Garrard Sales Corp. v. United States

35 C.C.P.A. 39, 1947 CCPA LEXIS 551
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 17, 1947
DocketNo. 4538
StatusPublished

This text of 35 C.C.P.A. 39 (Garrard Sales Corp. 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
Garrard Sales Corp. v. United States, 35 C.C.P.A. 39, 1947 CCPA LEXIS 551 (ccpa 1947).

Opinions

O’Connell, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the United States Customs Court, First Division, C. D. 950, sustaining the action of the Collector of Customs at the port of New York who classified an importation of merchandise from England consisting of automatic record changer units as parts of phonographs and assessed thereon a duty of B0 per centum ad valorem under paragraph 1542 of the Tariff Act of 1930, and overruling appellee’s protest claiming that the merchandise was properly dutiable at 25 per centum ad .valorem as articles having as an essential feature thereof an electrical element or device, such as electric motors, under paragraph 353 of the same act as modified by the trade agreement with the United Kingdom, T. D. 49753.

The statutory provisions of the Tariff Act of 1930 here involved, so far as pertinent, read as follows:

Par. 1542. Phonographs, gramophones, graphophones, dictophones, and similar articles, and parts thereof, not specially provided for, 30 per centum ad valorem * * *.
Par. 353. All articles suitable for producing, rectifying, modifying, controlling, or distributing electrical energy;
electrical telegraph (including printing and typewriting), telephone, signaling, radio, welding, ignition, wiring, therapeutic, and X-ray apparatus, instruments (other than laboratory), and devices; and
articles having as an essential feature an electrical element or device, such as electric motors, * * *
all the foregoing, and parts thereof, finished or unfinished, wholly or in chief value of metal, and not specially provided for, 35 per centum ad valorem.

[41]*41Paragraph 353 as modified by the trade agreement with the United Kingdom, supra, so far as pertinent, reads:

Electrical signaling, radio, welding, and ignition apparatus, instruments (other than laboratory), and devices, * * * and all other articles suitable for producing, rectifying, modifying, controlling, or distributing electrical energy, and articles having as an essential feature an electrical element or device, such as electric motors, * * * all the foregoing, not specially provided for, finished or unfinished, wholly or in chief value of metal * * * 25% ad val.
Parts, not specially provided for, finished or unfinished, wholly or in chief value of metal, of any articles provided for in any item numbered 353 in this schedule, shall be dutiable at the same rate of duty as the articles of which they are parts.

The evidence discloses that each of the imported articles is a unit composed in chief value of metal which can be used either'in a phonograph or in a phonograph-radio combination for the purpose of automatically changing a record after it has- been played. It is stipulated that each of such articles, as well as the phonograph-radio combination, has “an electric motor as an essential feature and integral part thereof” and that the phonograph-radio combination cannot function as such without the record changer unit.

Counsel for the Government makes the following pertinent statement in its brief:

The article here in question consists of an electric motor to which is attached a turntable suitable for holding phonograph records while being played, a “pick-up head” which, when the turntable revolves, translates the sound track of the phonograph record into electrical impulses of the corresponding audio frequencies, and a mechanism for automatically changing the records after they have been played. None of the units can be used for the purpose for which it was designed unless the output of the pick-up head is set into a suitable audio-frequency amplifier and loudspeaker system, neither of which accompanied any of the units in question upon their importation.

When the unit is installed in a phonograph-radio combination, the radio cannot be operated while the combination is used as a phonograph and vice versa because there is but one amplifying and one loud speaker system in the described combination and those two elements of that system are required to operate either the phonograph or the radio receiving set.

It is stipulated that units such as the Garrard record changers were not imported to the United States prior to 1937, and since that time have been chiefly used in this country in phonograph-radio combinations, the use of such units in phonographs which were not combined with radios being “very minor,” and that the same is true of Such “similar articles” sold and used in the United States on or prior to June 18, 1930.

The electrically operated phonograph-radio combination, according to the testimony, first came on the market in this country about 1925, and was developed by the radio industry “to promote sales and have [42]*42products which would be something that normal competition wouldn’t-be able to meet, particularly the more expensive units.”

It is not disputed that without the record changer unit the phonograph-radio combination would be just a radio set and that the device is no part of a radio. Appellant contends that for tariff purposes the record changer unit here involved likewise is no part of a phonograph but a part of something other than a phonograph, to wit, a phonograph-radio combination, and that the court below made a reversible error in holding that the imported unit is dutiable as a part of a phongraph or as a part of a similar article under paragraph 1542.

The Government takes the position that although the two mechanisms of the combination are combined in one cabinet and use some parts in common, the phonograph and the radio do not supplement or complement each other but on the contrary each retains its respective identity and so does its parts. Therefore the imported unit here involved is part of a phonograph and dutiable as such or as parts of similar articles under paragraph 1542.

The court below held that the involved combination constituted two separate and independent instruments, that the imported unit must be treated as an entirety, such as a part of a phonograph, that the provision for parts of phonographs and similar articles in paragraph 1542 is more specific than the provision in paragraph 353 for “articles having as an essential feature an electrical element or device” and that the imported merchandise was dutiable under paragraph 1542 as parts of phonographs and similar articles, citing United States v. Dryden Rubber Co., 22 C. C. P. A. (Customs) 51, T. D. 47050; Ralph C. Coxhead Corp. v. United States, 22 C. C. P. A. (Customs) 96, T. D. 47080; Julius Forstmann & Co. v. United States, 28 C. C. P. A. (Customs) 222, C. A. D. 149.

As hereinbefore described, none of the imported articles can be used for the purpose for which it was designed unless the output of the pick-up head is set into a suitable audio-frequency amplifier and a loud speaker system, and it is conceded that the imported record changer is an integral and essential part of a phonograph and radio-combination without which the combination could not function as such.

It is clear that a phonograph and a radio are two separate and distinct articles, and this court has held that two articles designed and constructed so as to be used together does not necessarily make either article a part of the other. United States v.

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Bluebook (online)
35 C.C.P.A. 39, 1947 CCPA LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrard-sales-corp-v-united-states-ccpa-1947.