H. J. Baker & Bro. v. United States

21 Cust. Ct. 76, 1948 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 451
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1948
DocketC. D. 1131
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 21 Cust. Ct. 76 (H. J. Baker & Bro. 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
H. J. Baker & Bro. v. United States, 21 Cust. Ct. 76, 1948 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 451 (cusc 1948).

Opinion

Cline, Judge:

These are protests arising at the port of New York against the collector’s assessment of duty on merchandise, invoiced as sunflower seed meal, imported from Uruguay on November 30 and December 12, 1944, at tlie rate of three-tenths of 1 cent per pound under paragraph 730 of the Tariff Act of 1930 as vegetable oil-cake meal, not specially provided for. The protests claim that the merchandise is free of duty under paragraph 1685 as a substance used chiefly for fertilizer, or chiefly as an ingredient in the manufacture of fertilizer, or that it is dutiable at 5 per centum ad valorem under paragraph 730, as amended by the trade agreement with Mexico, T. D. 50797, as mixed feed. The latter claim was abandoned by plaintiff at the trial.

The pertinent provisions of the tariff act are as follows:

Par. 730. * * * all other vegetable oil cake and oil-cake meal, not specially provided for, three-tenths of 1 cent per pound; * * *.

Par. 1685. Guano, basic slag (ground or unground), manures, and (notwithstanding any other provision of this Act) those grades of all other substances used chiefly for fertilizers, or chiefly as an ingredient in the manufacture of fertilizers. [Free.]

At the trial plaintiff called Herman Arrow, analytical chemist in the United States Customs Laboratory at the port of New York, who testified that he had examined samples of the merchandise herein; that the sample covered by entry No. 315519 (protest No. 121149-K) had a moisture content of 5.7 per centum, an ash content of 6.2 per centum, a protein content of 42 per centum, a fiber content of 14.6 per centum, and a fat content of 5.2 per centum; that he had found 6.7 per centum of nitrogen present and from that he had calculated the protein content to be 42 per centum; that the sample covered by entry No. 316787 (protest No. 121150-K) contained 5.9 per centum nitrogen, equivalent to a protein content of 36.9 per centum, a moisture [78]*78content of 5.8 per centum, an ash. content of 5.2 per centum, a fiber content of 16.6 per centum, and a fat content of 8.8 per centum; that he found no evidence of any admixture of grains or grain products; that he found no volatile solvents present; that in his opinion the merchandise was a pressed cake, the residue remaining after the physical extraction of oil; that he found no evidence of the presence of any organic solvent, such as petroleum, naphtha, or benzol.

Felix G. Sherry, testified that he is employed as a trader by H. J. Baker & Bro., the plaintiff herein; that he has devoted practically all of his business lifetime to the fertilizer and feed business; that he had bought and sold sunflower seed meal actively since 1940 both for fertilizer and for feed purposes; that sunflower seed meal is the residue after the extraction or expression of oil from the seed; that there is only one grade of sunflower seed meal; that sunflower seed meal is not a standard oilseed meal in this country; that he purchased the merchandise covered by protest 121149-K from a producer in Uruguay; that it arrived in this country on November 30, 1944; that he had previously sold'this importation to a feed manufacturer in Buffalo' on June 8, 1944; that the sale was cancelled in August 1944 because of the delay in shipment from Uruguay; that the merchandise covered by the shipment was eventually sold to Wilson & Toomer Fertilizer Co. in Jacksonville, Fla., on December 11, 1944; that the purchasers were fertilizer manufacturers but he did not know how they used this merchandise. The witness stated that he had purchased the merchandise covered by protest 121150-K from the same producer in Uruguay on May 15, 1944; that it was imported on December 12, 1944; that a part of this shipment had been included in the sale to the feed manufacturer in Buffalo in June 1944, which sale had beén cancelled; that the merchandise was eventually sold as follows: To Roy V. Mundis, York, Pa., on October 31, 1944; to H. K. Webster Co., Lawrence, Mass., on January 12, 19, and 30, 1945; and to Delaware Mills, Deposit, N. Y., on January 23 and 31, 1945.

The witness also testified that there was no market for sunflower seed meal during November and December 1944; that there was a decided lull in the feed market generally from October right through December of that year; that he made an investigation to ascertain whether or not sunflower seed meal was produced in the United States and sold domestically during 1944 and 1945; that he got in touch with some of the principal crushers of oil seeds and with brokers and dealers in various oil meals, contacting 9 or 10 different concerns and also the Department of Agriculture; that he could get no information whatever about the product and could not find where it was produced here nor anyone who had had any experience in handling it. He also made an investigation as to the sales of imported sunflower seed meal in the United States and found that there were one or two [79]*79other importations at about the same time as his; that the only concerns that had the material were a company in Houston, Tex., another company in New York, and his own firm. He stated that as a result of his investigations as to imported sunflower seed meal he found that the chief use was for fertilizer.

At a subsequent hearing plaintiff called J. Raymond Myers, manager of the Cambridge, Mass., plant of Eastern States Farmers Exchange, who testified that his firm handles feed, seed, fertilizers, and general farm supplies, and that it owns and operates fertilizer plants; that as manager of the fertilizer plant in North Cambridge he had bought sunflower seed meal on November 30, 1944, and January 26, 1945, from the Maurice Pincoffs Co., Houston, Tex.; that he received the first order on December 5 to 8, 1944, and the second near the middle of February 1945; that the two lots were used with other ingredients to make mixed fertilizer during March, April, and May 1945; that these were the only lots of sunflower seed meal that it had ever used in making mixed fertilizers; that it had never used any other lots for any other purposes; that sunflower seed meal could be used for feed for livestock or poultry; that he did not know the chief use of sunflower seed meal at the time of his purchase or at the time of its actual importation.

Mr. Edwin Simpson, purchasing agent of Consolidated Rendering Co., testified that his concern manufactured mixed fertilizers; that he purchased one lot of sunflower seed meal on December 1, 1944, from Bosworth Commission Co., acting as brokers for Maurice Pincoffs Co. at Houston, Tex.; that the merchandise was received on or about December 29; that he did not lmow of his own knowledge the chief use of sunflower seed meal.

Mr. Charles O. Duke, manager of the New Haven plant of Consolidated Rendering Co., testified that the plant operated a rendering department and also manufactured mixed fertilizers; that he had been engaged in the business of making mixed fertilizers for the past 35 years; that he saw the lot of sunflower seed meal referred to by the last witness; that it was used as a-nitrogen carrier for a mixed fertilizer; that the fertilizer containing the sunflower seed meal was sold to various fertilizer dealers as a “Specialty Fertilizer” made for lawns, shrubs, golf courses, and so forth.

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Related

Converse Rubber Co. v. United States
65 Cust. Ct. 453 (U.S. Customs Court, 1970)
H. J. Baker & Bro. v. United States
37 C.C.P.A. 52 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
21 Cust. Ct. 76, 1948 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-j-baker-bro-v-united-states-cusc-1948.