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SEC. 198. If the importer, owner, consignee, or agent of any imported merchandise, or the collector or Secretary of the Treasury, shall be dissatisfied with the decision of the Board of General Appraisers as to the construction of the law and the facts respecting the classification of such merchandise and the rate of duty imposed thereon under such classification, or with any other appealable decision of said board, they, or either of them, may, within sixty days next after the entry of such decree or judgment, and not afterwards, apply to the Court of Customs Appeals for a review of the questions of law and fact involved in such decision. *

It will not be contended that these sections have been repealed, or that they have in any way been modified or changed by the act of 1922. It seems to be the position of the Government that appeals under the act of 1922 are only permitted in the instances specified in the act. Such a contention nullifies the effect of the code above referred to. The action of the board in dismissing the petition for rehearing is a final decision "as to the construction of the law * respecting the rate of duty imposed and the fees and charges connected therewith," and such action on the part of the board raises "an appealable question as to the jurisdiction of said board," and also raises an appealable question "as to the laws and regulations governing the collection of customs revenues." Section 198 gives the importer, if he is not satisfied with the decision of the Board of General Appraisers on "any other appealable decision," an appeal to this court "for a review of questions of law and fact involved in such decision." This court has taken jurisdiction in cases involving final decisions on shortage, clerical error, entered values, additional duties, amendment of entry, admissibility of evidence, and various other related questions, having no authority for the procedure other than the sections of the statute above referred to. This court has not taken jurisdiction in any case where the statute indicates that it has no right of review. The motion by the Government to dismiss the appeal is, therefore, overruled.

Having determined that this court has jurisdiction to review the action of the board in dismissing the petition for remission, we proceed to determine the sole question decided by the board as to whether they had jurisdiction to hear and determine the petition for remission of additional duties under section 489 of the tariff act of September 21, 1922, which reads as follows:

ADDITIONAL DUTIES.-If the final appraised value of any article of imported merchandise which is subject to an ad valorem rate of duty or to a duty based upon or regulated in any manner by the value thereof shall exceed the entered value, there shall be levied, collected, and paid, in addition to the duties imposed by law on such merchandise, an additional duty of 1 per centum of the total final appraised value thereof for each 1 per centum that such final appraised value exceeds the value declared in the entry. Such additional duty shall apply only to the particular article or articles in each invoice that are so advanced in value upon final appraisement and shall not be imposed upon any article upon which the amount of duty imposed by law on account of the final appraised value does

not exceed the amount of duty that would be imposed if the final appraised value did not exceed the entered value, and shall be limited to 75 per centum of the final appraised value of such article or articles. Such additional duties shall not be construed to be penal and shall not be remitted nor payment thereof in any way avoided, except in the case of a manifest clerical error, upon the order of the Secretary of the Treasury, or in any case upon the finding of the Board of General Appraisers, upon a petition filed and supported by satisfactory evidence under such rules as the board may prescribe, that the entry of the merchandise at a less value than that returned upon final appraisement was without any intention to defraud the revenue of the United States or to conceal or misrepresent the facts of the case or to deceive the appraiser as to the value of the merchandise. If the appraised value of any merchandise exceeds the value declared in the entry by more than 100 per centum, such entry shall be presumptively fraudulent, and the collector shall seize the whole case or package containing such merchandise and proceed as in case of forfeiture for violation of the customs laws; and in any legal proceeding other than a criminal prosecution that may result from such seizure, the undervaluation as shown by the appraisal shall be presumptive evidence of fraud, and the burden of proof shall be on the claimant to rebut the same, and forfeiture shall be adjudged unless he rebuts such presumption of fraud by sufficient evidence.

