Great Lakes Paper Co. v. United States

52 Cust. Ct. 64, 1964 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1373
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedApril 2, 1964
DocketC.D. 2438
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 52 Cust. Ct. 64 (Great Lakes Paper 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
Great Lakes Paper Co. v. United States, 52 Cust. Ct. 64, 1964 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1373 (cusc 1964).

Opinion

Rao, Judge:

The seven protests here involved, which have been consolidated for purposes of trial, relate to several importations of merchandise invoiced generally as “ ‘Safir’ Lampshade Parchmentized Paper [or] Bristol Board.” It was classified as bristol board, embossed or decorated, 'valued at more than 15 Cents per pound, within the purview of paragraph 1407(a) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, 82 Treas. Dec. 305, T.D. 51802, or by the Sixth Protocol of Supplementary Concessions to said General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, 91 Treas. Dec. 150, T.D. 54108, and, accordingly, assessed with duty at the rate of iy2 cents per pound and 12y2 per centum ad valorem, or at the rate of 1.4 cents per pound and 11 y2 per centum ad valorem, depending upon the date of entry.

It is claimed in said protests that the subject merchandise is dutiable at only 1 cent per pound and 5 per centum ad valorem as vegetable parchment paper, as provided in paragraph 1405 of said act, as modified by said General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.

Insofar as the claimed provision is concerned, it involves a question which occupied the attention of this and our appellate court in the case of John J. Coates Co. et al. v. United States, 36 Cust. Ct. 149, C.D. 1768, reversed 44 CCPA 97, C.A.D. 643, and much of the record in the instant case constitutes an attempt on the part of plaintiffs’ counsel to establish identity of merchandise and issues to lay the groundwork for incorporation of the record in the decided case.

Thus, Gerald Miner, president of both the Great Lakes Paper Company and the Great Lakes Plastic Corporation, plaintiffs herein, testified that the subject merchandise, which was purchased from Renker-Belipa, GmbH, of West Germany, and is represented by samples in evidence as plaintiffs’ exhibits 1-A through 1-F, is the same as that before the court in the Ooates case and that he based this statement on the fact that, during the years 1951 and 1952, his company had purchased such merchandise from the Arthur Donniger Paper Co. (apparently the ultimate consignee in the decided case), which it subsequently sold. He further testified that the primary use of all of this material is in the manufacture of lampshades and that the salient characteristics rendering it particularly suited to that use are translucency, texture, due to embossing, resistance to dirt and grease, and the lack of fuzz or lint on the surface of the material.

Counsel’s motion for incorporation of the record in the Ooates case was objected to by counsel for the Government, for the reason that the classification of the merchandise in the two cases was not the same. The trial court denied the motion to incorporate the Ooates case, primarily because the parties there were not the same as those [66]*66in the present case. The court noted, however, as another basis for its ruling, the objection raised by the defendant.

• At a subsequent hearing, after a second notice of intention to request incorporation of a prior decision, counsel for the plaintiff moved into evidence the record in the case of Great Lakes Paper Co. et al. v. United States, 40 Cust. Ct. 509, Abstract 61783, wherein the parties and the classification of the merchandise- involved were alleged to be the same as those in the present case.

Counsel for the Government interposed objection to the second motion to incorporate, predicated upon the agreement that there was no independent record in Abstract 61783, but that the case was submitted for decision upon a stipulation that the merchandise and the issues were similar in all material respects to those involved in the Ooates case, the record in which was therein incorporated. Hence, asserted counsel, an attempt was being made to accomplish by indirection that which the court had held could not be accomplished directly. Nevertheless, and notwithstanding the lack of any evidence purporting to show that the merchandise in the instant case and that in Abstract 61783 was the same, the trial judge granted the motion to incorporate. Essentially, therefore, plaintiffs’ case in chief is the record as made in the Goates case, incorporated into the record in Abstract 61783, as incorporated herein and amplified by the testimony of the witness Gerald Miner.

Defendant’s case consists of the testimony of Foster K. Ballard, Government chemist at the port of Chicago, whose qualifications as a competent chemist, able to make an analysis, were stipulated by adversary counsel. Mr. Ballard testified that he made an analysis of a sheet of paper taken from the instant importations (defendant’s exhibit A). He first determined the weight and thickness; thereafter, he removed the resin with which the paper was impregnated, tested it to ascertain whether or not it had been treated with sulphuric acid, and found that it had not been so treated. The tests consisted of determining the bursting strength of the material, before and after the removal of the resin, while in a dry condition, and after the removal of the resin in a wet condition. They showed that the paper did not have a high wet strength after the removal of the resin — “the bursting strength when it was wet was very low as compared with the bursting strength dry in either of the other conditions,” which indicated that it had not been treated with sulphuric acid.

The tests were conducted some 8 years after importation, but the witness stated that the lapse of time would have little effect upon the condition of the paper, although, if it had been left out in the light and air for a period of time, it could become “a little more brittle and probably somewhat weaker.” The witness’ findings as to weight and thick[67]*67ness, and bis conclusion that examination of the material showed no evidence of treatment with sulphuric acid, as embodied in his report, dated May 1,1961, were received in evidence as defendant’s exhibit B.

He further testified that he had tested other papers treated with sulphuric acid, which were furnished by the Kalamazoo Vegetable Parchment Co., and represented to be vegetable parchment paper. He admitted, however, that otherwise, and except for reading on the subject, he had no personal knowledge of what vegetable parchment paper is, and that his conclusions as to the limits of bursting strength were based upon his own standards derived from determining the bursting strength of papers represented to be vegetable parchment paper.

Although, as heretofore noted, there is no direct evidence to establish any similarity between the instant paper and that involved in Abstract 61783, it would appear that a prima facie showing of similarity sufficient to support incorporation of the record results from the circumstance that, by testimony here and by stipulation in Abstract 61783, both are identified as the same for all material purposes as the paper before the court in the 0oates case. Moreover, although, as pointed out by counsel for defendant, Abstract 61783 was a decision rendered upon a stipulation of fact, the effect of the incorporation therein of the record in the 0oates case was to introduce into evidence the entire record as previously made, and, for all purposes, the decision in the later case rests upon that entire record. By the same token, the granting of the motion to incorporate the prior record in the instant case brings before us for consideration all facts established in both the Coates and Great Lakes Paper Co. cases, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
52 Cust. Ct. 64, 1964 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-lakes-paper-co-v-united-states-cusc-1964.