1 F. Cas. 395 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1843
I cannot but regret that the revenue laws have not- undergone a thorough revision and consolidation since the act of 1799, c. 128, [3 Bioren & D. Laws, 198; 1 Stat 677,] so as to cure the numerous defects, and supply the obvkras omissions (not to speak of the repugnances of the later legislation), which experience has demonstrated to exist in that act. Instead of a plain and uniform statute to regulate this whole matter, we are now driven to an examination of numerous laws, which have been since passed upon the same subject, the provisions of which are not always easily reconcilable with each other, and which present almost endless embarrassments and questions, in their actual application. It is a matter of surprise, that congress should have left this whole system in such an imperfect state, after the experience of nearly a half century has shown its inadequacy, and have rested satisfied with occasional amendatory laws, which have covered a few blots only, and introduced many new controversies as to their true interpretation and extent. The court, however, must act upon the system as it is, with a consciousness, however, that, in many cases, it is obliged to rely upon a measuring east of opinion, without being able to resolve many difficulties to its own entire satisfaction.
I shall consider the objections, in the order in which they stand in the bill of excép-tions, as at once natural and convenient, premising, however, that upon the state of the pleadings, the true issue before the jury was, whether the sugars in question were in
The next objection is to the admission of the evidence of the appraisers, as to prior shipments by Burnham (the shipper of these sugars for the claimant), and of invoices accompanying the same, being, in their judgment, invoiced below the market value, the other shipments not belonging to the claimant, nor he being shown to have any knowledge thereof. 1 confess,- that I have felt some difficulty upon this point; and I should have been glad that the original bill of lading of the* present shipment, and the invoice thereof, and the entry thereof at the custom house, had been put into the case, so that it might have been shown, in what precise manner the bill of lading and invoice were made out; whether Burnham appeared thereon solely as the shipper, or whether it was added, that the shipment was on account and risk of the claimant, and also what the entry and oath administered on the occasion purported to state. As I understand the case, however, Burnham made out the invoice as the agent of the claimant in the shipment; and, therefore, the invoice value of the sugars must be understood as the value put upon the same, with the full assent of the claimant, as the actual cost to him. IVe must then, as it seems to me, treat Burnham as the general agent of -the claimant in this matter. And the question comes shortly to this, whether an agent employed in other transactions of a similar nature for other persons, whose conduct is open to suspicion, as to his readiness to cooperate in a fraudulent evasion of duties in those cases, may not, in the claimant’s case, be equally open to the like suspicion, so as to let in his conduct as in some degree affecting the bona fides of his invoice for the claimant. I confess that the fact, per se, would not alone have much weight; but, combined with other circumstances, inflaming the suspicion of fraud, I am not entirely satisfied that it was not admissible in evidence, although the claimant is not shown to be directly privy to it. Suppose the argument at the bar to be urged, that the agent ought to be deemed as acting bona fide, for as a mere agent, he could have no motive to deceive or aid in a fraud, would not the ar
The next objection is to the admission of the evidence of other invoices of shipments in July and August, 1842, (the present shipment having been made in the preceding May,) in order (as I understand it) to show the market value, at those times, of like sugars at the port of export. I see no reason to exclude this evidence; although it would not and ought not ordinarily to be decisive as to the market value in May. There maybe fluctuations in the market during the intervening period between May and August; and, indeed, there was evidence (it seems) in this case to show, that such fluctuations actually existed. Still, however, upon a question of market value — a subject, in its nature, somewhat indeterminate, and of opinion — it appears to me, that evidence of this sort is admissible, as affording the means of approximation to the true market value at the time. Its weight would depend upon other circumstances, which might enhafice or diminish it.
Having disposed of these minor questions, we come, in the last place, to the main question in the case, which is as to the ruling of the learned judge in refusing the instruction prayed for on behalf of the claimant, and the actual instruction given by him to the jury, “that if they found the goods to be invoiced below their fair market value, with intent to defraud, &c. they should find a verdict for the government.” Now, upon the actual issue before the jury, the real question was, whether the sugars were invoiced at their actual cost and fair market value; and I do not, therefore, well see how the learned judge could otherwise have instructed the jury on that point. The main objection that exists is to the instruction prayed and refused by the court. And this involves several important considerations. In the first place, as to the construction of the 66th section of the revenue act of 1799, c. 128. I adhere to the doctrine laid down in the cases cited at the bar, U. S. v. Sixteen Packages of Goods, [Case No. 16,303,J and Tappan v. U. S., [Id. 13,749,] that “actual cost” in thht section means the actual price paid for the goods by the party in the case of a real bona fide purchase, and not merely the market value of the goods. But then the market value may be and often is justly resorted to as a means of ascertaining the actual cost in doubtful and suspicious cases, for It may be fairly presumed, in ordinary cases, that the market value, and no more, and no less, is generally given for the commodity. The terms, however, are not identical in their meaning, nor is the one necessarily the true interpretation of the other. It is observable in the present ease, that, in the pleadings and issue, the parties have used the words as exact equivalents, and treated the fair market value as the actual cost, and the actual cost as the fair market value.
In the next place it must be taken also, upon the pleadings and evidence, as a clear concession, that the goods were invoiced at their actual cost and fair market value by the shipper, the agent of the claimant, with the consent of his principal; and mus he has placed himself in the invoice and entry, in the predicament of a purchaser, and not in that of a producer or manufacturer of the article. If the invoice and entry purport to state the actual cost, or the market value of the sugars, as a purchase, is it competent in point of law for the claimant now to set up a different case, and to avail himself of the defence, that he was not a purchaser, but a producer or manufacturer? Now, in this view, it is most important to consider that the act of the 1st of March, 1823, c. 149, has in the 4th section prescribed the different oaths to be taken in the entry by the consignee or importer, or agent, and by the owner of the goods, and also by the manufacturer or owner, who has not purchased the goods,
See, also, act of 14th .July, 1832, c. 224, § 15, [chapter 227, 4 Stat. 593.]