United States v. Platt

27 F. Cas. 546
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 27 F. Cas. 546 (United States v. Platt) 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. Platt, 27 F. Cas. 546 (S.D.N.Y. 1840).

Opinion

BETTS, District Judge.

This is an action of debt, brought under the 66th section of the act of March 2, 1799, to recover the value of goods imported by the defendant [John Platt] as a forfeiture declared by that act. The declaration is in 41 counts, upon so many different importations and entries made by the defendant in this port at different periods between the first day of September, 1834, and the 20th of March, 1839. The averment in each count is in substance that the respective entries were made in conformity to invoices produced by the defendant to the officers of customs, and that the goods were invoiced below their actual cost at the place of exportation, with intent to evade the payment of duties thereon.

The action was commenced in September, 1839. The defendant pleads the general issue to all the counts, and the statute of limitations to all charging the entry to have been made more than three years previous to the commencement of this suit, to which plea the plaintiffs demur. A general demurrer is also interposed by the defendant to all the counts. The validity of the two latter pleadings is now the subject of inquiry.

The defendant’s demurrer rests upon two grounds: (1) That the 66th section of the act of 1799 is repealed, and (2) that, if the section is in force, the declaration is defective in substance, and that the plaintiffs can claim no judgment under it against the defendant. The 66th section being the substratum of the action, the leading inquiry in the ease will be whether that provision is now in force. The enacting clause directly applicable to this issue is “that if any goods, wares or merchandize of which entry shall have been made in the office of a collector, shall not be invoiced according to the actual cost thereof at the place of exportation, with design to evade the duties thereupon, or any part thereof, all such goods, wares and merchandise, or the value thereof, to be recovered' of the person making entry, shall be forfeited”; and the argument is that the provisions of various subsequent acts of congress (of 1818, c. 74, § 11 [3 Story’s Laws, 1682; 3 Stat. 436]; of 1823, c. 147, §§ 13, 14 [3 Story’s Laws, 1887; 3 Stat. 735, c. 21]; of 1828, c. 53, § 9 [4 Stat 274]; of 1830, c. 147, § 4 [Id. 410]; and of 1832, c. 224, § 14),— by legal implication abrogate so much at least of the act of 1799 as subjects the importer to a personal penalty. These subsequent enactments have been carefully collated with the 66th section by Judge Hopkins in a recent case (U. S. v. 25 Cases of Cloth [Case No. 16,563]) and the conclusion to which he arrives is that the Bection remains in force even in respect to the forfeiture of the goods. If his reasoning is sound in respect to that branch of the section, it is of stronger force in regard to the personal penalty, because the subsequent enactments from which the repeal of the 66th section is sought to be deduced have all relation to the goods,—to the effect of a false valuation or invoice upon the importation itself. I do not feel called upon to weigh the very able reasoning of the judge upon the latter point, for even if his conclusion in that particular should be adopted here, or should be found not in correspondence with the decisions of this court or the circuit court of this circuit heretofore made on the same subject (and which might conclude this court), they would come clothed with impressive influence in elucidation of the other branch of the section, which has never been before brought in review in this court No direct repeal of the 66th section is asserted, and the implication which it is supposed establishes such repeal, is raised from after-enactments providing remedies and pointing out a course of procedure which it is asserted are inconsistent with the provisions of that section. Congress designates an alternative penalty for the offences created by the section,—i. e. the forfeiture of the goods, or the value thereof, to be recovered of the person making entry. These penalties are distinct and positive in their character, so that the modification or repeal of the one need not necessarily affect the validity and operation of the other. No one would contend, if congress at the next session had repealed the personal penalty, that the forfeiture of the goods was also abrogated as a necessary incident. So even of criminal offences, made punishable by fine or imprisonment, an after-act, withdrawing imprisonment or modifying the fine, is not regarded as affecting the other branch of the punishment

These principles show that to derive a repeal of such alternative penalties by implication from subsequent provisions of law, those after-enactments must have relation to both branches of the penalty or the offence itself, upon which they are founded. The most careful examination of the acts subsequently passed has not enabled me to discern any provision having a necessary application to this personal penalty, or the basis on which it is founded. The goods are made subject to various processes of interpretation, to enhanced valuation and imports, and the party importing them to an examination on oath, but in every instance for the purpose of ascertaining whether the duties should not be increased beyond the amount payable upon the invoice or entry, or whether the goods themselves should not be forfeited. Every enactment points to the representation of the importer at the custom house, whether by invoice or entry, as a cardinal fact, conducing to fix the fate of the goods, either to be subjected to increased duties or to confiscation. The invoice is in no statute thrown out of view.

It is made an essential part of the importer’s vouchers, and must be verified by [548]*548solemn oath, and, if not received with the goods, the party making the entry must swear he will produce it to the custom house whenever it comes to hand. The clear intent of congress, manifested in every import act, to hold the importer bound to exhibit a true invoice of his goods, and making the invoice a basis for entry or appraisement of the goods, supplies also a strong intendment that every section provided for securing the integrity of the instrument is to be continued and enforced. Congress might be induced from many considerations of policy or conveniency to waive the confiscation of goods because entered below their value, and be content with full duties thereon; but it is not to be inferred that such payment of duties would be regarded as expiating so gross a violence to the laws and the rights of the honest merchant, as making out and presenting a false invoice of goods with design to evade the payment of duties. To imply the repeal of a sanction thus fastened upon the party making the entry because a co-ordinate penalty attached to the goods so entered was modified or withdrawn would be giving an effect to such after-legislation more serious and broad than is recognized in any case cited on the argument which the court can discover. The judgment of the court in U. S. v. One Case of Hair Pencils [Case Mo. 15,924], on the 76th section, lays down principles in this respect as favorable to the defendant as any other decision of equally high authority, and the criterion pointed out by that decision is that the provisions of two acts upon the same subject-matter must be so differing that both cannot be carried into execution, in order to render the latter a repeal by implication of the former; and, applying that doctrine to this case, it is most manifest that no incompatibility or incongruity between the provision of the 66th section now under examination and any subsequent enactments interferes with its application or enforcement.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

3m Company v. Carol M. Browner
17 F.3d 1453 (D.C. Circuit, 1994)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 F. Cas. 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-platt-nysd-1840.