American Push Broom & Brush Co. v. United States

25 C.C.P.A. 248, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 1
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 24, 1938
DocketNo. 4045
StatusPublished

This text of 25 C.C.P.A. 248 (American Push Broom & Brush 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 Push Broom & Brush Co. v. United States, 25 C.C.P.A. 248, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 1 (ccpa 1938).

Opinion

Garrett, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Importer has here appealed from the judgment of the United States Customs Court, Third Division, overruling its protest against the classification and duty assessment by the Collector of Customs at the port of San Francisco, Calif., of certain merchandise consisting of ribs of palm leaves, hereinafter more particularly described.

The collector’s classification was under the latter portion of paragraph 1558 of the Tariff Act of 1930 with duty assessment at 20 per centum ad valorem, the merchandise being held by him to be “articles manufactured, in whole or in part, not specially provided for.”

The protest contains a number of alternative claims. In the brief and oral presentation before us, argument was limited to the claims made under the first part of paragraph 1558 (“raw or unmanufac-tured articles not enumerated or provided for”), paragraph 1684, paragraph 1722 and paragraph 1806, the last three being free list paragraphs. The assignments of error include an assignment relating to a claim under paragraph 1674 (providing for certain palm-leaf) but no argument was presented upon this point, and the claim is regarded as abandoned.

Paragraphs 1558, 1684, 1722, and 1806 read:

Par. 1558. That there shall be levied, collected, and paid on the importation of all raw or unmanufactured articles not enumerated or provided for, a duty of 10 per centum ad valorem, and on all articles manufactured, in whole or in part, not specially provided for, a duty of 20 per centum ad valorem.
Par. 1684. Grasses and fibers: Henequen, sisal, manila, jute, jute butts, kapok, istle or Tampico fiber, New Zealand fiber, sunn, maguey, ramie or China grass, raffia, pulu, and all other textile grasses or fibrous vegetable substances, not dressed or manufactured in any manner, and not specially provided for.
Par. 1722. Moss, seaweeds, and vegetable substances, crude or unmanufac-tured, not specially provided for.
Par. 1806. Woods: Sticks of partridge, hair wood, pimento, orange, myrtle, bamboo, rattan, india malacca joints, and other woods not specially provided for, in the rough, or not further advanced than cut into lengths suitable for sticks for umbrellas, parasols, sunshades, whips, fishing rods, or walking canes.

[250]*250Several protests were involved before the trial court, but tbe appeal to this court was limited (according to appellant’s brief, “for purposes of simplicity and economy”) to protest 749373-G, which, covers two entries. It is said in the brief that “A large group of like cases are covered by suit 4046” upon our calendar. The trial court’s decision in that case seems to have been rendered concurrently with its decision in the instant case. Suit 4046 has not yet been heard by this court.

"During the course of the trial it was stipulated that the merchandise covered by protest 749373-G embraced in entries 2875 (“Pal. stalks”) and 3171 (“15 bales palm fibre”)— *

identified as palm reed on the invoices consists of palm ribs of the same'material condition and use as the merchandise involved in Great Pacific Company vs. United States, T. D. 46757, and that the evidence and exhibits in that case may be admitted herein.

During the trial of the case which resulted in the decision, T. D. 46757 (see 64 Treas. Dec. 590) so alluded to, which iuvolved protest 478651-G, there was inserted into the record thereof by stipulation, the record in another case, styled Great Pacific Co. v. United States, being, protest 304143-G, the decision of which was rendered in T. D. 44580. (See 59 Treas. Dec. 207.) Therefore, the latter case is also a part of the record in the case before us.

No appeals to this court were prosecuted from the decisions, T. D. 44580 and T. D. 46757, supra. So, the issues now before us are here for the first time.

It is noted that protests 304143-G, supra, and 478651-G, supra, arose under the Tariff Act of 1922, but neither was decided until after the passage of the Tariff Act of 1930. Both cases were decided by the Third-Division of the Customs Court, the opinion in the first being by Young, J. (since deceased), and that in the second by Kéefe, J., author of the opinion in the instant case. An examination of those opinions discloses that certain paragraphs of the 1922 act there quoted, or referred to, were, respectively, substantial prototypes of those of the 1930 act which are at issue here. Since the opinion in the instant case (Abstract 34604) is quite brief, we have had recourse to the opinions in the other cited cases, supra, to obtain the full reasoning of the trial tribunal. We have also examined its opinion in T. D. 48458 (by Keefe, J.) referred to in its decision in the instant case, being the case involved in suit-4046', alluded to above as being on our calendar.

Appellant’s brief directs attention to the fact that the reports of the collector and appraiser upon the protest here involved mention an item of “dyed palmyra fiber” but adds, “it is not referred to in the testimony, and this appeal is not intended to cover it.”

There is no dispute relative to the nature, character or ultimate use of the involved merchandise, nor as to its condition when imported. [251]*251So, there is no necessity of any comprehensive review of-the record. We think the brief on behalf of the Government fairly and succinctly states substantially all that is necessary for an understanding of what the merchandise is, as well as its ultimate use. After reciting the inclusion in this record of the records in the two Great Pacific Co. cases, above related, the brief says:

In the first case, Frank W. Smith, a broom manufacturer located in San Francisco, stated that the merchandise in controversy, represented by Exhibits 1 and 2, was used to make push brooms and pot-scrubs. The imported material is usually received in bales of 133 pounds within which are small packages ranging in weight from 5}4 to 15 pounds.
The process of treatment prior to exportation from China (the country of origin) was described by the witness Katz. The palm leaf just as it comes from the tree is first soaked in water and stripped of its pulp. Then the ribs which remain are torn from the butt end of the leaf, separated, and graded into various lengths. The lengths are again segregated, gathered into bundles and tapped on the floor so that all the ends are uniform. The pulp from the bottom and the thin ends from the top are trimmed off. The remaining sticks are packed in bundles and shipped to the United States.

To tke foregoing we find it necessary only to add that, as is pointed out in the brief of appellant, the material in question is imported in lengths ranging from 16 to 29 inches.

The foregoing describes the merchandise in its imported condition. The treatment given the “sticks” after importation, in order to fit them for ultimate use, and the method of inserting them into the brooms and pot-brushes are then described as follows:

* * * they are run through a combing machine to free all the fibers at the butt end. The necessary trimming is done and the ribs are repacked in bundles in which an equal number of butt ends have been stacked at top and bottom to produce a uniform'package. In this condition they are used by.

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25 C.C.P.A. 248, 1938 CCPA LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-push-broom-brush-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1938.