United States v. Tappan

24 U.S. 419, 6 L. Ed. 509, 11 Wheat. 419, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 325
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 16, 1826
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 24 U.S. 419 (United States v. Tappan) 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. Tappan, 24 U.S. 419, 6 L. Ed. 509, 11 Wheat. 419, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 325 (1826).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

*420 This is an action of debt-upon a duty bond., l,n^elr the act of the 20th of April, 1818. Upon the trial of the cause in the Circuit Court of Massachúsetts, the following questions arose :

1. Whether the words “ true valve," in the 11th section of the act of the 20th of April, 1818, meant the current market value of such goods at the place from which they were imported, or the true and actual cost thereof to the importer at such place.

2. Whether, if the Collector did, in fact, suspect that the goods were invoiced below the current market value thereof, at the place from which they were imported, but did not suspect that they were invoiced below the true and actual cost thereof to the importer, the Collector had a bight to direct an appraisements

8. Whether, if, in the opiniop of the Collector, there was just ground to suspect that the goods were invoiced below the current market value of the same, at the place from whence they were imported, then the said Collector had aright to direct the Same to be appraised in the manner prescribed in the 11th section of the beforementioned act of Congress.

Upon which questions the Judges of the Circuit Court were opposed in opinion, and they are brought up to this Court for decision.

It seemed to be admitted on the argument ai the bar, that the answers to these questions would depend in a great measure, if not entirely, upon a more general inquiry with respect to the basis on which the ad valorem rate of duties is to be *421 estimated ; whether upon the actual cost of the goods, or the current market.value thereof, at the place from which they were imported. That, prior to the act of 1818, ad' valm em duties were to be estimated upon the actual cost of the goods, cannot admit of a doubt. In one of the earliest acts of Congress passed on this subject in the year 1789, (2 L. U. S. 22.) this was assumed as the basis. The act declares, that the ad valorem rates of duty upon goods, wares, and merchandise, at the place of importation, shall be estimated by adding twenty per cent, to the actual cosí thereof, if imported from the Cape óf Good Hope, or from any place beyond the same, and ten per cent, on the actual cení thereof, if imported from any other place or country, exclusive of charges. In the act passed but a few days before. (2 L. U. S. 5.) after the enumeration of certain articles subject to an ad valorem■ duty, it is declared, “ that on all other goods, wares, and merchandise, five per cent, on the value thereof at the time and place of importation,’’ shall be laid. The word vahie, as here used, cannot bo understood in any other sense thaii the words actual cost, in the act pr.ssed only twenty-seven days after. It would be unreasonable to suppose that, in the former u«.t, market value was established as the basis, and in the latter a new rule introduced under the terms actual cost, with a view to any change of the basis. It is more reasonable to suppose, that value and actual cost, were intended To import the same meaning. And, in other parts of the ,laws on *422 this subject, where these terms are used in reference to the rule by which the duties are to be estimated, they are to be taken in the same genge> an(j[ to understood as a varied mode of conveying the same idea. (2 L. U. S. 22. 3 vol. ed. 185.) In the act of 1799, the same basis, actual cost, is expressly adopted as the rule by which ad valprem duties are to be estimated; (3 L. U. S. 193.) and that such was the rule previous to the act of 1818, was not denied on the argument, as it certainly could not be with the least colour of plausibility. And if this be so, there ought to be a very clear expression of the legislative will, before a rule which had governed the practice on this subject for nearly thirty years, should be considered as abolished; and a- new one adopted. And, wé think, the act of 1818, (6 L. U. S. 300.) will not justify such a conclusion. If any parts of the act, when separately considered, would seem.to warrant such a construction, the whole, when taken together, admits of no such interpretation, and would, indeed, be directly at variance with the fourth section of this act, which, in terms, adopts the rule first laid down in the act of 1789* and which has been continued in all the subsequent laws, “ that the ad valorem rates of duties, upon goods, wares, and merchandise, shall be estimated by adding twenty per cent, to the actual cost thereof, if imported from the-Cape of Good Hope, or from any island, port, or place, beyond the same, and ten per cent, on the actual cost thereof, if imported from any other place,” &c. It has been contended, however, on the *423 part of the United States, that, by the terms true value, as used in .several parts of the act of 1818, and particularly in the 11th section, it was intended to substitute the current market oalue instead of actual cost, as the basis upon which , ad valorem duties are to be estimated'. The subject matter of this section is, to provide for the detection of fraudulent invoices, and fix the rule- by which the duties are to be estimated, when the invoice price is below the áctual cost. The law requires (3 L. U. S. 437.) that the invoices of all goods imported .-into the'United States, and subject to an ad valorem duty, shall contain a true statement of the actual cost of such goods. And no entry of the' goods can be made, unless the original invoice is produced, and oath made that it contains a just and true account of the cost of such goods. (3 L. U. S. 172.) And to enforce a compliance with these injunctions, by putting into the hands of the Collectors more efficient means of 'detecting all evasions of the law, was one of the principal objects of this 11th section of the act of 1818; It requires the Collector, whenever, in his opinion, there shall be just grounds to suspect that goods, subject to an ad valorem duty, have been invoiced below their true value, at the place from which they were imported, to have them appraised. This power is, to act upon a supposed case, of fraud, attempted to be practised on the government, by making out the invoice below the actual - cost. The great object to which the attention of the Collector is directed, is to ascer *424 tain the cost, that being the basis on which the duties are to be estimated. And if the invoice is raise, proper inquiry is ag t0 ^g value of the goods, and to compare that with the invoice price.

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24 U.S. 419, 6 L. Ed. 509, 11 Wheat. 419, 1826 U.S. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-tappan-scotus-1826.