United States v. Wilson

168 U.S. 273, 18 S. Ct. 85, 42 L. Ed. 464, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1724
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 29, 1897
Docket296
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 168 U.S. 273 (United States v. Wilson) 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. Wilson, 168 U.S. 273, 18 S. Ct. 85, 42 L. Ed. 464, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1724 (1897).

Opinion

*274 Me. Justice Peckham

delivered the opinion of the court,

The Court of Claims in this case gave judgment in favor of the appellee upon these facts: Thomas B. Yan Burén, a citizen of the United States, was appointed consul-general of the United States at the port of Yokohama, Japan, and held office from June, 1874, until June, 1885. While at Yokohama, Mr. Yan Burén received fees for certifying invoices of merchandise shipped from that port through the United States in bond to foreign countries amounting to the sum of $4115, which fees were paid into the .Treasury of the United States under the. rules, regulations and requirements of the Departments of State and Treasury, requiring fees to be so accounted for and paid to the United States. There were 1646 of these invoices. Of the merchandise so shipped, that covered by 523 of the invoices was stopped in transit, for consumption in the United States without further consular certificates, and the declarations or invoices and certificates made by the consul were accepted by the customs officers of the United States as sufficient. The fees collected for certifying these 523 invoices amounted to $1307.50. The merchandise described in 478 of the 1646 invoices passed in transit through the United States to foreign countries, and was exported from the United States. The .fees collected for certifying these invoices amounted to $1195. With regard to 645 of the 1646 invoices, there was. no evidence either' that the merchandise described in the invoices was stopped in transit and entered for consumption in the United States, or that it passed in transit through the United States to foreign countries. The fees collected for certifying these invoices amounted to $1612.50. Mr. Yan Buren’s accounts for the total of all these among other fees were settled at the Treasury Department, and in the settlements he was charged with these as for official fees.

The Court of Claims found that it was not shown that the reason for paying said fees into the Treasury was to avoid controversy with any department of the Government, or that Mr. Yan Burén made any demand to have the fees refunded to him, or credited to. him before said accounts were finally set- *275 tied, or that before the final settlement of his accounts at the Treasury Department he made any objection or protest against said fees being charged to him as official fees. The court gave the claimant judgment for the total of the'three sums above mentioned, being $4115.

The judgment in this case was mainly based by the court below upon the case of United States v. Mosby, 133 U. S. 273, and it was there held that the invoices referred to in sections 2853 and 2855, Revised Statutes, either as they stood originally, or as they were amended by the act of June 10, 1880, did not include invoices for the shipment of merchandise in transit through the United States to other countries, and that the law did not require a consul to issue certificates in such cases; that no provision' was made for a fee for them in the regulations of 1874, or those of 1881, and that it did not appear that the regulations of the Treasury Department required a consul to perform any duty in relation to such goods. The claim -of the claimant in regard to such fees was allowed as a proper claim against the Government.

It is stated in the brief of counsel for the Government herein that in the Mosby case neither the Court of Claims nor this court was given the benefit of any information as to what transit invoices were, and it is now said that both the courts were mistaken in holding that the invoices in the Mosby case were, not those referred to in the above-numbered' sections of the Revised Statutes; and it is said that it now appears by the evidence before the court that such invoices are the identical invoices described by those sections, and that section 2860, in providing that, “ no merchandise imported from any foreign place or country shall be admitted to an entry unless the invoice presented in all respects conforms to the requirements of sections 2853, 2854 and 2855, and has thereon the certificate of a consul, vice-consul or commercial agent in those'sections specified,” makes it necessary to have tbe consular certificate given in this case.

.We are not now called upon to question the decision in the Mosby case. We think there is another ground upon which to base a reversal of the judgment herein, which is, that the *276 payments made by Mr. Yan Burén of the fees covered by his claim were wholly voluntary, and that the general rule applicable to voluntary payments should be enforced.

The petition in this case was not filed until the 30th of March, 1888, and Mr. Yan Buren’s term of service expired in June, 1885. . From the commencement of that service in 1874 up to the termination of his office and the final settlement, of his accounts, no whisper of any claim on his part against the Government was ever heard from Mr. Yan Burén. It does not appear that he’ had the least doubt that the Gov-. ernment was entitled to all the fees paid over by him to it, and in all the various settlements of his. accounts with the Treasury Department, and in his correspondence, so far as this record shows, no claim was ever made or hint given on his part that he had the least title to retain these fees or to recover them back if paid to the Government. There is no pretence that he paid the fees into the Treasury to avoid a controversy with any department of the Government, or that he ever made any objection or protest against the fees being charged to him as official fees. The Court of Claims so finds in substance. If a voluntary payment can be made to the Government, it seems to us that this is such a case, and unless it be declared that the law of voluntary payments is not applicable to the case of a payment by an official to the Government, we think the payments made by the original, claimant were voluntary. This is not a case of an order or direction for the payment of these moneys, given to Mr. Yan Burén by the officers of the Treasury or State Departments; nor is it a case where the failure to pay the moneys might be regarded as disobedience to the peremptory order of a superior officer; nor a payment under duress. The facts show nothing but a voluntary payment of money to the Government, without claim of any right to retain one penny of it.

In United States v. Lawson, 101 U. S. 164, the collector received an order in writing from the commissioner of customs, his superior, requiting him to account for all fees received by him as collector. TJnder that order he paid the fees in controversy into the Treasury, and it was held that *277 having thus paid them pursuant to a peremptory order of his superior officer, he was not precluded from thereafter recovering them in a suit against the United States.

To the same effect is United States v. Ellsworth, 101 U. S. 170, where the ruling in the Lawson ease is followed. In the Ellsworth case

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Bluebook (online)
168 U.S. 273, 18 S. Ct. 85, 42 L. Ed. 464, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 1724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-wilson-scotus-1897.