Court Opinion

ID: 97454
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2010-04-28 16:42:35+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:04:48.619489
License: Public Domain

221 U.S. 649 (1911)
FABER
v.
UNITED STATES.
No. 134.
Supreme Court of United States.
Submitted April 20, 1911.
Decided May 29, 1911.
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK.
*652 Mr. Edward S. Hatch and Mr. Walter F. Welch for appellants.
Mr. D. Frank Lloyd, Assistant Attorney General, and Mr. Charles E. McNabb, for the United States.
*657 MR. JUSTICE LAMAR, after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
Article 2 of the Convention with Cuba provides that the products of that island shall be admitted into the *658 United States at a reduction of twenty per cent of the rates of duty in the Tariff of 1897, or tariff laws subsequently enacted. There is much force in the suggestion that the reduction is limited to the rates of duty in general tariff acts, and does not apply to special rates under special agreements with other countries. Whitney v. Robertson, 124 U.S. 190. This point, however, we purposely leave open and limit our consideration to the principal question discussed in the brief, whether the Philippine Islands are "another country" within the meaning of the eighth article of the Cuban Treaty, providing that the rates therein granted shall continue "preferential in respect to all like imports from other countries."
This treaty was signed and proclaimed several years after it had been decided, in the Insular Cases, that Porto Rico and the Philippine Islands were not foreign countries, but territory of the United States, subject to such laws as Congress might enact for their political and fiscal management. In 1901 this court, in Fourteen Diamond Rings v. The United States, 183 U.S. 176, 178, said that "the theory that a country remains foreign with respect to the tariff laws, until Congress has acted by embracing it within the Customs Union, presupposes that the country may be domestic for one purpose and foreign for another." That case and DeLima v. Bidwell, 182 U.S. 1; United States v. Heinszen, 206 U.S. 370; Dooley v. United States, 183 U.S. 151, show that, notwithstanding their geographical remoteness, the Philippines are not a foreign country, and, if so, not "another country" within the meaning of the Cuban Treaty.
There have been statutes in which the language indicated an intent to make a distinction between a country and its colonies. But in the absence of some qualifying phrase "the word country in the revenue laws of the United States has always been construed to embrace all *659 the possessions of a foreign State, however widely separated, which are subject to the same supreme executive and legislative control." Stairs v. Peaslee, 18 How. 521, 526. If, therefore, in our revenue laws, a colony is treated as a part of the country to which it belongs, the Philippine Islands must be treated as a part of this Nation and not as another country. It must be presumed that the words "other country" in the Cuban Treaty were used according to their known and established interpretation, Ibid, and did not refer to charges on shipments from territory belonging to the United States. That they were not so regarded appears from the language of the act of March 8, 1902, 32 Stat., c. 140, which studiously avoids using the words "imports," and enacts that upon articles "coming into the United States from the Philippine Archipelago," there shall be levied only seventy-five per cent of the rates of duty imposed on like articles imported from foreign countries. These duties, when collected, are not covered into the Treasury of the United States, but are to be used and expended solely for the use and government of the Philippine Islands.
But it is argued that even if the United States understood the Philippine Islands to be a part of this country, Cuba could not be expected to understand that the words "other countries" did not include the Philippines if a duty was in fact charged on goods coming from those islands.
But the eighth article refers to "imports"  the correlative of "exports." This necessarily related to shipments from a country which was foreign to the United States. Pittsburgh Coal Co. v. Louisiana, 156 U.S. 590, 600; Patapsco Co. v. North Carolina, 171 U.S. 345, 353. The provision that the rates granted to Cuba shall continue "preferential in respect to all like imports from other countries," does not relate to charges on shipments between places under the same flag, but to duties laid on shipments *660  on imports  from countries which are foreign to the United States. Both in the light of our own legislation and in view of the generally accepted interpretation of the word "imports," the eighth article of the treaty cannot be construed to have been intended to give to Cuba an advantage over shipments of merchandise coming into the United States from a part of its own territory, where the collections were in part made as a means for raising revenue for the support of the government of the Philippine Islands. Cuba was given a preferential of twenty per cent over tariff rates on imports from countries which are foreign to the United States.
We make no ruling as to the duty to be charged on alcohol, because in the brief of the Government it is said that without conceding plaintiff's contention to be sound, and for reasons unnecessary to state, it consents to a reversal of so much of the judgment as relates to alcohol. It will be so ordered. The judgment of the Circuit Court as to the rate of duty on the cigars is
Affirmed.