United States v. Nineteen Bales of Tobacco

112 F. 779, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 112 F. 779 (United States v. Nineteen Bales of Tobacco) 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
United States v. Nineteen Bales of Tobacco, 112 F. 779, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2 (S.D.N.Y. 1898).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge

(charging jury). The object of this statute, gentlemen, is to secure to the United States the payment of its just duties. An incidental and by no means unimportant part of this procedure for the enforcement of the payment of the proper duties, is also equality in trade. No merchant can compete fairly •and honestly against dishonesty in importations under a tariff which imposes high duties. The distinction between wrapper tobacco and ¿fillers alone under our tariff law is very great, the duty being 35 cents a pound for fillers, but $1.85 a pound for wrappers; and so with' all other branches of trade. The honest merchant cannot compete, if he pays duties honestly, with the merchant who avoids the payment of honest duties and obtains his goods for use here very much below what the honest merchant' must pay. It is therefore a matter of great interest to the merchants, as well as to the United States, that the law shall be impartially and equally enforced that all may stand alike. Ther.e is no mode of enforcing this equality, or of enforcing the payment of its just dues to the government, except through you. The jury, in one shape or another, however a case may come up, determines whether the forfeiture either of the goods or of value, or the liability stated by the statute, has been incurred or not; and it is upon your faithful administration of the law according to its real intent, that the community and the government must rest. It is an important duty that you perform.

, .The claim here is that this consignment of tobacco was entered by means of a false invoice. The statute declares that if any person 'shall enter goods by means of a false invoice—I need, not mention 'any of the other papers—or a fraudulent invoice, the goods shall [781]*781be liable to forfeiture. There is also a provision for criminal punishment. The defendant contends that there can be no forfeiture unless there has been knowingly a false and - fraudulent entry. Now, it may be that the criminal side of this statute might not be enforced, because of certain other general principles of law that might be brought in to qualify this section, unless the government were both to aver in its pleadings and to sustain by its proof, the fact that the defendant, who is charged with crime, knew what he was doing and knew that the paper was false. It is not necessary here, that I should say either “Yes” or “No” to that proposition. This is not á proceeding against a' person criminally. It is for a forfeiture of the goods alone.

The law provides that any person interested in the goods may come in and claim them when they have been seized. Mr. Ordetx appears here as the claimant of these goods. The entry was made in his name by, Mr. Bird, under a power of attorney which covered only the authority to enLer. The invoice, which is a necessary part of the entry, has been produced before you. The invoice describes the goods as “39 bales leaf tobacco (filler) bought as filler and to be sold as filler. Value, $2,452.” That is its foreign value. Under the next item “6 bales leaf tobacco (filler) bought as filler and to be sold as filler. Foreign value, $392.” Those make the 45 bales. The government charges that 19 of these 45 bales were in reality wrappers under the customs law, and it has produced its witnesses whom you have heard, all of whom I think state very positively that beyond doubt these 19 bales, of which samples were produced, were wrappers, differing in their estimate of the percentage of leaves from upwards of 15 per cent, as the lowest said, all the way up to an estimate of 60 per cent, of the leaves.

The claimant who has testified in his own behalf stated that he regarded the bales as fillers, and did not consider that more than 1 per cent., as I understood his evidence, of the leaves were fit for wrappers, and that those would be poor wrappers, while all might be used as filling; that they would make good filling.

Unless you are quite satisfied that these 19 bales were wrappers, that is to say, embraced more than 15 per cent, of leaves that were fit for wrappers, your verdict must be for the claimant. But, if upon this evidence you are satisfied that more than 15 per cent, of the contents of these 19 bales were really wrappers, that is to say, were fit to make wrappers, although they would not be equal to Havana wrappers, then you have to proceed to the rest of the case, •which I shall now present to you.

Upon the finding of the last fact; if you so find, the invoice is undoubtedly untrue. The question remains whether it is false, so as to entitle the government to a forfeiture of the goods. The statute does not say if the person making the entry knows it to be false. No word of that character is in this section, although it is in other sections. So far that affords a presumption that the statute did not intend that knowledge on the part of the person who made the entry should be essential to the forfeiture of the goods. I do not say that it is a conclusive consideration. I merely say it is [782]*782one circumstance. I think, however, that it will not he necessary for you to be much troubled on that branch of the case if you find that these bales were wrappers, under the instruction which I feel bound to give to you as to what is further necessary in a proceeding against the goods alone; because it appears in this case from the testimony of the claimant, Mr. Ordetx, that he was not the only person interested in these goods. They were brought here apparently as a business venture during the war with Spain with the idea of their supplying deficiencies of Havana tobacco in the market. They were sent, as he says, to be sold here; sent to be sold by him on commission, but also with a further interest. He said he was somewhat interested in the goods, and he explained that by saying that he made advances to the person in Mexico who sent them here. There is no dispute about that part of the testimony, and therefore I must assume so much of it to be true, and you must do the same. It appears then that some one in Mexico, whose name I do not remember, consigned these goods to Mr. Ordetx here to be sold by him on commission, Mr. Ordetx having made advances on the goods to the consignor, and this invoice is sent on for these goods. Now, I think I must say that I regard the law on this point to be that it any person who is interested as owner, or part owner, in the goods makes a false paper which is to be used in the course of the entry, stating in it some matter which is substantially false—I say substantially false to distinguish it from some minor matter, from a clerical mistake, from an inadvertence1 or other incidental thing— I say if a person who is interested in the goods, makes a statement which is substantially false, and which when used upon the entry of the goods naturally tends to defeat the rights of the United States in regard to the amount of the duties which it shall receive, and which misstatement would inure to the benefit of the owner, that that at least is a false statement in every point of view within the statute, and is also a fraudulent statement, and makes such a paper, when sent by a person having that interest in the goods, to be a false and fraudulent paper—in this case a false and fraudulent invoice. So that if you find upon this evidence that the consignor in Mexico made this paper and intentionally described these as fillers when he knew that 'they were wrappers, or that above 15 per cent, of them were wrappers, that is a substantial misstatement such as should render the goods liable to forfeiture; and if you believe that condition of things it is your duty so to find.

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Bluebook (online)
112 F. 779, 1898 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-nineteen-bales-of-tobacco-nysd-1898.