F. F. G. Harper Co. v. United States

4 Cust. Ct. 208, 1940 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 50
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedApril 25, 1940
DocketC. D. 323
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Cust. Ct. 208 (F. F. G. Harper Co. 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
F. F. G. Harper Co. v. United States, 4 Cust. Ct. 208, 1940 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 50 (cusc 1940).

Opinion

Evans, Judge:

This is a suit against the United States wherein the plaintiff seeks to recover a certain sum of money claimed to have been illegally collected and paid as customs duties on an importation of merchandise entered at the port of San Francisco, Calif., under the name of glue stock, which was classified by the collector of customs at said port as dried blood albumen, dark, and assessed for duty at 6 cents a pound under paragraph 701 of the Tariff Act of 1930. Against tins classification the importer filed the following protest:

All the merchandise assessed at 60 per pound under paragraph 701, as dried blood albumen, dark, should be assessed free of duty under paragraph 1625 (dried blood, etc., or free of duty under paragraph 1689 (glue stock, etc.) or free of duty under paragraph 1685 (fertilizer, etc.), or free of duty under paragraph 1605 (albumen, etc.).
It is further claimed that duty should have been imposed at the rate of 10 per cent or 20 per cent under paragraph 1558 or at the rate at which entered. It is claimed that the merchandise is dutiable directly under the paragraphs or sections referred to, or by reason of similitude or of component material of chief value under the provisions of paragraph 1559, or by virtue of section 502 (c). Each of the claims asserted herein is made with the proviso and condition that the rate claimed is lower than the rate assessed. This protest is intended to apply to all goods covered by the entries referred to, of the same kind or character as the goods specified, whether or not particularly enumerated herein.

[209]*209We quote herewith, the provisions of the statute involved as follows:

Par. 701. Cattle, weighing less than seven hundred pounds each, 2% cents per pound; weighing seven hundred pounds or more each, 3 cents per pound; beef and veal, fresh, chilled, or frozen, 6 cents per pound; tallow, one-half of 1 cent per pound; oleo oil and oleo stearin, 1 cent per pound; dried blood albumen, light, 12 cents per pound; dark, 6 cents per pound.
Free List.
Par. 1625. Blood, dried, not specially provided for.
Par. 1689. Hide cuttings, raw, with or without hair, ossein, and all other glue stock.
Par. 1685. Guano, basic slag (ground or unground), manures, and (notwithstanding any other provision of this Act) those grades of all other substances used chiefly for fertilizers, or chiefly as an ingredient in the manufacture of fertilizers.
Par. 1605. Albumen, not specially provided for.

The plaintiff called two witnesses and submitted two depositions in support of his case and the defendant’s record is made up of the depositions of seven witnesses. A sample of the merchandise in suit was admitted in evidence after proper identification and said sample was thereafter divided so. as to permit the plaintiff to procure an analysis of the same by its chemist. Another portion of said sample was transmitted to the collector of customs at the port of Chicago, Ill., where it was submitted to the different witnesses whose depositions were taken at that port.

The plaintiff’s first witness was the Government chemist at San Francisco upon whose examination the classification was made by the collector. He described briefly the tests which he had made and upon which he relied for his conclusion that the commodity was dried blood albumen, dark. He stated that his test consisted of “solubility determination, and also the determination of the total nitrogen and protein content.” He further said that he had made a microscopic examination and found neither white nor red corpuscles present. This witness was permitted to answer on cross-examination without objection the following questions:

X Q. Do you know whether or not that merchandise is similar to that in any case decided by the United States Customs Court? — A. Yes, sir; it is similar to the merchandise which is the subject of T. D. 47788.
Mr. Auster. No further questions.
Redirect examination.
By Mr. Carpbneti:
R. Q. Are you familiar with the decision of the court in T. D. 46270 (showing decision to witness) ? — A. I have a copy of this decision.
R. Q. Do you know whether or not the instant merchandise is the same or similar? — A. The merchandise in this case is not the same as the merchandise the subject of T. D. 26270 [46270?].
****** *
[210]*210A. Exhibit 1 consists of dried dark blood albumen, whereas the merchandise the subject of T. D. 46270 is. a commodity in the form of a powder, which the record shows contained both red and white blood corpuscles.
R. X Q. Based upon your examination or analysis, does exhibit 1 before the court contain red and white blood corpuscles? — A. No sir.

The next witness was Mr. Fred H. Eldred, a commercial chemist who had studied at Pomona College at Los Angeles, and had done post graduate work at Stanford University, was assistant in the department of physiological chemistry there, and at the time of testifying was a commercial chemist in San Francisco. He stated that he had received a portion, of the sample introduced in evidence (Exhibit 1) and was requested to determine (1) whether it was dried blood, (2) whether it was blood albumen, or (3) whether it was dried blood containing blood albumen, and lastly, if it contained white blood corpuscles. He gave it as his opinion that the commodity was dried blood containing blood albumen. He also said that the sample in question contained numerous red and white blood corpuscles. He undertook to fortify his testimony by making a series of tests, described in his evidence, upon a sample of fresh cattle blood. Against the test of the fresh cattle blood he compared similar tests of the instant merchandise and also procured a sample of what he termed “technical blood albumen” which he purchased in the market. According to his evidence Exhibit 1 (a portion of which was referred to by him as Exhibit 2) showed the presence of 0.41 per centum iron oxide (Fe203), the blood serum prepared by him from the fresh blood, which he called blood albumen, carried 0.08 per centum of iron oxide and the dried corpuscles plus unseparated portion of serum that remained after removing the dried blood albumen above noted ran 0.37 per centum iron oxide, while the technical blood albumen purchased in the open market contained 0.11 per centum iron oxide.

It appears to the court that there would have been a much simpler and more accurate, certainly more satisfactory, method of proving what the instant material is by having the depositions of the persons who made it. On the rulings made by the court upon objection by the plaintiff the defendant was compelled to take out depositions for its case and no reason appears why the plaintiff might not have done the same thing. We are informed of the method adopted by the expert in his various stages of producing substances to be analyzed but we are entirely in the dark as to how the instant merchandise was produced. For instance, we do know the drying temperature used in making the experimental products tested.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Cust. Ct. 208, 1940 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-f-g-harper-co-v-united-states-cusc-1940.