United States v. Salen

235 U.S. 237, 35 S. Ct. 51, 59 L. Ed. 210, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1018
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 30, 1914
Docket506
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 235 U.S. 237 (United States v. Salen) 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
United States v. Salen, 235 U.S. 237, 35 S. Ct. 51, 59 L. Ed. 210, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1018 (1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lamab,

after making the foregoing statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the court.

This writ of error raises the question as to whether the suppression clause in the declaration, required to be made by agent consignees of imported goods (36 Stat. 95), relates to the omission of matter proper to be included in the invoice and account attached; — or to independent facts which, if brought to the attention of the Collector, *245 would have excited his suspicion, and induced him to institute a special inquiry as to the value of the merchandise mentioned in the account and invoice.

No case directly in point has been cited; but counsel have traced the history of the clause from the act of 1799, which required only one form of declaration from all importers, through the subsequent statutes, which, like the Tariff Act of 1909, provide for slightly different forms, according as the entry is made by owner,' manufacturer, consignee, or agent. (1 Stat. 627, 656; 3 Stat. 729, 730; 22 Stat. 488, 524; 26 Stat. 131, 132; 36 Stat. 11, 93.) Under the act of 1799 every importer had to attach the consular invoice and entry account and swear that he “had not in the said entry or invoice concealed or suppressed anything” whereby the Government might be defrauded of its duty. This clause is still retained in the form required to be signed by owner and manufacturer. Where the goods are entered by an agent consignee' he makes Declaration that “nothing has been on my part, nor to my knowledge on the part of any other person, concealed or suppressed, whereby the United States may be defrauded of any part of the duty lawfully due on the said goods, wares, and merchandiáe.” Much of the argument was addressed to the effect of this difference in the language in the respective forms of the several declarations. 36 Stat. 93-95.

Counsel for Salen insist that this difference is due to the fact that the suppression clause in the consignee’s declaration was included in a sentence all the terms of which related to invoice and entry. The declaration to be signed by owner and manufacturer (36 Stat. 94, 95) was in two sentences, and as the last of the two contained the suppression clause, it was necessary, from a grammatical point of view, to mention invoice and account-as antecedents. It is argued that the owner’s statement Conveyed the same meaning as was otherwise expressed in. *246 the suppression clause of the consignee’s declaration. On the other hand the Government contends that the difference in phraseology indicated an, intent to require the consignee to disclose matters as to which no requirement was made where the goods were entered by owner or manufacturer.

Congress, of course, could'have legislated in the same statute so as to make a distinction between consignor and consignee. But no satisfactory reason is given why Congress should have imposed no penalty upon an owner for concealing a great and uniform difference between invoice values and selling prices, while at the same time making the agent guilty of a felony for suppressing exactly the same fact. The moral quality of the act was the same whether the concealment was by owner or agent; the result to the Government was the same, and all doubtful or ambiguous language, in a statute covering the same subject, should be construed on the natural supposition that Congress required identity of disclosures and provided identity of punishment for identity of concealment;

In arriving at the meaning of the clause on which this indictment is founded it may be helpful to consider the purpose of the statute, in the light of the Customs Regulations applicable to the entry of foreign merchandise at a domestic port.

Foreign value is the basis on which ad valorem duties are imposed (36 Stat. 101, § 18), and Congress has made various provisions to enable collectors and appraisers to obtain information as to such foreign values. To that end it authorizes them to examine alk importers or consignees under oath so as to secure from them a statement of any facts which might shed light on the amount of duty to be paid. Any false statement made on such examination subjects them to indictment and punishment as for a felony (June 10, 1890, c. 407, 26 Stat. 131, 139, §§ 16, 17).

*247 But the Documents, attached to the Declaration are . the primary source of information as to value. .They consist of a Consular Invoice, [prepared by the consignor, showing a list of the goods and their foreign value at the date of' exportation]; an Entry or' Account, [prepared by the consignee, showing marks, number^, contents, quan- , tity; invoice value, dutiable value, and the rate of , duty of the goods, Customs Regulations,. 217] and also the Bill of Lading, [prepared by the Master of the vessel]. If these three papers, prepared by three different persons, have, been truly and correctly made they contain-all the information needed to assess the duties. In view therefore of the importance of these Documents the statute makes specific provisions by which they are to be verified, and as will appear from an analysis of the declaration (36 Stat. 93), the consignee states in the first sentence 1 of the Declaration;

*248 “(1) That he is the consignee of the merchandise described in the annexed entry and invoice;

(2) that the invoice and bill of lading are the true and only invoice and bill of lading;

(3) that they are in the state in which they were actually received by him;

(4) that he does not know or believe in.the existence of any other invoice or bill of lading;

(5) that the entry delivered to the Collector contains a just and true account of the merchandise according to the invoices;

(6) that nothing, has been suppressed by him or . to his knowledge on the part of any other person whereby the United States may be defrauded of any part of the duty lawfully due on the merchandise;

(7) that the said invoice and the declaration therein are in all respects true and were made by the person by whom they purport to have been made;

(8) that if at any time he discovers any error in the *249 said invoice, , or in the account now rendered, he will immediately make, the same known to the Collector, . .. .

It will be seen that the Declaration was not only intended to secure an affirmative statement as to the genuineness of the documents and of the correctness of what was actually therein set out, but the consignee was also required to make a negative averment that nothing had been suppressed or concealed by himself or, so far as he knew, by any one else — that is, nothing had been suppressed or concealed in the Account [prepared by the consignee]; in the Consular Invoice [prepared by the exporter]; or in the Bill of Lading [prepared by the Master of the vessel]. Seven of the eight clauses distinctly related to Documents.

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Bluebook (online)
235 U.S. 237, 35 S. Ct. 51, 59 L. Ed. 210, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-salen-scotus-1914.