East Asiatic Co.—New York Agency Inc. v. United States

10 Ct. Cust. 207, 1920 WL 19899, 1920 CCPA LEXIS 44
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 23, 1920
DocketNo. 2016
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ct. Cust. 207 (East Asiatic Co.—New York Agency Inc. 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
East Asiatic Co.—New York Agency Inc. v. United States, 10 Ct. Cust. 207, 1920 WL 19899, 1920 CCPA LEXIS 44 (ccpa 1920).

Opinion

Martin, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The merchandise consists of 150 cases of a fine, light-brown powder which was imported into this country by the appellants from China. The invoice describes the article as “Gall-nut Extract,” with the added statement that it “is powdered and nonalcoholic.” It was so entered at the customs.

The appraiser reported upon the importation as follows:

The merchandise in question consists of so-called nutgall extract in powdered form. It contains about 70 per cent of tannic acid, while the commercial powdered nutgalls contain a lower percentage of tannic acid. It is used as a mordant in dyeing with aniline or alizarine dyes, in manufacture of ink, sizing silk, printing fabrics, tanning, etc. It was returned for duty as tannic acid at 5 cents per pound (par. 1, act of 1913).

Pursuant to the advisory return of the appraiser the merchandise was assessed for duty by the collector at the rate of 5 cents per pound under the classification of tannic acid in paragraph 1, tariff act of 1913.

The importers protested, claiming alternatively that the merchandise was either dutiable at three-eighths of 1 cent per pound under the provision for “extracts and decoctions of nutgalls” in paragraph 30, or was free of duty as a tanning material under paragraph 624 of the act.

[208]*208The Board of General Appraisers heard the protest upon evidence and overruled it. From this decision the importers appeal.

Three paragraphs of the act of 1913 are thus brought into review, reading as follows, the first as far as applicable and the others in full:

1. Acids: * * * Tannic acid and tannin, 5 cents per pound; * * *
30. Extracts and decoctions of nutgalls, persian berries, sumac, logwood, and other dyewoods, and all extracts of vegetable origin suitable for dyeing, coloring, or staining, not specially provided for in this section; all the foregoing not containing alcohol and not medicinal, f of 1 cent per pound.
624. Tanning material: Extracts of quebracho, and of hemlock bark; extracts of oak and chestnut and other barks and woods other than dyewoods such as are commonly used for tanning not specially provided for in this section; nuts and nutgalls and woods used expressly for dyeing or tanning, whether or not advanced in value or condition by shredding, grinding, chipping, crushing, or any other process; and articles in a crude state used in dyeing or tanning; all the foregoing not containing alcohol and not specially provided for in this section.

It may be repeated that the imported powder was assessed with duty at the rate of 5 cents per pound as tannic acid, whereas the importers claim it to be dutiable at three-eighths of 1 cent per pound as an extract of nutgalls, or alternatively that it is entitled to free entry as nutgalls used expressly for dyeing or tanning. In the brief of the importers, however, the claim for free entry is not relied upon; the issue, therefore, becomes a.competition between the two enumerations, “tannic acid” and “extracts of nutgalls,” in their application to the merchandise.

Upon this question the board held “on the trend of the whole evidence” before them, and “in the absence of direct testimony concerning the process of manufacture” of the article, that it should be classified as tannic acid, under paragraph 1, supra, and upon this finding the protest was overruled.

Ten witnesses in all testified before the board concerning the article in question, its origin, its composition, and the understanding and nomenclature of the trade with respect to it, and we think that their testimony when considered together fully sustains the decision of the board. And while it is neither necessary nor practicable for us to discuss the testimony in detail, we will nevertheless state in general terms what we regard as its clear force and effect.

The powder now in question is largely used in weighting silk fibers or fabrics, and as a mordant in dyeing silks; it is also used extensively in the manufacture of ink; it is not commonly used in tanning leather. It is derived from nutgalls. For the purposes of this case these may be described as morbid excrescences which are found upon certain kinds of oak trees in eastern countries. The buds or leaves of the trees are punctured by certain insects, which deposit their eggs therein; these are surrounded by a fluid which exudes from the tree; after a time the fluid dries, producing the 'nutlike growths [209]*209which are called indifferently nutgalls, gallnuts, or simply galls; These contain a very high percentage of tannic acid, otherwise called tannin, said indeed to be 75 per- cent of their substance, and this element constitutes not only their chief value, but in fact almost their sole value, in commerce.

The powder now in question was produced from such nutgalls in China, and there is no testimony in the record which specifically describes the processes pursued there in the operation. Similar nutgalls, however, are imported in large quantities in their crude state into this country, and local manufacturers extract from them their tannic-acid content. There is no evidence in the record to show that the operations undertaken in China for the recovery of tannic acid from nutgalls differs essentially from those pursued in this country for the same purpose.

In this process the nutgalls are first finely ground; then soaked in water.; after sufficient maceration the liquid is drawn off and filtered. The liquid is thereupon concentrated by evaporation of a part of its water content until it contains about 25 or 30 per cent of tannic acid in solution. The other components of the fluid are water and various elements, at present negligible, extracted from the galls. This seems to bring the first part of the operations in producing tannic acid to a close, and according to our appraisal of the evidence the liquid as it thus stands is the article known in commerce as "extract of nutgalls,” and answers to that enumeration as it appears in paragraph 30, supra. It is needless to-say that the present merchandise is quite a different article, it being a powder containing slightly more than 78 per cent of tannic acid, which is derived from the foregoing extract by means of additional operations. And according to the clear weight of the evidence such powder when containing about 70 per cent of tannic acid or more is generally known in the trade in this country as commercial tannic acid, and the article retains this name in the markets even when the tannic-acid content is reduced to a lower percentage, as is sometimes the case, by means of adulteration. This conclusion is strongly supported by the fact, as established by the evidence, that in the markets of this country the substance which is commercially known as "tannic acid” invariably sells at a much higher price than does the substance which is known commercially as "extract of nutgalls;” and specific proof appears to the effect that this condition obtained prior to and during the year 1913.

There is a divergence in the testimony concerning the processes adopted in order to reduce the liquid extract above described as "extract of nutgalls" to the powder described as "tannic acid.” Some witnesses say that this is accomplished by means of evaporation [210]*210with great care under a vacuum by the use of more or less secret forms of apparatus for control of the temperatures.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ct. Cust. 207, 1920 WL 19899, 1920 CCPA LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-asiatic-conew-york-agency-inc-v-united-states-ccpa-1920.