19 F. Cas. 815 | S.D.N.Y. | 1874
The petition in this matter prays for an order directing the return to the petitioners of certain hooks, papers and correspondence mentioned in the petition. It also prays that three certain warrants named in the petition may be vacated. It alleges that the first warrant was issued on the 14th of June, 1873, the second on the 16th of July, 1873, and the third on the 30th of July, 1873, and that the books, papers and correspondence, the return of which is prayed for, were taken by the mar-, shal under the warrants.
The principal question discussed on the hearing on the petition was as to the constitutionality of the provision of the statute under which the warrants were issued. That provision is the 2d section of the act of March 2, 1SU7 (14 Stat. 547). It is in these words: “Whenever it shall be made to appear to the satisfaction of the judge of the district court for any district in the United States, by complaint and affidavit, that any fraud on the revenue has been committed by any person or persons interested, or in any way engaged, in the importation or entry of merchandise at any port within such district, said judge shall •forthwith issue his warrant directed to the marshal of the district, requiring said marshal, by himself or deputy, to enter any place •or premises where any invoices, books or papers are deposited relating to the merchandise in respect to which such fraud is alleged to have been committed, and to take possession of such books or papers and produce them before the said judge; and any invoices, books or papers so seized shall be subject to the or•der of said judge, who shall allow the examination of the same by the collector of customs of the port into which the alleged fraudulent importation shall have been made, or by any officer duly authorized by said collector. And such invoices, books or papers may be retained by said judge as long as, in his opinion,'the retention thereof may be necessary; but no warrant for such seizure shall be issued unless the complainant shall set forth the character of the fraud alleged, the nature of the same, and the importations in respect to which it was committed, and the papers to be seized. And the warrant issued on such complaint, with report of service and proceedings thereon, shall be returned, as other warrants, to the court of the district within which such judge presides.”
It is urged, that the provisions of the statute are in conflict with the 4th and 5th amendments to the constitution of the United States. The 4th amendment provides, that “the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated; and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.” The 5th amendment provides, that no person shall “be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” These amendments were proposed by resolution of congress in 17S9, and were ratified by the states before 1791.
The constitution (article 1, § 8) gives power to congress “to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises, to pay the debts and provide for the ■ common defence and general welfare of the United States,” and “to make all laws which snail be necessary and proper for carrying into execution” the other powers given to it. The fifth act passed by the first congress was the act of July 31, 1789 (1 Stat. 29), “to regulate the collection of the duties •imposed by law on the tonnage of ships or vessels, and on goods, wares and merchandises imported into the United States.” This act contains numerous regulations to insure the collection of duties on imported goods. Among other things it provides (section 22> that, in any case where a collector is suspicious of fraud, and that goods which have been entered are not fairly invoiced, it shall be his duty to take them into his possession, and retain them until their value is ascertained and the duty is paid or secured; also (section 23) that it shall be lawful for the collector, or other officer of the customs, on suspicion of fraud, after goods have been entered, to open and examine them; also, (section 24) that i'every collector, naval officer and surveyor, or other person specially appointed by either of them for that purpose, shall have full power and authority to enter any ship or vessel in which they shall have reason to suspect any goo us, wares or merchandise subject to duty shall be concealed, and therein to search for, seize and secure, any such goods, wares or merchandise; and, if they shall have cause to suspect a concealment thereof in any particular dwelling-house, store, building, or other place, they or either of them shall, upon application, on oath or affirmation, to any justice of the peace, be entitled to a warrant to enter such house, store, or other place (in the day time only) and there to search for such goods, and, if any shall be found, to seize and secure the same for trial.” These provisions of law were enacted by the same congress which proposed the two amendments to the constitution referred to; and it cannot be suggested, with any force, that these provisions of law could have been regarded as in conflict with those amendments, or that the congress which proposed, or the states which ratified, those amendments, could have regarded those amendments as forbidding the enactment of
The above provisions of sections 22, 23, and 21 of the act of July 31, 17S0, were re-enacted in the 40th, 47th, and 4Sth sections of the act of August 4, 1790 (1 Stat. 169, 170), and were again re-enacted in the 66th, 67th, and 68th sections of the act of March 2, 1799 (Id. 677, 67S). These provisions of the act of 1799 have never been repealed. Provisions like these, in force from the foundation of the government, are a legislative construction of the fourth and fifth amendments of the constitution, and are a construction to the effect that such provisions, to aid in the collection of revenue by duties, are not repugnant to such amendments. These provisions were enacted when the first occasion for establishing a manner of proceeding arose; they have continued throughout the existence of the government, and they have been repeatedly acted on by the other departments of the government These considerations are entitled to no inconsiderable weight on the question as to whether the proceedings those enactments authorize are in conflict with the amendments referred to. Prigg v. Pennsylvania, 16 Pet. [41 U. S.] 539, 621; Murray's Lessee v. Hoboken Land & Imp. Co., 18 How. [59 U. S.] 272, 279, 280.
