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or otherwise, by machinery, or with the needle, or other process." Schedule E imposed a duty of twenty per cent on "caps, gloves, leggins, mits, socks, stockings, wove shirts and drawers, made on frames, composed wholly of cotton, worn by men, women, and children," and on "velvet, in the piece, composed wholly of cotton." These provisions, and the one in schedule Das to cotton laces, &c., relate to goods made of cotton entirely. Those goods are all of them goods to which, as “manufactures composed wholly of cotton," sect. 2 of the act of 1857 applies, transferring them, when bleached, printed, painted, or dyed, to the twenty-four per cent schedule, schedule C. The duty on them had been thirty, twenty-five, and twenty per cent respectively. But for such transfer the new duty on those in schedules D and E would have been nineteen and fifteen. A new uniform rate of twenty-four was imposed, and while the thirty was reduced by six per cent, the twenty-five was reduced by only one, and the twenty was increased by four. This indicates an intention, in the act of 1857, to impose, in general, on manufactures composed wholly of cotton, when bleached, printed, painted, or dyed, a relatively higher duty as compared with other articles named in the act of 1846.

The expression "manufactures composed wholly of cotton" is not found in the act of 1846. It is in that act qualified by the words "not otherwise provided for." In the act of 1857 the expression is, "all manufactures composed wholly of cotton, which are bleached," &c. If the words " manufactures composed wholly of cotton," unqualified, and the words "cotton laces" and "cotton insertings," had all of them been found in the act of 1846, as the general expression would not have embraced the specific terms in that act, for dutiable purposes, though including them in general language, it would be reasonable to say that the general expression in a later act would not include the specific terms for dutiable purposes. But the fact that the general expression, as used in schedule D of the act of 1846, is qualified by the words "not otherwise provided for," ' shows that there were manufactures composed wholly of cotton otherwise provided for, that is, in other items in that act. Thus, besides the embroidered and tamboured manufactures of cotton provided for in schedule C of that act, there are cords,

gimps, galloons, laces, insertings, trimming laces, laces and braids, each with the word "cotton " prefixed, indicating manufactures composed wholly of cotton, and there are also the articles composed wholly of cotton named in schedule E. The material "cotton" is the thing of special mark, as the sole material in the manufacture. In this view it cannot properly be said that these manufactured articles, manufactures of cotton composed wholly of cotton, designated in the act of 1846 always by the epithet "cotton" applied to them, are not embraced, for dutiable purposes, in the terms "all manufactures composed wholly of cotton," in sect. 2 of the act of 1857.

The designations qualified by the word "cotton," in the act of 1846, are designations of articles by special description, as contradistinguished from designations by a commercial name or a name of trade. They are designations of quality and material. The articles referred to, named in schedules C, D, and E of the act of 1846, are all of them manufactures wholly of cotton; but under that act they were not all subject to the same duty, and so that act designates them substantially as manufactures wholly of cotton which are gimps at thirty per cent, manufactures wholly of cotton which are laces or insertings at twenty-five per cent, manufactures wholly of cotton which are stockings, made on frames and worn by human beings, at twenty per cent, and so on. But for the exceptions provided for by sect. 1 of, the act of 1857 the duties on those articles, if bleached, printed, painted, or dyed, would have been reduced to twenty-four, nineteen, and fifteen per cent, respectively; but sect. 2 of that act says, in substance, that manufactures wholly of cotton which are gimps, or laces, or insertings, or stockings, and so on, shall, all of them, be subject to twentyfour per cent duty. This was the view applied by Mr. Justice Nelson, in Reimer v. Schell, 4 Blatchf. 328, in 1859, to colored cotton hosiery, under the provisions in question, and we think it a sound one. It was the view adopted by the Circuit Court in this case. There is no question of commercial designation. Hence, the cases cited and relied on by the importers are not in their favor.

Homer v. The Collector, 1 Wall. 486, in 1863, was a case in which Mr. Justice Nelson delivered the opinion of this court.

