Fritz v. United States

452 F.2d 1399, 59 C.C.P.A. 46, 1971 CCPA LEXIS 229
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 1971
DocketNo. 5405, C.A.D. 1036
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 452 F.2d 1399 (Fritz 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
Fritz v. United States, 452 F.2d 1399, 59 C.C.P.A. 46, 1971 CCPA LEXIS 229 (ccpa 1971).

Opinion

Lane, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision and judgment of the Customs Court, 63 Cust. Ct. 484, C.D. 3940 (1969), upholding the customs collector’s classification of imported sealing rings as gaskets under item 773.25 of the Tariff Schedules of the United States (TSUS) with duty at the rate of 10 per centum ad valorem, and overruling appellants’ protest and claim that the proper classification should be under item 666.00 TSUS which provides for free entry of agricultural and horticultural implements not specially provided for, and parts thereof. We affirm.

[48]*48The statutory provisions at issue here read in pertinent part as follows:

773.25 Gaskets, of rubber or plastics-10% ad val.
666.00 Machinery for soil preparation and cultivation, agricultural drills and planters, fertilizer spreaders, harvesting and threshing machinery, hay or grass mowers (except lawn mowers), farm wagons and carts, and agricultural and horticultural implements not specially provided for, and parts of any of the foregoing-Free

Appellants assert error on two grounds. First it is urged that the imported sealing rings are more than gaskets and therefore not properly classified under an item limited to gaskets. It is next contended that in any event, item 773.25 was improperly included in the TSUS and is therefore null and void. We will consider each issue in turn.

CLASSIFICATION

The imported articles were invoiced as sealing rings and are used in irrigation equipment. A ring is positioned at the junction of a pipe and a coupling, and when water is forced through the junction, the water pressure expands the ring so as to effect a seal which prevents seepage or drainage of water at that point. It is undisputed that in this capacity the sealing rings function as gaskets. When the flow of water and pressure is terminated, the ring relaxes and permits water drainage from the pipes. Irrigation pipes are moved frequently in the field, and the residual water is a load which the testimony at trial indicates is so great that movement of the pipe is virtually impossible. The automatic drainage allowed by the imported sealing rings overcomes this problem. Because the rings allow this drainage to occur, the rings are appellants urge, more than gaskets.

The Customs Court referred to several dictionary definitions of gasket which read:

Plaited hemp or tallowed rope for packing pistons, making pipe joints, etc.; hence, packing for the same purpose made Of rubber, asbestos, metal, or other suitable material, usually in the form of sheets or rings.1 (1) A thin, flat, annular packing-piece of india-rubber, leather, or sheet metal, placed between two flat surfaces, as a manhole-plate and a boiler-head, to make their joint watertight. (2) A packing of hemp or other fibrous stuff, or of lead, between the bell of one pipe and the spigot or male end of another.2

Structurally, the imported articles are, as described by name, rings, and are made of rubber. In structure, and function as well, the mer[49]*49chandise conforms to that commonly understood to be gaskets. The difficulty in distinguishing the rings from gaskets is further apparent from the testimony of the plaintiffs’ witness at trial on cross-examination, which was, in pertinent part, as follows:

Q. Mr. Lake, will you further describe bow the draining takes place in this operation?
A. The gasket is not a tight fit on the pipe or the coupling until it is expanded by the internal pressure [of the water],
Q. In use it is used 'as a gasket, it seals?
A. It seals, yes, sir.
Q. And it ceases being a gasket, if I understand, according to what you are saying, when it’s nlot in use? In other words, when it drains?
* * * * * ❖ *
A. How could it cease to be?
Q. It’s still a gasket?
A. Yes.
Q. It would be a gasket if you carried it 'around in your hand before you put it on?
* * * * ❖ sit
A. You pick it up, you can call it a gasket or sealing ring.
Q. Essentially, this is a loose-fitting gasket specially designed for this operation?
A. You could call it that, Or you could call it packing.

The conclusion of the Customs Court was that in use, the rings functioned as gaskets. Appellants argue that the the draining operation is also a use and because it is capable of the dichotomous functions of sealing and draining, the rings more resemble valves than gaskets; We do not think the analogy is well-taken. In the case of the instant rings, they are made loose-fitting to accomplish a merely incidental purpose; their structural design is geared to what we are constrained to hold to be the primary purpose — sealing.

Our opinion in United Carr Fastener Corp. v. United States, 54 CCPA 89, C.A.D. 913 (1967), supports the view we take rather than a different result as urged by appellants. We reject here, as we did there, the claim that the imported goods are more than articles provided for eo nomine in the Tariff Schedules for the common reason that the principal goal of the design of the goods was to facilitate the function characteristic of the article named in the Tariff Schedules despite certain advantages of the importations over conventional articles of the type described.

For the above reasons, we hold the sealing rings at issue to be properly classified as gaskets as determined by the customs collector and so held by the Customs Court.

[50]*50The Customs Court found appellants' arguments against the validity of item 7~T325 TSTJS to be without merit and held that item to have the same force and effent as any other tariff provision in the Schedules. We agree.

The present Tariff Schedules were a product of a legislative attempt to simplify the complex Tariff Act of 1930 as repeatedly modified.3 Tn November 1960, the Tariff Classification Study was submitted to the President and the Congress pursuant to the Customs Simplification Act of 1954.4 The Study, along with its First Supplemental Report, was enacted by Congress as the Tariff Classification Act of 1962 (hereinafter the 1962 Act) 5 with the effective date to be ten days from the date of the proclamation of the President. 6 In the interim between appro'vaJ by Congress and the President's Proclamation. the Tariff Commission was authorized to make certain changes.

The eo ~omine provision for gaskets under which the imported sealing rings were classified by the customs collector was added by the Tariff Commission during that interim.

The gasket provision was introduced in the Third Supplemental Beport to the Tariff Classification Study, May 7, 1963, prior to the President's Proclamation of August 21, 1963, declaring the 1962 Act to become effective as of August 31, 1963. 7 The Tariff Commission determined.

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Bluebook (online)
452 F.2d 1399, 59 C.C.P.A. 46, 1971 CCPA LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fritz-v-united-states-ccpa-1971.