American Bristle & Hair Drawing Co. v. United States

458 F.2d 524, 59 C.C.P.A. 104, 1972 CCPA LEXIS 342
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 27, 1972
DocketNo. 5444, C.A.D. 1048
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 458 F.2d 524 (American Bristle & Hair Drawing Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Bristle & Hair Drawing Co. v. United States, 458 F.2d 524, 59 C.C.P.A. 104, 1972 CCPA LEXIS 342 (ccpa 1972).

Opinion

Lane, Judge.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Customs Court, 65 Cust. Ct. 147, C.D. 4070 (1970), upholding the district director’s classification of the imported merchandise, 'involved as “brown processed hoghair,” as bristles under item 186.30 of the Tariff 'Schedules of the United States (TSUS) with duty at the rate of 1‡ per lb. and rejecting appellants’ claim of free entry as hog hair under item 186.55 TSUS. We reverse.

The statutory provisions here at issue read as follows:

186.30 Bristles, crude, or processed in any way for use in brushes or other articles_ 1<jt per lb.
Hair, and fur removed from the skin, not specially provided for, crude, sorted, treated, dyed, or otherwise processed hut not made up into articles:
* * * Human hair_ * * *
Other:
186.55 Crude, sorted, treated or both sorted and treated but not otherwise processed_ Free

Appellants offered in evidence two exhibits 'and the testimony of three witnesses. Exhibit 1, illustrative of the imported merchandise,, was offered ¡as hog hair. Exhibit 2 was introduced as a sample of hog bristile. Appellee called one witness and introduced in evidence one exhibit (Exhibit A) as a bundle of two-inch tapered Yugoslavian hog bristles. With respect to Exhibit 1, the Customs Court said:

The fibers * * *, which are not sorted or bundled, but loosely packed, range from approximately one half to over two inches in length; the majority appeár to be approximately one and one quarter inches long. They are slightly curled [106]*106and almost all have flag ends,

The court characterized the bristles of Exhibits 2 and A as follows:

* * * [They] are fairly stiff and coarse. They are imported in firmly packed bundles with the butt ends [2] arranged at one end. They range in length in exhibit A from approximately one and one quarter to a little over two inches, with the majority between one and one half and one and three quarter inches. The bristles in exhibit 2 are over three inches long.

These observations are apparently not challenged by either party.

Appellants’ witnesses included Smolin, the president of the importer ■company, and Meyer, part owner of a company producing the imported goods in Holland as well as president of a domestic company which imports wool and hair. Both witnesses had long experience in importing hog hair, but more limited experience with bristles. Siegel, vice-president of a company which manufactured curled hair who had a good deal of experience in that field, was appellants’ third witness. The testimony of these witnesses establishes that imported fibers such as those here involved and represented in Exhibit 1 were sold to Siegel’s company and to others under the name of hog hair. The purchasers processed the hair by giving it a permanent curl to impart resiliency thereby rendering it suitable for use as upholstery padding for furniture and as packing material. The witnesses testified that the importations, which they regard as hog hair, cost considei'-ab'ly less than hog bristles and are not used to make brushes, the predominant use of bristles.

Zeitlin, the government’s sole witness, president of a company •engaged in importing bristles and horsehair and with long experience in that field, declined to identify the Exhibit 1 fibers as bristles “of .any kind.” Instead, he stated that “[w]e always refer to merchandise like this as hog hair” in “the terminology in our trade.”

The Customs Court focused on the tariff history of bristles and observed that prior to the 1962 Tariff Classification Act, bristles were •divided into two categories. One, for “bristles, sorted, bunched, or prepared,” carried a duty, while the other, for “bristles, crude, not •sorted, bunched, or prepared,” was given duty-free treatment. Under the present tariff schedules, a duty is applied to all bristles, crude or processed. The court below felt this change to be significant. In addition, the court regarded definitions of bristle gleaned from dictionaries .and other sources to be broad enough to comprehend the imported merchandise. In overruling appellants’ protest, the Customs Court .said:

[107]*107[I] t is patent that item 186.30 * * * includes bristles, “crude, or processed * * * for use in brushes or other articles” * * *. [Emphasis the Customs Court’s.] Therefore, the fact that the hog fibers at bar were not used in the manufacture of brushes would not be preclusive of their classification as bristles.
Although the quoted definitions and descriptions state that bristles are extensively used in the manufacture of brushes, none of them makes identification of the material contingent on actual use, or suitability for use, in that respect, as plaintiffs claim. * * *
It is apparent that the bristles, which vary in quality, texture and length, [footnote omitted] consists of hairs of the hog which, to varying degrees, are stiff and coarse, and have flag, or split, ends. All of these attributes are ascribable to the merchandise at bar. * * *
On the record herein, which is vague and inconclusive, plantiffs have failed to show a valid and viable distinction between bristles of all shapes, grades and qualities, and the importation at bar.

Appellants’ position is essentially that the tariff laws have historically distinguished between 'bristles and hog hair and that the evidence adduced in this case establishes that the importations at bar consist of hog hair, not bristles. Appellants additionally urge that the decision of the Board of General Appraisers in F. Irsch v. United States, T. D. 12852, G. A. 1448 (1892), sustaining a protest against the classification of allegedly similar goods used for manufacture into curled hair for beds, matresses, etc., and known in commerce as hog’s hair or pig’s hair, is controlling in this case. The Customs Court was not satisfied that the goods here involved and in Irsch were the same, but in any event regarded the differences between the bristle provision of the TSUS and that in force when Irsch was decided to be distinguishing.

Opinion

We do not agree with the conclusions of the Customs Court in this case. The court’s analysis fails to reflect adequate appreciation of the historical distinction between hair and bristle which appellants have correctly noted. While it is true that Congress, commencing no later than the Tariff Act of 1894 'and down to and including the Tariff Act of 1930, provided for bristles in two categories which were consolidated in the Tariff Classification Act of 1962, the tariff statutes at the same time included a provision distinct from the bristle provisions which allowed hog hair to be imported duty free. The Irsch decision, properly relied upon by appellants, demonstrates the application of these separate tariff provisions. The 1948 Summaries of Tariff Information, Volume 16, pp. 92-93, in discussing the animal hair provision of paragraph 1688 of the 1930 Act, stated:

[108]

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Bluebook (online)
458 F.2d 524, 59 C.C.P.A. 104, 1972 CCPA LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-bristle-hair-drawing-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1972.