delivered the opinion of the Court:
There is but one point presented on this record, which we deem necessary to consider, and that is the one made by the fourth assignment of error.
On the trial, the defendants offered to prove that no tax had been paid on the whiskey, and that it was shipped in fraud of the revenue laws of the United States, and that the plaintiffs knew no tax had been paid on it. The court refused to admit this evidence, and this is the fourth error assigned.
This court, it is conceded, does not sit to enforce the revenue laws of the United States, nor is that its province. But that is not the question, as we view it. The plaintiffs seek to recover the value of the whiskey lost by the defendants, and which they had undertaken to carry safely and deliver to the consignee. How is this value to be determined ? That article has different values, at different times. It is subject by law to a tax of two dollars upon each gallon, which, if paid, enhances the raw material to that extent. Supposing the article untaxed, to be worth twenty-five cents per gallon, with the tax paid upon it the value would be two dollars and twenty-five cents per gallon, therefore, it was a fair and proper question before the court, in order to determine the value, was the tax paid on the whiskey ? If it was paid, then its value would be that of the whiskey with the tax added. If it was not paid, the value would he less by the amount per gallon of the tax.
It is said by defendants in error, that the bill of lading shows there were barrels of whiskey, which means, in commercial phrase, rectified whiskey, and that the government tax must be paid on all highwines before they are rectified, and the presumption of law therefore was, that the tax was paid on the whiskey.
We do not know, and it was not proved, that in commercial parlance, “ barrels of whiskey” means rectified whiskey, for raw whiskey is put in barrels. Admitting that, in theory, the government tax is paid on all highwines, before they are rectified, in practice, it is not always done. On the plaintiff’s own admission, it is but a presumption the tax was paid on this whiskey. Being but a presumption, it was open to rebuttal by proof of the contrary, which the court refused to receive, and therein .erred.
The defendants have been condemned to pay a value which the article lost did not possess if the tax upon it was not paid. For this error, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Judgment reversed.