Cliff Paper Co. v. United States

4 Ct. Cust. 186, 1913 WL 20028, 1913 CCPA LEXIS 70
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 12, 1913
DocketNo. 1099
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 4 Ct. Cust. 186 (Cliff Paper 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
Cliff Paper Co. v. United States, 4 Ct. Cust. 186, 1913 WL 20028, 1913 CCPA LEXIS 70 (ccpa 1913).

Opinions

Martin, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case relates to an importation made on May 7, 1912, from Canada at the port of Niagara Falls, of 600 bundles of unbleached chemical wood pulp, which was manufactured in Canada from pulp wood cut on private lands.

The importation upon its exportation from Canada was free from any export charge or any prohibition or restriction of exportation and the right to like free exportation was possessed by the pulp wood from which the imported merchandise had been manufactured.

The entry was admitted free of duty by the collector in conformity with the interpretation which had been placed by the Treasury Department upon section 2 of the reciprocity act, which ruling of the department was published on July 26, 1911, as T. D. 31772. The act of Congress which is referred to is entitled “An act to promote reciprocal trade relations with the Dominion of Canada, and for other purposes.” (62d Cong., Sess-. I, ch. 3, July 26, 1911.)

The following is a copy of section 2 of the act just cited:

Sec. 2. Pulp of wood mechanically ground; pulp of wood, chemical, bleached, or unbleached; news print paper, and other paper, and paper board, manufactured from mechanical wood pulp or from chemical wood pulp, or of which such pulp is the com[187]*187ponent material of chief value, colored in the pulp, or not colored, and valued at not more than four cents per pound, not including printed or decorated wall paper, being the products of Canada, when imported therefrom directly into the United States, shall he admitted free of duty, on the condition precedent that no export duty, export license fee, or other export charge of any kind whatsoever (whether in the form of additional charge or license fee or otherwise), or any prohibition or restriction in any way of the exportation (whether by law, order, regulation, contractual relation, or otherwise, directly or indirectly), shall have been imposed upon such paper, board, or wood pulp, or the wood used in the manufacture of such paper, board, or wood pulp, or the wood pulp used in the manufacture of such paper or board.

The appellant protests against the action of the collector, and .contends that the merchandise was dutiable at one-sixth of 1 cent per pound under paragraph 406 of the tariff act of August 5, 1909.

It is conceded that the importation was liable to duty under that paragraph unless the same was exempted therefrom by the terms of section 2 of the reciprocity act as above copied. Therefore the entire issue in the present case is presented by the questions whether or not that section has become operative, and whether or not, if thus operative, the section comprehends within its purview such an importation as that at bar.

The appellant first maintains that section 1 of the reciprocity a,ct has not become operative, and can not become onerative until Canada shall enact the reciprocal legislation required by that section and the President shall make proclamation to that effect; and that section 2 of the same act was not intended by Congress to come into operation until section 1 should first become operative upon such reciprocal legislation and proclamation. Appellant contends that the two sections of the reciprocity act are but parts of a general scheme of reciprocity between the two countries; that the entire scheme has failed for lack of reciprocal action by Canada; and therefore that section 2, like the remainder of the act, is left without present effect or operation.

The answer to this contention is found in the fact that the several sections of the reciprocity act are separable both in form and character. This fact is made evident by the history and terms of the legislation. In the original bill as first introduced in Congress the paper and pulp provisions were items of a schedule of articles which were designated for reciprocal free admission into the respective countries. The provisions of the original bill governing that schedule were inseparable and were not to become operative until reciprocal action should be taken by Canada and the President of the United States should make proclamation to that effect. But afterwards the provisions for paper and pulp were withdrawn from the schedule to which they first belonged, and were enacted as a separate section of the act. It seems clear that this action was designed for the purpose of making the separated provisions independent of each [188]*188other. The following statement, taken from appellant's brief, comes near to the foregoing view:

Subsequently the provisions in respect to paper and pulp were taken out of section 1 and put by themselves in section 2, because otherwise none of the reciprocal legislation could have taken effect until all the provincial restrictions upon the export of wood were removed which, as pointed out in the trade agreement, could not be controlled by Canada:

According to this statement from appellant's brief the paper and wood pulp provisions were taken from section 1 and enacted as section 2 in order to permit section 1 to become operative regardless of the operation of section 2.

If therefore Congress intended to permit section 1 to become operative independently of section 2, it is reasonable to conclude that section 2 might likewise become operative independently of section 1. The act as adopted contains no words which specifically or impliedly make the operation of either section dependent upon the operation of the other. The conditions upon which each section shall become operative are specifically set out in the section itself, and no requirement appears in either section for the concurrent operation of the other.

The conclusion just stated leads next to a consideration of the condition precedent contained in section 2, in order to determine its effect with relation to the present importation.

Appellant contends that the condition precedent of section 2 was adopted by Congress with reference to the fact that certain Canadian Provinces were prohibiting or restricting the exportation to this country of pulp wood growing upon Crown lands, and that Congress intended that the section should not become operative until all such prohibitions or restrictions should first be rescinded or repealed by those Provinces. Appellant furthermore contends that section 2, if it becomes operative, would continue in operation only so long as the enumerated paper, wood pulp and pulp wood are each and all allowed free and unrestricted exportation into the United States from all parts of Canada; and that the section if once operative would become inoperative so soon as any Province of Canada restricts in any manner the exportation into this country of any one of the enumerated articles, wholly regardless of the action of the other Provinces respecting any or all of those articles, and also regardless of the action of the given Province respecting the other enumerated articles. According to this construction the entire section would be inoperative or would become so if New Brunswick, for example, should restrict in any maimer the exportation to this country of any part of the pulp wood growing in that Province, or the wood pulp manufactured therefrom, even though at the same time all other Canadian Provinces, in reliance upon section 2, should permit the [189]*189free exportation into this country of all pulp wood growing in such Provinces, and also of all wood pulp manufactured therefrom.

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5 Ct. Cust. 519 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1915)
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Bluebook (online)
4 Ct. Cust. 186, 1913 WL 20028, 1913 CCPA LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cliff-paper-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1913.