Court Opinion

ID: 9322376
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-02 18:21:39.624823+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:14:41.405269
License: Public Domain

Thayer, District Judge,
(after stating the facts.) The chief objections-to the first series of counts are that an “obliteration ” of a portion of a government inspection mark or stamp is not a “change or alteration” thereof, within the meaning of section 3326; and, secondly, that the-counts are bad because it is not alleged that the marks and stamps were ¡ knowingly and intentionally altered in the respects stated.
*847Neither of these objections appears to the court to be tenable. A stamp or inspection mark is changed or altered from its former condition when a portion of it is obliterated or rendered illegible, as well as when some part of the stamp is erased, and something else is substituted in lieu of the part erased. The same conclusion follows when the purpose of the law is considered. Inspection marks and stamps are required to be placed on casks and packages of distilled spirits to enable the government to readily trace the origin and history of each cask, and thus effectually prevent frauds upon the revenue. The system is elaborate, and, as a whole, was so framed that each package might tell its own story, — where it was made, when it was made, and if the tax thereon had been paid. It would be nearly or quite as mischievous to permit dealers to obliterate a portion of a government inspection mark or stamp found on a barrel of distilled spirits as it would be to permit a falsification of such mark. Therefore, the words “change or alter,” as used in the statute, must be construed to cover an intentional erasure of any essential part of a mark or stamp which congress has required to be placed on packages of distilled spirits.
It will be conceded that an unintentional or accidental erasure of a stamp, or some part of it, is uot an offense under section 3326. An indictment or information thereunder should accordingly allege that the act was done knowingly and intentionally, or it should employ language of a similar import. The present information avers that the defendant “did unlawfully change and alter” the marks and stamps in question. This sufficiently shows that the act was done willfully and intentionally, as otherwise it could not bo said to have been done unlawfully.
2. The second serios of counts must be adjudged insufficient. The statute (section 3326) imposes a penalty on one who “fraudulently uses any cask or package having any inspection mark or stamp thereon, for the purpose of selling other spirits, or spirits of quantity or quality different from the spirits previously inspected therein.” The fraud in this clause intended is evidently a fraud upon the government, to be effected by putting into a cask, after it has been inspected or stamped, other spirits, either of the same or a different quality, that were not therein at the time of such inspection or stamping. It is apparent that congress was legislating for the protection of the revenue, rather than for the prevention of merely private wrongs. It intended to prevent frauds on the revenue that might be perpetrated by filling barrels that had been inspected or stamped with other spirits, after the original contents had been wholly or partially withdrawn. The second series of counts do not charge with certainty such a fraud as this clause of the statute was intended to prevent. They show, no doubt, that defendant made use of the inspection marks to misrepresent the proof of the liquor to one of his customers, or to aid in such misrepresentation, but it is not alleged that the change in proof was due to the fact that other spirits had been placed in the several casks after the original inspected contents had been wholly or partially withdrawn. The reduction in proof may have been due to natural causes, or to the addition of water after a por*848tion of the original contents had leaked out or had evaporated. If the reduction in proof was due to the addition of water, the penalty sued for was not. incurred," since no wrong was thereby done to the government. The penalty is imposed for the doing of some act whereby the ,g ivernment is or may be defrauded. In re Three Packages of Distilled. Spirits, 14 Fed. Rep. 569. See, also, U. S. v. Thirty-Two Barrels of Distilled Spirits, 5 Fed. Rep. 188.
The second series of counts will be quashed. The demurrer and motion to quash the first series will be overruled.