Gulf Gypsum Co. v. United States

20 C.C.P.A. 101, 1932 CCPA LEXIS 206
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 23, 1932
DocketNo. 3460
StatusPublished

This text of 20 C.C.P.A. 101 (Gulf Gypsum Co. 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
Gulf Gypsum Co. v. United States, 20 C.C.P.A. 101, 1932 CCPA LEXIS 206 (ccpa 1932).

Opinion

Garrett, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The controversy involved in this appeal was initiated by appellant, Gulf Gypsum Co., under the provisions of section 516 (b) of the Tariff Act of 1922, wherein an “American manufacturer, producer, or wholesaler” is authorized, upon the conditions of the section being complied with, to file protest against a classification by the collector of customs of imported merchandise “of a class or ldnd manufactured, produced, or sold at wholesale by him” in the United States.

Among other things it is made the duty of one protesting under said section to set forth a description of the merchandise and allege “the classification and the rate of duty he believes proper.”

[102]*102No question is raised in the hearing before us as to the sufficiency of appellant’s pleadings, nor as to the condition of the statute having been complied with.

The merchandise consists of gypsum rock, to be hereinafter more particularly described, imported from Canada by the United States Gypsum Co. which appears as the party in interest, the United States being the nominal appellee.

The merchandise was liquidated by the collector as free of duty under paragraph 1643, Title II (the free- list title), of said Tariff Act of 1922, the paragraph reading:

Par. 1643. Plaster rook or gypsum, crude.

The protest of appellant described the merchandise as having—

been subjected to a crushing or grinding or reduction and/or manufacturing process in Canada before importation thereof,

and alleged it was not “crude within the meaning of the provisions of paragraph 1643 * * Also, it contained the further allegation that the articles and merchandise—

were minerals advanced in value and/or condition by refining or grinding, or by other process of manufacture and were not included within the meaning of any provision of Title II of the said Tariff Act of 1922,

but were specifically exempted therefrom by paragraph 1619 of said act which free lists only “minerals, crude, or not advanced in value or condition * * *.”

Appellant’s claims as to proper classification were in the alternative: Viz, first, paragraph 205; second, paragraph 214; third, paragraph 1459; or, fourth, under some one of said three paragraphs, by virtue of paragraph 1460 — the similitude clause of the act.

Paragraphs 205, 214, and 1459 read as follows:

Par. 205; Plaster rock or gypsum, ground or calcined, $1.40 per ton; white nonstaining Portland cement, 8 cents per one hundred pounds, including the weight of the container; Keene’s cement, and other cement of which gypsum is the component material of chief value, valued at $14 per ton or less, $3.50 per ton; valued above $14 and not above $20 per ton, $5 per ton; valued above $20 and not above $40 per ton, $10 per ton; valued above $40 per ton, $14, per ton; other cement, not specially provided for, 20 per centum ad valorem.
Par. 214. Earthy or mineral substances wholly or partly manufactured and articles, wares, and materials (crude or advanced in condition), composed wholly or in chief value of earthy or mineral substances, not specially provided for, whether susceptible of decoration or not, if not decorated in any manner, 30 per centum ad valorem; if decorated, 40 per centum ad valorem.
Par. 1459. That there shall be levied, collected, and paid on the importation of all raw or unmanufactured articles not enumerated or provided for, a duty of 10 per centum ad valorem, and on all articles manufactured, in whole or in part, not specially provided for, a duty of 20 per centum ad valorem.

In addition to the foregoing appellant has also invoked section 502 (b) of the Tariff Act of 1922 to which reference will be made later.

[103]*103The protests were overruled by the Customs Court in an elaborate and evidently carefully considered opinion by Judge McClelland, Judge Brown specially concurring, with an opinion making certain comments upon the nature of proceedings bad under said section 516 (b).

The opinion of Judge McClelland states—

Two facts are established beyond dispute by the record; one, that the gypsum involved passed through a crusher, and the other, that except as to the reduction in size resulting from passing through the crusher the gypsum is in exactly the same condition physically as it existed in nature before being quarried. Whether, therefore, plaintiff is entitled to succeed depends largely, if not altogether, on whether the gypsum is no longer crude within the meaning of paragraph 1643, supra, because of the crushing process through which it passed after being quarried and before being exported.

A tborougb and careful examination of the well-prepared record in the case convinces us that the findings of fact by the Customs Court are fully and amply sustained by the testimony of many witnesses for both parties in interest.

It is established that prior to about 1920 the method of mining and handling crude plaster rock or gypsum (“plaster rock” and “gypsum” being synonymous terms) was that the rock would first be quarried, usually by blasting with explosives, and the large lumps of rock thus loosened were broken into irregularly shaped pieces of an average of eight or ten inches in diameter by the use of sledge hammers wielded by hand. The blasting operation itself produced much material of irregular size, some of the lumps requiring no further breakage or reduction in size in order to be handled for shipment and some of the material being reduced to a form described as dust.

The above method of breaking by sledge hammer apparently still continues in some mines, but beginning about 1920-1922 some of those engaged in the business of mining such rock began to substitute machinery for the sledge-hammer process of breakage.

This machinery was capable of being so adjusted as to crush or break the large lumps of rock into smaller pieces of different sizes. The testimony and representative samples before us indicate that the sizes of the rocks so broken by machinery range from two to six inches or more in diameter, and that the sizes produced by the machine action are probably more regular and uniform than were or are those resulting from the sledge-hammer process.

In the machine process there is also a process of screening to remove some of the dirt from the rock.

Ño chemical change whatever results from the machine process. The material remains in all respects precisely in the same condition as was that material produced by the blows of sledge hammers, except that the lumps produced by machine action may be somewhat more regular and smaller in dimension.

[104]*104Alter importation, in order to prepare the material for the ultimate uses intended, the lumps of rock produced by the machinery must be further processed, and the record satisfactorily establishes that in this further processing every step which was required in reducing the sledge-made material must be utilized.

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Bluebook (online)
20 C.C.P.A. 101, 1932 CCPA LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-gypsum-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1932.