28 F. Cas. 35 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1840
This case is brought up on a writ of error from the district court for the Southern district of New York. It was an information filed in the court below, alleging a forfeiture of the goods in question,
The ruling of the court on the second count in the information, was, I think, correct. That count claims the forfeiture by reason of a mis-description of the whole package; whereas the 14th section of the act of 1832 looks to the case where certain articles contained in the package were not entered, and attaches the forfeiture to such articles only. Under the act of 1832, if the package be made up with intent to evade or defraud the revenue, the whole package shall be forfeited. The entry of the goods was of worsted shawls, and the evidence was, that they were part cotton; this, I think, was competent evidence under the count charging the package to have been made up with intent to evade or defraud the revenue. The evidence, however, was not excluded; and the opinion of the court with respect to it, was only an opinion upon the fact, that the shawls being part cotton, was not in itself competent evidence tending to prove that the package was made up with intent to evade ordefraud the revenue. It might have been more correct for the judge to have told the jury that the evidence was not, in his opinion, sufficient to establish the fraud. But as this was the only evidence tending in any manner to show a fraudulent intent, and was so obviously insufficient to establish the fraud, I think the judgment ought not to be reversed on this ground. The judgment must, accordingly, be affirmed.
“For the protection of its commerce,” says Mr. Benedict, “for the collection of its reve-núes, and for the enforcement of all the regulations of its police in navigable waters, the United States, like all other commercial nations, find it necessary to impose penalties and forfeitures on goods afloat and on vessels, in relation to which the laws of trade, navigation and revenue, have been violated. In a great variety of such cases, the vessels and the goods are the only things within the reach of the courts and their process. Whenever, therefore, a penalty or forfeiture is attached to a ship or vessel, or goods on board of her, it is enforced by a seizure of the thing, and the proceeding to condemn it is a suit in the district court, in the name of-the United States or other party, in whose favor the penalty or forfeiture is imposed.” “It is the place of seizurs. and not the place of committing the offence, which decides the jurisdiction. If the seizure be made in a foreign jurisdiction. or on the high seas, the district court of the district to which the property is brought has the jurisdiction. If the seizure be made within a judicial district of the United States, the district court of that district has the jurisdiction. If the seizure be unlawful, the party has his redress by a suit in personam in the admiralty; and the jurisdiction in this class of torts is coextensive with the jurisdiction of the seizure, and exists whether the seizure be on the high seas, in ports and harbors, or on the lakes and rivers of the interior.”