292 F. 773 | E.D. Ill. | 1923
It appears from the record and stipulation of the parties that some 228 quart bottles of distilled spirits containing more than one-half of one per cent, of alcohol, whisky, was being illegally transported in the car in question; that the owner was prosecuted for illegal transportation of same and convicted. The liquor was confiscated and the automobile libeled. The petitioner, intervening, claims the automobile by virtue of a chattel mortgage upon the same, the validity of which is beyond question.
The bottles in question bear revenue strip stamps passing over their mouths stating that they were bottled for export. They bear no other stamp of any character. The Act of Congress of August 27, 1894, c. 349, § 48, 28 Statutes at Uarge, 563 (Comp. Stat. § 5986), Barnes Code, § 5173, provides that on and after the passage of the act there shall be levied and collected upon all distilled spirits' a tax of $1.10 on each proof gallon and a proportionate tax at a like rate on all fractional parts of such proof or wine gallon. This act to said extent superseded the Act of July 20, 1868, c. 186, §§ 1 and 4, 15 Stat. 125 (Comp. Stat. § 5985). Distilled spirits may be withdrawn from bonded warehouses for export in accordance with section 3330, Revised Statutes, Act June 9, 1874, c. 259, § 2, 18 Stat. 64; Act May 28, 1880, c. 108, § 11, 21 Stat. 148, sections 5295 and 5293 of Barnes Code (Comp. St. §§ 6127, 6125), tax free. Distilled spirits were formerly allowed to be/withdrawn from a bonded warehouse in bottles upon payment of the tax in accordance with the provisions of the Act of March 3, 1897, c. 379, § 1 (Comp. Stat. § 6070). It is evident from the strip stamps attached to the bottles in this case and the absence of any other stamp that this liquor was withdrawn for export, tax free..
The only question now before the court is whether or not there is any evidence by which it can be said that this liquor was being removed for the purpose of' defrauding the United States of the tax. As above noted, all distilled spirits are subject to tax except such as is withdrawn for export and such as is legally withdrawn for use by the government or other special purposes. There is no testimony directly to the facts that the tax upon the spirits contained in the bottles in the case at bar had been paid or that it had not been paid. If it had been paid, of course, the libel cannot succeed. If it has not been paid, the court will imply an intent upon the part of one who is illegally transporting liquor on which the tax was not paid to defraud the United States of the tax, as every man must intend to do that which is the natural result of his acts. So, if the owner here was illegally transporting distilled liquor upon which the tax had not been paid, he was thereby evading the tax and will be presumed to have intended thereby to defraud the United States of the tax. The important question, therefore, is whether or not this tax has been paid.
The testimony oh the part of the government’s expert, the clerk in •the internal revenue collector’s office, is that liquor withdrawn for export without payment of tax must have attached to the bottles, containing same, strip stamps showing that tlíte same is bottled for export; that liqüor withdrawn from a warehouse not intended for export must have attached to each bottle a strip stamp pasted over the bottle’s mouth containing certain information; and that all liquor bottled and
The Act of March 3, 1897, provides that whenever distilled liquor shall be removed from the warehouse the cases or casks shall bear the required marks and brands and tax paid stamps or export stamps, as the case may be; that every bottle when filled shall have affixed thereto and passing over the mouth of the same such appropriate suitable adhesive engraved strip stamp as may be prescribed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury. In pursuance of that act, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, has promulgated certain regulations and instructions known as Regulations No. 23. Article 15 provides that the bottling shall be conducted under the supervision of a storekeeper who shall supervise the filling and stamping of the bottles. Article 24 provides that strip stamps for bottled liquor not intended for export and, therefore, not tax free, shall state the proof of the spirits, the registered distillery number, the state and district in which the distillery is located, the real name of the actual bona fide distiller, the year and distilling season, whether spring or fall, of original inspection or entry into bond, and the date of bottling. These stamps are, in pursuance of article 27 of the regulations, issued in book form by the collectors. Article 20 provides that when the liquor has been tested by the storekeeper or gauger it may be drawn off into bottles and that the bottles shall be stamped and cased under his supervision; that he shall supervise the affixing of strip stamps and see that they are firmly and securely attached so as to necessitate their destruction upon opening of the bottle. It is further provided that the storekeeper will refuse to allow any case to be removed from the warehouse the bottles in which have not been filled, stamped, and cased in accordance with the law and these regulations.
It follows from the law and the regulations that this liquor apparently was removed from the distillery for the purpose of export and, therefore, tax free, for the, strip stamps on the bottles are export strip stamps: There is no presumption that the governmental employees violated the law or disregarded the regulations. The exportation of liquor is likewise governed by certain provisions and regulations from which it appears that one who is illegally transporting liquor in Illinois cannot possibly have been complying with the statutes and regulations governing export. Therefore this liquor was in transportation in domestic commerce in Illinois illegally, and inasmuch as no tax is required for the exportation of liquor, the clear conclusion is that the liquor had been withdrawn and was in transportation with a fraudulently declared intent to export it tax free, which exportation was not completed, with a necessary resultant intent to evade the tax imposed upon all other liquor and defraud the United States of the same. If there were no strip stamp of any kind, there might be no- presumption of nonpayment of tax, a question not now decided. But the presence of an export strip stamp raises a presumption of nonpayment of tax. If after being legally removed from the warehouse for export the spirits
Independent of this, the Revised Statutes, section 3333, Barnes Code, § 5299 (Comp. St. § 6130), provides that whenever seizure is made, of any distilled spirits found elsewhere than in a distillery or distillery warehouse or other legal warehouse or in transit from one of said places, the burden of proof shall be upon the claimant of said spirits to show that no fraud has been committed and that all the requirements of the law in relation to the payment of the tax have been compliecf with. This probably does not apply to the case at bar.
In the case of Dukes v. United States, 275 Fed. 142, and Hester v. United States, 284 Fed. 487, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit required the government to prove that the liquor seized had not been tax paid and held that there is a presumption of law that where liquor is found in vessels of less capacity than five wine gallons, the tax has been paid. It would seem that the court there overlooked the statute and regulations with regard to the attaching of strip stamps. The government had offered no evidence as to whether the tax had been paid, but merely grounded its case upon the fact that the liquor was moonshine liquor. If the court there intended to hold that the law was such that in the present case, where the strip stamp indicates that the liquor was removed for export tax free, the presumption is that the tax is paid, this court cannot accede to the correctness of their view.
It follows, therefore, that these essential propositions are established: That distilled spirits, as defined by law, in quart bottles bearing export strip stamps were being illegally transported in Illinois and were not on their way to any port of embarkation; that no other strip stamp was attached; that prima facie at least no tax had been paid
Therefore the prayer of the intervening petitioner should be denied and judgment allowed as prayed for in the libel, and it is so ordered.