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Form of the bond.

Fees of the

officers and surveyors.

Perth Amboy, Yorktown, Dumfries, Washington, Cambden, Georgetown (South Carolina), Beaufort and Savannah, five thousand dollars, each; the collectors of Hudson, Middletown and Waldoborough, four thousand dollars, each; and all the other collectors in the sum of two thousand dollars each; the naval officers of the ports of Boston and Charlestown, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Charleston, ten thousand dollars, each; and all other naval officers, in the sum of two thousand dollars, each; the surveyors of the ports of Boston and Charlestown, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Charleston, five thousand dollars, each; and all the other surveyors, in the sum of one thousand dollars, each :— Which bonds shall be filed in the office of the said comptroller, and be, by him, severally, put in suit for the benefit of the United States, upon any breach of the condition thereof.

And all bonds to be hereafter given, shall be of the form following; to wit: Know all men by these presents, that we are held and firmly bound unto the United States of America, in the full and just sum of dollars, money of the United States; to which payment, well and truly to be made, we bind ourselves, jointly and severally, our joint and several heirs, executors and administrators, firmly by these presents, sealed with our seals, and dated this

sand

day of

one thou

The condition of the foregoing obligation is such, that, whereas the President of the United States hath, pursuant to law, appointed the said to the office of in the State of Now therefore if the said has truly and faithfully executed and discharged, and shall continue truly and faithfully to execute and discharge all the duties of the said office, according to law; then the above obligation to be void and of none effect, otherwise it shall abide and remain in full force and virtue.

Sealed and delivered

in the presence of

Provided, That in cases where bonds have been already given, according to the directions aforesaid, new bonds shall not be required.

SEC. 2. That ** in lieu of the fees and emoluments heretofore estabcollectors, naval lished, there shall be allowed and paid for the use of the collectors, naval officers and surveyors, appointed and to be appointed in pursuance of law, the fees following; that is to say; to each collector for every entrance of any'ship or vessel of one hundred tons burthen and upwards, two dollars and an half; for every clearance of any ship or vessel of one hundred tons burthen and upwards, two dollars and an half; for every entrance of any ship or vessel under the burthen of one hundred tons, one dollar and an half; for every clearance of any ship or vessel under one hundred tons burthen, one dollar and an half; for every post entry two dollars; for every permit to land goods, twenty cents; for every bond taken officially, forty cents; for every permit to load goods for exportation, which are entitled to drawback, thirty cents; for every debenture or other official certificate, twenty cents; for every bill of health, twenty cents; for every official document, (registers excepted) required by any merchant, owner or master of any ship or vessel not before enumerated, twenty cents; and where a naval officer is appointed to the same port, the said fees shall be equally divided between the collector and the said naval officer, the latter paying one third of the expense of the necessary stationery, and of the rent of an office to be provided by the collector, at the place assigned for his residence, and as conveniently as may be for the trade of the district, except the expense of fuel, office rent and necessary stationery for the collectors of the districts of Salem and Beverly, Boston and Charlestown, the cities of New York, Philadelphia and Charleston, the towns of Baltimore, Norfolk and Portsmouth, which shall be paid three fourths by the

