American Sugar Refining Co. v. United States

1 Ct. Cust. 228, 1911 WL 19849, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 28
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 1, 1911
DocketNo. 7
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1 Ct. Cust. 228 (American Sugar Refining 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 Sugar Refining Co. v. United States, 1 Ct. Cust. 228, 1911 WL 19849, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 28 (ccpa 1911).

Opinion

Barber, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellants made the following importations of sugar at the port of New York, upon which duty should be assessed under the provisions of the tariff act of 1897: By the ship Strathdon, March 20, 1898, 23,700 packages; by the Arecuna, September 20,1898, 8,847 packages, and by the Asphodel, January 23, 1899, 101,626 packages.

At the time of these importations paragraph 209 of said tariff act provided that such sugars should be tested by the polariscope and that [229]*229the results of such polariscopic tests should, determine the classification of the sugars upon which duty at the rates provided in the act should be assessed.

At the same time there were in force regulations, promulgated by the Secretary of the Treasury on the 27th day of October, 1897, under the authority of section 251 of Revised Statutes, which contained detailed provisions for the application of the polariscopic test to such sugars. It is unnecessary to recite these regulations at length. They may be found at page 974 et seq. of the Treasury Decisions for the year 1897, and are in T. D. 18508. Amongst other things, they provide that suitable samples shall be taken of each importation designed to fairly represent the same; that at least two tests shall be made of each sample, and that the test to be accepted for classifying the sugars shall be the average of such tests or of such tests and additional tests, if made, as the regulations provide. It is prescribed that all .tests under the regulations shall be made by Government employees, and, further, that the importers shall be immediately notified by messenger, when practicable, of the results of the tests first made to determine the classification, and that he shall have two official days in which to claim error in the reported tests and to ask for a resampling and retesting, for which provisions are also made.

Detailed provisions are made in the regulations for the location, equipment, and maintenance of laboratories in which sugars are to be tested and minute instructions given for the mailing of these polari-scopic tests. The regulations in terms provide that they shall apply to all sugars imported under the provisions of the act of 1897.

It is also expressly stated — •

That these regulations shall take the place of all orders or regulations heretofore issued -with reference to the sampling and classification of imported sugars and molasses.

Samples of each importation were taken and the tests made pursuant to the regulations. Portions of some or all of these cargoes were resampled or retested, but it is unnecessary to consider the details thereof. These tests gave results which were unsatisfactory to the customs officials, and instead of using the official tests as the basis of classifying these sugars the collector classified all the same upon what is known as the settlement tests.

From the record before us, as well as information obtained from the opinions in the cases hereinafter referred to in which an adjudication of some of the issues raised by the appellants’ protests has already been made, we learn that the polariscope is an instrument so adjusted that when a ray of polarized light passes through a tube filled with a certain solution of sugar the scale indicates the percentage of pure sugar; that under the commercial system of testing sugars which had been in use prior to the passage of the act of 1897 the actual readings [230]*230of the scale on the eyepiece of the polariscope were taken as showing the actual value of the sugar; that is, the result of the polariscopic test was determined by the readings of the eye. This commercial method was in use between buyers and sellers of sugars, each party employing experts to test the sugars, and in case their tests disagreed a compromise of the same was arrived at by averaging the results of the polariscopic tests made by the representatives of the respective parties or by making a third test. This method was known as the settlement test, and the words “settlement test” will be hereinafter used in that sense.

The method prescribed in the Treasury regulations before referred to varies from the settlement test in the main by prescribing that certain changes or reductions in the readings of the polariscope must be made to correct erroneous results which follow from the polariscopic tests of sugars taken at differing temperatures, it being established that the same sugars when tested at different temperatures by the polariscope show different results. The courts in the cases involving these protests hereinafter referred to appear to have been satisfied that the methods adopted by the Government result is more accurate determination of the amount of pure sugar in each sample tested than the “settlement test.”

The appellants seasonably filed their protests against the classifications and assessments so made, in each protest alleging in substance, amongst other things, that under the law the Secretary of the Treasury had no authority to insist upon the tests provided for by the general regulations referred to as a test of sugars, but that the only lawful test was the usual commercial polariscopic test recognized and accepted in trade by buyer and seller as ascertained by methods and instruments used by chemists engaged in the business of testing sugars, being methods in general use by sugar chemists, manufacturers, and refiners at the time of the existing tariff act, and claiming that the tests and returns were erroneous and excessive owing to erroneous and incorrect methods of testing the sugars by the polariscope as prescribed by the regulations of the Secretary of the Treasury.

Upon this phase of the protests appeal was .taken by the appellants here from the judgment of the Board of General Appraisers overruling the same to the Circuit Court and then by the United States to the Circuit Court of Appeals, in which last-mentioned court the judgment of the board was affirmed. A petition to the Supreme Court for a writ of certiorari in the case was later denied.

The issue which was determined in this litigation appears to have been as stated by the Circuit Court of Appeals—

Whether Congress used the words “testing by the polariscope” and “shown by the polariscopic test” with some special trade meaning which would confine them to a particular method of conducting- such test.

[231]*231The court held that the words were not so used and that all the matters of detail relating to the polariscopic tests came naturally within the province of the Secretary of the Treasury under the general power given him to make regulations not inconsistent with law under section 25 lof the Revised Statutes, and concluded by saying that—

It seems a reasonable conclusion that Congress when it passed the act oí 1897 containing merely the phrase “testing by the polariscope” without any further directions as to such test, without approval or condemnation of either of the variant methods of conducting it which the Treasury Department had theretofore prescribed for imported as well as domestic sugars intended to leave all details as to selection of instruments, employment of experts and instruction as to the method, to the sound discretion of the Secretary.

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1 Ct. Cust. 228, 1911 WL 19849, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-sugar-refining-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1911.