delivered the opinion of the court. ■
This suit was brought to recover from the Internal Revenue collector of the third district of Virginia the amount, paid by the plaintiffs from 1869 to 1872, inclusive, for stamps affixed to certain cases of tobacco manufactured by them and intended for exportation. The sum paid for the stamps was twenty-five *505 cents each. The. ground of action relied on by the plaintiffs is, that the tax was unconstitutional, being, as contended, repugnant to that clause of the Constitution which declares that “ no tax or duty shall be laid on articles exported from any State.” . The stamps were required to be-affixed by the act of July 20, 1868; 15 Stat. 157. By this act. an excise tax of 32. cents'per pound was imposed on all manufactured tobacco, except smoking tobacco, on which the tax was 16 cents per pound. This tax was required to be paid by purchasing stamps to be affixed to the packages before the tobacco was allowed to be removed from-the manufactorybut tobaóco intended for exportation was relieved from the payment, of this tax by affixing to each package or box, of whatever size, before removal from the factory, a twenty-fivq cent stamp, engraved to indicate the intent to export the same. After being thus stamped, and giving bond according to the regulations of the Treasury Department, such tobacco might be removed to any export bonded warehouse at some port of entry, and there kept in bond until actually exported. In 1872 the price of the stamp was reduced to 10 cents; and the act was incorporated in this form-in section 3385 of the Revised Statutes.
We had occasion-to examine the very question raised in this case in
Pace
v.
Burgess,
reported in
With the action of Congress in abolishing the charge for the stamp we have nothing to do. That is a matter of pure legislative discretion, and has no bearing on the question.
We are referred to certain expressions in the opinion of the Court of Appeals of Virginia in the case of
Burwell
v. Burgess,
There is another view of this subject, however, independent of the considerations which governed our former decision, which is equally decisive of this case. We have lately decided, in
Coe
v. Errol,
It is true, as was conceded in Coe v. Errol, that the prohibition to the States against laying duties on imports or exports related to imports from and exports to foreign countries; yet the decision in that case was based on the postulate that when such imposts or duties are laid on imports or exports from one State to another it amounts to a regulation of commerce among the States, and, therefore, is an invasion of the exclusive power of Congress. So that th¿ analogy between the two cases holds good, and what would be constitutional or unconstitutional in the one case would be constitutional or unconstitutional in the other.
In the present case, the tax (if it was a tax) was laid upon the goods before they had left the factory. They were not in course of exportation; they might never be exported; whether they' would be or not would depend altogether on the will of the manufacturer. Had the same excise which was laid upon all other tobacco manufactured by the plaintiffs been laid on-the tobacco in question, they could not have complained. But ■it Avas not. A special indulgence was granted to them (in com *508 mon with others), in reference to the particular tobacco which they declared it to be their intention to export. With regard to that, in order to identify it, and to protect the government from fraudulent practices, all that was required of the plaintiffs was to affix a 25 cent stamp of a peculiar design to each package, no matter how much it might contain, and enter into bond either to export it accprding to the declared intention, or to pay the regular tax, if it should not be exported. In this view of the case,.the plaintiffs not only had no ground of complaint, but they were really the objects of favorable treatment on the part of the government, which, on the slight and easy conditions referred to, accepted their declared intention to export the tobacco in question, before it was commenced to be exported, or put in the way of exportation..
On both grounds we are satisfied that the plaintiffs are without any cause of action, and the judgment of the Circuit Court is
Affirmed.
