United States v. George

25 F. Cas. 1277, 6 Blatchf. 406, 1869 U.S. App. LEXIS 1385
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedApril 16, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 F. Cas. 1277 (United States v. George) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. George, 25 F. Cas. 1277, 6 Blatchf. 406, 1869 U.S. App. LEXIS 1385 (circtsdny 1869).

Opinion

BENEDICT, District Judge.

The course of procedure adopted in this matter appears to have been somewhat irregular. A more proper practice would have been, for the customs’ officers and the informers to have set forth their claims to this fund by petitions, to which answers should have been interposed by the government, and. upon the issues thus framed. and the testimony adduced by the respective parties, in support of their allegations, a decree could have been rendered, with less danger of confusion and mistake. The respective parties petitioning here seem to have treated each petition as an answer to the others; and the customs’ officers appear to have considered themselves entitled to prove their case under the petition presented by the United States. But. as all parties have spread out their case very fully in the evidence, and as all the points in controversy have been considered and argued by the counsel, without objection, as if duly pleaded, it appears unnecessary to direct the proceedings to be reformed.

In considering the questions thus presented, it will be convenient to examine, first, the claim made by the customs’ officers and the informers to the portion of the fund consisting of $29.861 in gold. The claim in regard to this is, that the $59,722 in gold, of which the $29,861 remaining in the registry is a moiety, consisted of fines and penalties, and that a moiety of it is given by law to the customs’ officers and informers; while, on the part of the United States, it is contended that the $59,722 was not fines and penalties, but duties, in which no person is entitled to share with the government.

The determination of this issue renders it necessary to consider, at the outset, the effect of the record of the judgment in favor of the United States, and against the offenders, which was entered on the 27th of December, 1867, and was satisfied upon the payment of this fund into the registry. This record, which it has been suggested, on this argument, must be conclusive in favor of the customs’ officers and informers, would, as I view it, if held conclusive, deprive those persons of any right to any portion of this fund. This will appear from an examination of the record itself. The cause of action which the record sets forth, and which was admitted by the confession, is, that certain parties defendant unlawfully removed from the bonded warehouse dutiable goods, without payment of the duties, whereby, as it is averred, the value of the goods became forfeited to the United States, and the United States oecame entitled to have of the defendants $59.722 in gold, and $32,000 in currency. The record nowhere refers to any statute by virtue of which the alleged forfeiture arose, and no statute has been found which forfeits the value of goods for any such act as is set forth in the declaration, or which, upon the facts stated in the declaration, created a legal liability on the part of the defendants to pay to flte United States this $59,722 in gold, and $32.000 in currency. Customs’ officers and informers can claim to. share only in fines, penalties, and forfeitures which are created by S' une law of the United States. If no statute exists, by virtue of which any particular sum of money, whether called a fine, a penalty, or a forfeiture, has been demanded and paid, no customs’ officer or informer can share in the money. Here was no forfeiture of goods, for, no goods subject to forfeiture were proceeded against. The segars which were seized by the collector were released, without any other condition than that they should be duly entered,and the duties be paid; and the illegal acts charged in the declaration did not render the parties liable in a civil action, under any law of the United States, to such fines and penalties as were demanded. It may be that the $32.000 in currency, which formed part of the demand, can be held to be thirty-two fines of $1,000 each, incurred by virtue of the act of August 6, 1846 (9 Stat. 53), and that portion of the fund has been so treated by the government. But this would not affect the $59,722 in gold, which is now under consideration. If, then, the record alone were to be looked to as fixing the rights of the parties, it would seem to confer no right upon the customs’ officers and informers to a distributive share of the gold in the registry. This difficulty has been realized on this, proceeding, and. accordingly, the customs’ officers and informers have not rested their claims upon the record of the judgment alone, but have, without objection on the part of the government, introduced much testimony to show the real nature of the claims made by the government against the offenders. The case being thus opened, evidence has been also introduced by the United States, tending to show the circumstances under which this money' was demanded and paid. This evidence. therefore, thus introduced by the respective petitioners, and which discloses the actual liabilities which the parties who paid [1279]*1279this money were under to the United States, and from which they sought to be discharged by the payment which they made, must be considered in connection with the record, in determining the character of the fund in question, and the rights of the parties to share therein. It is proper to say here, that, if the course of this proceeding had been otherwise, and the judgment entered on the 27th of December, 1867. had been relied upon as decisive of the character of this fund, it would, doubtless, have been incumbent upon the court—called on, as this court is by this proceeding, to distribute a fund in its registry— to require a fuller explanation than has yet been given of the circumstances under which that judgment was taken. On this argument,. it has been treated by the counsel for the government as an inadvertence, and. perhaps, properly so treated; but. it is such an inadvertence as to require full explanation before I should feel justified in disposing of this large amount of money in accordance with its terms.

Looking, then, into the evidence as it has been given, it appears, that certain parties, doing business under the name of J. W. George & Co., perpetrated frauds upon the government, by removing for consumption, dutiable goods from a bonded warehouse, without payment of the duties; that criminal proceedings were commenced against them, and also a civil suit to recover some $400.01)0 of duties, in which suit a large amount of property was attached; that, thereupon, the offenders applied.to the secretary of the treasury for relief, and then, plainly and deliberately, admitted themselves to be liable to the government for duties amounting to $50,722 in gold, which they promised to pay, together with the sum of $82,000. as thirty-two penalties for as many unlawful withdrawals, which they also admitted to have been made by them; and that, thereupon, the secretary agreed that all the parties implicated should be released from all civil and criminal liability relating to the transactions in which they liad beeu engaged, upon the payment of such duties and penalties. In pursuance of this agreement, the parties did pay into the registry of this court the $59,722 in gold, and the $32,000 in currency, in question; and all the pending civil and criminal proceedings, were thereupon stopped by the district attorney. But the payment, instead of being made in the proceedings, pending at the time of the agreement ■ with the secretary, was made in satisfaction of a judgment confessed by them in a friendly action, which they suggested should be commenced, as affording them a more satisfactory evidence of the payment of the money which they had agreed with the secretary to pay.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. Cas. 1277, 6 Blatchf. 406, 1869 U.S. App. LEXIS 1385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-george-circtsdny-1869.