137 F. 677 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania | 1905
The defendant in this case imported two cargoes of raw sugar from France, one per S. S. Vimeira and the other per S. S. Wildcroft, in April, 1897. The sugar was assessed with a duty under paragraph 182yi, Tariff Act 'Aug. 28, 1894, c. 349, § 1, Schedule E,28 Stat. 509, and there was imposed upon the same both the regular duty therein provided for sugar of the class imported and an additional duty of one-tenth of one cent per pound as further provided for in_said section when imported sugars “are the product of any country which at the time the same are
France, the country from which this sugar was imported, passed an act allowing exporters of sugar a certain bounty, which went into effect April 7, 1897, after these two cargoes of sugar had been shipped, and no protest was entered by the defendant against the assessment of one-tenth of one cent per pound in the tentative liquidation made by the collector on June 13, 1897, although it had not received any bounty upon either cargo of sugar, but subsequent to the first protest filed on July 16, 1897, to the tentative liquidation by the collector, the Board of General Appraisers filed an opinion on October 30, 1897, in which they held that no bounty was payable on sugar exported from France prior to April 7, 1897, and therefore the United States was not entitled to assess an additional duty of one-tenth of one cent per pound on such sugar.
The prder of the Secretary of the Treasury of July 5, 1897, requiring the tentative liquidation to be stamped “Subject to change of rates if required by law,” had been revoked, as the reasons for continuing the order no longer existed, and on July 28, 1898, a final liciuidation was made by the collector of the duty upon the Wild-croft’s cargo. On July 30, 1898—within 10 days thereafter—the defendant company filed a protest against this final liquidation on the ground that the additional duty of one-tenth of one cent per pound was charg-ed on the cargo contrary to law. A similar protest was filed for the same reason to the final liquidation made in regard to the cargo of the Vimeira. The government contends that as to the Wildcroft the liquidation made July 7, 1897, by the collector was the final liquidation, against which all objections should have been raised by protest within 10 days, under section 14, Act June 10, 1890, c. 407, 26 Stat. 137 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1933], and that all questions not then raised could not subsequently be raised or considered upon the liquidation which took place July 28,1898. The defendant claims, however, that the latter assessment was the final liquidation, against which a protest could be made for
I am of the opinion that the board is clearly .right in so holding, and that the first liquidation must be regarded as tentative. It was stamped “Subject to change of rates if required by law,” and this notice could mean nothing else than that the government did not consider this assessment final. The final decision of the collector as to “rates and amount of duties chargeable upon imported merchandise,” against which the importer is required to file his protest, under section Í4, “within ten days” after such decision, must necessarily be a final decision, and he is not permitted to give this notice “before” such ascertainment and liquidation of duties. The importer is thus notified by section 14 of the act of June 10, 1890, that he cannot enter his protest before such “rates and amount of duties” are ascertained and liquidated by the final decision of the collector. It will be disregarded if entered too soon. In re Bailey (C. C.) 112 Fed. 413. Prior to the passage of the act of 1890 a protest could be.filed any time after entry and duties estimated thereon. The final liquidation was regarded as only fixing the limit beyond which notice shall not be given. Davies v. Miller, 130 U. S. 284, 9 Sup. Ct. 560, 32 L. Ed. 932. In order to avoid the inconveniences of this practice, the act was passed by inserting the words “but not before” in section 14. So that the legislation on this subject shows it has been the constant aim of the government to confine the time of protest to “within ten days from final liquidation,” and to prevent it from being filed either “before” such “final ascertainment” or after the expiration of the 10 days. When the government liquidated the entry of the Wildcroft and placed a notice upon that liquidation that it was “subject to change of rates if required by law,” they gave notice that it was not a final decision of the collector. It is urged, however, that the importer must have regarded this as a final, and not a tentative liquidation, because he filed a protest on July 16, 1897. It may be that the importer so regarded this liquidation at that time; but, even if this be true, the government should not be permitted to escape the effect of its own act in notifying importers that these liquidations were not final. The government must be bound by its intention in this regard, and not be permitted to take advantage of a misconstruction put upon its acts by an importer in the first instance, and to say to him that, because he acted in a way to indicate that he regarded the first liquidation as final, therefore he must be held to that, notwithstanding the fact that it was not so intended or acted upon by the government, and notwithstanding the further fact that the importer before the expiration of 10 days from .the “final adjustment” took a different view of the question as to the time within which he was required to file his notice, and assumed, as the government intended, that the first assessment was only tentative, as the notice stamped thereon indicated; that the liquidation of July 28, 1898, was final, and fixed the time within which a valid protest could be entered. It is not the case of a reliquidation pursuant to a decision of the Board of General Appraisers, where the protestant is bound by the
The ruling of the Board of General Appraisers in both cases is affirmed.