United States v. United Cigar Stores Co.

1 Ct. Cust. 450, 1911 WL 19881, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 10, 1911
DocketNo. 266
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1 Ct. Cust. 450 (United States v. United Cigar Stores Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. United Cigar Stores Co., 1 Ct. Cust. 450, 1911 WL 19881, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 78 (ccpa 1911).

Opinion

Smith, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

A verified consular invoice dated Manila, P. I., June 25, 1909, shows that the United Cigar Stores Co., a corporation organized under the laws of New Jersey, purchased at Manila from the Philippine Co. (Ltd.), at a cost of $3,387.25, inclusive of packing and other charges, 225,000 cigars manufactured from tobacco the growth and product of the Philippine Islands. It appears from the bill of lading in evidence [451]*451that the cigars so purchased were delivered at Manila on June 25, 1909, to the Pacific Mail Steamship Co. for carriage from that place to New York, shipment thereof to be by the steamship Korea to San Francisco and thence to destination by transshipment. As the Korea had left Manila on June 19, 1909, and was lying at Hongkong at the time the bill of lading was executed, the Pacific Mail Steamship Co. placed the cigars on board the Yuensang and caused them to be transported by that vessel to Hongkong, where by lighters they were immediately transferred without landing to the Korea. The Korea carried the goods to San Francisco, whence, under entry for immediate transportation in bond, they were forwarded by rail to Hew York. At New York the cigars were entered for immediate consumption, and the collector, after liquidating the entry as “free,” delivered the goods to the importer, who sold them for $9,500. Subsequent to the sale by the importer the collector of customs, believing that the transboarding' of the cigars at Hongkong interrupted their “ direct shipment” from Manila to the United States and that they were therefore not entitled to free entry, ordered a reliquidation, and imposed on the merchandise duties amounting in the aggregate to some $19,000, under the provisions of paragraph 224 of the tariff act of August 5, 1909, which reads as follows:

224. Cigars, cigarettes, cheroots of all kinds, four dollars and fifty cents per pound and twenty-five per centum ad valorem, and paper cigars and cigarettes, including wrappers, shall be subject to the same duties as are herein imposed upon Cigars.

The importers protested against the reliquidation and the duties-imposed and claimed that the cigars were entitled to free entry under the provisions of section 5 of the act, the relevant parts of which are as follows :

Seo. 5. That there shall be levied, collected, and paid upon all articles coming into the United States from the Philippine Islands the rates of duty which are required to be levied, collected, and paid upon like articles imported from foreign countries: Provided, That * * * all articles the growth or product of or manufactured in the Philippine Islands from materials the growth or product of the Philippine Islands or of the United States, or o'f both, * * * coming into the United States from the Philippine Islands shall hereafter be admitted free of duty, except * * * cigars in excess of one hundred and fifty million cigars, which quantities shall be ascertained by the Secretary of the Treasury under such rules and regulations as he shall prescribe. * *. * And provided further, That the free admission, herein provided, of such articles, the growth, product, or manufacture of the United States, Into the Philippine Islands, or of the growth, product, or manufacture, as hereinbe-fore defined, of the Philippine Islands into the United States, shall be conditioned upon the direct shipment thereof from the country of origin to the country of ■destination: Provided, That direct shipment shall include shipments in bond through foreign territory contiguous to the United States.

The Board of General Appraisers sustained the protest and the Government appealed.

[452]*452It seems to be conceded that the cigars were manufactured from tobacco the growth and product of the Philippine Islands within the meaning of the statute; that the limit of 150,000,000 cigars entitled to exemption from duty in any one fiscal year was not exceeded by the importation; and that shipment from origin to destination was accomplished as hereinbefore recited. There being no dispute as to the facts of the case, the question to be determined on appeal is purely one of law, namely, What construction shall be put upon the provision for “ direct shipment,” which is expressly made a condition for the admission free of goods coming from the Philippines to the United States ?

The Government insists that no dutiable merchandise imported from the Philippines is entitled to free entry unless transported therefrom to the United States in a single bottom and that once such merchandise has passed beyond the maritime jurisdiction of the islands any transfer of it from one vessel to another is violative of the statutory condition and precludes its admission without payment of the usual duties. On the other hand, the importers claim that goods the product, growth, and manufacture of the Philippines are exempt from duty if their shipment is made on a through bill of lading and if as a matter of fact they come to the United States without entering into the commerce of any other country.

The language of the statutory provision is fairly susceptible of either interpretation, and it is therefore not only permissible but necessary to consider the history of the legislation and to inquire into the conditions and the circumstances inducing its enactment in order to arrive at a satisfactory conclusion touching its true purpose and intention.

The United States acquired the Philippines by cession from the Kingdom of Spain, and their acquisition was in a measure one of the unavoidable results of the Spanish-American War. The treaty , between the high-contracting parties did not vest the peoples of the islands with the rights and privileges of American citizenship, and that of course left their future well-being largely dependent on whether they should be considered as utter strangers to the American household or as wards of the Nation for whose happiness and prosperity the Government was at least morally responsible. The original instructions of the President to the Philippine Commission and the organic act for the government of the islands argue strongly that the political welfare and material progress of the Filipino people were matters of real and serious concern to the American Government. Indeed, both act and instructions indicate that from the outset the United States regarded the inhabitants of its newly acquired territory as something' more than mere aliens, and that in dealing with them it elected to pursue a policy which was highly altruistic and benevolent.

[453]*453The establishment of civil government in the islands, the concession of a large measure of political autonomy to the peoples thereof, and the beneficent intent of legislation affecting their business interests, are all convincing evidences that a kindly purpose rather than a selfish one was to distinguish our sovereign relations with the Philippines. In this spirit was passed the act of March 8, 1902, which admitted to the United States articles the growth and product of the Philippine Islands at 75 per cent of the duty imposed on foreign imports of the same character and which-directed that all the duties collected thereon be covered into the Philippine treasury. That act was intended to stimulate the business of the islands and to provide revenue for their government.

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1 Ct. Cust. 450, 1911 WL 19881, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-united-cigar-stores-co-ccpa-1911.