Upon the making of such order or finding, the additional duties shall be remitted or refunded, wholly or in part, and the entry shall be liquidated or reliquidated accordingly. Such additional duties shall not be refunded in case of exportation of the merchandise, nor shall they be subject to the benefit of drawback. All additional duties, penalties, or forfeitures applicable to merchandise entered in connection with a certified invoice shall be alike applicable to merchandise entered in connection with a seller's or shipper's invoice or statement in the form of an invoice. Duties shall not, however, be assessed upon an amount less than the entered value, except in a case where the importer certifies at the time of entry that the entered value is higher than the value as defined in this act, and that the goods are so entered in order to meet advances by the appraiser in similar cases then pending on appeal for reappraisement or rereappraisement, and the importer's contention in said pending cases shall subsequently be sustained, wholly or in part, by a final decision on reappraisement or re-reappraisement, and it shall appear that the action of the importer on entry was so taken in good faith, after due diligence and inquiry on his part, and the collector shall liquidate the entry in accordance with the final appraisement.

It is the contention of the importers in this case that this section. is remedial in character and is intended to be retroactive and apply to additional duties which arise by reason of importations prior to the passage of the act of 1922; that remedial acts are retroactive, and as such are not prohibited by the Constitution; that all remedial acts are retroactive unless the act specifically provides to the contrary; and that the saving clause or clauses in section 641 of the tariff act of September 21, 1922, does not prevent the retroactive application of section 489.

The Government insists that section 489 is not retroactive, and that to so apply it would be in contravention of the Constitution as affecting prior rights and liabilities; that section 489 is not remedial

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within the meaning of the decisions of the courts which give retroactive effect to certain statutes, and that Congress has definitely and specifically provided under section 641 that section 489 shall not be retroactive, and that all additional duties levied upon goods entered prior to the passage of the act of 1922 are in no sense affected by section 489.

The rule laid down in Larkins v. Saffarans (15 Fed. 147, 152–153) that

statutes are, in the absence of directions to the contrary, retrospective in their operations wherever they are remedial, as where they create new remedies for existing rights, remove penalties or forfeitures, extenuate or mitigate offences, supply evidence, make that evidence which was not so before, abolish imprisonment for debt, enlarge exemption laws, enlarge the rights of persons under disability, and the like, unless in doing this we violate some contract obligation or divest some vested right

is supported by considerable very respectable authority. However, Judge Story sitting as Circuit Judge in the District of Massachusetts, in Prince v. United States (19 Fed. Cas. 1331) said:

It is a general rule that statutes are to be construed to operate in futuro, unless from the language a retrospective effect be clearly intended. "Nova constitutio futuris formam imponere debet, et non preterites." (Bract. lib. 4, fol. 228; 2 Inst. 292.) And this maxim applies as well to remedial as to other statutes.

If the rule in the Larkins case, supra, was admitted to be the settled law, there are a number of very forceful reasons why the case at bar does not come within this rule. The tariff act of 1913 gave the importer the right to apply to the Secretary of the Treasury for remission of additional duties only in case of clerical error. The act of 1922 not only gives this same right, but gives to the importer an additional new right, as well as a remedy for obtaining it, namely, the right to petition the Board of General Appraisers for the remission of additional duties levied by reason of undervaluation when made without any intention of defrauding the revenues of the United States or concealing or misrepresenting the facts of the case, or of deceiving the appraiser as to the value of the merchandise. It is with this new right we are concerned in this case, and not with the old right existing under the act of 1913. The importer has his remedy to obtain the remission of the additional duties other than those arising from manifest clerical error only by virtue of the new statute. It certainly can not be contended that he has the right to apply a new remedy given for the enforcement of the new right to a different old right. The books are full of authorities supporting the general principle that statutes are directed to the future, and are prospective and not retrospective, unless from the language a retrospective effect be clearly intended. Cooley's Const. Lim. (530, 531);

Prince v. United States (19 Fed. Cas. 1331); Chew Heong v. United States (112 U. S. 536); White v. United States (191 U. S. 545); Union Pacific R. R. Co. v. Laramie Stock Yards (231 U. S. 190); Union Pacific R. R. Co. v. Snow (231 U. S. 204); Cameron v. United States (231 U. S. 710).