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It was a case under these same statutes. Almonds were dutiable, by that name, at forty per cent, in schedule B of the act of 1846. Under the act of 1857 the duty on the articles in said schedule B was reduced to and fixed at thirty per cent, and the collector exacted that duty on almonds. It was contended that as, by sect. 2 of the latter act, "fruits, green, ripe, or dried," were transferred to schedule G, and so made subject to only eight per cent duty, almonds were so transferred, as being fruits, green, ripe, or dried." An attempt was made, at the trial, to show that, at the time the act of 1857 was passed, almonds were fruit, green, ripe, or dried, according to the commercial understanding of those terms in the markets of this country, and questions were certified to this court, on a division of opinion in the Circuit Court, as to the proper duty on almonds, and as to the admissibility of such evidence. It was contended, for the importer, that the term "dried fruits," in popular meaning, included almonds. The government claimed that the term "almonds" was a specific name, and, therefore, commercial nomenclature had no application. This court held that inquiry as to whether, in a commercial sense, almonds were dried fruit, had nothing to do with the question, as a duty had been imposed on almonds, eo nomine, almost immemorially; and that, as almonds were charged specifically with a duty of forty per cent in the act of 1846, and were not named as almonds in the changes in the act of 1857, and full effect could be given to the term "fruit, dried," without including almonds in it, it followed that almonds were dutiable at thirty per cent. There is nothing in this decision that overrules that in Reimer v. Schell, or that aids the importers in the present case. The act of 1846, in substance, mentions manufactures wholly of cotton which are laces or insertings, bleached or dyed, and sect. 2 of the act of 1857 mentions them in naming manufactures composed wholly of cotton, bleached or dyed.

Nor does the case of Reiche v. Smythe, 13 Wall. 162, as to birds, apply. That case was decided on the ground that the word "animals," in the act of 1861, did not include "birds," and so could not include them in the act of 1866.

There is nothing in Smythe v. Fiske, 23 id. 374, or in Arthur v. Morrison, 96 U. S. 108, which applies to this case.

Movius v. Arthur, 95 U. S. 144, was decided on the same view as Homer v. The Collector. "Patent leather" had been dutiable by that name in the acts of 1861 and 1862. The act of 1872 imposed a less duty on "skins dressed and finished, of all kinds." This court held that patent leather continued subject to the former duty, on the view that, although patent leather was a finished skin, something was done to it after it could be called a finished skin to make patent leather of it, and that it could not have been intended to include patent leather in the general designation of "finished skins."

In Arthur v. Lahey, 96 id. 112, the subject of duty was laces, manufactures of silk, on which a duty of sixty per cent was exacted, under the act of 1864, as "silk laces." It was contended that they were dutiable at thirty per cent, as "thread laces," under the act of 1861, as amended by the act of 1862. The question being submitted to the jury whether they were commercially known as "thread laces," although made of silk, it was found that they were, and the plaintiffs had a verdict. This court held that the question was one of commercial designation, and that the prior specific designation of "thread laces" must prevail over the words "silk laces," it appearing that there were thread laces of cotton and thread laces of silk, and articles commercially known as silk laces, the designation of "thread lace" depending on the mode of manufacture. The principle of that case, and of kindred cases, such as Arthur v. Rheims, id. 143, is, that the specific designation of an article by a commercial name will prevail over a general term in a later act, and has no application to the present case, which is not, as to cotton laces and cotton insertings, one of designation by a commercial name.

The bill of exceptions in the present case states that previously to about 1879 there were no cotton laces printed or dyed, and that from 1850 to 1861 there were many goods composed wholly of cotton, and bleached, printed, painted, colored, or dyed, such as calicoes (prints), lawns, handkerchiefs, velvets, and velveteens, and cotton piece-goods generally. If, when sect. 2 of the act of 1857 was enacted, the words "printed" and "painted” were not applicable to laces, it does not follow that the provision is to be limited to such cotton articles as

were then printed or painted as well as bleached or dyed. It includes any article which, as then known, satisfied any one of the conditions.

We see no warrant for the view that the act of 1857 applies only to piece goods.

It results from these views that the goods in question were subject to the duty imposed.

As to the three disputed fees, we are of opinion that they were none of them allowed by the law in force, sect. 2 of the act of March 2, 1799, c. 23.

The stamp or certificate on the invoice was one for the convenience and security of the collector and the government, and was not an "official certificate," in the sense of the statute. It was not an official document required by the merchant, nor was it given to him. It was a memorandum between officers in the custom-house, as a part of their system of checks and authentications.

The fee for the oath to the entry, as a fee for its administration, was not named in the statute. As a fee for the jurat to the oath, although the oath was required by the statute, and its form was prescribed, and it was to be taken before the collector, the jurat was not an official document required by the merchant or given to him.

The bill of exceptions states that the order to the storekeeper to deliver examined packages was an order required by the plaintiffs' firm from the collector. But we do not think it was an official certificate, or an official document required by the merchant, in the sense of the statute. The permit to land the goods having been issued and paid for, and the duties paid or secured, it was the duty of the officers of the customs to deliver the goods, when examined. The order to the storekeeper was a memorandum between officers. It was "required" by the merchant, in one sense, because, without it, according to the course of business, the storekeeper would not deliver the examined packages, but it was not an official document passing from the custom-house to the merchant.

Judgment affirmed.

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