In aid of these provisions of the act of 1799, congress, by the 7th section of the act of March 3, 1S63 (12 Stat 740), the title of which act is, “An act to prevent and punish frauds upon the revenue, to provide for the more certain and speedy collection of claims in favor of the United States, and for other purposes,” enacted as follows: “Whenever it shall be made to appear, by affidavit, to the satisfaction of the district judge of any district within the United States, that any fraud on the revenue has been, at any time, actually committed or attempted by any person or persons interested, or in any way engaged, in the importation or entry of merchandise at any port within the United States, said judge shall forthwith issue his warrant, directed to the collect- or of the port at which the merchandise in respect to which said alleged frauds have been committed or attempted, has been imported or entered, directing said officer, or his duly authorized agents or assistants, to enter any place or premises where any invoices, books or papers relating to such merchandise or fraud are deposited, and to take and carry the same away to be inspected; and any invoices, books or papers so received or taken shall be retained by the officer receiving the same, for the use of the United States, so long as the retention thereof may be necessary, subject to the control and direction of the solicitor of the treasury.” This provision of the act of 1863 was repealed at the time the 2d section of the act of 1867 was passed. The latter was substituted for the former. The latter confines the warrant to cases of committed fraud, while the former extended it to cases of attempted fraud as well as committed fraud. By the latter the warrant is to be issued to the marshal, while by the former it was to be issued to the collector of the port. By the latter the books and papers taken are made subject to the order of the judge who issues the warrant, and may be retained by him as long as, in his
The basis of the proceeding authorized by the act of 1867 is the commission of a fraud on the revenue by a person interested or engaged in importing or entering merchandise at a port in the United States. This means a fraud which deprives the government of revenue. The revenue from imported merchandise is duties. The proceeding, therefore, concerns the enforcement of the laws for the collection of revenue from duties, and is in aid of such collection. The complaint and the warrant should set forth the importations in respect to which the fraud was committed, so as to identify them .as nearly as may be. as, for instance, the names of the vessels, the dates of the importations, the marks on the packages, and the nature of the goods. The frauds alleged in the complaints and warrants in the present case were frauds depriving the government of duties. It would have been competent for the officers of the customs to have seized the goods described in the complaints and warrants in this case, for non-payment of the duties of which the government was deprived by the alleged frauds. This might have been done without warrant, as far as a seizure without warrant is authorized by the statute, or under a warrant, as far as a seizure, when authorized, is. required by statute to be made under a warrant. By the act of July IS, 1S66 (14 Stat. 178), it is provided (section 2) that it shall be lawful for any officer of the customs, &c., to search any vessel, and any person, trunk or envelope on board, and to seize any goods liable to forfeiture for a violation of law; and (section 3) that it shall be lawful for the same officers or persons to search and examine any vehicle or person on which or on whom he or they shall suspect there are goods subject to duty, and to search any trunk or envelope, wherever found, in which he may have a reasonable cause to suspect there are goods which were imported contrary to law, and to seize any goods found on such search which he shall have reasonable cause to believe are subject to duty, and that any person willfully refusing to permit the search and examination shall be punished, on conviction: and (section 5) that any person authorized by the act to make searches and seizures, or any person assisting him, or acting under his directions, may, if deemed necessary by him or them, enter into or upon, or pass through, the lands, inclosures and buildings, other than the dwelling-house, of any person whomsoever, in the night or in the day time, in order to the more effectual discharge of his or their official duties; and (section 6) that any person forcibly resisting or interfering with any officer or person authorized by the act to make searches or seizures, in the execution of his duty, or rescuing any property seized by him, or, in order to prevent a seizure, destroying or removing goods, shall be punished, on conviction.
