Court Opinion

ID: 8638779
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 19:49:40.54326+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:56:01.648227
License: Public Domain

HOPK1XSOX. District Judge
(charging jury). On a careful review of the law, a question has presented itself, which did not occur at the former trial; nor was it suggested on that trial, by the counsel on either side. It is this. Do not the directions of the law apply only to the seller of a cask? Is not he the person on whom it is enjoined to erase the custom house marks, on the sale of any cask, before the delivery thereof to the purchaser, or before any removal thereof? Do these directions apply to the purchaser of the cask, or only to seller? How can the purchaser deface the marks prior to the delivery of them to him, or before they are removed from the possession of the seller? How can he exercise any act of ownership over them until they are delivered to him; or before they are removed from the place where they were in the possession of the seller? It seems to me that the provisions and penalties of the law apply only to the person who sells a cask, without defacing the marks; not to the purchaser of such casks, who may not be presumed to know any thing of their antecedent history, where they came from, or what was in them. But I go on the words of the law. They are as follows: “Every person who shall sell, or in any way alienate or remove any cask, chest, vessel or case, which has been emptied of its contents, before the marks and numbers, set thereon pursuant to the provisions aforesaid, shall have been defaced or obliterated in presence of an officer of inspection; or who shall neglect or refuse to deliver the certificate issued to accompany the cask, chest, vessel, or case of which the marks and numbers shall have been defaced and obliterated in manner aforesaid, on being thereto required by an officer of inspection or of the customs, shall, for each and every such of-fence, forfeit and pay one hundred dollars with costs of suit.” If the purchaser is liable. he is so the moment the cask is removed; even before it comes to his store, or actual possession, or he can know wild lier it has. or has not, or ever had, any marks upon it, or that they had been defaced. A man sends an order from the country for empty casks; they are sent without defacing the marks; the penalty under such a construction is irrevocably fixed upon him. It is now impossible to comply with the law; the marks cannot be defaced before delivery or removal.
The jury found the following verdict: “We find the facts proven, that the defendant did remove the cask described in the declaration, without having the marks erased therefrom, and having purchased the same from some person unknown to the jury.’”
On this verdict the court subsequently directed judgment to be entered for the defendant.