Twelve Hundred & Nine Quarter Casks, etc., of Wine

24 F. Cas. 398, 2 Ben. 249
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1868
StatusPublished

This text of 24 F. Cas. 398 (Twelve Hundred & Nine Quarter Casks, etc., of Wine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Twelve Hundred & Nine Quarter Casks, etc., of Wine, 24 F. Cas. 398, 2 Ben. 249 (S.D.N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

BLATCHFORD, District .ludge

(charging jury). Gentlemen of the Jury: The eom-•mendable attention and unwearied patience which you have manifested throughout this trial, the first steps in which were taken thirty-five days ago, and on which we have bestowed consideration now for twenty-two days, are commensurate with the zeal, and care, and distinguished ability with which the case has been presented to you by the learned counsel upon both sides, and with the importance of it to the parties, and with the magnitude of the principles involved in it. It concerns 1,826% quarter casks of wine, amounting in the aggregate, to 73,060 gallons, and the value of which, to day, in this market, at the rate of $1.10 in gold per gallon (allowing for a premium upon the gold) is about-the sum of $112,000. This statement measures merely the pecuniary value involved in this controversy. It is a measure of that pecuniary value, because, if the goods seized are forfeited, the owners lose that amount: but it is far from being a measure of the principles involved in the controversy. They reach and extend las you have been advised by the counsel upon both sides, in the course of this case, and as appears somewhat in the evidence) to other importations, and to other seizures of the same character of ^oods. Now, as. yon recollect, the mass of the wine in this case is invoiced at the rate of $16 per quarter cask, the only exception, I believe, being the case of the two quarter casks called the Paris & Allen, or the P. & A. wine, one of which was invoiced at $22, and the other at $30 per quarter cask. The invoices which are alleged on the part of the government to have been false and fraudulent, were all of them sworn to by one of the persons, who, it is admitted on both sides in this case, were the owners of the wine — one of the firm of Lacave & Echecopar. Therefore, the case, although involving such a large amount of property, becomes very simple in that aspect of it. and is no more complicated in respect to the ownership, the entry and the rate of valuation in the invoices, than if it covered only a single invoice of one quarter cask of wine, valued at $16.

On the part of the government, it is claim-ad in this ease, that there has been a systematic series of undervaluations of these wines by the manufacturers of them, an intentional and wilful undervaluation, resorted to because of the ad valorem system of duties provided by law in regard to the wines; and the government claims that it was resorted to with full knowledge on the part .of the owners, Lacave & Echecopar, of what the law required, and of the values which they ought to state in their invoices. The government claims that the invoices are below the actual market value of the wines in Cadiz. Throughout the observations which I may make to you, I shall speak of value in Cadiz: for. although the law speaks of value in the principal markets of Spain, yet it is conceded, on both sides, for the purposes of this trial, that actual market value in Cadiz is the proper test, because Cadiz is the principal market for these wines, and it does not appear that there is any other port from which these wines are exported, or in which they are largely dealt in, in the manufactured and completed state in which they are found ready for shipment. On the part of the claimants it is contended, that these wines are not valued in the invoices at a price -under the actual maraet value, but that they are valued at a price fully up to the actual market value in Cadiz. That is the issue between these parties, and, subject to the observations in regard to the law, which 1 shall make to you, the question is wholly one of fact for you to determine. I shall make no comments upon the evidence, but shall leave the decision of the questions, of .-fact involved entirely to your unbiased judgment, satisfied that the close attention which you have paid, throughout the trial of the cause, to the testimony as given, and to the elaborate arguments of the counsel on both sides, has fitted your minds for a proper consideration of the questions of fact which you are to decide.'

The information. is founded upon three statutes of the United States — the act of March 2. 1799 (1 Stat. 637), the act of May 28, 1830 (4 Stat. 409), and the act of March 3, 1863 (12 Stat. 737). But the counts under the act of 1799 may be laid entirely out of view. The 66th section of the act of 1799 covers only the case where property ought to be invoiced at its actual cost, which, under the law as it now stands, is only where the property is imported by the purchaser of it. Therefore, the ease is presented for your consideration as if the counts under the act of 1799 were not in the information, and as if the information were founded solely on the other two statutes. — the fourth section of the act of 1830, and the first section of the act of 1863. The provisions of these two statutes I will now state to you. So far as they apply to this case, they are very simple.

By the fourth section of the act of 1830, it is provided that if an invoice be made up with an intent, by a false valuation, or false extension, or otherwise, to evade or defraud the revenue, the goods contained in the entry made on such invoice shall be forfeited to the United. States The other statute counted upon is the first section of the act of March 3, 18G3. which provides, that if any owner of any merchandise shall knowingly make, or attempt tq make, any entry thereof by means of any false invoice, or of any in[404]*404voice which shall not contain a true statement of all the particulars required by that section, the merchandise shall be forfeited. The- only material and substantial apparent difference between these two statutes is. that the one speaks of making up an invoice with “intent-to evade or defraud” the revenue, and the other speaks of “knowingly” making an entry by means of a false invoice. “Intent to evade or defraud” is the wording in the orn-ease; “knowingly” iñ the other. 1 shall have occasion further on in my remarks, to call your attention to those two expressions in the two statutes. The act of 1863, as I have just read to you. defines the offence to be, knowingly entering or attempting to enter goods upon a false invoice, or upon an invoice which ¡does not contain a true statement of all the particulars -required by that act. What are the particulars required? So far as they ap■ply to the present case,, they are these: If the - merchandise is obtained in any other .manner than by purchase (and, in the present, case," there- is no dispute .in regard to the. ■ fact that the ■ merchandise. was not obtained by -purchase; for Lacave & Echecopar did not-purchase any of the wines that are under seizure, in the state in which they are now found as an article of merchandise), the invoice must state the actual market value thereof, at the time and place when and where the same was procured or manufac-' tured. On the other hand, if the merchan-, . dise. is obtained by purchase, the invoice •must contain a true and full statement of the time when and the place where the same, was purchased, and the ¡actual cost thereof, .and of all the charges thereon, that is, the-aetual cost thereof to the person who so pur- ' chases ft in a condition ready for shipment, and undertakes to enter it in that condition. These two provisions are very plain and simple. If the merchandise is obtained in any .other manner than by purchase, the invoice must state the actual market value thereof at. the time and place when and where the same was procured or manufactured.

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