“ Whether, upon a true construction of the revenue laws of the United States, the additional duties of 20 per centum, which have been levied and collected by and paid to the defendant, as collector of the port of New ilork, at the port" of New York, as *148 stated in his answer, under and by virtue of the 8th section of the act entitled ! An act for reducing the duties on imports, and for other purposes,’ passed July 30, in the year 1846, were to be treated as penalties, and one moiety thereof divided between and paid in equal proportions to and among the collector, naval officer, and surveyor of the port of New York, holding said offices at the time of the levying, collection, and payment thereof, in the said port of New; York, as claimed by the plaintiffs, in their bill in this cause.”

The 8th section of the act of July 30,1846, after requiring the collector to cause the dutiable value of the imports therein referred to, to be appraised, estimated, and ascertained, in accordance with the provisions of existing laws, goes on to enact, “ and if the appraised value thereof shall exceed, by ten per centum or more, the value so declared on the entry, then, in addition to the duties imposed by law on the same, there shall be levied, collected, and paid, a duty of twenty per centum, ad valorem, on such appraised value.” The question is, whether the sums levied, collected, and paid under this clause, were by law distributable as penalties, one moiety to the treasury of the United States, and the other moiety among the collector, naval officer, and surveyor.'

To render any sum of money collected for the government, thus distributable, it is not doubted that some act of congress, directing that distribution, must be found; and the complainant’s counsel has sought for such a law, by arguing that these additional duties must be treated as penalties, levied, for the offence of undervaluation, against the directions and in contravention of the requirements of the revenue laws; and that if they are penalties, they are required to be distributed by different collection laws to' which he has referred, and which he Urges have been made applicable by congress to the sums of money now in question. We do not find it necessary to determine whether these additional duties might have been deemed penalties, so as to come under the terms of either of the collection laws which have directed the distribution of penalties among certain officers of the customs; nor do we deem’it important, to examine in-detail, the provisions of those collection laws, and the manner in which they have been, from time to time, rendered applicable, in part or in whole, to the different acts levying duties and penalties.

Because, we are all of opinion, that whatever may be the nature of the sums levied, as additional duties, under the 8.th section of the tariff act of 1846, they are not distributable as penalties.

To exhibit the reasons on which this opinion is founded, it is necessary to refer, first to the tariff act of August 30,1842. The *149 26th section of that act, provided that, the laws existing on the 1st day of Jiine, 1842, shall extend tó and be in force for the collection of the duties imposed by this act, &c., and for the recovery, collection, distribution, and remission of all fines, penalties, and forfeitures, and for the allowance of the drawbacks by this act authorized, as fully and effectually as if every regulation, restriction, penalty, forfeiture, provision, clause, matter, and thing in the said laws contained, had been inserted in and reenacted by this act.

The 16th and 17th sections of the same act, prescribe the manner in which merchandise, subject to ad valorem rates of duty, shall be appraised, and its dutiable value ascertained; and then the 17th section enacts : “ That in all cases where the actual value to be appraised, estimated, and ascertained, as hereinbefore stated, of any goods, wares, and merchandise, imported into the United States, and subject to any ad valorem duty, or whereon the duty is regulated by or directed to be imposed or levied on the value of the square yard, or other parcel, or quantity thereof, shall exceed, by ten per centum or more, the invoice value, then in addition to the duty imposed by law on the same, there shall be levied and collected on the same'goods, wares, and merchandise, fifty per centum of the duty imposed on the same where fairly invoiced.”

These being provisions of the tariff act of 1842, the complainants’ argument is, that the additional duties levied under its 17th section, were ltiade distributable by its 26th section; that the 8th section of the act of 1846 only changed the amount of the penalty in the cases it reached; that, whereas, by the 17th section of the act of 1842, if the appraisement should exceed the invoice value ten per centum, fifty per centum of the duty was the penalty, by the act of 1840, twenty per centum of the appraised value was to be the penalty; that this was the only change made; although the 26th section of the act.of 1842, which made penalties distributable under the then existing laws, applied, in terms, only to the penalties levied by that act, yet those laws of distribution are applicable to this penalty under the act of 1846, which must be considered as substituted in place of the penalty levied by the act of 1842, and to be governed by the same provisions of law as were applicable to the additional duty, by way of penalty, under that act of 1842.

There is great force in this argument. The tariff act of 1846 is an act fixing new rates of duty on imports. It does not contain any provisions for the collection of those duties, nor for the collection or distribution of any penalties. It does not, in terms, adopt the existing laws on those subjects, nor declare that they shah be deemed applicable to the duties and penalties which it *150 levies; yet it is obvious that it must have been intended that those existing laws should be thus applied; and this can only be effected, by considering the duties and penalties levied by the act of 1846, as substitutes for, and to be governed by the same rules as,,the corresponding duties and penalties levied by the act of-1842,.which did, in terms, adopt and apply the existing laws for the recovery, collection, and distribution of duties . and penalties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 U.S. 147, 15 L. Ed. 25, 17 How. 147, 1854 U.S. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ring-v-maxwell-scotus-1854.