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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
U S v. ZUCKER, 161 U.S. 475 (1896)
161 U.S. 475
UNITED STATES
v.
ZUCKER et al.
No. 794.
March 2, 1896
Mr. Whitney, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the United States.
Abram J. Rose, for defendant in error.
Mr. Justice HARLAN delivered the opinion of the court.
By the act of June 10, 1890 (chapter 407), known as the 'Customs
Administrative Act,' it is provided that 'if any owner, importer,
consignee, agent, or other person shall make or attempt to make any
entry of imported merchandise by means of any fraudulent or false
invoice, affidavit, letter, paper, or by means of any false statement,
written or verbal, or by means of any false or fraudulent practice or
appliance whatsoever, or shall be guilty of any wilful act or omission
by means whereof the United Stated shall be deprived of the lawful
duties or any portion thereof, accruing upon the merchandise, or any
portion thereof, embraced or referred to in such invoice, affidavit,
letter, paper, or statement, or affected by such act or omission, such
merchandise or the value thereof, to be recovered from the person
making the entry, shall be forfeited, which forfeiture shall only
apply to the whole of the merchandise or the value thereof in the case
or package containing the particular article or articles of
merchandise to [161 U.S.
475, 476] which such fraud or false paper or statement
relates; and such person shall, upon conviction, be fined for each
offense a um not exceeding five thousand dollars, or be imprisoned for
a time not exceeding two years, or both, in the discretion of the
court.' 26 Stat. 131, 135, 9.
The present action was brought to recover from the defendants the
sum of $346.02, as the value of certain merchandise originally
belonging to them, and alleged to have been forfeited to the United
States under the above statute.
The complaint, which is in the form prescribed by the New York Code
of Civil Procedure, alleged that on or about December 14, 1891,
certain described merchandise was imported into the United States, at
the port of New York, and, when so imported, was subject to the
payment of duties; that the defendants, the owners, importers, and
consignees of such merchandise, entered the same at the office of the
collector, to whom was produced a duly-certified invoice, purporting
to show the actual cost of the merchandise, and also a declaration,
which entry and declaration were signed and verified in the manner and
form required by law; that said entry, invoice, affidavit, and paper
were false and fraudulent, as the defendants well knew, in that the
actual cost of such merchandise was greater than the amount stated
therein; and that the defendants willfully and wrongfully concealed
the actual cost of such merchandise, whereby the United States had
been deprived of the lawful duties, or a portion thereof, accruing
upon the same.
The defendants made a general denial of each allegation of the
plaintiff. As separate defenses they pleaded: (1) That the merchandise
mentioned in the complaint was not forfeited. (2) That the action was
not brought against the person making the entry of the merchandise in
the complaint specified. (3) That the duties and all goods imported by
them during the times specified in the complaint had been liquidated
and paid by them, and such merchandise delivered to them as the owners
thereof, all without fraud, and that more than one year had elapsed
since the date of the entry referred to by the United States.
[161 U.S. 475, 477]
At the trial below, the government, to sustain the issues on
its part, offered to read in evidence a deposition that had been duly
taken in Paris, France, and was properly authenticated and certified
under letters rogatory, properly issued and returned.
The defendants objected to the admission of this testimony upon the
following grounds: (1) That this action, though civil in form, was in
substance a criminal case; and, under the constitution of the United
States, the defendants were entitled on the trial 'to be confronted
with the witnesses' against them. (2) That 'the constitutional right
of the defendants to be confronted with the witnesses against them is
not secured by giving them notice of the execution of letters rogatory
in France; and that their failure to attend on such occasion at a
place three thousand miles from the place of trial, out of the
district and in a foreign country, does not operate as a waiver of
their constitutional right, if it can be waived.'
In answer to questions propounded by the court, the defendants
admitted that the evidence was material, and placed their objection to
it upon the grounds just stated.
The court thereupon sustained the objection, and excluded the
evidence, to which action the government excepted.
The United States having no other evidence to offer, the jury, by
direction of the court, returned a verdict for the defendants, and the
action was thereupon dismissed.
The only question presented for our decision is whether the court
below erred in excluding the deposition which the government took in
Paris, France, and the materiality of which is conceded by the
defendant.
The sole ground of objection to the deposition, as we have seen,
was that, in this action to recover the value of merchandise alleged
to have been forfeited to the United States under the ninth section of
the act of June 10, 1890 (chapter 407), no deposition, wherever taken,
could be read against the defendants, without their consent, but the
witness must testify in person, before the court, during the progress
of the trial.
