Bache & Co. v. United States

11 Ct. Cust. 314, 1922 WL 22030, 1922 CCPA LEXIS 27
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 9, 1922
DocketNo. 2156
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 11 Ct. Cust. 314 (Bache & 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
Bache & Co. v. United States, 11 Ct. Cust. 314, 1922 WL 22030, 1922 CCPA LEXIS 27 (ccpa 1922).

Opinion

MautiN, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case relates to two importations of glass. One of these consisted of pieces of polished plate glass, oval in shape with beveled edges, the cross dimensions being approximately 13 by 16 inches, having a thickness of three-eighths of an inch. It is said that these were designed for use in the manufacture of computing scales. The second class consisted of circular pieces of window glass having beveled edges, each piece having a diameter of 2xt inches. It is said that these were designed for use as clock glasses. All of the glass was clear and unground, having no markings of any kind upon its surface.

The appraiser described the merchandise as "beveled clock glasses made from cylinder glass, and computing scale glasses oval in shape and beveled, made from plate glass.” It was returned for duty at 30 per cent ad valorem under the provision for manufactures of glass,contained in paragraph 95 of the tariff act of 1913, and was assessed with duty by the collector accordingly.

The importers protested against the assessment, claiming that the merchandise should be classified for duty in part as common window glass and in part as plate glass under paragraphs 85 and 88 of the act, and should be assessed thereunder at various rates of duty according to size, and in addition should be assessed 4 per cent ad valorem under paragraph 90 because of the beveled condition of the glass.

The protest was submitted to the board upon exhibits and testimony, and was overruled. The importers have appealed from that decision.

It is unnecessary in this decision to copy the paragraphs cited in the protest. It is sufficient to note that paragraph 85 imposes duty upon common window glass at specific rates which are graduated according to the size of the glass. And, similarly, duty is imposed by paragraph 88 upon cast polished glass, if unsilvered, at specific rates varying with its size; while in paragraph 90 it is provided that both descriptions of glass shall be subject to a duty of 4 per cent ad valorem ■ in addition to the rates otherwise chargeable upon them, if "bent, ground, obscured, frosted, sanded, enameled, beveled, etched, em[316]*316bossed, engraved, flashed, stained, colored, painted, ornamented, or decorated.”

On the other other hand, paragraph 95 of the act imposes duty, among other things, upon “all glass or manufactures of glass or paste or of which glass or paste is the component material of chief value, not specially provided for” in the act.

It may be repeated that the importers claim assessment for the merchandise under the several provisions for common window glass and polished plate glass, beveled, under paragraphs 85, 88, and 90 aforesaid, while the Government contends for its assessment as manufactures of glass under paragraph 95 aforesaid.

It is clearly established by the testimony that in point of component materials and of the methods and processes employed in its production as well as its character in general, the imported glass would be entitled to the description of common window glass, and of plate glass, beveled; and that description should govern in this case unless negatived by the fact that the glass was made and imported in sizes which are suitable for immediate use as clock glasses and computing-scale glasses. It appears also that the glass was made in these sizes-according to patterns prescribed by the purchaser.

It appears, however, that the sizes and forms of the present importations, while making them, respectively, suitable for use as clock glasses and compúting scale glasses, do not have the effect commercially of appropriating them exclusively to those uses nor of restricting-their use to those purposes only. It appears, furthermore, that many stock sizes and forms of glass are imported which are capable of use without alteration, or which may be reduced to other forms or sizes-for use. The following extracts from the testimony of the witness,. Sobel, establish and illustrate that fact:

Genera] Appraiser McClelland. My question mainly is what the instruction ‘ ‘ cut to pattern ” means. Whether it is cut to pattern for some particular use that the-customer has?
Witness. That would be the conclusion we should reach, but, as I said there, if an order came from a jobber, a jobbing house, for glass cut to pattern, we wouldhardly know what it would be used for. Of course we would draw our own inferences, but if we got an order from some scale manufacturer specifying polished plate glass three-eighths inch thick, edges beveled, we would know that was intended for some part of a scale.
By General Appraiser McClelland:
Q. But in any case would it convey to you that it was destined for some particular-use? — A. That would be true about any article of glass that is imported.
Q. Cut to pattern? — A. Even if not; for instance picture glass. The picture framer-says, send me one case 12 by 16,100 of 12 by 16 — -12 inches by 16. That is going to be used in the actual size in which it is imported in the frame.
Q. But those are standard sizes? — A. They are, in a waj', but there are a great many sizes that are not standard.
Q. Exhibit 1, for instance, is not a standard size, is it? — A. It is a standard size for certain people; yes, sir.
[317]*317Q. What I want to know is this: Whether, when you get instructions, such as you detailed, to cut the glass to pattern, whether that does not convey to you that the pattern is prepared so that the glass may be cut for a particular use? — A. That is true in every single case, of every order that you-
Q. Out to pattern? — A. Whether cut to pattern or not.
Q. I am just confining it to- cases where you cut to pattern. — A. Certainly, to be intended for some use; either might be used for window or a table top, or a transom, or tray, or scale, or a porthole, or a thousand and one things. This particular sample here-
Mr. Hampton. Which one?
A. No. 1 might be used for a scale, it might be used for a tray, for a top for a desk, and other innumerable things that it could be used for. Of course, if it was shipped to a jobber, we could not tell what it would be used for. We would simply use our own opinion that it might be used for any one of the things mentioned.

The foregoing testimony and an inspection of the exhibits convince us that the glass forms now in question are capable of various other commercial uses in addition to those named by the appraiser. And upon these facts we conclude that the merchandise when imported had retained its original character as window glass and plate glass, beveled, and had not been advanced to the status of a new or different manufacture. The only incident or characteristic which is cited as having thus advanced the tariff status of the glass is the fact that it was made to order in a prescribed shape and form. But it must be observed that paragraph 90 provides for an additional duty of 4 per cent ad valorem upon such glass when treated by various processes, specifically when ground, obscured, frosted, sanded, enameled-, beveled •etched, embossed, engraved, flashed, stained, colored, painted, ornamented, and decorated.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ct. Cust. 314, 1922 WL 22030, 1922 CCPA LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bache-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1922.