The regulations of law requiring the payment of duties on imports, and providing means for enforcing their payment, properly extend to punishment for the violation of such regulations. They also embrace, properly, the forfeiture of goods, to be enforced through their seizure for trial; and a search is a proper part of -the means of seizure. The foregoing provisions for the search for and seizure of goods have never been questioned, as in conflict with the constitution. If imported goods may be searched for and seized, because alleged to have been imported or entered in fraud of the revenue, it is difficult
Congress, by the Sth section of the act of March 3d 1803 (12 Stat. 740), has provided that “if any person shall willfully conceal or destroy any invoice, book or paper relating to any merchandise liable to duty, which has been, or shall hereafter be, imported into the United States from any foreign port or country, after an inspection thereof shall have been demanded by the collector of any collection district within the United States, or shall at any time conceal or destroy any such invoice, book or paper, for the purpose of suppressing any evidence of fraud therein contained, such person shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall, upon conviction thereof, be punished by fine not exceeding five thousand dollars, or by imprisonment not exceeding two years, or both, at the discretion of the court” This enactment, so far as it relates to the punishment of the offence of concealing or destroying any invoice, book or paper for the purpose of suppressing any evidence therein contained of a fraud on the revenue in the importation of merchandise liable to duty, is valid and constitutional, under the principles laid down by the supreme court, in its opinion given by Chief Justice Marshall, in McCulloch v. State of Maryland, 4 Wheat. [17 U. S.] 310, 410-421. If it may be made an offence to conceal or destroy books or papers containing evidence of a fraud on the revenue in the importation of merchandise liable to duty, for the purpose of suppressing such evidence, it is difficult to perceive why such books and papers may not be sought for and taken, by the sovereign power, to be examined, to see the evidence which they so contain. The end — the collection of duties — is legitimate and within the scope of the constitution, and the means —the examination of the record of the fraud —are appropriate and plainly adapted to the end of recovering the withheld duties, notwithstanding the fraud. These means are not prohibited by the constitution, as has been shown, but consort with its letter and spirit. They are, therefore, constitutional.
This statute, the 2d section of the act of 1807, was held to be constitutional, against the objections above considered, by the circuit court for the district of Maine (Clifford and Shepley, JJ.), in Stockwell v. U. S. [Case No. 13,406] in affirmance of the decision of the district court for that district to the same effect. The judgment of the district court, which was in favor of the United States, was affirmed by the circuit court, and the defendants removed the case, by writ of error, to the supreme court, which affirmed the judgment. 13 Wall. [80 U. S.] 531. But, although the defendants raised in the circuit court the question of the unconstitutionality of the 2d section of the act of 1807, they did not raise it before the supreme court.
Kindred enactments have been held to be constitutional, against like objections. Section 14 of the internal revenue act of June 30, 1804, as amended by section 9 of the act of July 13, 1SO0 (14 Stat. 101), provides, that an assessor may require, by summons, the production of books of account containing entries relating to the trade or business of any person liable to pay tax, and that, if the summons.be not obeyed, obedience to its requirements may be enforced by an attachment to be issued against the person summoned, by a judge of the district court; and that the assessor may enter the premises of any person neglecting to make a return of taxable property, and himself make the list of taxable property. The 49th section of the act of July 20, 1868 (15 Stat. 144), provides that a supervisor of internal revenue “shall have power to examine all persons, books, papers, accounts and premises, and to administer oaths, and to summon any person to produce books and papers, or to appear
In the present case the alleged frauds are charged, in the complaints and warrants, to have been committed by the persons whose premises are to be entered and whose books and papers are to be taken, and to have consisted, in the particulars described and set forth in the complaints and warrants, in the defrauding of the government, by such persons, of duties on goods imported by them. There can be no valid objection, therefore, to the scope of the warrants.