This objection is supposed to be sustained by the sixth
[161 U.S. 475, 478]
amendment of the constitution, which provides that 'in all
criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy
and public trial, by an impartial jury of the state and district
wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have
been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature
and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses
against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his
favor, and to have the assistance of counsel for his defense.'
In support of their contention, the defendants cite Coffey v. U.
S.,
116 U.S. 436, 443 , 6 S. Sup. Ct. 437; Boyd v. U. S.,
116 U.S. 616, 634 , 6 S. Sup. Ct. 524; and Lees v. U. S.,
150 U.S. 476 , 14 Sup. Ct. 163.
Coffey v. U. S. was a civil information, on behalf of the United
States, against certain property that had been seized by an internal
revenue officer as forfeited to the United States on account of the
alleged violations of certain provisions of the Revised Statutes
relating to internal revenue. Rev. St. 3257, 3450, 3453. Coffey
intervened, and claimed the property. One of the defenses was that a
criminal information had been filed against him in respect of the
matters set forth in one or more of the counts of the declaration, and
that upon a trial he had been acquitted. The principal question
presented in the civil case was as to the effect of the trial,
verdict, and judgment of acquittal in the criminal case. This court,
after observing that the proceeding to enforce the forfeiture against
the res named must be a proceeding in rem and a civil action, while
that to impose upon the offender the fine and imprisonment prescribed
by statute must be a criminal proceeding, said: 'Yet where an issue
raised as to the existence of the act or fact denounced has been tried
in a criminal proceeding, instituted by the United States, and a
judgment of acquittal has been rendered in favor of a particular
person, that judgment is conclusive in favor of such person on the
subsequent trial of a suit in rem by the United States, where, as
against him, the existence of the same act or fact is the matter in
issue, as a cause for the forfeiture of the property prosecuted in
such suit in rem.'
That case is an authority for the proposition that if the
[161 U.S. 475, 479]
present defendants had been proceeded against criminally on
account of the same acts and facts that must be shown in order to
sustain this action under the statute of 1890, and had been acquitted,
the verdict and judgment of acquittal would have barred a subsequent
civil proceeding, based on the same acts and facts, and instituted to
enforce a forfeiture, or to recover the value of the merchandise
forfeited.
Boyd v. U. S. was an information, in a cause of seizure and
forfeiture of property, against certain merchandise seized as
forfeited to the United States, under the twelfth section of the
customs act of June 22, 1874, c. 391 (18 Stat. 186, 188). Boyd
intervened, and claimed the goods. On the trial, it became important
to show the quantity and value of the merchandise contained in certain
cases previously imported. The court, on motion of the district
attorney, made an order, under the fifth section of the above act,
requiring the claimant to produce the invoice of those cases. The
order was obeyed, the claimant, however, objecting to its validity, as
well as to the constitutionality of the statute. When the invoice was
offered by the government as evidence, Boyd objected to its reception,
on the ground that, in a suit for forfeiture, the claimant himself
could not be compelled to produce evidence, and that the statute, in
that particular, was invalid. This court said: 'As showing the close
relation between civil and criminal proceedings on the same statute in
such cases, we may refer to the recent case of Coffey v. U. S., in
which we decided that an acquittal on a criminal information was a
good plea in bar to a civil information for the forfeiture of goods,
arising upon the same acts. As, therefore, suits for penalties and
forfeitures incurred by the commission of offenses against the law are
of this quasi criminal nature, we think that they are within the
reason of criminal proceedings for all the purposes of the fourth
amendment of the constitution, and of that portion of the fifth
amendment which declares that no person shall be compelled in any
criminal case to be a witness against himself; and we are further of
opinion that a compulsory production of the private books and papers
of the owner of [161
U.S. 475, 480] goods sought to be forfeited in such a
suit is compelling him to be a witness against himself, within the
meaning of the fifth amendment to the constitution, and is the
equivalent of a search and seizure,-and an unreasonable search and
seizure,-within the meaning of the fourth amendment. Though the
proceeding in question is divested of many of the aggravating
incidents of actual search and seizure, yet, as before said, it
contains their substance and essence, and effects their substantial
purpose.'
