Two Hundred Chests of Tea

9 U.S. 430
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 15, 1824
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 9 U.S. 430 (Two Hundred Chests of Tea) 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
Two Hundred Chests of Tea, 9 U.S. 430 (1824).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Story

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The two.hundred chests of tea. in controversy in this suit, were imported into the city of New-York, in the ship Ontario, from China, and entered there at the custom house, and the duties regularly secured as bohea teas. They were after-wards transported coastwise to Boston ; and upon examination there, under the direction of the collector of the district, they were seized as forfeited, under the collection act of the 2d of March, 1799, ch. 128. s. 67. on account of their differing in de[436]*436scription from the contents of the entry. The libel states the facts specially, but contains no allegation of an intention to defraud the revenue. Upon this state of the case, the libel is assailed for a supposed defect, arising from the absence of such an allegation. But we think this objection cannot be sustained. The libel follows the language of the enacting clause of the act, which inflicts the forfeiture ; and the. exemption from forfeiture, when the collector or the Court shall be satisfied that the difference between the entry and the packages “ proceeded from accident or mistake, and not from an intention to defraud the revenue,” being found in a separate proviso, is properly matter of defence, to be asserted and proved by the claimant, and is not, according to the course of adjudications in this Court, essential to the structure of the libel itself. This objection, then, may be dismissed without further observation.

Another question, of more serious importance, is, whether the examination and seizure authorized by the 67th section of the act, are not limited to the collector of the district wheré the goods were originally entered and the duties secured, upon importation; and so the.case made by the libel is not within the purview of the act, whatever might be the authority of the collector to seize for forfeitures generally, and to assert the claim in a Bbél, properly framed for such a purpose. The decision of this question would require a very minute and critical examination of the whole revenue and coasting acts; and as the Court- can satisfac[437]*437torily dispose of the cause upon the merits, in point of fact, it is deemed unnecessary to institute so laborious an inquiry.

The claim admits, that the teas were imported and entered as bohea teas; and asserts, that they are of the kind and. denomination called bohea teas, and not of a different kind or quality of teas; and this forms the main point in controversy between the parties. One. of the earliest acts of Congress, (the act of the 20th of July, 1789, ch.2.) imposes duties on teas in the following.words: “On bohea tea, per pound, six cents; on all sou-chong or other black teas, per pound, ten cents ; on all hyson teas, per pound, twenty cents; on all other green teas, per pound, twelve cents.” The act of the 10th of August, 1790, ch. 39. varied the duties, but retained the same descriptions. The act of the 29th of January, 1795, ch. 82. declared that “ teas commonly called imperial, gunpowder, or gomee,” should “ pay the same duties, as hyson teas.” The act of the 3d of March, 1797, ch. 64. laid an additional duty of two-cents “ upon all bo-bea tea.’’ And the act of thé 27th of April, 1816, ch. 107. under which this cargo Was imported, le-' vies duties on “bohea, twelve cents per pound ; souchong and other black, twenty-fiye cents pei pound; imperial, gunpowder, and gomee, fifty cents per pound ; hyson, and young hyson, forty cents per pound; hyson skin, and other green, twenty-eight cents per pound.” The legislation of pongress here detailed, exhibits a progressive discrimination’in. the kinds of green teas, but leaves [438]*438the black teas with no other specific discrimination ^at bohea and souchong.

The argument on behalf of the United States, is, that the two hundred chests of tea, now in controversy, are in reality simple congo tea, and not bohea ; that the latter is a pure unmixed tea, entirely distinct from congo, and known in China by an appropriate name; that it is to this pure and unmixed bohea tea, that the successive acts of Congress refer, and not to any other mixed tea, though known by the common denomination of bohea. If we were to advert to scientific classifications, for our guide on the present occasion, it is most manifest, from the works cited at the bar, that bohea is a generic term, including under it all the black teas, and not merely a term indicating a specific kind. But it ippears to us unnecessary to enter upon thisinqif y, because, in our opinion, Congress must be understood to use the word in its known, commercial sense. The object of the . duty laws is to raise revenue, and for this purpose to class substances according to the general usage and known denominations of trade. Whether a particular article were designated by one name or another, in the country of its origin, or whether it were a simple or mixed substance, was of no importance in the view of the Legislature. It did not suppose our merchants to be naturalists, or geologists, or botanists. It applied its attention to the description of articles as they derived their appellations in our own markets, in our domestic as well as our foreign traffic. And it would have been as dangerous as useless, to attempt any other [439]*439classification, than that derived from the actual business of human life. Bohea tea, then, in the sense of all our revenue laws, means that article which, in the known usage of trade, has acquired that distinctive appellation. And even if the article has undergone some variations in quality, or mixture, during the intermediate period from 1789 to 1816, when the last act passed, but still retains its old name, it must be presumed that Congress, iri this last act, referred itself to the existing standard, and not to any scientific or antiquated standard.

The true inquiry, therefore, is, whether, in a commercial sense, the tea in question is known, and bought, and sold, and used, under the denomination of bohea tea. We think the evidence on this point is altogether irresistible. It establishes that the bohea tea of commerce is not usually a distinct and simple substance, but is a compound made up in.China of various kinds of the lowest priced black teas, and the mixture is of higher or lower quality, according to the existing state of the market. Indeed} from the uniformity of its price in the midst of great fluctuations in. the prices of all other teas, it seems rather to indicate the lowest quality of black teas, than any uniform compound. It is accordingly in proof, that old congo teas are often sold as bohea, and have sometimes been imported into our market under that-denomination. In short, whenever black teas are deteriorated by age, or are of the lowest price, they are mixed up to form bohea for the market, and are suited to the demand and wishes of the [440]*440purchasers. It is not meant to affirm that there is no such simple and distinct tea known as bohea. All that the evidence justifies us in saying is, that this is not the common bohea of commerce. The latter may or may not be a simple substance, according to circumstances. The generic name bohea, comprehending under it all the. varieties of black teas, whenever they are at the cheapest price in the market, or are of a very .inferior quality, or are mixed up for sale, they lose their specific names, and sink, in to the common denomination.

Such is the conclusion which, in the opinion of the Court, the evidence in this record justifies and requires.

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9 U.S. 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/two-hundred-chests-of-tea-scotus-1824.