The 7th section of the act of 18G3 provided, that the collector might take and carry away the invoices, books and papers relating to the merchandise or fraud, “to be inspected,” and might retain them “for the use of the United States so long as the retention thereof may be necessary.” The 2d section of the act of 1807 provides, that the invoices, books and papers taken shall be subject to the order of the judge, who shall allow the examination of them by the collect- or, or by any officer duly authorized by the collector, and that the judge may retain them as long as, in his opinion, the retention thereof may be necessary. The words “for the use of the United States” are not found in the act of 1807, but they are necessarily implied in that act, for, the proceeding being one in aid of the collection of the revenue by the United States, the books and papers must be not only for the use of the United States, but cannot be for the use of any other than the United States. The manifest object of the act is examination of the books and papers, in respect to the alleged fraud, and retention thereof as long as, in the opinion of the judge, may be necessary, not only for the purpose of examination, but for the purpose of the use, on behalf of the United States, of the evidence which the books and papers may. when examined, afford in respect to the Gaud alleged. This is necessarily confided to judicial discretion, in view of all the circumstances of the particular case.
I am, therefore, now called upon to say whether the retention of the books and papers in the present case is longer necessary. The warrants were issued and executed in June and July, 1S73. The petition for their return was sworn to on the 12th of March, 1S74. No earlier application was made to this court for their return. It appears, by said petition, that three suits are pending, brought by the United States against the petitioners, in August, 1873, to recover moneys, founded on the frauds alleged in the warrants. It must be assumed that the books and papers were adequately examined before the suits were brought, or, if not, chat abundant time has elapsed, not only for their examination but for the taking of such copies of and extracts from them as relate to the frauds alleged in the warrants. Copious extracts from letters, alleged to show the frauds, were presented to the court on the hearing on the petition, showing that the papers had been searchingly examined. The defendants set forth, in their petition, that the books and papers are necessary to them for their preparation for trial in the suits referred to. The books and papers are or ought to be in the custody of the marshal, under the warrants. It is alleged, in the petition, that they, or the principal part of them, are in the office of the marshal; that the marshal, on being applied to to return them, referred the matter to the. district attorney; that the petitioners applied, many months since, to the district attorney for their return, but unsuccessfully; that they renewed their application to the district attorney on the 5th of February last,, by a letter, of which they set forth a copy; but that the application has not been complied with. The district attorney makes affidavit that the petitioners did not apply to him several months since for the books and papers, but first applied about the middle or latter part of January; that he stated, in reply, that he would examine as to the matter; that, on inquiry, he found that the papers and the entries in the books which are, in his opinion, essential for the government to retain until the trials of the suits referred to, are very numerous; that thereafter he arranged, as he supposed, with the attorney for the petitioners, that all the books and papers should be brought to the district attorney’s office, and that he, the district attorney, would, as rapidly as possible, examine them, and see if any, and which ones, could be properly returned to the petitioners, of which, if any, he desired to have copies made, and which, if any, he desired to retain until the trials; that, accordingly, the marshal sent the books and papers, in a box, to the district attorney’s office, where they were opened in the presence of said attorney, and, as the district attorney was about to
Nothing is shown to me on which I can base a satisfactory opinion that the further retention of any of these books and papers is either necessary or proper. On the contrary, there having been ample time for their examination, and the petitioners having offered, in the letter of February 5th, to stipulate to produce them upon the trial, or, in default thereof, to admit secondary evidence of their contents, and to certify as correct any copies which had been or might be taken, and such offer not having been accepted by the district attorney, and he having declined to examine the papers unless the petitioners should affirmatively assent to his doing so, or express a desire that he should do so, there can be no propriety in retaining the papers longer. The statute contains nothing indicating an intention that the books and papers taken under a warrant shall be retained until and unless the party from whom they are taken shall assent to their examination. They ought, in all cases, to be examined promptly, with a view to the identification of such or such parts of them as answer the description in the warrant, and to the taking of such copies as it may be deemed important to take for the purposes of evidence, and to their restoration, as soon as possible, to the custody from which they were taken. The question of retaining any of them, instead of retaining merely copies of them, until an approaching trial can be had, is one which must be determined by the judge, in each case, as it arises, on the circumstances presented. In the present case, I think the petitioners are entitled to an order that the marshal return the books and papers to them forthwith, and without further examination by any person, and unconditionally.