It is clear that that part of section 489 of the tariff act of 1922 relating to the remission of duties does not on its face indicate that Congress intended to make it apply to past entries, and even if Congress had not seen fit to include in the act the general saving clause contained in section 641, we do not believe under either of the rules heretofore stated that section 489 should be construed to be retroactive. But the framers of the act did include section 641, which in our opinion leaves no doubt upon the question that they did not intend that petitions for remissions of duties which arise from entries made prior to the passage of the act should be heard or decided under the provisions of the new act.

Section 641 reads as follows:

RIGHTS AND LIABILITIES.-The repeal of existing laws or modifications thereof embraced in this act shall not affect any act done, nor any right accruing or accrued, nor any suit or proceeding had or commenced in any civil or criminal case prior to said repeal or modifications, but all liabilities under said laws shall continue and may be enforced in the same manner as if said repeal or modifications had not been made. All offenses committed and all penalties, forfeitures, or liabilities incurred prior to the taking effect hereof, under any statute embraced in, or changed, modified, or repealed by this act, may be prosecuted and punished in the same manner and with the same effect as if this act had not been passed. No acts of limitations now in force, whether applicable to civil causes and proceedings, or to the prosecution of offenses, or for the recovery of penalties or forfeitures embraced in, modified, changed, or repealed by this act, shall be affected thereby so far as they affect any suits, proceedings, or prosecutions, whether civil or criminal, for causes arising or acts done or committed prior to the taking effect of this act, which may be commenced and prosecuted within the same time and with the same effect as if this act had not been passed.

It will be noted that this section specifically provides that any act done or any right accruing or accrued shall not be affected by the repeal or modification of the then existing laws, and that all liabilities under said laws shall continue and may be enforced in the same manner as if said repeal or modification had not been made. Congress certainly did not intend that the procedure in the act of 1922, for obtaining a right granted by said act, should be resorted to in an effort to obtain an alleged right claimed to exist prior to the passage of said act, but which in fact did not so exist.

It is argued by the importer that the Government has no rights, and that the importer only can be said to have rights. We can not agree with this view. In Harris v. Dennie (28 U. S. [3 Pet.] 290, 305) Justice Story held that the Government's right to duties took

precedence over an attachment issued by a State court, although the deputy sheriff had physical possession of the merchandise on the vessel before it was entered in the customs and before the customs officers had arrived. The court said:

In short the United States having a lien on the goods for the payment of the duties accruing thereon, and being entitled to a virtual custody of them, from the time of their arrival in port until the duties are paid or secured, any attachment by a State officer is an interference with such lien and right of custody; and being repugnant to the laws of the United States, is void.

The same judge, in Meredith v. United States (38 U. S. [13 Pet.] 486), held:

The right of the Government to the duties accrues when the goods have arrived at the proper port of entry, and, thus accruing, they are a personal debt of the importer, notwithstanding that their actual payment may be postponed upon the giving of a bond for them.

It seems to us that the decision in this case must rest upon the answers to the inquiries, Does the Government have any right accruing or accrued to additional duties at the time of entry if the merchandise is undervalued? and, Is there a liability upon the importer to the Government for additional duties at the time of entry if there is an undervaluation? To both of these questions the answers should be in the affirmative. It may be contended that the Government has a right to regular duties at the time of entry, but that it has no right to the additional duty at the time of entry, and that there is no liability accruing or accrued on the part of the importer for additional duty at the time of entry. Additional duties under both statutes under discussion arise by virtue of undervaluation at the time of entry. It is the act of undervaluation that Congress sought to prevent. The undervaluation was made at the time of entry, and it was then that the liability of the importer for additional duties and the right of the Government to them began and continued to exist. Subsequent appraisement or reappraisement does not change undervaluation. Appraisement is only to determine what the market value, by which the valuation is measured, was on the date of exportation from the country from which the merchandise was exported. The obligation to pay additional duty therefore arose at the time the importer, in entering his merchandise, gave a valuation which was less than the market value at the time it left the foreign country, and was a liability within the meaning of section 641. The statute clearly provides that this liability "shall continue and may be enforced in the same manner as if said repeal or modification had not been made." If the liability continues and is to be enforced under the provisions of the old law, how can it be contended that the importer has any rights for remission other than by virtue of those arising

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