Bemis Bro. Bag v. United States

11 Ct. Cust. 373, 1922 WL 22008, 1922 CCPA LEXIS 39
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 6, 1922
DocketNo. 2137
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 11 Ct. Cust. 373 (Bemis Bro. Bag 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
Bemis Bro. Bag v. United States, 11 Ct. Cust. 373, 1922 WL 22008, 1922 CCPA LEXIS 39 (ccpa 1922).

Opinions

MartiN, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The importations now before the court consist of certain woven fabrics composed of single jute yarns, and the sole issue in the present case is whether they are colored or not colored, within contemplation of the tariff act of 1913.

There are two paragraphs of the act which severally relate to merchandise of this character, to wit, paragraph 279, which imposes duty upon such goods if colored, and paragraph 408, which grants them free entry if not colored. These goods were classified and assessed with duty by the collector under paragraph 279, which assessment was protested by the importers upon a claim for free entry under paragraph 408. It is conceded by both parties in the case that the importations should be governed by one of the two paragraphs in question.

The paragraphs read as follows:

279. Plain woven fabrics of single jute yarns, by whatever name known, bleached, dyed, colored, stained, painted, printed, or rendered noninflammable by any process, 10 per centum ad valorem.
(Free list.)
408. * * * plain woven fabrics of single Jute yarns, by whatever name known, not bleached, dyed, colored, stained, printed, or rendered noninflammable by any process; * * *.

The question as aforesaid is whether the imported goods are dutiable as colored fabrics, under paragraph 279, or are entitled to free entry as goods not colored, under paragraph 408. This question was submitted upon exhibits and testimony to the Board of General Appraisers, and the collector’s assessment was sustained. The importer has appealed from that decision.

The fabric in question is known as jute padding. It is a stiff and heavy material, and is said to be manufactured and used solely as an interlining for men’s and women’s coats. It serves as a means of adding stiffness, body, and shapeliness to such garments, and when in place in a garment it is concealed from view.

The fabric in the piece is plain-woven throughout, is about 24 inches in width, and has a selvage of jute or cotton yarn. It is con-cededly uncolored, except for two stripes composed of six warp threads each, either blue or red in color, the stripes being severally about one-quarter of an inch from the selvage edge, and running lengthwise throughout the piece. The stripe threads constitute pro tanto the warp threads of the fabric. Concerning these stripes the board said: ' Tt is true that the colored warp threads here in question servé no useful purpose either by way of ornamentation or to give [375]*375color effect, as tbe interlining is entirely concealed from view wben used in a garment.” It appears, however, from the testimony that the stripes serve the purpose of identifying this class of cloth in the trade. It is said that “it has been a practice for a good many years and it is sort of known in the trade that padding carries a colored border;” and again that the colored threads “serve as a brand or trade-mark to identify jute padding.” It is said, moreover, by the witness that the jute paddings or linings “would do just as well for all purposes * * * if there was not any color in them.”

The two colored stripes aforesaid are the sole feature relied upon by the Government for the assessment of the goods as colored fabrics, the stripes being as aforesaid composed of six yarns each, each stripe being about three-eighths of an inch wide, each running the entire length of the piece at a distance of about a quarter of an inch from the selvage edge, but forming no part of the selvage itself. Otherwise, it is conceded, the goods are not colored, and the sole question therefore is whether the presence of the colored stripes in the fabric as aforesaid is sufficient to serve as a basis for the board’s finding that the goods are colored, within the purview of the statute. The importer answers this inquiry by the contention that “the issue here is solely whether the colored portion is of sufficient importance on any ground of ornamentation, use or necessary function to bring this fabric into the class of colored fabrics. It is submitted [continues the importer] that the colored threads here are of no significance.”

In many cases arising under the various tariff revisions the board and the court have been called upon to decide whether certain imported goods came within the enumeration of colored fabrics within the purview of the law. The decisions perhaps have not been entirely uniform upon the subject. However, it has been accepted as elementary that the term “colored fabrics” is not limited in application to goods which are wholly and entirely colored, but applies also to many fabrics which are colored only in part. And in respect to such partly colored fabrics it is settled that if the colored part thereof be substantial, having reference to appearance, component quantities, and other like considerations affecting the character and condition of the cloth at the time of importation, the cloth itself should be held to be colored within the sense of the act; but on the other hand if the colored part be trifling, insignificant, or negligible, the cloth should be held to be not colored. The question therefore becomes one of fact in each case respecting the actual character and condition of the goods when imported. In this view, if imported goods be colored in a substantial measure according to the foregoing definition, it is not important whether the color be ornamental, or serves a useful purpose, or is permanent, or is visible [376]*376when in final use, or adds to the marketable value of the goods. For the only question asked by the statute in this particular is one relating to the actual condition of the goods at the time of their importation, and not the motive therefor nor the result thereof.

This statement finds apt support in the decision of this court in Heyliger et al. v. United States (11 Ct. Cust. Appls. 90; T. D. 38735), relating to certain cotton cloth, the warp yarn of which, before weaving, had been treated with a so-called fugitive tint solely for the purpose of assisting the weaver to distinguish the two yarns. The tint' imparted color to a substantial portion of the cloth when imported. It appears that the tint was temporary; that it added absolutely nothing to the market value or final usefulness of the cloth, nor was it intended to, since it was invariably removed before the cloth was put to any use by the final consumer. Nevertheless the court held the cloth to be dutiable as colored cloth, since that was its condition when landed. The court said: “The tariff provision in question prescribes but a single criterion in this particular, and that is whether the cloth is colored or not at the time of importation. If so, it becomes dutiable as colored cloth, regardless of the means or motive with which it was colored, or the subsequent history of the article as intended by the importers.”

The present inquiry therefore addresses itself solely to the condition of the fabric in controversy when landed, and the question is whether a substantial part thereof was in fact colored. The board has held in the affirmative, and we agree with that conclusion. It is clear that at times it may be difficult and uncertain in practice to find the dividing line between a substantial and an insignificant coloring of fabrics, and a review of the published decisions would amply sustain that statement.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Ct. Cust. 373, 1922 WL 22008, 1922 CCPA LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bemis-bro-bag-v-united-states-ccpa-1922.