1 Cliff. 580 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1860
Passing over any mere formal objections to the plea in bar, the record presents but two questions for the consideration of the court. It is insisted by the counsel for the claimants that the sixty-sixth section of the act of March 2, 1799, is inapplicable to the facts of this case, as set forth in the plea in bar, and if applicable, that the section is repealed by the fourth section of the act of March 1, 1823. That proposition, which is twofold in its character, is wholly denied by the district attorney, and he insists that the provision in question is in full force, and that it is applicable to importations made by the manufacturer or producer, as well as to those made by the owner where the goods have been actually purchased. No other questions were discussed at the bar, and the inference is a clear one, both from the state of the record and the course of the argument, that the counsel on both sides desire that the decision of the court may turn upon the solution of those questions. Under the circumstances, mere formal defects in the plea, if any, will not be noticed in determining the cause. Regarding the case as one of considerable importance, I think it proper to say in the outset that the questions presented for decision are not unattended with difficulty and perhaps are involved in some doubt.
1. When the entry is by a consignee, importer, or agent, he or they are required to make oath, among other things, that the invoice and bill of lading are the true and only invoice and bill of lading received of all the goods, for account of any person for whom he or they are authorized to enter the same, and that those documents are in the state in which they were received; that the entry contains a just and true account of the goods according to the invoice and bill of lading; and that, to the best of his or their knowledge and belief, the person therein named as such is the owner of the same, and that the invoice produced exhibits the actual cost of the goods if purchased, or the fair market value of the same if otherwise obtained, at the time and place when and where procured.
2. Where the goods have been actually purchased, and the owner makes the entry, he is required in all cases to make oath that the entry contains a just and true account of all the goods, and that the invoice produced contains a just and faithful account of the actual cost of 'the same, and of all charges thereon which are particularly specified in the form of the oath. Both of the preceding oaths, it will be seen, have respect to .the nature of the case, and were evidently framed so as to avoid any necessity for false swearing, but at the same time to .elicit all the material facts within the knowledge of the affiants.
3.Those remarks indeed apply to all the previous legislation upon the subject, and the intention of congress in that behalf is equally well exemplified in the third form prescribed in the same section. That form-of oath applies when the entry is made by the manufacturer or by the owner, in cases-where the goods have been procured otherwise than by actual purchase. Such parties are required to make oath that the entry contains a just and true account of the goods imported, and that the same were not actually bought by the person making the entry or his agent in the ordinary mode of bargain and sale, but that, nevertheless, the invoice produced contains a just and faithful account of the same at their fair market value, including charges. Unmistakable discrimination is also made in the fifth section of the act between goods actually purchased and such as are procured otherwise than by purchase, in the mode there prescribed for estimating ad valorem duties. Actual cost, actual value, and appraised value are severally recognized as a basis of the calculation. Duties were levied upon the invoice and entry in the preceding acts, and that is true of the act under consideration, except when the collector is of the opinion that there is just ground to suspect that the goods are invoiced below their true value in the place from whence imported, and in that event the collector is required, by the thirteenth section of the act, to direct the same to be appraised, and if the appraised value exceeds by twenty-five per cent, the invoice prices, then, in addition to the per centum laid upon correct and regular invoices, under the fifth section of the act, he is required to add fifty per centum on the appraised value. Unless appraised, therefore, goods actually purchased were valued at the actual cost, as specified in the invoice, and goods procured otherwise than by purchase were estimated, subject to the same qualification, at the actual or fair market value, as specified in the same document; but if either class was directed to be appraised under the thirteenth section of the act, then the goods were estimated at the appraised value. These explanations are sufficient to show the correctness of the remark, that actual cost, actual or fair market value, and appraised value are severally, according to the nature of the case, recognized by that act as a basis of dutiable valuation.
Additional regulations upon the subject were made by the act of May 28, 1830 (4 Stat. 409); and by the seventh section of the act of July 14, 1832 (Id. 591). It is made the duty of the collector, in all cases where an ad valorem rate of duty is imposed on any goods, to cause the actual value thereof at the time* purchased, and place from which imported, to be appraised, estimated, and ascertained; and it is made the duty of the-