delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit Avas brought by William Astor, in a court of the State of NeAV York, and removed into the Circuit Court of the
At the trial, in October, 1880, the plaintiff testified in- his own behalf, that, in the summer of 1878, he, a citizen of the United States; was travelling in Europe with his wife, three daughters and son, also citizens of the United States, and returned to this country with them, arriving in New York, by a steamer, on September 22d, 1878 ; that he had in his personal baggage certain articles of wearing apparel,' being the goods above mentioned, belonging to himself and other members of his family, purchased in Europe during that summer, on which the duties above mentioned Avere exacted, and that they AA'ere paid in order to get possession of the Avearing apparel; that
Mrs. Astor testified that the garments of ladies’ wear contained in the baggage were generally dresses and cloaks of woolen, worsted and silk, and linens, intended entirely for her own and her daughters’ use, and which had been purchased under her supervision in Paris; that such garmеnts were intended for the separate and ^individual use of herself and daughters as soon as it was cold enough to wear them for the •app aching séason; that some were adapted for ordinary wear an bitíe for balls and entertainments, and all were made upon measure'; that the aggregate quantity of wearing apparel which formed part of the baggage' of herself, and -daughters rather fell short of their usual supply of such articles for that season of the year; that she was obliged, after she arrived-in this country, to have some dresses made; that none of the articles were purchased for sale or exchange, but only for the special use of the persons for whom they were made; that, when they were purchased. and sent home from the persons
It appeared in evidence that the examiner who appraised the dutiable articles in the plaintiff’s baggage went upon the principle of including as dutiable articles those which seemed not to have been worn.
The plaintiff’s counsel requested the court to charge the jury as follows: “ 1. The general purpose of the statute being to impose duties upon the importation of merchandise, the exemptior of the wearing apparel of passengers is in accordance with that purpose, and the language providing for such exemption should have a wide and liberal interpretation. 2. The general pur
The court then charged the jury as follows, and the plaintiff
The court then commented on the testimony as to Avhat articles had been worn and what had not been Avorn, and added : “ Your duty is to examine the testimony on both sides and ascertain AA'hether the plaintiff has proved that any, and, if so, how many, of his Avorn articles Avere assessed for duty. The amount, if anything, Avhich he has overpaid is the measure of the defendant’s liability.” ££ I suppose it is conceded that some were not worn. The amount, if anything, Avhich he has overpaid, that is, the amount, if anything, Avhich he has paid
The parts of the charge excepted to were these: (1.) That, • although the clothing in question was confessedly not excessive m quantity for persons of the means, habits, and station in life of the plaintiff and his family, and was their ordinary outfit for the winter, the exemption of wearing apparel from the payment of duty was limited “to.wearing apparel whicn had been actually used as such before the arrival of the owner in this country.” (2.) That the terms “ wearing apparel in actual use, (not merchandise),” as contained in the statute, “meant wearing apparel bought for personal use, and not for sale, which has been really subjected to use in the way in which that particular wearing apparel is ordinarily used.” (3.) That “the unworn goods of the plaintiff ” in this case were not exempt.
By § 46 of the act of March 2d, 1799, chap. 22, 1 Stat. 661, it was provided, that “ the wearing apparel, and other personal baggage, and the tools or implerhents of a mechanical trade only, of persons who arrive in the United States, shall be free and exemptеd from duty ; ” and a separate entry of such articles was required, with an oath that the packages contained no goods other than “ the wearing apparel and other personal baggage ” and tools, and were not directly or indirectly imported for any other person or intended for sale.
By § 2 of the act of April 27th, 1816, chap. 107, 3 Stat. 313, it was declared that the following articles should be imported into the United States free of duties, that is to say, “ wearing apparel and other personal baggage in actual use, and the implements or tools of trade of persons arriving in the United States.”
