delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit brought by the United States to recover a penalty of $6,400 from the defendant for bringing into this country one hundred five-tael tins of opium prepаred for smoking purposes without including the same in the ship’s manifest. The defendant was master of the vessel in which the opium was imported and was charged by the Collector of Customs with a liability for the above sum, that being the price paid by the defendant for the goods. By Rev. Stats. § 2809, “ If any merchandise is brought into the United States in any vessel whatever from any foreign port . . . which shall not be included or described in the manifest . . . the master shall be liable to a penalty equal to the value of such merchandise not included in such manifest; and all such merchandise not includеd in the manifest belonging or consigned to the master, mate, officers, or crew of such vessel, shall be forfeited.” The District Court, sitting without a jury, held thаt opium prepared for smoking purposes was not merchandise within the meaning of § 2809, and that being outlawed by the statutes it had no value; and gave judgment for the defendant.
The collection of duties is not the only purpose of a manifest, as is shown by the requirement of one for outward bound cargoes and from vessels in the coasting trade bound for a port in another collection district, Rev. Stats. §§ 4197, 3116, and mоre clearly by the plain reason of the thing. A Government wants to know, without being put to a search, what articles are brought into the cоuntry, and to make up its own mind not only what duties it will demand but whether it will allow the goods to enter at all. It would seem strange if it should except from the mаnifest demanded those things about which it has the greatest need to be informed — if in that one case it should take the chance of being able to find what it forbids to come in, without requiring the master to tell what he knows. It would seem doubly strange when at the same time it required any other pеrson who had knowledge that the forbidden article was on the vessel to report the fact to the master. Act of January 17, 1914, c. 9, § 4, 38 Stat. 275, 276. It is not an answer to say that if the master knows that he has contraband goods on board he is subject to a penalty for that and probably will lie. Thе law naturally, one would think, would put the screws on to make him tell the truth, and in that way diminish the chance of his carrying contraband and help him to shоw his innocence if he has made a mistake.
Harford
v.
United States,
The main foundation of the decision below is Rev. Stats. § 2766: “The word ‘merchandise/ as used in this Title [the Title including § 2809 upon which this suit is based,] may include goods, wares, and chattels of every desсription capable of being imported.” It is argued that this is a definition; that “ capable of being imported ” must be taken to mean cаpable of being imported lawfully as otherwise the phrase hardly would do more than exclude chattels real, and would want the poignant significance attributed to every word of legislation; and that therefore the merchandise to be included in the manifest does not embrace opium for smoking which the law has done all it can to exclude. Act of January 17, 1914, c. 9, 38 Stat. 275. Yet this very Act of 1914 provides that whenever there shall be found upon a vessel arriving at any port of the United States opium “ or any preparations or derivatives thereоf ” “ which is not shown upon the vessel’s manifest, as is provided by sections twenty-eight hundred and six and twenty-eight hundred and seven of the Revised Statutes, such vessеl shall be liable for the penalty and forfeiture prescribed in section twenty-eight hundred and nine of the Revised Statutes.” We see no adequate reason for not taking these words in their natural sense as including smoking opium and as meaning that it must be included in the manifest, or for limiting them to forfeiture of the vessel. We rather should read them as showing that, at least for the future and at least so far as derivatives from opium arе concerned, the language quoted from Rev. Stats. § 2766, was also to be taken in its natural sense as meaning physically capable of being imported:
The language under consideration was an insertion in the Revised Statutes. That volume was primarily a codification of the general statutes then in force and is
What, we have said sufficiently disposes of the suggestion that the requirement was repealed by the opium act that we have cited. That is merely saying in another way that a manifest is not necessary for goods forbidden to enter the country. All that remains is the suggestion that smoking opium has no value. . But assuming it to be established that the statutes require the manifest to disclose prohibited articles the penalty imposed implies that such articles may have value and does not require the Courts to set up a technical rule in face of the plain truth.
Judgment reversed.
