Tucker v. Kane

24 F. Cas. 268
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland
DecidedNovember 15, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 F. Cas. 268 (Tucker v. Kane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tucker v. Kane, 24 F. Cas. 268 (circtdmd 1850).

Opinion

TANEY, Circuit Justice.

This action is brought by the plaintiffs against the defendant. as collector of the port of Baltimore, to recover back certain duties paid by them under protest upon a quantity of pimento imported, in the schooner Juliet, from St. Ann’s Bay. in the Island of Jamaica.

The official appraisers determined that the true value of this pimento, in the principal markets of the country from which it was imported, exceeded the invoice price; and this excess being, according to the appraisement. more than ten per cent., the penal duty of twenty-five per cent, was added, and the whole amount demanded by the collector. The importer was dissatisfied with this ap-praisement, and gave notice of his dissatisfaction to the collector, according to the provisions of the seventeenth section of the act of 1842; and the collector then appointed E. P. Cohen and Wm Lemmon, two merchants of the city of Baltimore, and both citizens of the United States, to appraise and value the said goods. These appraisers undertook the duty assigned to them, and made their award in the following words.

“Baltimore. 16 November. 1849. The undersigned merchants, appraisers appointed to review the appraisement of the cargo of the schooner Juliet, rroin St. Ann’s Bay, Jamaica, [269]*269beg leave to report, that they have carefully investigated all the facts connected with this shipment, and feel satisfied, from the positive, as well as corroborative testimony submitted to them, that the price named in the invoice of pimento (viz., 2y2 per pound), was the actual price paid for the same, and the true value of the article, at the time of shipment. and that the duties here should be adjusted accordingly. We are very respectfully your obedient servants, E. P. Cohen, Wm. P. Lemmon.

“To Col. Geo. P. Kane, Collector, Port of Baltimore.”

This appraisement, it appears, was reported to the secretary of the treasury, by the collector, and the reply of the secretary states that, from the language of the appraisement, and from the circumstance, “that the merchant appraisers had before them evidence, furnished on appraisements at New York, of importations of pimento from Jamaica, shipped about the same time, going to show that the market value of the article was higher than that stated in the invoice under review, the department was compelled to infer that their estimate of value referred solely to the price or cost, paid by the owner or shipper, and not to the actual market value or wholesale price, at the time of shipment, in the principal markets of the country.” And he proceeds to state that, upon these grounds, this appraisement was not in conformity with law, and must be disregarded; and that, if the importers were still dissatisfied with the appraisement of the United States appraisers, the collector, upon being notified by them, in writing, might select another set of merchant appraisers, to appraise these goods, and lay before them all the evidence in his possession, bearing upon the case.

The importers, however, refused^to apply for another appraisement by merchant appraisers. insisting that the one already made was conclusive upon the subject; and thereupon. the whole amount of duties, as ascertained by the officers and appraisers, was, under the order of the secretary, demanded by the collector, and paid by the importers; and this suit is brought to recover back the excess thus paid, over and above the amount due on the appraisement of the merchant appraisers.

The act of congress declares that the ap-praisement of the merchant appraisers shall be final, and deemed and taken to be the true value of the goods, and the duties are to be levied upon them accordingly.

They are referees, appointed to decide between the officers of the government and the importers, when a difference shall exist between them, as to the value of the goods, upon which the duties are to be charged. The subject-matter in dispute, in this case, referred to the merchant appraisers, was the market value, or wholesale price of the pimento. at the time of the shipment, in the principal markets of the country from which it was imported. They report that they have carefully investigated all the facts connected with this shipment, and feel satisfied from the positive, as well as corroborative testimony submitted to them, that the price named in the invoice was the actual price paid for the same, and the true value of the article. When they speak of the true value, they must, of course, be understood to speak of the value referred to them, that is, the market value or wholesale price, at the time of shipment, in the principal markets of the country from which it was shipped; this is the natural import of the words used, when taken in connection with the subject referred.

The law does not require that the ap-praisement of the merchant appraisers should have all the formalities and precision of a common law award; nor is it necessary to set forth in it the principles upon which they acted, nor the evidence by which they were governed. It is not suggested, that there was any misconduct on the part of the appraisers; they were selected by the collector himself, and admitted on all hands to be highly respectable and intelligent merchants. And if it could even be proved, as mentioned in the letter of the secretary, above quoted, that there was evidence before them sufficient to show that the invoice value was too low, and their decision against the weight of evidence; yet their judgment could not, on that account, be reversed; there is no tribunal authorized to review it; the law makes it final, as to the question of value.

Certainly, if it appeared on the face of the appraisement, that they merely intended to ascertain the price paid for the pimento, and not its market value in the principal markets in the country, the appraisement would be a nullity, and would not fix the dutiable value of the goods. But as we have already said, the language used by the merchant appraisers will not justify that construction; the fair construction of the instrument is, that the 'true value of which they speak, is the dutiable value they were required to ascertain. and concerning which they heard evidence, as appears by the correspondence produced by the government; And the construction of their written award cannot be influenced by the knowledge of the secretary, that there was evidence before them, which ought, in his judgment, to have produced a higher valuation. The appraisement must speak for itself, and be construed by its own language; and if its validity is to be impeached by anything outside of the award, it must be by testimony showing that the question referred was not decided, or showing some misconduct in the appraisers.

The power exercised by the secretary of the treasury, and contended for in the argument here, is supposed to be conferred upon him by the twenty-third and twenty-fourth [270]*270sections of the act of 30 August. 1842. It has been argued that, inasmuch as it is made his duty, under these sections, to secure a just, faithful and impartial appraisement of all goods, wares and merchandise, imported into the United States, and just and proper entries of the actual market value and wholesale price thereof, he had the power to set aside this appraisement, because, from the terms used, and his knowledge of the evidence before them, he was of opinion that they intended to estimate the value of the importation at its eost to the importers, and not at the general market value.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-kane-circtdmd-1850.