This continued to be the language in § 1 of the act of Sep- . tember 11th, 1841, chap. 24, 5 Stat. 463, and until § 9 of the act of August 30th, 1842, chap. 270, id. 560, was enacted, which introduced the language now found in the first clause of the paragraph above cited from § 2505 of the Revised Statutes, which language was repeated in Schedule 1 of § 2 of the act of July 30th, 1846, chap. 75, 9 Stat. 49, with the addition of what is now found in the second clause of said paragraph; and
The course of legislation is thus seen to have been, to exempt from duty, in 1799, “ wearing apparel and other personal baggage ; ” in 1816, “ wearing apparel and other persоnal baggage in actual use; ” “ in 1842, wearing apparel in actual use and other personal effects (not merchandise); ” and in 1846, and thenceforward, the same articles as in 1842, with the limitation as to excluding from the exemption articles imported for sale. The enactment in question is repeated in the statute now in force,, as § 2503 of the Revised Statutes, by virtue of '§ 6 of the act of March 3d, 1883, chap. 121, 22 Stat. 521. The question raised is, therefore, one of continuing importance and interest, under the customs laws.
It is quite apparent that the Circuit Court finally applied to the plaintiff’s wearing apparel the test of whether the given article had been bought for personal use and not for sale and had also been worn, and subjected it to duty unless it had been actually Avorn. The court refused to give the 12th instruction, which it stated to be, that the articles of apparel suitable for the season of the year just approaching at the time, not exceeding in quantity Avhat the OAvner would ordinarily provide for himself and keep on hand for his reasonable Avants, and purchased for his own use as occasion might require, may be properly said to be
“
in actual use,” within the meaning of the statute, from the time Avhen they come into the owner’s hands and are placed in his wardrobe, to be worn whenever the proper occasion arrives, and, if the articles in question came Avithin that test, they should have been admitted free. The court very properly
It is contended here, for the defendant, that unworn wearing apparel, purchased for an approaching season, cannot be exempt from duty, ás “ in actual use,” before that season has arrived, while wearing apparеl proper for the1 season of arrival from abroad may, unless there is a want of good faith, be considered as “in actual use,” -whether it has been already used .or not.
We are of opinion that the court should have given a different construction from that which it gave to the statute, as applicable to the facts of this case. If the articles in question fulfilled the following conditions, and were (1) wearing apparel owned by the plaintiff and in a condition to be worn at once without further manufacture; (2) brought with him as a passenger, and'intended for the use or wear of himself or his family who accompanied him as passengers, and not for sale, or purchased or imported for other persons, or to be given away; (3) suitable for the season of the year which was immediately approaching at the time of arrival; (4) not exceeding in quan
If a person rеsiding in the United States should purchase wearing apparel here, in a condition ready for immediate wear without further manufacture, intended for his own use or wear, suitable for the immediately approaching season of the year, and not exceeding in quantity, quality or value the limit above mentioned, no one would hesitate to say that such wearing apparel was “ in actual use ” by such person, even though some of it might not have been actually put on or applied to its proper personal use. The word “ actual,” in the lexicon, has as a meaning “ real,” as opposed to “ nominal,” as well as the meaning of “ present.” “ In use ” is defined to be “ in employment ; ” “ out of use ” to be “not in employment; ” “ to make use of, to put to use ” to be “ to employ, to derive service from.” These definitions aid in showing that it is too narrow a construction of the words “ in actual use,” as applied to this case, to say that they require that the wearing apparel should have been actually worn.
It is manifest, that, by the words “ in actual use,” Congress did not intend that those words should be limited to wearing apparel on the person at the time. They must have a more extended meaning. The test'of having worn the аrticle, as a criterion whether it is “ in actual use,” is arbitrary, and without support in the statute. An article of wearing apparel, bought for use, and appropriated and set apart to be used, by being placed in with, and as a part of, what is called a person’s wardrobe, is, in common parlance, in use, in actual use, in present use, in real use, as well before it is worn as while it is being worn or afterwards. The test of Avearing must, therefore, be rejected. "What test shall be adopted? ¥e are aided by the other language of the statute, in saying, that the articles must be “personal effects,” and must not bе “merchandise,” and must not be “for sale.” These Avords of limita
As appears by the record in this case, the Treasury Department, in heretofore making regulations for the conduct of the officers of the customs, as to the exemption of wearing apparel, promulgated the following, which were in force from 1857 to 1875 : “ Such exemption of wearing apparel cannot be
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, cmd the case is remanded to that court, with direction to award a new trial.
