Eastman Kodak Co. v. United States

26 C.C.P.A. 315, 1939 CCPA LEXIS 228
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 23, 1939
DocketNo. 4169
StatusPublished

This text of 26 C.C.P.A. 315 (Eastman Kodak 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
Eastman Kodak Co. v. United States, 26 C.C.P.A. 315, 1939 CCPA LEXIS 228 (ccpa 1939).

Opinion

Lenroot, Judge,

delivered the opinion of tbe court:

Between December 18, 1935, and January 5, 1937, appellant made three importations from Canada, consisting of bales of sensitized photographic paper scrap, made up of trimmings, clippings, and rejected sheets, from the operation of appellant’s'Canadian photographic plant; all of the paper contained a coating of an emulsion of silver. Three entries were made of the respective importations at the port of Rochester, N. Y. The merchandise was classified by the collector under the provisions of paragraph 1555 of the Tariff Act of 1930 as “Waste, not specially provided for” and assessed with duty at the rate of 10 per centum ad valorem. Appellant filed protests covering each of said entries and claimed the merchandise to be free of duty under paragraph 1734 of said tariff act as sweepings of silver, or, in the alternative, free of duty under paragraph 1750 as stock for making paper.

The three protests were consolidated for the purposes of trial by the Customs Court and judgment was entered overruling the claims in all of the protests. From the judgment so entered this appeal was taken. 'The paragraphs of said tariff act here involved read as follows:

Par. 1555. Waste, not specially provided for, 10 per centum ad valorem.
Par. 1734. Ores of gold, silver, or nickel; nickel matte; nickel oxide; ores of the platinum metals; sweepings of gold and silver.
Par. 1750. Rag pulp; paper stock, crude, of every description, including all •grasses, fibers, rags, waste (including jute, hemp, and flax waste), shavings, clippings, old paper, rope ends, waste rope, and waste bagging, and all other waste not ¡specially provided for, including old gunny cloth and'old gunny bags, used chiefly for paper making, and no longer suitable for bags.

[317]*317Tbe issue is whether the imported sensitized photographic paper •clippings, in the coating of which there is silver in the form of an emulsion, are properly free of duty either as “sweepings of * * * silver” under paragraph 1734, or as “paper stock * * * including * * * ■clippings” under paragraph 1750, or are dutiable as “Waste, not ■specially provided for” under paragraph 1555, as classified by the ■collector.

Upon the trial before the Customs Court two witnesses testified ■on behalf of appellant and a sample of the merchandise was introduced in evidence. The Government offered no evidence.

One Edward EL Woodworth testified that he was the general superintendent of appellant’s said Canadian plant. With respect to the character of the involved merchandise he testified as follows:

Q. Will you please describe, Mr. Woodworth, what the imported meróhandise ■consisted of? — A. It is silver scrap which is unfit for use. It is paper scrap, sensitized paper scrap, containing silver which is unfit for use because of some defect.
Q. What is that paper scrap and paper clippings derived from in your plant?' — • A. From either the paper coating department where the paper has a coating ■emulsion put on it, or the paper packing department where the paper is cut to size, or in the testing department where it is tested.
Q. What is the form that the merchandise is imported in? Is it in barrels? — • A. It is baled, 400 pounds to the bale, a little less maybe, 390.
Q. All that scrap paper is made up in bale form and shipped into the United States that way? — A. Yes.
Q. Is there anything else you can tell us about how this paper scrap is derived from your manufacturing processes, other than what you' have already described? — A. It comes from the paper coating department because of defects in coating due to streaks and spots. We have about forty different varieties. They sometimes cut out those defects in the paper coating departmeht. But tbe great part of this scrap comes from the paper packing department where the paper is put in rolls and from the rolls cut into sheets, large sheets, and then the large sheets are cut down into smaller sheets. The large sheets are inspected and are thrown out for certain defects and those defects have to be culled out later. Those clippings are waste commodities which are classified as paper sweepings and put into bales and shipped to the United States.

Upon cross-examination the witness testified as follows:

X Q. And when these paper clippings get here to the United States what do you do with them, please? — A. In the United States?
X Q. Yes. — A. I am not familiar with how they recover the silver here.
X Q. You know what happens to it, don’t you? — A. Do you mean me to give it by hearsay?
X Q. No, sir. If you know what happens to these paper clippings after they leave your plant in Canada, I would like to know it. — A. I feel I can say, from what I know, that they are washed in an emulsion in some process and the recovery of silver is made from that emulsion.
X Q. Is that, -so. far as you know, the only purpose for which this paper is used after it is imported in this country? — A. No. They also recover some of the paper stock. What proportion, I don’t know.
[318]*318X Q. That so-called paper stock is not the chief use for which this merchandise is imported? — A. No.
X Q. It is chiefly imported, as I understand, to recover silver? — A. Yes.
X Q. And an incidental use may be paper stock? — A. Yes.
X Q. These paper clippings are all clippings of photographic paper, coated; are they not? — A. Yes.
* * * sf * * *
R. X Q. Just one- question. In your plant in Canada where these clippings of photographic paper are found, are there any precious metals worked there from which these paper clippings would be the waste or residue? — A. You are talking just about paper clippings?
R. X Q. Yes. — A. No.
R. X Q. Are there any precious metals worked there. — A. We make silver nitrate.
R. X Q. And you may have a residue or waste from such process? — A. Yes.
R. X Q. It would not be anything like these paper clippings? — A. No.

One Gerould T. Lane testified, that he was connected with the Eastman Kodak Co. at Rochester, N. Y. He described the process of recovering the silver from the involved merchandise. He further-testified as follows:

Q. But the two products you receive from this recovery process are: first, silver,, and second, some paper pulp? — A. I don’t know about first and second. There are two we get.
Q. I don’t know anything about the order. But those are the two products you receive? — A. Silver and paper pulp, yes.
Q. Are any other by-products derived from this recovery process? — A. None-
Q. Those are the only two? — A. Except what little strawboard might be obtained. Five per cent of strawboard might be taken out and sold.
Q.

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26 C.C.P.A. 315, 1939 CCPA LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastman-kodak-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1939.