23 F. 650 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1883
The case shows that in 1853 the Ystalifera Iron Company, of Swansea, Wales, consigned, for its account and upon its risk, to Naylor & Co., of the city of New York, 1,300 boxes of tin and terne plates manufactured and owned by said iron company. Said goods were sent by way of Liverpool, and arrived by the ship Sid-dons about August 29, 1853, The invoice and entry contained four different kinds or brands, of different values, viz., 600 boxes terne plates, marked I C; 333 boxes, I C, tin plates; 137 boxes, I X, tin plates; and 230 boxes, W I C, tin plates. The invoice was presented for entry at the custom-house on August 29, 1853. The dutiable value was estimated upon the invoice valuation, being the value at the time and place of the manufacture of the goods, at $8,133.14, and the duties thereon were properly estimated to amount to $1,219.95, which were paid by Naylor & Co., without protest, on September 3, 1853. One box only of each mark or brand of the importation, being four boxes in all, were designated by the collector for examination and appraisal, and were removed to the public stores. A penal redelivery bond was given to the collector, as provided in section 4
The decision by the reappraisers of the question what markets of the country from which the goods have been imported are the principal ones for the goods in controversy, and their appraisal, made in accordance with the examination which is required by statute, are final. But the statute (act Aug. 30, 1842, 5 St. at Large, 563-565, 16,17, 21) required that one package in every ten packages of the merchandise to be appraised must be designated by the collector and must be examined, and there must be, in substance and effect, a faithful personal examination by the reappraisers of the number of packages which are required to be examined and appraised, or such an examination of the samples drawn from such packages as is equivalent to an examination of tnc packages themselves. If such examination is not had, the reappraisal is invalid, and the excess of duty or the penalty that is imposed by reason of any increased valuations above those stated in the invoice is illegally imposed. Greely v. Thompson, 10 How. 225; Greely’s Adm'rx. Burgess, 18 How. 413; Burgess v. Converse, 2 Curt. C. C. 216; Stairs v. Peaslee, 18 How. 521; Belcher v. Linn, 24 How. 508. If a faithful examination was
Let judgment be entered upon the verdict for $715.70, with interest from December 8, 1854.