said collectors, and the other fourth by the respective naval officers in those districts; and all fees shall, at the option of the collector, be either received by him or by the naval officer, the party receiving to account monthly with the other for his proportion or share thereof; Provided, That all fees arising on the exportation of any goods, wares or merchandise on which drawbacks are allowed, shall be equally shared among the collector, naval officer and surveyor, where there are such officers at the port where the fees are paid, to be accounted for monthly, by the collector or naval officer who shall receive the same; and where there is no naval officer, such fees shall be divided equally between the collector and the surveyor, who may have been concerned in attending to such exportation, and the surveyors shall pay their proportion of the expenses of stationery and printing. To each surveyor,* [for the admeasurement and certifying the same, of every ship or vessel of one hundred tons and under, one cent per ton; for the admeasurement of every ship or vessel above one hundred tons and not exceeding two hundred tons, one hundred and fifty cents; for the admeasurement of every ship or vessel above two hundred tons, two hundred cents;] for all other services by this act to be performed by such surveyor, on board any ship or vessel of one hundred tons or upwards, having on board goods, wares or merchandise subject to duty, three dollars; for the like services on board any ship or vessel of less than one hundred tons burthen, having on board goods, wares or merchandise subject to duty, one and an half dollar; on all vessels not having on board goods, wares or merchandise subject to duty, two thirds of a dollar. All which fees shall be paid by the master or owner of the ship or vessel in which the said services shall be performed, to the surveyor by whom they shall be performed, if performed by one only, for his sole benefit, but if performed by more than one, to him who shall have the first agency, to be divided in equal parts between him and the other or others by whom the said services shall also be performed. To each inspector there shall be allowed, for every day he shall be actually employed in aid of the customs, a sum not exceeding two dollars; and for every other person that 95, § 1. the collector may find it necessary and expedient to employ, as occasional inspectors, or in any other way in aid of the revenue, a like sum, whilst actually so employed, not exceeding two dollars for every day so employed, to be paid by the collector out of the revenue, and charged to the United States: Provided, That the services performed by occasional inspectors, shall be particularly detailed in the accounts to be transmitted to the treasury, and certified as to the necessity as well as performance of such services, by the naval officer or surveyor of the district, if any such officers there are: to the measurers, weighers or gaugers, respectively, to Compensation be paid monthly by the collector out of the revenue, and charged to the to the measurUnited States, for the measurement of every one hundred bushels of and gaugers. grain, thirty cents; for the measurement of every one hundred bushels of See 1816, ch. salt, according to the weight established by law for the payment of duties 95, § 1. thereon, fifty cents; for the measurement of every one hundred bushels of coal, sixty cents; for the weighing of every one hundred and twelve pounds, and marking every cask, box or package, weighing more than two hundred pounds each, except sugar, coffee, pepper, pimento and indigo, in bales, bags, mats, canisters or seroons, with the weight in durable characters, in the districts of Pennsylvania, New York, Boston and Charlestown, and Baltimore, one cent and a quarter; in the district of Norfolk, one cent and a half; and in the other districts, two cents; for the gauging and marking every cask, to be marked in durable characters, with his own name, and the quantity, eight cents; for computing the contents of and marking cases containing distilled spirits and wines, three cents per case; for actually counting the number of bottles of cider, beer,

* As to fees for admeasurement, see act of May 6, 1864, ch. 83, §§ 4 and 5.

Compensation to inspectors. See 1816, ch.

ers, weighers,

Fees to the

spectors of the

revenue for

ports.

Additional

ale, perry or porter contained in any cask, or other package or packages, one cent per dozen; and in proportion for any greater or lesser quantity; and the allowances aforesaid shall be deemed to include a compensation for making returns of the goods or merchandise weighed, gauged and measured, specifying the quality as well as quantity; and there shall be allowed to the surveyors or inspectors of the revenue for ports, the sum surveyors or in- of one cent and one half for every certificate to accompany foreign distilled spirits, and two cents and one half for every certificate to accompany wines and teas, issued within their ports respectively; and to the deputies of the inspectors aforesaid, the sum of two cents and one half for every cask, or package, or foreign distilled spirits, wines or teas, by them marked and returned to their respective principals, and for gauging wines, whereon the duties are payable according to the value thereof six cents for every cask actually gauged. There shall moreover be allowed to the several officers hereafter mentioned, the following allowances and percentage: To the collectors of the district of New York, one quarter per compensation to cent.; to the collector of the district of Boston and Charlestown, and to certain collectors the collector of the districts of Baltimore and Philadelphia one half per and surveyors. 1822, ch. 107, § 7. cent.;* to the collectors of the district of Charleston,* Salem and Norfolk,*† seven eighths of one per cent.; to the collectors of the districts of Alexandria † and Savannah, one per cent.; to the collectors of the district of Newburyport, ‡ one and one quarter per cent.; to the collectors of the districts of Portsmouth,* Portland, † Newport, Providence, † and New Haven, † one and one half per cent.; to the collectors of the districts of Georgetown, (in Maryland) and Marblehead, two and one half per cent. ; to the collectors of the districts of New London, † Biddeford, Bath, and Wiscasset, two per cent.; and to the collectors of all other districts, three per cent.; on all moneys by them respectively received, on account of the duties arising on goods, wares and merchandise imported into the United States, and on the tonnage of ships and vessels. And in addition to the allowances above mentioned, there shall be allowed and paid annually, the sums following, to wit:-To the collectors of St. Mary's, § Passamaquoddy, § Vermont, || Champlain, and to the collectors of the several districts comprising the northern and western boundaries of the United States, and the river Ohio, two hundred and fifty dollars each; to the surveyors in the several districts comprising the northern and western boundaries of the United States, and the river Ohio, two hundred dollars each; to the surveyor of Shell Castle or Beacon Island, one thousand dollars: To each of the collectors of the districts of Wilmington, in Delaware, § Annapolis, Havre-de-Grace, Chester, in Maryland, Gloucester, South Quay, Yeocomico, Tappahannock, Newbern, ** Edenton, || Camden, Wilmington** (North Carolina) Nanjemoy, Ipswich, York, Washington and Bermuda Hundred, the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars; to each of the collectors of the districts of Oxford, Vienna, Sagg Harbor, || Nottingham, Hampton, Yorktown, Dumphries, § Foley Landing, Cherrystone, Beaufort, Brunswick § and Hardwich, the sum of two hundred dollars; to each of the collectors of the districts of Perth Amboy, § Portsmouth,** Hudson, Plymouth, Barnstable, Nantucket,†† Edgartown, || New Bedford, Dighton, Penobscot, Frenchman's Bay, Machias § (Newport) Middletown, Fairfield, Burlington, Bridgetown, Great Egg Harbor, § Little Egg Harbor, § Snowhill, Georgetown (in South Carolina),|| Sunbury, § Marblehead, New Haven** and Georgetown § (in Maryland), the

