Electric & Musical Industries (US), Ltd. v. United States

42 Cust. Ct. 87
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1959
DocketC.D. 2070
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 42 Cust. Ct. 87 (Electric & Musical Industries (US), Ltd. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Customs Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Electric & Musical Industries (US), Ltd. v. United States, 42 Cust. Ct. 87 (cusc 1959).

Opinion

Oliver, Chief Judge:

Phonographs, gramophones, graphophones, dictophones, and similar articles and parts thereof, not specially provided for, 15 per centum ad valorem.

The case was the subject of our decision in Electric & Musical Industries (US), Ltd. v. United States, 40 Cust. Ct. 140, C.D. 1973, wherein we sustained plaintiff’s claim. In reaching the conclusion, we found that the recorded tapes in question are exclusively used with, and essential to the operation of, a tape recorder and playback machine, identified herein as the “Ampex 35 Tape Recorder” (plaintiff’s illustrative exhibit 2), being an instrument that reproduces sound or replays previous recordings and which is also used for recordings. In our decision, C.D. 1973, supra, the operation and functions of this tape recorder and playback machine were described as follows:

* * * As an instrument for reproducing sound or for replaying recordings, its important phase is the top plate, equipped with two "hubs” (one on the upper right-hand side and the other on the upper left-hand side), a recording head, and a so-called "idler” that controls the movement or action of the tape while the machine is operating. To replay a recording or reproduce sound from the recorded tape, the metal core upon which the tape is wound is fitted into the hub on the left-hand side of the machine, and the tape is threaded through the record[89]*89ing head. Pressing a button releases the tape, which travels around the idler and winds on the blank hub on the right-hand side of the machine. The sound is emitted through a separate speaker that is plugged into the machine and mounted on a jack.
In its capacity as a recorder, the machine under discussion produces a master disk record. To perform this function, there is required a special cutting lathe “which takes the impulses from this machine and from the tape, and from there you cut your master record,” usually made of an acetate base material. The witness described the production of a master disk record as follows (R. 22-23):
You go from this particular tape, through your cutting lathe, and through a series of mixing boxes and angles on your lathe. It needs an experienced engineer to do the cutting there. Prom there the master goes into what they call a bath, copper bath. Prom that you create the reverse of that, which is then called a mother. The mother in turn makes the series, a metal mother, which is copper, and then which is niekelplated, creates a series of what we call stampers. The stampers go into the pressing facilities at the plant, and two stampers, top and bottom, then create the disk record as we know it.

The treasurer of the plaintiff corporation, who was the sole witness, testified that this tape recorder and playback machine cannot be used without recorded tapes, such as those under consideration, and that these recorded tapes are essential to the use of that machine. He described the articles that are eo nomine provided for in paragraph 1542, as modified. In this connection, he testified that “A gramophone is actually a sound box, through which electronically, or acoustically, through the use of a needle on a disk, reproduces sound * * that there is "no difference” between a gramophone and a phonograph; and that the only difference between a gramophone and a graphophone is that the former uses the disk record, and the latter uses the cylinder record. Recognized dictionary authorities support the witness’ testimony that phonographs, gramophones, and grapho-phones are instruments designed, and exclusively used, for reproducing sound. Funk & Wagnalls Standard Dictionary defines a phonograph as “an apparatus for recording sounds and reproducing them when desired,” and a gramophone as “an instrument of the phonograph type for recording and reproducing articulate speech: invented by E. Berliner.” The Oxford Dictionary defines a phonograph as “an instrument, invented by Thomas A. Edison in 1877, * * * by which sounds are automatically recorded and reproduced”; a gramophone as “the name given to one of the instruments devised for permanently recording and reproducing sounds”; and a graphophone as “the name on one of the instruments for recording and reproducing sound.”

On the basis of the record, as hereinbefore outlined, coupled with the quoted dictionary definitions, we found, in our previous decision, C.D. 1973, supra, that “there is substantial sameness” between phonographs, gramophones, and graphophones that are eo nomine provided for in paragraph 1542, as amended, supra, and the tape [90]*90recorder and playback machine, with which these imported recorded tapes are used, and, therefore, held that this tape recorder and playback machine was within the class of merchandise contemplated by the statutory provision for “similar articles” in paragraph 1542, as amended.

The case comes before us at this time on rehearing*, granted pursuant to defendant’s motion, that was based on certain changes in tariff provisions through enactment of Public Law 693 (68 Stat. 913). The changes effected by that legislation applied to the shipment under consideration but were not called to the attention of the court when the case was originally presented. Government counsel gives an explanation in his memorandum, stating as follows:

Although in effect at the time of importation, this change was not brought to the attention of the court by either [sic] counsel for the plaintiff nor counsel for the defendant, through inadvertence, and it is contended that the change in language prevents classification of the merchandise herein, the recorded tapes, as parts of articles similar to those named in paragraph 1542.

Public Law 693, supra, so far as pertinent herein, reads as follows:

An Act
To reclassify dictophones in the Tariff Act of 1930.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That paragraph 372 of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C., sec. 1001, par. 372) is hereby amended by inserting after “cash registers, 25 per centum ad valorem;” the following: “business dictating, recording, and transcribing machines, chiefly used in business offices, of the type or types recording on nonmagnetizable recording medium, and parts thereof, 30 per centum ad valorem;”.
Sec. 2. Paragraph 1542 of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U.S.C., sec. 1001, par. 1542) is hereby amended by striking out “dictophones,” in each place it appears therein.

Defendant argues that the changes effectuated by Public Law 693, supra, limited the scope of amended paragraph 1542 to articles that are similar, not only in their functions of recording and reproducing sound but also in the manner by which they operate. Government counsel, in his memorandum to support the contention, states as follows:

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42 Cust. Ct. 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/electric-musical-industries-us-ltd-v-united-states-cusc-1959.