Corporacion Sublistatica, SA v. United States

511 F. Supp. 805, 1 Ct. Int'l Trade 120, 1 C.I.T. 120, 1981 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 1633
CourtUnited States Court of International Trade
DecidedJanuary 14, 1981
DocketCourt 77-11-04749
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 511 F. Supp. 805 (Corporacion Sublistatica, SA 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
Corporacion Sublistatica, SA v. United States, 511 F. Supp. 805, 1 Ct. Int'l Trade 120, 1 C.I.T. 120, 1981 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 1633 (cit 1981).

Opinion

BOE, Judge:

In the above-entitled action the merchandise in question, consisting of powders containing benzenoid crude colors and ethylcellulose, was imported from Switzerland and entered at the port of San Juan, Puerto Rico between December 1973 and December 1975.

Upon liquidation the merchandise was classified under item 406.50, TSUS, providing:

SCHEDULE 4. - CHEMICALS AND RELATED PRODUCTS
Part 1. - Benzenoid Chemicals and Products
406.50 Colors, dyes, and stains (except toners), whether soluble or not in water, obtained, derived, or manufactured in whole or in part from any product provided for in subpart A or B of this part...................... 20% ad val.

The plaintiff, however, contends that said merchandise should be properly classified under item 474.26, TSUS, providing:

SCHEDULE 4. - CHEMICALS AND RELATED PRODUCTS
Part 9. - Dyeing and Tanning Products; Pigments and Pigment-Like Materials; Inks, Paints, and Related Products Inks and ink powders:
474.26 Other inks .................. 2% ad val.
Printing and lithographic inks..................
Other ..................

*807 In the alternative plaintiff contends the merchandise should be classified as ink powders under item 405.10, TSUS, providing:

SCHEDULE 4. - CHEMICALS AND RELATED PRODUCTS
Part 1. - Benzenoid Chemicals and Products
Products obtained, derived, or manufactured in whole or in part from any product provided for in subpart A or B of this part:
******
405.10 Ink powders................. 1.7$ per lb.
11% ad val.

The powders in question, more specifically referred to herein as Yellow 2100, Red 2301, Violet 2404, Blue 1561 and Blue 2505 are products of Ciba-Geigy, A. G., a chemical manufacturing company located in Switzerland. In their manufacture the colorant, a benzenoid dye, is combined with salt and ethylcellulose in a heavy-duty plate kneader. The foregoing ingredients are ground together forming a homogeneous mixture. Upon the addition of a solvent consisting of diacetone alcohol, a “globby paste” is formed. After cooling, further kneading is continued for a considerable length of time. With the addition of water to the paste within the kneader, the alcohol solvent and the salt are dissolved forming a “watery slurry.” In a subsequent filtering process the watery substance is separated from the powder. The latter is then thoroughly rinsed removing all remaining traces of salt and solvent. The resulting powder, when dried, consists of a benzenoid dye colorant of approximately 75% and ethylcellulose of approximately 25%, with the exception of Blue 1561 which consists of approximately 50% dye colorant and 50% ethylcellulose.

After the importation and delivery of the powder in sealed drums to the plaintiff at its printing plant in Puerto Rico, ethanol is added thereto causing the powder to liquify. This substance is thereupon used by the plaintiff in a standard gravure press to print desired patterns and designs upon customary rotogravure paper. Although gravure printing is used in connection with the printing of wrapping papers, newspapers, packaging for various products and transfer paper, it is the printing and sale of the latter product with which the plaintiff is principally engaged.

In support of the classification of the imported powders as a dye under item 406.-50, TSUS, the defendant directs our attention to the nature of the image printed by the gravure press upon the paper as well as the result occurring when the printed image upon the paper is transferred to a textile in a subsequent and unrelated process referred to as “heat transfer.”

In the “heat transfer” process a portion of the dye colorant contained in the image printed on the gravure paper is caused to sublime by means of the application of high pressure and a high temperature ranging from 160° to 220° C., thereby causing in turn the image or design to be transferred or affixed to the textile material.

From the testimony of the witnesses presented in the trial of the instant action, this court concludes that the imported merchandise in question is not . a dye.

All witnesses are in agreement, including the defendant’s single witness, that a dye, without the addition of a binder cannot be used in a gravure press. The testimony of the defendant’s witness, Dr. Feeman, as well as the test report of the United States Customs Laboratory, a part of the official record of the within proceedings, acknowledge that the imported powder contains two components — a benzenoid dye colorant and a polymer binder consisting of a cellulose component. 1

From the evidence adduced at the trial herein, it is manifestly clear that ethylcellulose provides viscosity to the ink necessary *808 to permit its utilization in gravure printing. The evidence likewise is undisputedly clear that it is the ethylcellulose which in the printing process binds the dye colorant to the paper in the form of a desired image, thereby permitting the favorable sublimable characteristic of the benzenoid dye colorant contained in the printed image to be advantageously utilized in a subsequent independent heat transfer process. As succinctly described by the plaintiff’s expert witness, Professor Gryte, the grinding of the benzenoid dye colorant with the polymer, ethylcellulose, causes the former to become veritably encapsulated by the latter. The powder resulting from the grinding process contains no separate and distinct components and is in fact a “homogeneous mixture,” evidencing, however, the dominant characteristics of the ethylcellulose contained therein. 2

In its testimony challenging the liquidated classification of the subject merchandise, the plaintiff concurrently seeks to sustain its burden of establishing its claimed alternative classifications. In so doing, it has been clearly established without contradiction that a gravure ink, to which a great portion of testimony has been devoted, contains a colorant; consisting of a pigment or a dye, a binder and a solvent. It likewise appears to be without dispute that a wide variety of inks exist, differing both in constituency as well as in purpose. While writing inks may be characterized by the penetration of the ink into the substrate upon which it is applied, a gravure ink, on the other hand, is produced to provide adhesion with a minimum amount of penetration into the substrate. This drying process is accomplished by evaporation.

In the production of gravure inks, it appears from the uncontroverted evidence that dyes are frequently used as colorants. Various solvents are used therein including water, hydrocarbons, alcohols, esters and ketones.

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Bluebook (online)
511 F. Supp. 805, 1 Ct. Int'l Trade 120, 1 C.I.T. 120, 1981 Ct. Intl. Trade LEXIS 1633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corporacion-sublistatica-sa-v-united-states-cit-1981.