Barnebey-Cheney Co. v. United States

487 F.2d 553, 61 C.C.P.A. 10, 1973 CCPA LEXIS 240
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1973
DocketNo. 5510, C.A.D. 1110
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 487 F.2d 553 (Barnebey-Cheney 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
Barnebey-Cheney Co. v. United States, 487 F.2d 553, 61 C.C.P.A. 10, 1973 CCPA LEXIS 240 (ccpa 1973).

Opinions

Miller, Judge.

Tbis appeal is from the judgment of the United States Customs Court, First Division, 68 Cust. Ct. 98, C.D. 4343 (1972), overruling appellant’s protest against the classification under paragraph 69 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by T.D. 54108, of imported merchandise consisting of spent activated carbon salvaged in Great Britain from canisters of gas masks. We reverse.

The referenced paragraph provides as follows:

Decolorizing, deodorizing, or gas-absorbing chars and carbons, whether or not activated, and all activated chars and carbons_ 19% ad val.

Appellant claims that the merchandise was properly classifiable under paragraph 1555 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by T.D. 52739, which provides as follows:

Waste, not specially provided for_ 4% ad val.

Facts

The merchandise in question was sold to appellant by J & J May-bank, Limited, which had purchased the gas masks from the Ministry of Supply. Some of the masks had been in storage since 1936 and the latest were 1945 manufacture. Maybank invented a machine to open the canisters to release the charcoal they contained through [12]*12a screen into burlap sacks for storage and shipment. Small slivers of metal and bits of fabric from the canisters also came through, the screen and were contained in the imported charcoal, which originally had been impregnated with various metallic salts of copper, silver and chromium (to improve its capacity for military gases). Appellant introduced evidence that the charcoal contained moisture from rain and snow due to open Storage of the masks. The Customs Court found it to be “clear” that upon entry the merchandise “had a sufficiently high adsorbed moisture content, i.e., 20 percent, to be regarded as ‘spent’ activated charcoal.”

Questioning of one of appellee’s expert witnesses by the court below brought out the distinction between spent activated charcoal and activated charcoal, namely: that spent activated charcoal is no longer, as such, without further treatment, capable of adsorption.

Testimony by another of appellee’s witnesses with respect to tests made in Customs Service laboratory disclosed that activated carbon purchased from a chemical supply house had an adsorbent capacity of 50 to 60 percent, while a representative sample of the merchandise in question (following a heating and drying process) had an adsorbent capacity of 21.9 percent.

In tendering the masks, the British government advised as follows: “CHARCOAL WHICH MAY BE RECOVERED FROM BREAKDOWN OF THE RESPIRATORS MAY NOT BE USED FOR THE PRESERVATION OF FOODSTUFFS OR THE PURIFICATION OF WATER.” The invoices covering the merchandise shipped from Maybank to appellant contained the description: “Scrap Charcoal From Gas Masks.”

Appellant introduced evidence that the merchandise was used as “raw material” for the production of a low grade of unspent activated carbon. Its process of “regeneration,” “rejuvenation,” or “revivification” consisted of burning out the absorbed material at high temperature under steam, with some of the carbon being leached to remove the metallic salts. The resulting product was sold as a deodorizer for diaper pails and refrigerators, for testing .of the gasoline content of natural gas, and (after grinding) as an ingredient for decolorizing dry cleaning solvent. In its “raw” state, the merchandise was not commercially suitable for any specific purification application.

The Issue Over What the ClasshtcatioN Was

The record clearly shows that the Deputy Collector of Customs, m his reports dated February Y, 1964 (filed with the U.S. Customs Court, February 10, 1964), on the various protests involved herein classified the merchandise in question as “non-activated decolorizing, deodoriz[13]*13ing, or gas absorbing carbon,” although by letter dated. January 20, 1960, from the Chief, Division of Classification and Drawbacks, appellant was advised that in the opinion of the Bureau of Customs the merchandise was classifiable “under the provision for decolorizing, deodorizing, or gas absorbing carbons and chars, whether or not activated.” The government (appellee), on the other hand, argues that in its opening statement before the U.S. Customs Court it made it clear that it was supporting the classification as “a gas absorbing carbon or an activated carbon” and that this statement was not disputed by appellant during the trial. The government further argues, without citation of authority, that the main purpose of the Customs reports was to indicate the paragraph, rather than specific language within the paragraph, under which the merchandise under protest was classified.

The Issue OveR the Wokd “AbsoebeNt”

The parties have devoted considerable argument over whether the Congress intended «¿sorbent carbons to be included when the word «^sorbent was used in paragraph 69. The Summary of Tariff Information, 1929, which was compiled by the U.S. Tariff Commission and printed for use of the Committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives, described decolorizing and deodorizing carbons as activated by special processes so that they are capable of absorbing much greater quantities of coloring matter than ordinary charcoal or bone char. (Yol. 1, p. 334.) The conclusion could thus be drawn that “absorbent” was used by Congress in a nonscientific sense to include carbons having «¿sorbent qualities. On the other hand, the principal testimony during the hearings before the Ways and Means Committee stated that activated carbons have superior decolorizing, deodorizing, and «¿sorptive properties. Hearings on Tariff Readjustment — 1929 Before the Convmittee on Ways and Means, House of Representatives, TOth Cong., 2d Sess., Yol. I,- p. 805 (1929). Accordingly, it could be argued that the distinction between «Ssorbing and «¿sorbing had been brought to the attention of those who drafted the legislation and that both words would have been used if it had been intended to include both types of carbons.

OPINION

As will appear below, we dp not believe it necessary to decide the above issues. Taking the government’s classification, as set forth in its opening statement before the U.S. Customs Court, namely: “a gas absorbing carbon or an activated carbon,” and assuming that the word “absorbing” was intended to include “adsorbing,” the question is whether or not Congress, in its enactment of paragraph 69, intended [14]*14to reach merchandise consisting of spent activated carbons possessing no commercial use except as a raw material.

A study of the legislative history of paragraph 69 of the Tariff Act of. 1930 discloses that the one witness before both the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee who contended for an increase in the duty on decolorizing and deodorizing carbons was a representative of Darco Corp. of Wilmington, Delaware, one of the two U.S. manufacturers of activated decolorizing and deodorizing carbons. Hearings on Tariff Readjustment — 1929. Before the Committee on Ways and Means, House of Representativesy supra, VoL.I, pp. 803-808; Hearings on II.R.. 266.7 Before A Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Finance, 71st Cong., 1st Sess., Yol. I,'pp. 298-301 (1929).

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487 F.2d 553, 61 C.C.P.A. 10, 1973 CCPA LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnebey-cheney-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1973.