See act of May 10, 1800, ch. 54, § 2.

† See act of March 27, 1804, ch. 58, § 2, and act of May 7, 1822, ch. 107, § 7.

See act of March 3, 1817, ch. 49, § 2.

See act of May 10, 1800, ch. 54, § 1.

See act of May 7, 1822, ch. 107, § 7.

See acts of May 7, 1822, ch. 107, § 7, and March 3, 1855, ch. 175, § 12.

**See act of March 27, 1804, ch. 58, § 1.

†† See act of May 26, 1824, ch. 158, § 1.

To certain na

surveyors.

sum of one hundred and fifty dollars; to each of the collectors of Biddeford, Bath and Wiscasset, one hundred dollars; to the naval officer of the district of Portsmouth, two hundred dollars; to each of the naval val officers and officers of the districts of Newburyport, Salem, Newport, Providence, Wilmington (in North Carolina), and Savannah, the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars; to each of the surveyors of Salem, Portsmouth, Newburyport, Gloucester, Bristol, Warren, East Greenwich, North Kingston, Saint Mary's, Suffolk, Smithfield, Richmond, Petersburg, † Fredericksburgh, Wilmington, Beaufort and Swansborough, the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars; to each of the surveyors of Newport, Providence, ‡ Thomastown, Beverly, New Haven,* Middletown, † Hartford, † Saybrook, Albany, Hudson, Lewellensburgh, Portland, Pawkatuck, Patuxet, New London, † Stonington, Town creek, Bermuda Hundred, West Point, Urbanna, Port Royal, Alexandria, ‡ Windsor, Hartford, Plymouth, Skewarky, Murfreesborough, Bennet's creek, Winton, Nixonton, Newbiggen creek, Pasquotank river, Indiantown, Currituck inlet, Savannah, and New Brunswick (in New Jersey), the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars; to each of the surveyors of such ports of delivery as may be hereafter established by the President of the United States, and for whom other annual compensations are not hereby provided, a sum not exceeding two hundred and fifty dollars. And it shall be the duty of the Collectors, &c. respective collectors, naval officers and surveyors, to keep accurate ac- to keep accounts counts of all fees and official emoluments received by them, also, of all ments and exexpenditures, particularizing their expenditures for rent, fuel, stationery penditures, and and clerk hire, and to transmit annually, within forty days after the last transmit them to the comptroller. day of December, an account, as aforesaid, verified on oath or affirmation, to the comptroller of the treasury, § who shall, annually, lay an abstract of the same before Congress; and if any collector, naval officer, or surveyor, shall omit or neglect to keep an account, as aforesaid, or to transmit the same, verified as aforesaid, he shall forfeit and pay a sum not exceeding five hundred dollars, for the use of the United States.

