Coraggio Design, Inc. v. United States

12 Ct. Int'l Trade 143
CourtUnited States Court of International Trade
DecidedFebruary 19, 1988
DocketCourt No. 84-5-00658
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ct. Int'l Trade 143 (Coraggio Design, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of International Trade primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coraggio Design, Inc. v. United States, 12 Ct. Int'l Trade 143 (cit 1988).

Opinion

Opinion

Tsoucalas, Judge:

This action is before the Court to determine the appropriate classification of fabric possessing "Continental” or pre-woven hems, imported from Italy in 1981. The Customs Service classified the merchandise under item 338.30, Tariff Schedules of the United States, ("TSUS”), as modified by T.D. 68/9, as woven fabrics, of man-made fibers: Other: * * * Other * * * 13 cents per lb. plus 22.5% ad valorem. Plaintiff challenges Customs’ finding and contends the merchandise is properly classifiable under 389.62, TSUS, as modified by Presidential Proclamation No. 4707, as articles not specially provided for, of textile materials: Other articles, not ornamented: Of man-made fibers: Other: * * * Other * * * at 25 cents per lb. plus 15% ad valorem.

Issue

The issue to be resolved is whether the incorporation of the "Continental hem” into the fabric makes the material, as imported, more than mere fabric and a semi-finished drapery product, classifiable as an "article” in the basket provision, 389.62, TSUS; or whether the fabric is still "material” within item 338.30, TSUS, and not an "article,” as addition of the hem results only in the fabric being "dedicated for use” as a drapery.

■ Trial

At the trial of this action, three witnesses testified on behalf of plaintiff and one witness testified on behalf of defendant. The testimony established that plaintiff purchased the subject merchandise directly from the mill in Italy in rolls or bolts of woven drapery fabric, approximately one hundred eighteen inches wide and fifty yards long. Trial Transcript at 3, 22, 27 (hereinafter "Tr. at-”). The "Continental hem” is part of the fabric construction. It is incorporated into, roughly, the last sixteen to twenty-four inches of the product and is constructed by infusing additional heavier yarns on the bottom portion of the roll. Id. at 27. The hem serves three purposes: to stop the drapery from unravelling, to provide an esthetically pleasing drapery, and to offer weight at the bottom of the drapery enabling it to hang in a straight manner. Id. at 28. Functionally, it replaces the conventional sewn hem present in most draperies, which is made by turning over the fabric, and sewing [144]*144weights in place. Thus, by pre-weaving the "Continental hem” at the mill, plaintiff saves significant costs, and cuts production time by up to twenty-five percent.

The material was identified by all witnesses as woven fabric. Tr. at 26, 103, 131, 165. Additionally, plaintiff purchases and sells the drapery fabric by the yard and imports it in the piece. It is uncon-troverted that the inclusion of the hem renders the fabric unsuitable for any other purpose but for draperies.

Discussion

It is clear that the involved merchandise is of the type contemplated by Congress to be included within item 338.30, TSUS. The headnote to Part 3, covering 338.30, specifically refers to woven fabrics "in the piece”:

This part covers all woven fabrics in the piece, of any width and with or without fast edges * * *.

Schedule 3, Part 3, Headnote 1, TSUS.

There is no doubt that plaintiffs goods were imported "in the piece.”1 The fabric was imported in bolts, the commercial invoices and testimony established that the cloth was sold by the yard, and all of plaintiffs witnesses testified that it was impossible to determine how many draperies would be made from a particular bolt.

The subject merchandise is also "woven” fabric. The "Continental hem” is constructed by doubling the warp threads in the bottom sixteen to twenty-four inches of the fabric. It is pre-woven into the fabric by use of a second warp beam. Thicker yarn is sometimes used for the purpose of constructing the hem. Thus, the "Continental hem” is not a hem in the traditional sense since it is not a "finished edge or border, made by folding back a fabric, and sewing it down.” Fairchild’s Dictionary of Home Furnishings 222 (1974). But it functions as a hem for drapery purposes, by preventing unravel-ling, adding esthetic beauty and ensuring straight drapery hanging. Additionally, all witnesses at trial agreed that the "Continental hem” was composed solely of warp threads and filling threads crossing each other at right angles; therefore, it conformed with the following definition of woven fabric in the American Society of Testing and Materials Book ofASTM Standards, 353 (1975):

a planar structure produced by interlacing two or more sets of yarns, fibers, rovings, or filaments where the elements pass each other essentially at right angles and one set of elements is parallel to the fabric axis.

However, plaintiff asserts that the presence of the prewoven hem makes the involved merchandise a semi-finished drapery product and not merely woven fabric since it replaces a significant production step: the making of the lower sewn hem and the insertion of weights. This production step, however, to be sufficient to remove [145]*145the subject merchandise from the purview of item 338.30, TSUS, must satisfy the rule of United States v. Buss & Co., 5 Ct. Cust. Appls. 110, 113, T.D. 34138 (1914), which reads as follows:

The rule expressed by the decisions just cited recognizes the fact that most small articles are not produced as individual or separate products of the loom, but for economy of manufacture are first woven "in the piece.” The rule of decision is therefore established that where such articles are imported in the piece and nothing remains to be done except to cut them apart they shall be treated for dutiable purposes as if already cut apart and assessed according to their individual character or identity. This follows, however, only in case the character or identity of the individual articles is fixed with certainty and in case the woven piece in its entirety is not commercially capable of any other use. [Emphasis added.]

The Buss rule requires a two prong analysis: (1) whether the addition of the hem rendered the fabric commercially unsuitable for use as anything other than a drapery; (2) whether the addition of the hem enabled the actual individual drapery to be fixed with certainty. Plaintiff must prove the fabric meets both requirements iterated in Buss before the product can be classified as an "article” within the basket provision, 389.62, TSUS.

The Court finds that the production step of inserting the "Continental hem” comports with the first part of the Buss rule in that the addition of the hem dedicates the material in question for use solely as a drapery, commercially unsuitable for any other use. The imported merchandise fails to satisfy the second requirement of Buss, however, since the addition of the hem does not fix the identity of an individual drapery with certainty. It is well settled that "no matter how close the importation is to the finished article or how dedicated it is to a single use, it remains a material until the identify of actual articles can be seen emerging with certainty from the undifferentiated material.” Bendix Mouldings, Inc. v. United States, 73 Cust. Ct. 204, 206, C.D. 4576, 388 F. Supp. 1193, 1194-95, (1974); see also American Import Co. v. United States, 26 CCPA 72, 75, T.D. 49612 (1938); United States v. The Harding Co., 21 CCPA 307, T.D. 46830 (1933); Permagrain Products, Inc. v.

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Permagrain Products, Inc. v. United States
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Bendix Mouldings, Inc. v. United States
388 F. Supp. 1193 (U.S. Customs Court, 1974)
United States v. Buss & Co.
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In re Mills
56 F. 820 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1893)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ct. Int'l Trade 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coraggio-design-inc-v-united-states-cit-1988.