United States v. Sherman & Sons Co.

237 U.S. 146, 35 S. Ct. 520, 59 L. Ed. 883, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1320
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 5, 1915
Docket541
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 237 U.S. 146 (United States v. Sherman & Sons Co.) 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. Sherman & Sons Co., 237 U.S. 146, 35 S. Ct. 520, 59 L. Ed. 883, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1320 (1915).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Lamae,

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

The questions certified by the Circuit Court of Appeals involve an inquiry as to whether the Collector of Customs, after the expiration of one year, can make a finding of’fraud and thereupon make a reliquidation of duties which is final unless, within 15 days, the importer pays the amount thus *150 declared to be due so as to secure the right to a hearing (1) on the finding of fraud and (2) on the correctness of the new assessment on goods which had' been removed for consumption.

On the part of the Government it is claimed that this power is conferred by § 21 of the act of .1874; 1 but it is a significant fact that although the act has been in force for more than 40 years there are only two instances reported, in which the Collector, after the expiration of one. year, has attempted to reliquidate because of the existence of fraud. Those two cases (United States v. Vitelli, Customs Ct. of Appeals (1914) and United States v. Federal Sugar Co., 211 Fed. Rep. 1016) are of recent date and in direct conflict with each other.

The novelty of the practice, the conflict in the two decisions and the statement that numerous suits on similar reliquidation orders are now pending, justify a somewhat detailed examination of the authority conferred upon the Collector by the Tariff Act of 1909, 2 36 Stat., p. 100, § 14; *151 p. 98, § 12; the act of 1874, 1 18 Stat. 19Ó, and the Customs Regulations prescribing the method of hquidating duties and defining the effect of liquidation orders.

An analysis of the various provisions bearing on the subject shows, that when foreign merchandise is to be entered at a domestic port, the owner files his statutory Declaration, together with the invoice, account and list of the goods sought to be imported. United States v. Salen, 235 U. S. 237. The Surveyor gives a certificate as to weight or quantity, and the Appraiser issues a certificate of value. (Customs Regulations, 861, 1431, 1481, 1484.) With these documents before him — and with 'the privilege of examining .witnesses “touching any matter deemed material in ascertaining the dutiable value and classification of the merchandise,” — the Collector determines the rate of dutj^ to be imposed under the Tariff Act and thereupon calculates, assesses and liquidates the amount to be paid. His decision, as to the amount of duty is final — unless within 15 days the importer files a protest and pays the full amount of duty thus liquidated. In that event the Collector is required to transmit the invoice and all the papers connected therewith to the Board of Nine General Appraisers for their determination of .the questions raised by the protest. From them the case can be taken to the Court of Customs Appeals. If the decision *152 is in favor of the importer provision is made for a refund of any overcharge assessed against him.

If, however, there is no such protest, payment and appeal, the Collector’s decision is final as to the amount of duty (36 Stat. 100, subsection 14) except that for one year— certainly when the goods have not passed beyond his reach (Iasigi v. Collector, 1 Wall. 384), — the Collector, like a court during the term at which a judgment is entered, has full control of the assessment, and may on his own motion set aside his first order and make a reliquidation. Robertson v. Downing, 127 U. S. 613. Where there is no such renewal or continuance of the original proceeding, but, where the duty is paid, as assessed, the statute (18 Stat. 190, § 21) provides that the “settlement shall, after the expiration of one year, in the absence of fraud, be final and conclusive upon all parties.”

1. This brief review of the many and detailed provisions of the statutes will suffice to show that the Government will not'allow foreign goods to be brought into this country and then litigate with the importer as to the amount of duty. Neither bond, nor security, nor retention of the, goods during litigation, will dispense with the necessity of payment. The duty, as assessed by the Collector, must be paid in any event, — not only as a condition of the goods being entered, but also as a condition of the right to file a protest. When that has been done, Congress, in order to prevent injustice, has given the importer, who thus pays and protests, the right to bring the goods into the United States, has granted him the opportunity to review the finding of the Collector and has also given him the promise of a refund in case the Collector is found to have made an overcharge. (36 Stat. 103, subsection 23.) But this right of review is not an appeal in ordinary course of law and can be exercised only in the statutory method, on statutory conditions before special statutory'tribunals of limited jurisdiction.

*153 2. This summary method of collection, and the requirement that duties be paid as assessed before the right to litigate arises, is an incident of the fact that the assessment and collection of duties is an administrative matter — no notice or hearing being necessary since the assessment is in rem and against the foreign goods which are sought to be entered. The amount is determined by inspection of experts, and payment is enforced against the merchandise actually in custody of the customs officers, who cannot permit its removal until the assessed charges have been paid.

If, after the duty had been paid and the goods had been removed, it should be made to appear that they had been fraudulently entered and were still in the possession of the importer, they could be retaken and condemned in forfeiture proceedings. Or, if after the expiration of one year it should be discovered that, as alleged in the present case, there had been false invoices, false weights, or fraud of any kind, by which the United States had been deprived of its just dues, and if the goods themselves could not be found, so as to be forfeited, the inability to proceed in rem would not prevent the Government from bringing a suit in personam to enforce the importer’s personal liability for the debt which accrued and which rightfully should have been paid when the foreign merchandise was entered at the domestic port.

This is illustrated by the. decision in United States v. National Fiber Company, 133 Fed. Rep. 596, cited by the Government on another branch of the argument. It there appeared that certain bales of flax had been fraudulently entered as waste-paper stock.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 U.S. 146, 35 S. Ct. 520, 59 L. Ed. 883, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-sherman-sons-co-scotus-1915.