SEC. 3. That the compensations of the commissioned officers of the revenue cutters, shall be as follows, to wit:

[To a captain, or master, fifty dollars per month and the subsistence of a captain in the army of the United States; to a first lieutenant or mate, thirty-five dollars per month: to a second lieutenant or mate, thirty dollars per month; to a third lieutenant or mate, twenty-five dollars per month, and to every lieutenant or mate, the subsistence of a lieutenant in the army of the United States; and]

of their emolu

See 1836, ch. 253.

Compensation and subsistence

of the officers of revenue cutters.

crew.

The pay of the non-commissioned officers, gunners and mariners em- Pay and raployed in the said cutters, shall from time to time be established and tions of the varied by the President of the United States, not exceeding twenty dollars per month, with such rations as are or shall be allowed in the naval service of the United States.

If a collector die or resign,

SEC. 4. That whenever a collector shall die or resign, the commissions to which he would have been entitled, on the receipt of all duties bonded how certain fees by him, shall be equally divided between the collector resigning, or the are to be dislegal representative of such deceased collector, and his successor in office, tributed. whose duty it shall be to collect the same, and for this purpose all the public or official books, papers and accounts of the collector resigning or deceased, shall be delivered over to such successor.

See act of March 27, 1804, ch. 58, § 1. † See act of May 7, 1822, ch. 107, § 7.

See act of May 10, 1800, ch. 54, § 1.
See act of March 3, 1849, ch. 108, § 12.

No. 28. - MARCH 2, 1799.

Stat. at Large, CHAP. XXXVI. — An Act in Addition to "An Act for the Relief of sick and disabled

Vol. I. p. 729.

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Seamen."*

SEC. 1. Be it enacted, &c. That the President of the United States shall be, and he hereby is, authorized to direct the expenditure of any moneys which have been or shall be collected by virtue of an act, entitled "An act for the relief of sick and disabled seamen," to be made within the State wherein the same shall have been collected, or within the State next adjoining thereto, excepting what may be collected in the States of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut; anything in the said act contained to the contrary thereof, notwithstanding.

SEC. 2. That the Secretary of the Navy shall be, and he hereby is authorized and directed to deduct, after the first day of September next, from the pay thereafter to become due, of the officers, seamen and marines of the navy of the United States, at the rate of twenty cents per month, for every such officer, seaman and marine, and to pay the same quarter annually to the Secretary of the Treasury, to be applied to the same purposes, as the money collected by virtue of the above mentioned act is appropriated.

SEC. 3. That the officers, seamen, and marines of the navy of the United States, shall be entitled to receive the same benefits and advantages, as by the act above mentioned are provided for the relief of the sick and disabled seamen of the merchant vessels of the United States.

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No. 29.- MARCH 2, 1799.

CHAP. XLI. An Act to revive and continue in Force, certain Parts of the "Act for
the Relief and Protection of American Seamen," and to amend the Same.
SEC. 2. That the Secretary of State shall be, and hereby is required
to lay before Congress, within ten days after the commencement of each
ordinary session, an annual statement, containing an abstract of all the
returns made to him, by the collectors of the different ports, pursuant to
the said act, and of the communications received by him, from the agents
employed by virtue of the same, in foreign countries.

No. 30. - FEBRUARY 11, 1800.

Stat. at Large, CHAP. VI. An Act to repeal Part of an Act, intituled "An Act to provide for mitiVol. II. p. 7. gating or remitting the Forfeitures, Penalties and Disabilities, accruing in certain Cases therein mentioned, and to continue in Force the Residue of the Same."

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Be it enacted, &c. That the fourth section of an act intituled "An act to provide for mitigating or remitting the forfeitures, penalties and disabili ties, accruing in certain cases therein mentioned," passed on the third day of March, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-seven, shall be, and the same is hereby repealed, and the residue of the said act shall be, and the same is hereby continued in full force without limitation of time.

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Stat. at Large,

Vol. II. p. 16.

Salvage on re

CHAP. XIV.

- An Act providing for Salvage in Cases of Recapture.

SEC. 1. Be it enacted, &c. That when any vessel other than a vessel captured proper- of war or privateer, or when any goods which shall hereafter be taken as

An act for the relief of sick and disabled seamen, July 16, 1798, ch. 77.

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