United States v. Dent, Allcroft & Co.

15 Ct. Cust. 408, 1928 CCPA LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 1928
DocketNo. 3013
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 Ct. Cust. 408 (United States v. Dent, Allcroft & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Dent, Allcroft & Co., 15 Ct. Cust. 408, 1928 CCPA LEXIS 14 (ccpa 1928).

Opinion

Graham, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellee imported a shipment of gloves in cases. Case No. 600 was examined by the discharging inspector and he noted, on a slip attached to the entry, that this case contained 3^- dozen pairs of gloves less than the invoiced amount. „On request of the importer, this case was sent to the public stores for examination. The appraiser duly reported to the collector that he found the case to be 13dozen pairs short. Thereupon the collector liquidated the entry, allowing 1o importer a shortage of 3-^ dozen pairs only. The importer protested, insisting it should be allowed a shortage as reported by the appraiser. On appeal, the Customs Court sustained the protest, and the Government has appealed from said judgment.

It is argued by the Government that, as it appears from the report of the discharging inspector that the case, when landed, was only 3^-dozen pairs of gloves short, the rest of the goods must have been actually imported, and, having been so imported, are dutiable, irrespective of any shortage the appraiser may thereafter have found; in other words, if the goods were abstracted from the case between the examination of the inspector and the appraiser’s examination, this can not affect their dutiability. To support this theory, the Government relies upon Mills & Gibb Corp. v. United States, 13 Ct. Cust. Appls. 72, T. D. 40933.

Practically this same question has, on several occasions, been propounded to this court for solution. United States v. Shallus, 2 Ct. Cust. Appls. 332, T. D. 32074, construed section 2921 R. S., which provided:

If, on the opening of any package, a deficiency of an article shall be found, on examination by the appraisers, the same shall be certified to the collector on the invoice, and an allowance for the same be made in estimating the duties.

The court said:

While it is true under the ordinary hard and fast principle of substantive law that duties accrue upon imported merchandise at the exact moment they cross the line within the customs district, it is equally true that the whole framework of customs administrative law and regulations are [is] constructed upon the principle that, while duties actually accrue at the time stated, the ascertainment of the amount of duties which have thus and then accrued, and the amount of merchandise which has been imported, its condition, and in every respect its dutiable status, are ascertained as of the time they cross said line by examinations and inspections of their condition at the subsequent time of weighing, gauging, appraising, etc. It would be a physical impossibility to otherwise ascertain their dutiable status.

In Madeira Embroidery Co. v. United States, 9 Ct. Cust. Appls. 140, T. D. 37990, the same section was under consideration. There [410]*410the case of goods in question had been landed and, from the report of the inspector, the case was delivered to the public stores carman in apparently good condition. The appraiser reported the contents of the case to be missing. The collector, however, held the contents to be dutiable, and the Board of General Appraisers sustained him. This court reversed the board, saying, inter alia,:

This statute contemplates that where the examination is made by the appraisers and a deficiency in articles shall be found, a certificate to the collector to that effect shall be made and that an allowance shall be made by the collector. The statute is mandatory and is not ambiguous in any of its terms.

In Hamrah v. United States, 11 Ct. Cust. Appls. 147, T. D. 38945, a case of goods, before being sent to public stores, was reported by an official to be intact as to its contents. The appraiser who examined the case reported certain shortages. The case turned upon a construction of said section 2921, R. S., and Paragraph K of Section III of the tariff act of October 3, 1913. Said paragraph is as follows:

K. That it shall be the duty of the appraisers of the United States, and every of them, and every person who shall act as such appraiser, or of the collector, as the case may be, by all reasonable ways and means in his or their power to ascertain, estimate, and appraise (any invoice or affidavit thereto or statement of cost, or of cost of production to the contrary notwithstanding) the actual market value and wholesale price of the merchandise at the time of exportation to the United States, in the principal markets of the country whence the same has been imported, and the number of yards, parcels, or quantities, and actual market value or wholesale price of every of them, as the case may require.

The court, while refraining from deciding whether the appraiser’s report was mandatory, held that the evidence furnished by the official’s report that the goods were intact was insufficient to counteract the evidence furnished by the appraiser’s return of shortage.

United States v. Lippman, Spier & Hahn, 11 Ct. Cust. Appls. 336, T. D. 39145, also under the said act of 1913, dealt with a case of goods sent to the appraiser’s stores for examination, the contents of which were reported by the appraiser to be short certain specified amounts. The discharging inspectors had reported that the case was landed in good order. The collector assessed duty upon the invoiced quantity, ignoring the appraiser’s report. The court said:

We regard the real question here to be whether or not this statute requires the collector to make an allowance for the shortages found by the appraiser in this case. We think it does, and that the collector had no authority to take duty upon the missing articles.

Again, in McKesson & Robbins v. United States, 11 Ct. Cust. Appls. 481, T. D. 39572, also under the said act of 1913, the discharging inspector reported a certain case of opium landed in good order; the appraiser reported a large shortage from the invoiced amount. The collector ignored this report of shortage and assessed [411]*411full duty. This court, after noting that the missing goods had probably been removed after landing, said:

It is well settled that duty attaches upon merchandise at the time it enters the customs district. However, the involved details of handling and the attending difficulties in the ascertainment of the dutiable status of merchandise, required that legislative authority and responsibility for determination of dutiable status be given to some recognized agent of the Government.
So far as the question involved in this case is concerned, the statutory authority and responsibility for determination of quantity devolves upon the appraiser by the provisions of section 2921, Revised Statutes.
*******
The section is unambiguous and mandatory and the collector is required by said section to make an allowance for any deficiency reported to him by the appraiser thereunder, in the absence of fraud, when the merchandise has at all times been in the uninterrupted possession of the Government.

'The Tariff Act of 1922, under which the case at bar is brought, is in no material respects different from the statutes involved in the cases cited. The relevant provisions are:

Sec. 499.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ct. Cust. 408, 1928 CCPA LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-dent-allcroft-co-ccpa-1928.