Ferner v. United States

23 C.C.P.A. 62, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 236
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 1935
DocketNo. 3833
StatusPublished

This text of 23 C.C.P.A. 62 (Ferner 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
Ferner v. United States, 23 C.C.P.A. 62, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 236 (ccpa 1935).

Opinion

Bland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

After appeal here, the death of Roy Y. Ferner, the importer of the merchandise involved, having been suggested to the court, and other pertinent facts having been shown, Clara M. Ferner, the executrix of the estate of Roy Y. Ferner, was substituted as appellant in the place and stead of said Roy Y. Ferner.

The instant appeal is from the judgment of the United States Customs Court, First Division, which overruled importer’s protests and sustained the collector’s classification and assessment with duty at 60 per centum ad valorem of certain imported measuring machines [63]*63more particularly described hereinafter, under paragraph 228 (a), Tariff Act of 1930, as optical measuring instruments.

Appellant's protests alternatively claimed the measuring devices to be dutiable under the following paragraphs of said act: 372, as machines, at 27K per centum ad valorem; 360, as scientific instruments, at 40 per centum ad valorem; 353, as electrical articles, at 35 per centum ad valorem; or 228 (b), as optical instruments, at 45 per centum ad valorem. In this court, appellant relies solely upon the claim for dutiability under said machine paragraph 372.

The sole question necessary for us to consider is whether or not the devices are provided for in paragraph 228(a) as optical measuring instruments, since it is, in effect, conceded that the provisions of paragraph 228(a) are more specific than those of the said machine paragraph.

Paragraph 228(a) reads:

Par. 228(a). Spectrographs, spectrometers, spectroscopes, refractometers, saccharimeters, colorimeters, prism-binoculars, cathetometers, interferometers, haemacytometers, polarimeters, polariscopes, photometers, ophthalmoscopes, slit lamps, corneal microscopes, optical measuring or optical testing instruments, testing or recording instruments for ophthalmological purposes, frames and mountings therefor, and parts of any of the foregoing; all the foregoing, finished or unfinished, 60 per centum ad valorem. (Italics ours.)

The instruments involved were not before the trial court nor were they here. They had gone into commerce before the trial and are large and heavy, the largest weighing nearly 400 pounds. Photographic exhibits of the same, however, were introduced in evidence and are numbered 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5. The merchandise represented by Exhibits 1, 2 and 3 is called spectrographic comparators, while the device represented by Exhibits 4 and 5, which are front and side views of the same instrument, is called a universal measuring machine. All the devices are used for substantially the same kind of work. The device represented by Exhibits 4 and 5 is more elaborate than are the others, is much larger, and has a greater variety of uses. It may be used for all the purposes for which the devices represented by Exhibits 1, 2 and 3 may be used and for making some measurements which cannot be made with the latter.

Broadly speaking, all the devices at bar are designed to be and are used for the purpose of very accurate measurements and measurement comparisons, and especially are used for such close and accurate measurements as can not be made by hand and with the naked eye. All the devices comprise framework, plates, holders, and adjusting machinery for moving the objects to be measured past a scale of line measurements, and under a microscope or microscopes which are integral and essential features of the devices. According to the [64]*64testimony of the importer, Mr. Ferner, they are used in the following manner:

The Witness. One places a plate on the carriage, photographic plate, and rotating the hand wheel until the point of the plate on which one wishes to make the measurement, until it is under the lens of the microscope, and then reads the reading of the drum “H” at the left end of the machine as well as a scale shown on the front of the machine, for which there is an index mark. This locates the position of the point measured. Then to measure the distance from that to another point, you rotate on the hand wheel, and the difference between the two readings gives the length or distance between two points.

It is stated in the record that the device represented by Exhibits 4 and 5 has as many as 75 known uses, all of which relate to measurements or comparisons of measurements and that it is used in such places as the laboratories of Columbia University, the Bell Telephone Co., and the Western Electric Co.; that with such a device, spectro-graphic plates and astronomical photographs are measured and that it is used to determine the co-ordinates of points on photographs. It is also claimed that it may be used in measuring and comparing finger prints in crime detection cases and to measure the stretch of wires under load, and also to measure oscillograph filaments. One of the very important uses is for measuring machine parts, tools, dies, etc., which require extermely close measurements, the device measurements to be made of one ten-thousandth of an inch. One witness testified that—

the accuracy of the scales on this machine [the universal] is guaranteed to be one ten-thousandth of an inch.

It is definitely proven that the imported devices are not and could not be used for ophthalmological purposes. The record does not show that the instruments are used or are designed to be used in pure science. As a part'of the device represented by Exhibits 1, 2, and 3, there is but one microscope. According to the witness Ferner, the microscope shown in Exhibit 3 represented about one-tenth of the value of the device. There are three microscopes on the device represented by Exhibits 4 and 5, and the importer testified that "the value of the microscope is about one-eighth of the whole machine”. The comparators measure only in one direction while the universal measuring machine measures in two directions. In the latter instrument, one of the microscopes is called a micrometric microscope and measures the “displacements of the table”, another is styled a micrometric microscope and measures the “displacements of the transversal carriage”, and a third is termed a “locating microscope.” Numerous accessories and tools may be attached to and used with the universal measuring device. It is shown that the •comparators have no electric light in connection therewith, while the universal measuring machine contains a small electric light. [65]*65By the use of a reflection prism, the light is projected on the objects to be observed. The instruments contain glass panes associated with the table or part which holds the article to be measured, and the light may be reflected from below onto the article to be measured.

Some of the witnesses state that by the use of electrical contact apparatus, which might be used in connection with the imported articles, the microscopes could be dispensed with, but that these particular machines are not provided with such electrical contact equipment and that they have not been, as far as the witnesses knew, so used.

It is clearly disclosed by the record that the close and accurate measurements for which the devices are intended cannot efficiently and properly function except by the use of the microscope, since the devices are used in making microscopic measurements upon a scale containing microscopic measuring fines.

Appellant contends that this court’s decision in the case of United States v. Arthur H. Thomas Co., 22 C.C.P.A. (Customs) 120, T.D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 C.C.P.A. 62, 1935 CCPA LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferner-v-united-states-ccpa-1935.