Tappan v. United States

23 F. Cas. 690, 2 Mason C.C. 393
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedMay 15, 1822
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 F. Cas. 690 (Tappan v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tappan v. United States, 23 F. Cas. 690, 2 Mason C.C. 393 (circtdma 1822).

Opinion

STORY, Circuit Justice.

Several objections have been taken by one of the learned counsel for the plaintiffs in error to the constitutionality of the act of 20th of April, 1818, c. 74 [3 Story’s Laws, 1679; 3 Stat 433, c. 79], under which the duties in this case were by an appraisement, ascertained. I do not feel myself called upon to discuss these objections minutely, however ingeniously they were urged, because it seems to me, that they may be disposed of by the single remark, that as congress has the constitutional power “to lay and collect taxes and duties,” and “to regulate commerce with foreign nations,” it possesses the incidental right to: prescribe the manner, in which the duties shall be levied, and the value of the goods shall be ascertained, and the conditions upon which the importation shall be permitted.: It might, therefore, direct, if such should-be its pleasure, that all ad valorem duties should be ascertained by appraisement, as the condition upon which alone the importation of goods should be allowed. And a fortiori it may require such an appraisement in a few specified cases. The act of 1818, c. 74, is an uniform law in the sense of the constitution in relation to duties, for it is in its terms equally applicable to all parts of the United States, and makes no distinction • between them. That it may be differently construed or administered in point of fact in different districts, forms no solid objection to the law itself; and may with as much force be urged against many other laws, whose constitutional character will not be doubted. Even under the revenue act of 1799, e. 128 [1 Story’s Laws, 573; 1 Stat. 627, c. 22], what constituted the “actual cost” or “real and true value” of goods was matter of some diversity of opinion and practice in the different custom houses; and, doubtless, invoices were not made out by the merchants to be exhibited there by any uniform rule of estimating the value. So that in point of fact, different persons, according to their honesty, or their fraud, their ignorance, or their judgment, must often have paid different sums in duties upon goods having the same intrinsic value, or purchased under similar circumstances. This is an infirmity in the practical operation of all laws of this nature, and is probably beyond the reach of any legislative remedy, which deals with a system of ad valorem duties.

The principal question, however (most important it is in its consequences), is, whether the evidence rejected at the trial by the district court was admissible. That depends upon another question, whether the appraisement made under the act of 1818, as disclosed in the bill of exceptions, is conclusive of the value of the goods, so far as respects the ascertainment of the duties. If so, then the decision of the court was right; if otherwise, then the judgment must be reversed.

Before proceeding to the consideration of the act of 1818, it is necessary to notice an argument, upon which considerable stress was laid by the counsel for the plaintiffs in error, and that is, that such an appraisement was not conclusive on the subject of duties under the former revenue laws of the government That is a point, upon which I entertain exceeding doubts. The revenue act of 1799, c. 128 [1 Story’s Laws, 573; 1 Stat 627, c. 22], has been referred to in illustration of this subject; but I do not find, that there is in that statute any clause, which takes from an appraisement made in pursuance of its provisions a conclusive effect in the ascertainment of ad valorem duties. In cases, where appraisements are made on account of defect of proper invoices, or of damage during the voyage, under the 52d section of the act, ft is manifest, and indeed was admitted at the argument, that the appraisement is conclusive on both parties. And as to appraisements under the 66th section, in cases where the collector suspects the goods to be invoiced below their usual price in the country of their exportation, the clause expressly requires the appraisers to be chosen and appointed as in the case of damaged goods, and authorizes the collector to retain the goods, “until the duties, arising according to such valuation, shall be paid or secured to be paid as required by the act in other cases of importation.” It is true, that there is a proviso, that “such an appraisement shall not be construed to exclude other proof, upon the trial, of the actual and real cost of [692]*692the goods at the place of exportation;” but this proviso is not coextensive with the whole enactment, but is in terms confined to prosecutions for the forfeiture of the goods or their value, which the preceding part of the section inflicts, where the goods “shall not be invoiced according to the actual cost at the place of exportation with design to evade the duties thereupon.” The proviso, therefore, leaves the effect of the appraisement, so far as respects the ascertainment of duties, untouched; and I confess myself to have extreme difficulty in distinguishing this ease from that of an appraisement made under the 52d section, as to its conclusiveness upon the value. We may then dismiss the consideration of this particular point, since it does not repel the construction contended for in behalf of the government, and pass to the consideration of the act of 1818, upon the true intent and meaning of which the case must after all essentially depend.

The first question, which arises upon the act, is whether it has changed the basis, upon which ad valorem duties were previously calculated. That basis, as is apparent from the whole series of statutes cited at the bar (Act of July 81, 17S9, c. 5, § 17 [1 Stat. 41); Act of August 4,1790, e. 35, § 39 [1 Stat. 107); Act of January 29, 1795, c. 82, § 3 [1 Story’s Laws, 377; 1 Stat. 411, c. 17]), and particularly from the 30th and 01st sections of the revenue act of 1799, c. 128 [1 Story’s Laws, ,006, 620; 1 Stat. 055, G73; c. 22], and the 2d ■ section of 3d of March, 1801, c. 99 [1 Story’s Laws, 820; 2 Stat. 121, c. 28), was beyond all controversy the “actual cost” of the goods, which is sometimes denominated the “'prime cost,” and sometimes the “actual value” in the provisions on this subject (Act 1799, c. 128, § 30; Id. § 52 [1 Story’s Laws, 600, G17; 1 Stat 655, 005, e. 22]). The district attorney, however,'contends, that this basis is taken away by the act of 1818, and that of the “actual value” at the place of exportation, • without any reference to the cost, is substituted in its place. The counsel on the other, side deny this position, and refer to the fourth section of the act as decisive of the question. That section, which is, substantially, in the same terms as the former enactments on the same subject, declares, “that the ad valorem rates of duty upon goods, &c. shall be estimated by adding 20 per cent to the actual cost thereof, if imported from the Cape of Good Hope, or from any island, port or place beyond the same, and ten per cent, on the actual cost thereof, if imported from any other place or country, •including all charges, except commissions, outside packages, and insurance.” The first section of the act also denies an entry of the goods, unless “the original invoice thereof” shall be produced to the collector, and upon the non production subjects the goods to an appraisement in the manner provided for by the act. The fifth section goes on to provide, that in addition to the oath before required by law "to be taken by the owner, &e. on the entry of goods, &c. he shall on the entry of any goods imported and subject to an ad valorem duty, “declare on oath, that the invoice produced by him exhibits the true value of such goods, &e.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. Cas. 690, 2 Mason C.C. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tappan-v-united-states-circtdma-1822.