EXAMINATIONS BY CUSTOMS’ OFFICERS.

The officers of Customs are compelled to discharge various duties beyond those connected with the collection and protection of the Revenue. Among others they have to take care that foreign goods, on their importation, do not bear the mark or brand of any British maker, or such marks or brands as would be likely to give them a British character. All goods so marked and branded are, by 16 and 17 Vict., cap. 107, sec. 44, prohibited to be imported into this country. Cases are constantly occurring where such goods have to be dealt with by the Customs’ authorities. In some instances the goods are confiscated, in others the brands or labels are ordered to be removed, upon which the goods are delivered to the owner, either with or without fine; and in other cases they are ordered to be returned to the port whence they were imported. But why should this duty devolve upon the Customs’ officers? It is an extremely disagreeable one, involving much trouble to the department and vexation to importers. If a manufacturer or dealer in this country infringes the right of another by using his mark or brand, he has his remedy in a court of justice; but he has no right to enter a factory or warehouse, to open packages and make an indiscriminate search, with or without grounds of suspicion that his brands have been placed on the contents of the packages. Yet, practically, this is really the case with regard to the Customs’ right of search for prohibited marks and brands. Why not let the goods pass without reference to brands or marks? Leave the owner of the marks to his remedy in law; and the vendor of the goods bearing such forged or false brands to the risk and penalty which he thus incurs. In this case the fraudulent dealer only will be the sufferer, while the innocent will be saved the vexation of having his goods pulled about at the Custom-house; and the Customs department will be relieved of an extremely disagreeable and troublesome duty. As to the brand, not those of any particular maker, but in their general character purporting the goods to be of British manufacture, but very little harm can result to any particular interest from the use of such marks. It will take something more substantial than such mere fictions to ruin the trade of the country; but if better goods, even if they be of foreign origin, can be obtained at the same prices as those paid for British, then so much the better for the consumer. Would it not be well, also, to relieve the Customs officers of the duty of searching for pirated works under the Copyright Act? Why not deal with the vendors here of such works, if reprinted abroad, in like manner as if reprinted here?

THE BRITISH AND FOREIGN BOOK TRADE.

The following figures, extracted from a recent Parliamentary Return, while they show a highly satisfactory ratio of increase, will probably convince the commercial reader that the International Book Trade of Christendom is yet in its infancy, and, perhaps, that the swaddling-bands and close confinement of monopoly should be exchanged for a freer and more natural system of nursing and protection:—

Books Printed in the United Kingdom, Exported therefrom.

Countries to which Exported. Quantities. Declared Value.
1828. 1848. 1868. 1828. 1848. 1868.
Cwts. Cwts. Cwts. £ £ £
Foreign Countries:—
United States 605 3,158 18,379 14,612 47,955 184670
Other Foreign Countries 1,449 2,003 10,540 33,319 30,678 181350
Total 2,054 5,161 28,919 47,931 78,633 366020
British Possessions:—
Australia 148 1,968 18,583 3,933 27,249 148413
British North America 364 1,131 6,919 8,178 15,156 64139
Other British Possessions 1,552 4,026 6,987 41,072 71,114 105671
Total 2,064 7,125 32,489 53,183 113519 318223
Aggregate of Foreign Countries and British Possessions. 4,118 12,286 61,408 101114 192152 684243

Quantities and Value, with the Weights and Moneys rendered into English Equivalents, of Printed Books Imported into and Exported from the United Kingdom and Foreign Countries in the latest Year for which Returns have been received and the Tenth Year previous thereto:—

Countries. Imported
(for Home
Consumption).
Exported
(Domestic
Produce).
Cwts. £ Cwts. £
United Kingdom[12] { 1858 5,971 83,598 12,286 192,152
{ 1868 10,695 137,580 61,480 684,243
Russia[13] { 1857 Not
stated
100,718 Not
stated
Not stated
{ 1867 73,588 18,813
Sweden[13] { 1856 Not
stated
6,938 Not
stated
1,697
{ 1866 8,780 3,569
Zollverein { 1856 21,098 Not
stated
38,275 Not
stated
{ 1866 31,485 67,376
Holland { 1857 4,349 46,126 2,437 38,363
{ 1867 7,228 76,659 3,555 37,714
Belgium { 1856 5,612 69,750 4,063 52,228
{ 1866 Not stated 97,040 Not stated 48,760
France { 1857 5,438 95,224 38,542 510,352
{ 1867 11,942 201,280 40,887 522,374
Spain[13] { 1854 Not stated 2,060 19,383
{ 1864 1,924 8,323 674 8,929
Italy 1865 6,108 56,464 1,678 15,375
United States { 1857 Not
stated
181,980 Not
stated
57,843
{ 1867 246,539 71,386