B. A. McKenzie & Co. v. United States

39 Cust. Ct. 52
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1957
DocketC. D. 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 39 Cust. Ct. 52 (B. A. McKenzie & Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Customs Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B. A. McKenzie & Co. v. United States, 39 Cust. Ct. 52 (cusc 1957).

Opinion

MollisoN, Judge:

The merchandise the subject of this protest is described on the invoice as “2-piece stock, sawed lumber, planed, tongued, grooved and edge glued,” and was assessed with duty at the rate of 16% per centum ad valorem under the provision for manufactures of wood, not specially provided for, in paragraph 412 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by the Presidential proclamation carrying out the Annecy Protocol of Terms of Accession to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, reported in T. D. 52373.

Although various claims are made in the protest and by timely amendment thereof, the claim apparently relied upon (being the only one pressed in the brief filed on behalf of the plaintiff) is that for entry free of duty under the provision in paragraph 1803 (1) of the Tariff Act of 1930 for “sawed lumber and timber, not further manufactured than planed, and tongued and grooved; * * * not specially provided for,” and subject to tax or duty only at the rate of 75 cents per thousand feet, board measure, under the provision in section 4551 (1) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as modified by the Presidential proclamation relating to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, T. D. 51802, for “Lumber, including sawed timber, rough, or planed or dressed on one or more sides * * * cedar.”

Imported at the same time and covered by the same entry, but not involved in the protest, was merchandise described on the invoice as “1-piece stock, sawed lumber not further advanced than planed, tongued and grooved.” That merchandise was admitted to free entry under paragraph 1803 (1), Tariff Act of 1930, supra,, and assessed with tax or duty at the rate of 75 cents per thousand feet, board measure, under the Internal Revenue Code, i. e., the treatment, it is claimed, which should have been accorded the 2-piece stock.

Plaintiff’s illustrative exhibit 1 represents the merchandise described as “1-piece stock,” while plaintiff’s illustrative exhibit 2 represents the merchandise described as “2-piece stock.”

[54]*54The evidence establishes that both the 1-piece stock and the 2-piece stock are ultimately used for the same purpose — in the manufacture of sides of drawers for furniture. As imported, they are each manufactured to the same extent with that end in view, the only real difference between them being that, in the case of the 1-piece stock, the wood was originally sufficiently wide for the width dimension desired, while, in the case of the 2-piece stock, the wood originally was not sufficiently wide, and the two pieces were joined together by what is known as the Linderman joint (a type of dovetail joint, running lengthwise) and glued under pressure so as to provide the width desired.

The merchandise at bar was made from reject cedar bevel siding which, for one reason or another, was unsuitable for siding purposes and which was resawn so as to obtain the desired thickness.

The evidence also shows that, before importation, aside from the operations necessary to joining the two pieces, which make up plaintiff’s illustrative exhibit 2, by means of the Linderman joint and gluing under pressure, both the 1-piece stock and the 2-piece stock had been planed on both surfaces, “bullnosed” on the top edge and “eased” on the bottom edge (both apparently types of planing), and each had a groove about three-sixteenths of an inch wide and three-sixteenths of an inch deep, cut lengthwise about three-fourths of an inch from the bottom. The effect on the classification of the merchandise of the bullnosing, easing, and grooving is apparently not in dispute and is apparently not considered by the Government as processes further manufacturing the merchandise than the planed, tongued, or grooved state, permitted by paragraph 1803 (1), supra.

The record shows that a considerable amount of work remains to be done to the merchandise, after importation, in order to fit it for its ultimate use in the manufacture of drawers. It appears that it is sometimes recut to width and regrooved and, in any event, it is cut to length, chamfered, dovetailed, sanded, and beveled.

Counsel for the plaintiff has pointed out in the brief filed in its behalf, and we are of the opinion that the record supports the statement, that the discrimination in customs treatment between the 1-piece stock and the 2-piece stock—

* * * is based on the theory that the process of combining two pieces to make a merchantable singleton results in removing the material from the status of sawed lumber “not further manufactured than planed and tongued and grooved” to the status of a manufacture.

Counsel argues in the brief that the process of “building up” or “reconstituting” the 2-piece stock by placing the Linderman joint on the edges and gluing the same is not a process of manufacture which would take the merchandise out of the purview of paragraph 1803 (1), supra, inasmuch as it was for the purpose of reclaiming scrap wood [55]*55and making it fit for use as wood material or lumber upon which, the manufacturing processes permitted by paragraph 1803 (1) could be performed.

In this connection, counsel for the plaintiff has cited a number of cases, but we think the rule derived from all of them is succinctly expressed in Hampton, Jr., & Co. v. United States, 6 Ct. Cust. Appls. 392, 395, T. D. 35926, as follows:

* * * It may be generally said that it has been uniformly held in customs interpretation that the application of processes necessary to produce an article from its native condition and to bring it into a condition that it may be imported, without affecting its per se character, is not regarded either as a manufacturing process or as a process advancing it in value or condition. [Italics added.]

Applying the foregoing rule to the merchandise at bar, it will be seen that the processes of effecting the Linderman joint and gluing under pressure made two narrow pieces of wood into one wide piece of wood. The merchandise was merely wood material, lumber, before the processes were applied thereto, and it was wood material, lumber, when it emerged from those processes. Its per se character as lumber was not changed at all.

In the brief filed on behalf of the defendant, there is cited as applicable to the 2-piece stock at bar a ruling by the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Department, dated February 17, 1914, and contained in 26 Treas. Dec. at page 294, T. D. 34198. That ruling related, among other things, to “narrow pieces of wood, the edges dovetailed and glued together,” and directed the collector of customs at the port of Buffalo, N. Y., to assess duty thereon as manufactures of wood under paragraph 176 of the Tariff Act of 1913, it being the opinion of the Department that the dovetailing and gluing of the narrow pieces “advances the lumber beyond the condition of planed and tongued and grooved” lumber, provided for in paragraph 647 of the 1913 act.

It is suggested by counsel for the defendant that Congress is presumed to have had knowledge of that ruling and that subsequent reenactments in substantially the same language of the provision for sawed lumber, not further manufactured than planed, and tongued and grooved (the latest being the provision in paragraph 1803 (1), Tariff Act of 1930, under which claim is here made), constitute legislative approval of administrative practice.

In Rapken & Co., Ltd. v. United States, 25 C. C. P. A. (Customs) 268, T. D.

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39 Cust. Ct. 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-a-mckenzie-co-v-united-states-cusc-1957.