Tremlett v. Adams

54 U.S. 295, 14 L. Ed. 152, 13 How. 295, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 861
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 28, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 U.S. 295 (Tremlett v. Adams) 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
Tremlett v. Adams, 54 U.S. 295, 14 L. Ed. 152, 13 How. 295, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 861 (1852).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice. TANEY

delivered the- opinion of the court.

This is an action brought by the plaintiff against the collector of the port of New Bedford, for refusing to permit the plaintiff to enter for warehousing at Wareham sundry cargoes of coal, imported from Pictou, Nova Scotia, which were shipped for Wareham, and arrived in the months of September and October,' 1846. Wareham was a port of delivery in the collection district of which New Bedford was the port of entry;' and the collector, in refusing to permit them to be entered for warehousing at Wareham, acted under the directions of the Secretary of the Treasury. • The plaintiff was required to pay in cash the duties imposed by the act of 1842, before the permit for landing at Wareham was granted. And this suit is brought to recover the difference between the duties paid and the duties to which the coal would have been liable if it had been warehoused at' Wareham and remained in store as the plaintiff desired until the reduced tariff went into operation. The case depends upon the construction of the Warehousing Act of August 6,1846.

The law is framed in very general terms, referring to other laws for some of its regulations ; and containing but few specific directions as to the manner in which it should be carried into execution. And. it authorizés the Secretary of the Treasury to make from time to time such regulations, not inconsistent with, law, as might be necessary to give full effect to the provisions of *303 the act, and secure a just accountability under it. This mode of legislation has naturally led to some ambiguity, and has given rise to this controversy.

The act went into operation on the'day it was approved by the President. And the plaintiff insists that, under its provisions, he was entitled, as soon as it passed, to land his goods at the port of delivery upon bonding for the duties .; and to have them placed there in store in order to avail himself, if he thought proper, of the reduced tariff, which took effect on the 2d of December, in the same year. The 6th section of the Tariff Act of July 30,1846, which passed a few days before the Warehousing Act, of which we are now speaking, provided that all goods imported after the passage, of that law, and remaining in the public stores on the 2d of December following, when the act went into operation, should be subject to no other duty upon entry thereof than if they had been imported after that day.

In expounding the Warehousing- Act, it must be borne in mind, that it was not passed for the purpose of enabling the importer to avail himself of the reduced rates of duty. It is a part of the general and permanent system of revenue; and its evident object is to facilitate and encourage-commerce, by exempting' the importer from the payment of duties, until he is ready to bring his goods into market. The opportunity it afforded of taking advantage of the reduced rates of duty was an accidental circumstance arising from the time at which it happened to be passed. The provisions in the 6th section of the Tariff Act of July 30,1846, had no reference to goods entered for warehousing. There was.no law at that time which authorized the importer so to enter them. And although the Warehousing Act, which passed a few days afterwards, enabled the importer, by warehousing his goods, to take the benefit of the provisions of-the previous law, yet it was not passed for that purpose. And it must be regarded and interpreted, not as.an act passed for a temporary purpose, or to meet a change of tariff, but as one intended to be equally applicable to goods imported after the 2d day'of December, as to goods imported between the 30th of July and that time. The plaintiff had the same legal rights in this respect at the time he offered to enter his coal at Wareham as an importer of the present day, and nothing more; and no greater advantages were intended to be given him'by the Warehousing Act.-

Previous to the passage of this act no goods, chargeable with cash duties, could be landed at the port of delivery until the duties were paid at the port of entry. The importer had no right to land them anywhere until they had passed through the custom-house. And they could not be landed at the port of delivery without the permit of the proper officer at the port of *304 entry. This permit in effect delivered them to. the owner to be landed under the usual inspection, and sold and disposed of as he thought proper; and the permit could not be granted unless the duties had been paid.

There could, therefore, but rarely be any necessity for public stores or warehouses at a port of delivery, before the passage of the Warehousing Act,

It was otherwise at ports of entry. The importer himself had no right: ,to land them even at a- port of entry before the duties were paid.'' But when the entry at the custom-house was imperfect, for.yvant of the proper documents, or where the goods were damaged in the" voyage, and the duties could not be immediately ascertained; or the cash duties were not paid after the forms of entry had been complied with; in all of these cases the collector was directed, by existing laws, to take possession of such goods, and -place them in public stores, and retain them untir the duties were paid. And as all of this was to be done at the port of entry, public stores were necessary at such ports,; and they had acfcordingly been provided for by law, before the passage of the Warehousing Act.

Now, the Warehousing Act, so far as the landing and storing of goods is. concerned, places goods entered for warehousing upon the same, footing with goods upon which the duties have not been paid. It provides, that in all cases of failure or neglect to pay the duties within the period, allowed by law to the importer, to make entry thereof, or whenever, the owner,' importer, or consignee, shall make entry for warehousing in the manner directed in the act, the collector shall take possession of the goods and deposit them in the public stores; or in other stores to be agreed on by the collector or other chief officer of the port, and the importer of the goods to be secured in the manner provided for in the act of 1818 relative to the warehousing of wines and distilled spirits. The warehoused goods, therefore, are to be taken possession of by the same officer and stored, and treated like goods upon which the importer had failed to pay duty. And, as the latter were necessarily to be taken possession of at the port of entry, and accustomed to be stored there, the natural inference from this association is, that the law contemplated the storage of warehoused goods at the same place, and did not mean to give the importer a right to store them at any port of delivery to which he .might have chosen to ship them. The Warehousing Act gives him no peculiar privileges over the importer of goods directed to be placed in the public stores because the duties were not paid; nor any greater fight to select for himself the place of storage.

The 2d section of the act strengthens this construction of the *305 1st section. It provides that warehoused goods, deposited in the public stores in the manner provided in the 1st section, might be withdrawn and transported to any other port of entry; and directs that the party should give bond for the deposit of them in store, in the port of entry to which they shall be destined.

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Barney v. Rickard
157 U.S. 352 (Supreme Court, 1895)
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152 U.S. 628 (Supreme Court, 1894)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 U.S. 295, 14 L. Ed. 152, 13 How. 295, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tremlett-v-adams-scotus-1852.