The principles announced in the Boyd Case have no application
whatever to the present case. Neither the constitutional provision
which protects the people in their persons, houses, papers, and
effects against unreasonable searches and seizures, nor the provision
that a person shall not be compelled in any criminal case to be a
witness against himself, has any bearing whatever upon the inquiry
whether the right of an accused, in a criminal prosecution, 'to be
confronted with the witnesses against him,' is infringed by permitting
a deposition of a living witness to be read against him in an action
brought to recover the value of merchandise forfeited to the United
States by reason of his acts in violation of law. This is so manifest
that it is impossible, by any argument, to make it clearer.
Equally inapplicable to the present inquiry is the case of Lees v.
U. S.,
150 U.S. 476 , 14 Sup. Ct. 163. That was a civil action to recover
a penalty imposed by the act of February 26, 1885, c. 164 (23 Stat.
332), for importing an alien under a contract to perform labor. Our
attention has been called to that part of the opinion in that case in
which it was declared, upon the authority of Boyd v. U. S., above
cited, that, although the proceeding against Lees was civil in form,
it was 'unquestionably criminal in its nature, and in such a case a
defendant cannot be compelled to be a witness against himself.' But
that principle is not involved in the present case.
No case has been cited which sustains the contention of the
defendants. And we are unaware of any such case in England, where the
constitutional principle embodied in the sixth amendment, and here
involved, is recognized as part of the law of the land.
[161 U.S. 475, 481]
The sixth amendment relates to a prosecution of an accused
person which is technically criminal in its nature. In such a
proceeding, the person accused is entitled to a speedy and public
trial, by an impartial jury of the state, as well as of a district
previously ascertained by law in which the crime charged against him
shall have been committed; whereas an action in which a judgment for
money only is sought, even if in some aspects it is one of a penal
nature, may be brought wherever the defendant is found and is served
with process, unless some statute requires it to be brought in a
particular jurisdiction. The words, in the sixth amendment, 'to be
informed of the nature and cause of the accusation,' obviously refer
to a person accused of crime, whether a felony or misdemeanor, for
which he is prosecuted by indictment or presentment, or in some other
authorized mode which may involve his personal security. So the clause
declaring that the accused, in a criminal prosecution, is entitled 'to
be confronted with the witnesses against him,' has no reference to any
proceeding (although the evidence therein may disclose, o necessity,
the commission of a public offense) which is not directly against a
person who is accused, and upon whom a fine or imprisonment, or both,
may be imposed. A witness who proves facts entitling the plaintiff in
a proceeding in a court of the United States, even if the plaintiff be
the government, to a judgment for money only, and not to a judgment
which directly involves the personal safety of the defendant, is not,
within the meaning of the sixth amendment, a witness against an
'accused' in a criminal prosecution; and his evidence may be brought
before the jury, in the form of a deposition, taken as prescribed by
the statutes regulating the mode in which depositions to be used in
the courts of the United States may be taken. The defendant in such a
case is no more entitled to be confronted at the trial with the
witnesses of the plaintiff than he would be in a case where the
evidence related to a claim for money that could be established
without disclosing any facts tending to show the commission of crime.
In Counselman v. Hitchcock,
142 U.S. 547, 562 , 12 S. Sup. Ct. 195, it was held that the
provision in the fifth amendment that no person-
[161 U.S. 475, 482]
'shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness
against himself' covered, but was not limited to, criminal
prosecutions; that its object was 'to insure that a person should not
be compelled, when acting as a witness in any investigation, to give
testimony which might tend to show that he himself had committed a
crime.' In the argument of that case reference was made to the sixth
amendment in support of the proposition that an investigation before a
grand jury was not a criminal case, within the meaning of the fifth
amendment, and was solely for the purpose of finding out whether a
crime had been committed. But this court said that a criminal
prosecution, within the meaning of the sixth amendment, was one
against a person who was accused, and who was to be tried by a petit
jury; that 'a criminal prosecution under article six of the amendments
in much narrower than a criminal case under article five of the
amendments.'
Of course, if the government had elected to prosecute the present
defendants, criminally, for the offense defined in the ninth section
of the act of 1890, a verdict and judgment of acquittal could have
been pleaded in bar of an action to recover the value of the
merchandise. Coffey v. U. S., above cited. But it does not follow that
the defendants can demand of right, in this civil action, not directly
involving their personal security, that they shall be confronted at
the trial with the witnesses who testify in behalf of the government.
The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded, with directions
to set aside the verdict and judgment, and for further proceedings in
conformity with this opinion.
Reversed.
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