Connor v. United States

9 Ct. Cust. 312, 1919 WL 21342, 1919 CCPA LEXIS 70
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1919
DocketNo. 1960
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ct. Cust. 312 (Connor 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
Connor v. United States, 9 Ct. Cust. 312, 1919 WL 21342, 1919 CCPA LEXIS 70 (ccpa 1919).

Opinion

Smith, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Certain textile fabrics were held by the collectors of customs at the' ports of 'New York and Philadelphia to he dutiable at 35 percent ad valorem, either as cloths .composed wholly or in chief value of wool under paragraph 288, or as women’s and children’s dress goods, composed wholly or in chief value of-wool under paragraph 290 of the tariff act of 1913. Paragraphs 288 and 290, in so far as-they are material to the case, read as follows:

Par. 288. Cloths * * * and all manufactures of every description made, by any process/wholly or in chief value of wool, not specially provided for in this section, thirty-five per centum ad valorem.
Par. 290. Women’s and children’s .dress goods * * * composed wholly or in-chief value of wool and not specially provided for in this section, thirty-five per. centum ad valorem.

[313]*313The importers claimed that the goods were dutiable under paragraph 289 of the tariff act of October 3, 1913, the pertinent part of which reads as follows:

Par. 289. * * * flannels, composed wholly or in chief value of wool, twenty-five per centum ad valorem; flannels composed wholly or in chief value of wool, valued at above fifty cents per pound, thirty per centum ad valorem.

The appraiser and the examiners of the merchandise returned the goods as flannels or wool flannels with the exception of the items covered by protests 815838, 813424, 811497, 808650, 803192, 789432, S03600, 806374, 807546,-809088, 809279, 810232, 814805, 760078, 807190, 807191, 809671, 809678, 809688, 809693, and 804227, which were returned as wool cloth. The collector in his report to the board describes the goods covered by protests 807190, 807191, 809671, 809687, 809688, 809693, and 804227, as -flannels dutiable as wool cloth.

As to protests 804227, 809671, 809687, 809688, 809693, 807190, 807191, of J. B. Ellison & Sons, it was stipulated that the merchandise involved was substantially the same as that covered by the records in protests 761896, etc., of R. Connor, and protests 785384, etc., of Baruch, Wolff & Co.

The Government contended before the, board that the term “flannel” had a different.meaning in the trade from, that commonly assigned to it by people in general, and to prove that contention introduced in evidence the testimony of Robert F. Francis, John E. J. Clare, F. A. Tracy, E. M. Stout, W. A. Tucker, and C. J. Mass, submitted as to similar goods on the hearing of the protests of Baruch, Wolff, et al., 785384, etc.

The testimony of Robert F. Francis was to the effect that flannels were made of a short soft stock and had a loom width of 54 to 56 inches; that the set of the loom for the making of flannels was narrower than that employed in the making of cassimeres and cheviots, although not narrower than that used for worsteds; that the stock from which flannels were made was radically different from that required for the production of worsteds, cheviots, and cassimeres; that worsteds differed from flannels, inasmuch as worsteds were made of combed yarn and flannels of carded yarn.'

According to this witness, flannel was practically not fulled or shrunk at all and that little or no fulling was characteristic of flannels. He said that 'flannels were sponged unfulled fabrics, whereas cheviots, worsteds, and cassimeres were firmly fulled; that in the men’s trade a flannel is a woven fabric in either plain or twilled weave, made from fairly short staple, soft stock — wool, or largely so— and manufactured entirely or with a great proportion of the weight of carded yarns, which are rather loosely woven; that the finished flannel has considerable face and has practically the texture which [314]*314it had on leaving the loom; that flannels have no luster, are fulled hut slightly, and are of a softer handle and appearance than the more firmly fulled and woven thibets, meltons, cassimeres, etc., used for general suitings. Francis said that flannels were determined by handle, appearance, and structure; that a flannel might have a worsted warp, but in that case the preponderance of weight would have to be carded wool; that all of the goods covered by protest 785384 were comparatively of soft finish and that some of them bordered on flannels but were fulled too much; that he classified -some of the goods as worsteds because the preponderance of weight in his opinion was worsted, but just how he determined, the weight of the worsted and wool does not appear. He stated that the ordinary width of cassimeres was 56 inches finished and that when, he spoke of flannels 54 to 56 inches wide he meant the same thing — that is, flannels finished. He said that very few flannel suitings were woven for every-day wear, but that flannel suits were worn for outings in summer and hot weather. He said that persons dressed in some of the cloths involved might be referred to as "having on their flannels,” hut that the goods were not flannels.

John E. J. Clare testified to the effect that flannel was a carded woolen fabric of plain or twill weave with very little or no finish other than that which it possesses as it comes from the loom or which is produced by scouring or slightly fulling; that a flannel is a fabric which can be worn next to the skin; that cheviots and worsteds differ in structure and finish from flannels; that no cloth with a worsted warp can be a flannel and that a worsted warp removes a fabric absolutely from the classification of flannels; that some of the goods have had the fiber of the cloth raised or gigged and then sheared or napped and that flannels are not gigged or napped.

F. A. Tracy testified that in the wholesale clothing trade a flannel was a soft, light-weight, loosely constructed piece of wool goods, practically unfulled, and that a cloth subjected to the fulling process was thereby taken out of the category of flannels and that all of the exhibits had been fulled; that flannels are not fulled and that if a cloth is fulled at all it ceases to be a flannel. He said that he had never seen a flannel composed of a worsted warp and á wool weft, .and that according to his experience flannels were limited in color to staple blacks, blues, and a few browns.

E. M. Stout testified in effect that flannels in the trade were understood to be soft, loosely woven, open-mesh fabrics made of short-carded wool; that a flannel is not fulled, and when finished is about in the same condition as when it left the loom; that almost every one of the exhibits had been put through a fulling machine; that in the trade .none of them were flannels; that some of them were worsteds, and that worsteds were never known as flannels; that most of the goods [315]*315were made of worsteds and fulled; tbat there were certain flannels on the market which would not be worn next to the skin, because too heavy for that purpose, and that he did not agree with the witness Clare that no fabric can be a flannel unless so finished that it can be worn next to the skin; that flannels were not excluded from the trade designation, because they were used in the manufacture of dress goods; that there is a men’s wear flannel which is sold to the men’s wear trade and may be used for heavy shirting or even for an inferior suiting; that silk, linen, or worsted yarns can not be used in the making of flannels known as such to the trade in this country. A flannel must'be all wool. No flannel can .have a worsted u*arp in the men’s trade. If a flannel had.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ct. Cust. 312, 1919 WL 21342, 1919 CCPA LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connor-v-united-states-ccpa-1919.