The Sarah B. Harris

21 F. Cas. 441, 1 Hask. 52
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedDecember 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 F. Cas. 441 (The Sarah B. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Sarah B. Harris, 21 F. Cas. 441, 1 Hask. 52 (D. Me. 1867).

Opinion

FOX, District Judge.

This vessel is charged with a violation of the 50th section of the Act of 1799, by landing without a permit at Deer Isle, in Oct., 1866, one hundred barrels oí mackerel of the value of ten thousand dollars, brought in said schooner from Port Mulgrave in the province of Nova Scotia.

It is shown that this schooner, Wilson master, being enrolled and licensed for mackerel fishing, with a license to touch and trade at any foreign port during the cruise, sailed from Deer Isle in the month of August on a mackerel trip in Bay of Chaleur. After having taken about 200 bbls., she went into Port Mulgrave and on the 15th of October, there took on board as freight one hundred barrels of mackerel and arrived at Green’s landing about the 21st of the same month.

On the 22d of October the captain produced to Vincent J. Warren the deputy-collector for Dear Isle, an “inward foreign manifest,” describing the cargo, of the schooner as one hundred barrels of mackerel shipped by Chas. R. McDonald, of American fishing schooner Olivia Maria, taken on board at Port Mulgrave, N. S., and consigned to Davis & Co., at Green’s landing, Deer Isle. The captain made oath that the manifest contained a just and true account of all the goods on board. There were in fact over 300 barrels on board the schooner, but all but 100 barrels were taken by the crew on the trip.

At the same time the master presented to the deputy-collector a certificate of Chas. R. McDonald under oath, setting forth that he as master of American schooner Olivia Maria had landed 100 barrels of mackerel at Port Mulgrave for transportation to the port of Deer Isle in the United States, and that the same were caught in said American vessel by American fishermen and shipped to the said port of Deer Isle by the schooner Sarah B. Harris of Deer Isle, John Wilson, master. This document was signed and sworn to before the comptroller of customs at Port Mul-grave, Oct. 15th. 1860. Accompanying this certificate was the sworn statement of same date of A. W. 1-Iart and David Wild, who represent themselves as merchants at Port Mul-grave, and who declared on oath that the statements of McDonald in his certificate, are just and true and worthy of full faith and credit. Warren testifies that Capt. Wilson entered his vessel and made entry of the 100 bbls. of mackerel, and that he gave Wilson no written permit, but thinks he gave him a verbal one. That Wilson asked him if it was all right and he told him, “Yes. go ahead and land your mackerel,” and therefore they were [442]*442unladen. It is quite manifest upon the statement, that the goods in question were brought to the knowledge of this deputy-collector. He was informed that they were a portion of the cargo of the Sarah B. Harris, taken by the crew of the Olivia Maria, transhipped from her in the province of Nova Scotia, and forwarded by the Sarah B. Harris to the United States.

The deputy-collector at Deer Isle believing these mackerel not to be dutiable goods, gave his assent to their being landed, but never granted any written permit for that purpose. The government claims that the permit required by the C>0th section of the act of 1799 is a document duly authenticated by the proper officers, and that the verbal assent of the officers to the unloading of the cargo is not sufficient to save the vessel and cargo from forfeiture, and although both the collector and the master, in ignorance of the law, may'have supposed a verbal assent was sufficient, yet that cannot alter the law as each party is said to know the law, and the ignorance of the officer of the customs as to the true construction of the law, cannot change the law and make an act legal and valid, which otherwise would be invalid. However harsh such a principle may apparently be, such is and must be the law. Everybody is presumed to know the law, to understand its effects, and must therefore comply with it; and any mistake of any executive officer of the government by which a party is led to violate it, cannot be used as a justification or excuse when he is called upon to answer for its violation. Mr. Justice Story, in U. S. v. Lyman [Case No. 15,647], well remarks, “The collector is but a mere ministerial officer. It may be his misfortune or the misfortune of the public, that he misinterprets the law, but certainly he cannot alter it The collector had no authority to admit Lovejoy to enter the goods, or give bonds for the duties. The whole proceeding was irregular, and not binding on the United States. * * * The receipt of the bond by the collector was no estoppel to the United States, since no act of his. not within the scope of the law, could vary these rights.” When the act therefore prohibits the landing of goods without a permit from the collector and naval officer of any of the ports, what did the law contemplate and intend by these words? Could it have intended thereby, merely the assent of these officers however manifested ? Or did it not mean some documentary evidence manifesting their assent? I apprehend an examination of these provisions of the act will leave but little doubt in the mind of any one as to the true meaning of this clause.

The 45th section prohibits the landing of any ship-stores without a permit first obtained from the collector and naval officer; something is to be obtained, not the mere consent of these officers. So too, by the 46th section entry is required of the baggage and tools of a person arriving in the United States, and if he is not the owner of them, a bond is to be-given, “and in compliance with the conditions . aforesaid and not otherwise a permit shall and may be granted for landing said articles.” This certainly indicates something more than a verbal assent to the landing.. Something is to be granted by the officers which is here termed a permit. The same-language is to be found in the 47th section regulating goods carried to and brought back from-a foreign port. It enacts, that after certain formalities shall be complied with, “a permit shall be granted for landing the same.” The law having thus in various sections declared “that a permit shall be granted for landing,” the 49th section proceeds to declare the form of all permits.

The next section is that, under which a forfeiture is now claimed, which declares the-vessel to be liable to forfeiture, if goods, wares, or merchandise of the value of $400 are brought from any foreign port and unladen from her without a permit from the collector and naval officer. Can there be any doubt that the permit so required is one required in the previous section, the form of which is prescribed to be authenticated by the signature of the collector and naval officer? I cannot entertain any doubt on this point, but for satisfactory reasons, I proceed to a further examination of the facts of the-case, to ascertain the circumstances under which this verbal assent of the deputy-collect- or was procured by the master of this schooner.

Wilson represented to the deputy-collector that these mackerel were caught by an American vessel, and produced the certificate of the master of that vessel to substantiate his statement. The deputy-collector relying on this statement, and supposing that in such a case the goods were not subject to duty, admitted them to entry duty free, and gave his assent to their landing in the manner above stated. The government, claims that in this a gross fraud was perpetrated, that the mackerel were not thus caught, but that on the contrary they were British mackerel, the property of John Morse a resident at Port. Mulgrave; and from a careful examination of the testimony, I am of opinion that such was the fact, that McDonald had no interest in them, but that they belonged to Morse.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 441, 1 Hask. 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-sarah-b-harris-med-1867.