United States v. Sixteen Cases of Silk Ribbons

27 F. Cas. 1099, 12 Int. Rev. Rec. 175
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 F. Cas. 1099 (United States v. Sixteen Cases of Silk Ribbons) 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. Sixteen Cases of Silk Ribbons, 27 F. Cas. 1099, 12 Int. Rev. Rec. 175 (S.D.N.Y. 1870).

Opinion

BLATCHFORD, District Judge

(charging jury). The prosecution in this case is instituted on the seizure of the goods, and a suit in rem against the goods seized is promoted for their condemnation and forfeiture under two statutes of the United States which apply to the subject The first one is the fourth section of. the act .of May 28, 1830 (4 Stat. 410), and the second is the first section of the act of March 3, 1S63 (12 Stat. 737). The substance of the act of 1830 is, that if any invoice on which foreign goods are entered at any customhouse is made up with an intent, by a false valuation to evade or defraud the revenue, all the goods embraced in the entry made on such invoice are forfeited. If any article inserted in the invoice has a false valuation put upon it, with an intent to evade or defraud the revenue, then not only that article, but all other goods embraced in the same invoice,' are forfeited to the United States. It will not be necessary to call your attention any further to the act of 1830.

The questions which arise in this case under the act of 1863 are substantially the same, but there are certain provisions of the act of 1863 to which it is necessary 1 should call your attention. The first section of that act provides that all invoices of goods imported from any foreign country into the United States shall be made in triplicate,— that is, there shall be three sets of invoices signed by the person owning or shipping the goods, if the same have actually been purchased, or by their manufacturer or owner, if the same have been procured otherwise than by purchase, or by the duly authorized agent of such purchaser, manufacturer, or owner. The invoice so signed must, at or before the shipment of the goods, be produced to a consul, vice-consul, or commercial agent of the United States nearest the place of shipment, and must have endorsed thereon, when so produced, a declaration signed by such purchaser, manufacturer, owner, or agent, setting forth that .such invoice is in all respects true. That is to be a declaration not on oath, and is to state what the invoice contains, if the goods were obtained by purchase, and are. subject to ad valorem duty,—a duty by a percentage on the valuation,—a true and full statement of the time when and place where the same were purchased, and the actual cost thereof, and of all charges thereon, and that no discounts, bounties, or drawbacks are contained in the invoice but such as have actually been allowed thereon. When the goods are obtained in any other manner than by purchase —as when they are sent by their manufacturer, or when they are presented to the individual as a gift—then this declaration is to state that the invoice contains the actual market value thereof at the time and place when and where the same were procured or manufactured, and that no different invoice has been produced or will be furnished to any one. The person producing this invoice to the consul must, at the same time, declare to the consul at what port it is intended to make entry of the goods. This presentation to the consul of the invoice, accompanied by [1101]*1101tlie declaration, is the second stage of the proceeding. The third stage is this: The consnl must endorse upon each one of the three invoices a certificate, under his hand and seal, stating that the invoice has been produced to him, with the date of its production, the name of the person by whom produced, and the port in the United States at which it shall be the declared intention to make entry of the goods. Thereupon, the consul must hand back to the person producing the three invoices, one of them, to be used in making entry of the goods; he must file the second one in his own office, to be there carefully preserved; and he must transmit the third one to the collector of the port where it is intended to make entry of the goods. Such is the disposition to be made of the three sets of invoices, with the three declarations, and the three certificates of the consul. The statute then provides that no goods imported into the United States after the first day of July, 1863, shall be admitted to entry, unless the invoice shall in all respects conform to the requirements above mentioned, and shall have such certificate of the consul. Therefore the invoice must come from the foreign country, containing, in the case of the manufacturer, the actual market value, accompanied by the declaration, not on oath, and a certificate of the consul, to the effect that the invoice has been produced to him, and that the goods are to be entered at a specified port. The statute gees on to say that no goods shall be admitted to entry unless the invoice be verified—now is the first time an oath appears in the matter—unless the invoice be verified, at the time of making the entry, by the oath or affirmation of the owner or consignee, or the authorized agent of the owner or consignee of the goods, certifying that the invoice and- the declaration are in all respects true, and wer.e made by the person by whom the same purport to have been made, nor, except as thereinafter provided, unless the triplicate invoice transmitted to the collector shall have been received by him. You thus see the machinery provided—the invoice made up abroad, in a certain way, the declaration accompanying it and the certificate of the consul, the appearance of those three papers at the customhouse, and the addition to them, at the customhouse, of the oath or affirmation that the invoice and declaration are in all respects true.

The act of 1863 then goes on to make this provision, under which this prosecution is brought: “If any such owner, consignee or agent”—that is, if the consignor abroad, or the consignee here, or the agent of either of them—“of any goods, wares or merchandise shall knowingly make, or attempt to make, an entry thereof by means of any false invoice or false certificate of a consul, vice-consul .or commercial agent, or of any invoice which shall not contain a true statement of all the particulars hereinbefore required, or by means of any other false or-fraudulent document or paper, or of any other false or fraudulent -practice or appliance whatsoever, said goods, wares, and merchandise, or their value, shall be forfeited and disposed of as other forfeitures for violation of the revenue laws.” Any infraction of this provision forfeits all the goods embraced in the entry. * * * All the papers correspond with the machinery provided by law; and the question raised in this ease is whether this entry was made by means of a false paper, and, if so, whether the paper was false to the knowledge either of these parties in Switzerland or of their agent or consignee here, who made the entry. Knowingly making an entry by means of a false paper, such as a false invoice or a false oath, where the fact that it was false was known to the agent or consignee here, forfeits the goods just as much as if the knowledge was possessed by the consignor abroad.

There have been heretofore before this court cases in regard to various descriptions of merchandise, involving the same questions that are now before you; and I have had occasion to charge juries heretofore on these subjects. I shall, therefore, in what I have to say to you, draw somewhat at1 large upon what I have heretofore said on like questions in some other cases. You have seen that the language of the act of 1830 is, that if the invoice is made up with an intent, by a false valuation, to evade or defraud the revenue, the goods shall be forfeited. The language of the act of 1S63 is that if the entry, or the attempt to make the entry, is by means of a false invoice, find is done knowingly, the goods shall be forfeited.

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Bluebook (online)
27 F. Cas. 1099, 12 Int. Rev. Rec. 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-sixteen-cases-of-silk-ribbons-nysd-1870.