Robertson v. Frank Brothers Co.

132 U.S. 17, 10 S. Ct. 5, 33 L. Ed. 236, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1836
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 28, 1889
Docket15
StatusPublished
Cited by89 cases

This text of 132 U.S. 17 (Robertson v. Frank Brothers Co.) 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
Robertson v. Frank Brothers Co., 132 U.S. 17, 10 S. Ct. 5, 33 L. Ed. 236, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1836 (1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bradley

delivered the'opinion of the court.

This is an action to recover for an alleged overcharge of duties on imports. The goods imported were bananas brought from Aspinwall. The duty was ten per cent ad valorem. The plaintiffs offered evidence tending to show the naarket value of the bananas at the port of shipment, which was claipaed to be only fifty cents apiece for the large bunches and twenty-five cents apiece for the small bunches. The invoices received with the cargo exhibited this as the true market value, and added Certain charges for labor and consul fees. The appraisers required the plaintiffs to add fifty per cent of these amounts as transportation charges for bringing the bananas into Aspinwall, and also certain shipping charges and commissions. The plaintiffs protested against this as an unjust' addition; but whenever it was.omitted, the charge was added by the Appraiser and a penalty of twenty per cent of the whole duty was imposed and exacted; and the officers declared that this would be done whenever the addition should be omitted. To avoid this penalty, and to. get immediate possession of their goods, (which are.of a perishable nature,) the plaintiffs made the addition required,, and paid the increased duties that resulted, —but always under protest as before stated.

*19 The fprm of the entries and invoices with the additions was as follows, the additions being in italics:

Entry:

“Merchandise imported by Frank Brothers Company in the steamship Alsa, whereof Seymour is master, .from Aspinwall to New York, Feb. 23, 1882. Marks, F. B.”
“Two bins of banana's, containing'4132 large bunches, at sixty cents,” “pesos, 2479.20,” “3463 small bunches .at thirty cents,” “ 1038.90 pesos.”
“ Charges, two hundred and thirty-nine pesos.”
“ Shipping charges added as required by the appraiser to make fine cents Colombian currency per- bunch, 140.38 pesos.”
“ Transportation charges added as required by appraiser on 4132 large bunches at 25 cents, $1033, and 3463 small bunches at 12J cents, $432.87.”

Invoice:

Invoice of merchandise shipped by the Frank Bros. Co. on board the Alsa, Sansome master, bound for New York, and ■ consigned to Frank Bros. Co.; Colon, Feb. 11, 1882, 2 bins containing —
“ 4202 bunches bananas at 60 ...... 2521.20 pesos.
“ 3564 bunches bananas at 30 ...... 1069.20 “
“ Charges for labor.......... 239.37 “
“ Consul fee........... . 3. “
3832.77 “
“ The Frank Bros. Company:
“4132 large bunches at .60 . . . . . . '. 2479.20 “
“ 3463 small bunches at 30 ....... 1038.90 “
“ Charges.....■........ 239.37 “
“Shipping changes added as required by the appraiser to make 5 cents Colombia currency per bunch ............ 140.38 “
3897.85 U
*20 “ Reduced to IT. S. currency......$3207.93
Transportation charges added as required hy the appraiser on 4132 large hunches at 25 cents 1033.
“ 3463 small hunches at 12£ cents..... 432.87
4673.80
“ Commission 2£ per cent........ 116.84
4790.64” .

The appraiser’s return indorsed thereon was as follows: “ Yalue correct, with importer’s additions.”

It was contended by the counsel for the government at the trial, and is contended here, that the payment of the duties complained of was a voluntary payment, inasmuch as the plaintiffs themselves made the additions to the entries and invoices, and that, therefore, they cannot recover back any part of the money so paid ; and they requested the court below to instruct the jury to render a verdict for the defendant. This the court refused to do ; and left it to the jury to decide, upon the evidence, whether the making of the additions was a voluntary act on the. part of the plaintiffs, or done under constraint in view of the penalty sure to be imposed in cáse it was not done.

On this point the judge, in his charge to the jury, speaking of the entry and the additions made by the plaintiffs or their agent, said:

“ He says he put them on there because he was compelled to. If that is so he ought not to be estopped from recovering, and here is a question for you on that subject, and you will decide it in this way. If those statements and figures were put on there because he thought that was the best way, on the whole; if, ' exercising his own judgment freely, he thought that it was the best way to get along with this to put it on there and let it go, he can’t take it back, ... he can’t recover anything back. The verdict will have to be for the defendant anyway, if that is so,' because it was his own act in putting it on there. The collector assessed the duty just as he made it, and he can’tv complain. But ... if *21 he was required to do it, or given to understand by some officer in the collector’s department that it would be the worse for him, seriously, if he didn’t; as, for instance, if the appraiser told him if he didn’t put those on there the collector’s office would, that the appraiser would, and that he would be exposed to a penalty that would be assessed against him; if he was given to understand by the collector’s department, or some officer of it, that if he didn’t put these figures on there they should, and make it the worse for him because he didn’t, and he would thereby be exposed to a penalty of a larger duty which he would have to pay for not doing it, and he was in that way, for the sake of saving himself from the penalty which they would put upon him beyond what would otherwise be chargeable, induced to put them on, then he is not bound by it. . . . If you find he did not do it freely, then you can look further, and see if there was anything put on there that ought not to be. If he was compelled to do it, it ought not to go on, and if he -was, the plaintiffs are entitled to recover. And if you decide he is bound by putting that on, that will end the case; you must give a verdict for the defendant. If not, you may look and see if he was compelled to pay more than he ought; if he was compelled to pay transportation charges more than he ought to; and, if so, find a verdict for the right amount. If they were compelled to pay labor charges more than they ought to pay, find the verdict for the plaintiffs for the right amount of that.

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Bluebook (online)
132 U.S. 17, 10 S. Ct. 5, 33 L. Ed. 236, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-frank-brothers-co-scotus-1889.