delivered the opinion of the court.
It is conceded in this case that the reappraisement was binding provided it was properly conducted; Rev. Stat. § 2930;
Rankin
v.
Hoyt,
It was decided at an early day in this court that the refusal of an inferior court to continue a case cannot be assigned as error. ,
Woods
v.
Young,
The tribunal in this case was created as a part of the machinery of the government for the collection of duties upon imports, and while its proceedings partake of a semi-judicial character, it is not reasonable to expect that in notifying the importer it should proceed with the technical accuracy neces
The first day fixed for the hearing was in June, 1883, when the defendant and the appraisers attended, but the government was not ready to proceed, and the hearing was adjourned indefinitely, with an understanding that the defendant should be notified of the day when the case would be again taken up. Nine months elapsed without any action, when on March 18, 1884, the general appraiser at New York addressed a letter to the defendant at Philadelphia, notifying him that the roappraisement would take place at his office on the 20th day of March, at noon. Defendant at that time was in Cuba, but the letter was received by his brother, a clerk in his office, who wrote the appraiser in Earnshaw’s name that Mr. Earnshaw. was out of the country and was not expected back before the beginning of May, “ and I must, therefore, ask you to be kind enough to postpone' the said reappraisement.” In reply to this a telegram was sent to the effect that the case was adjourned to March 25th, at noon, a postponement "of five days from the time originally fixed. To this telegram no attention was paid, and it appears that the reappraisement was not held until the 31st, nearly a week after the day fixed in the telegram. On’the 10th of May, when the defendant returned, he received a demand for payment of the duties according to the reappraisement.
The amount of business done by the defendant does not dis-' tinctly appear, but considering that this suit is brought to collect the difference in duties upon eleven different importations
There was no error in the ruling of the court below, and the judgment is, therefore,
Affirmed.
