Excel Shipping Corp. v. United States

44 Cust. Ct. 55
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1960
DocketC.D. 2153
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 44 Cust. Ct. 55 (Excel Shipping Corp. 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
Excel Shipping Corp. v. United States, 44 Cust. Ct. 55 (cusc 1960).

Opinions

Donlon, Judge:

The question here at issue is whether dried fava 'beans, imported from the Azores at the port of New York during the period from May 1 to August 31, 1955, are entitled to the benefit of the reduced seasonal duty rate under paragraph 765 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by the President’s proclamation effectuating the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, T.D. 51802 and T.D. 52167.

There is no controversy as to the classification of these beans. They are beans, not specially provided for, other, dutiable under paragraph 765. The controversy before us has to do only with the plaintiff’s [57]*57claimed right to the seasonal rate reduction. The language of the pertinent GATT modification of paragraph 765, as to beans, is as follows:

Beans, not specially provided for:
Dried, when entered for consumption during the period from May 1 to August 31, inclusive, in any year:
Bed kidney_2<£ per lb.
Other_l1/^ Per lb.
[Emphasis supplied.]

It is shown either 'by stipulation or in the official papers (which are of record) that these beans were shipped from Ponta Delgada in the “Monte Brasil” on July 18, 1955, consigned to plaintiff, and ■that they reached New York on July 28 (or possibly 29), 1955; that the merchandise was entered by plaintiff at once on customs Form 7502, “Warehouse or Eewarehouse Entry”; that the warehouse specified in the entry was “Port Whse. 47 Vestry St., NYC.”; that entry was made at the seasonal reduced duty rate of iy2 cents per pound, and estimated duties were tendered and accepted by the collector on that basis on or before August 31,1955.

Both the entry, Form 7502, and the permit, Form 7502-A, are endorsed with the following statement:

To be transferred to Port Wbse (Vestry St.) there to be retained until released by B.E.P.Q. who will notify us when same may be sampled and weighed. Whf view and gross weigh.

There are no proofs as to what this endorsement signifies. However, it appears to be common knowledge in customs circles that this is a stamp affixed to entry papers in the customs line whenever the merchandise is such that the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine of the United States Department of Agriculture requires it be sent to warehouse for fumigation. The final direction of this stamped endorsement is to the inspector on the wharf, cautioning him not to inspect the beans on the wharf beyond a “view” and taking the gross weight. Again, it is known that this is the procedure followed when rules require the fumigation of imported merchandise before it may enter into the commerce of the country. As directed, fumigation by the Department of Agriculture is to precede sampling and weighing by the Customs Bureau.

These beans are fava beans. The rules of the Department of Agriculture, of which the court may take judicial notice, require (and in 1955 required) that imported fava beans shall be fumigated by the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine before they may be delivered out of customs custody.

The beans of this importation were withdrawn from the warehouse in two lots, according to the warehouse officer’s return on customs [58]*58Form 7505-A, on August 15,1955, and August 31, 1955. Liquidation was on July 17, 1956, when duty was increased to 3 cents per pound, the nonseasonal rate for these beans.

Plaintiff’s original protest raised only its claim to the benefit of the seasonally reduced rate. By protest amendment in open court, plaintiff further claims:

The acceptance of this entry by the office of the Collector of Customs, showing a iy2 cents a pound rate of duty, under Paragraph 765, was a clerical error, or other inadvertence on the part of the Collector’s office within the meaning of Section 520(c) (1) of the Tariff! Act of 1930, as amended by the Customs Simplification Act of 1953.

Plaintiff’s amended claim is that the collector is empowered, and may be directed by judgment order of the court, to reliquidate the entry of this merchandise to correct his “clerical error” or inadvertence in failing to reject a warehouse entry filed at the reduced seasonal rate.

It is the gist of plaintiff’s principal claim that when dried beans which are subject to the seasonal rate reduction are entered by the importer into warehouse at the seasonal rate within the period of rate reduction and are withdrawn for consumption within the same period, the test set up for entitlement to the GATT seasonal rate modification has been met. Defendant denies this, arguing that only such beans as are entered on a consumption entry form may qualify as beans that are “entered for consumption” within the rate reduction period, in the sense intended by the GATT negotiators.

Are the words “entered for consumption,” as used in the GATT modification of paragraph 765, synonymous with the words “entered under a consumption entry,” as defendant appears to contend? Or do they 'have a somewhat different significance, as plaintiff argues ?

In their briefs, both parties discuss the decision of this court in D. Kelman & Co. v. United States, 28 Cust. Ct. 112, C.D. 1396, a decision which became final without appeal. The record in the Kelman case admirably illustrates the uncertain value of some court decisions as reliable precedents. The sole proofs of record in the Kelman case ware the official papers. These have long since been returned to the collector, and they are not available to us now. We are left with absolutely no proofs of record in the Kelman case for comparison with the proofs of record before us here. There is nothing in the opinion to illuminate points of similarity or of difference.

What kind of beans were the Kelman beans? Did they require fumigating? Were they entered in usual course into bonded warehouse for the importer’s convenience, or because of Government quarantine requirements? It is idle to speculate. The record before us in the Kelman case is barren of answers. Our decision must be made on the record that is now before us, and on the law that is applicable [59]*59to the proofs here. Our problem is to ascertain what the GATT negotiators intended, in relation to these facts, when they used the expression “entered for consumption.”

“Entry” is a customs word of particular significance. In United States v. Legg, 105 Fed. Rep. 930, the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit construed the word “entry” as it was used in section 33 of the Tariff Act of 1897:

* * * on and after the day when this act shall go into effect all goods, wares, and merchandise previously imported, for which no entry has been made * * *. [Emphasis supplied.]

The court said:

The only remaining question is whether this written entry by the importer under section 2785 is the “entry” referred to in section 33 of the act of 1897. “The term ‘entry,’ in the acts of congress, is used in two senses. In many of the acts it refers to the bill of entry, — the paper or declaration which the merchant or importer in the first instance hands to the entry clerk. In other statutes it is used to denote, not a document, but a transaction, — a series of acts which are necessary to the end to be accomplished, viz.

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44 Cust. Ct. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/excel-shipping-corp-v-united-states-cusc-1960.