Hamfton v. United States

12 Ct. Cust. 490
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 17, 1925
DocketNo. 2462
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 12 Ct. Cust. 490 (Hamfton 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
Hamfton v. United States, 12 Ct. Cust. 490 (ccpa 1925).

Opinion

Graham, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The entries in this case were four in number, made at various dates on and after September 29, 1922. Entry No. 3185 described the merchandise as 1,476 crates asbestos shingles; the corresponding invoice described the same as "starters,” and “slates,” of various sizes and colors. Entry No. 3659 described the merchandise as “three hundred cases asbestos sheets,” and the invoice as “sheets,” of various sizes. Entry No. 4221 described the merchandise as “2,662 crates asbestos shingles,” and the invoice described it as “shingles,” “starters,” and “ridges” of various sizes and colors. Entry No. 5098 described the merchandise as “two hundred and thirty-one packages asbestos shingles,” and the invoice described it as “shingles,” of a certain size.

The collector classified the same for duty under paragraph 1401, tariff act of 1922, at 25 per cent-ad valorem,, as “manufactures'in [492]*492chief value of asbestos.” The local appraiser reports that the merchandise is " asbestos sheets, slates, shingles, and starters, composed of asbestos and cement. Asbestos being the component of chief value * * *.” The importers protested, claiming the goods to be free of duty under paragraph 1660 as shingles or under paragraph 1515, as asbestos unmanufactured, etc., or alternatively dutiable under paragraph 1460, by similitude, or under paragraph 1459, as an unenumerated article. The Board of General Appraisers, on appeal, sustained the classification, and importers appeal.

In the assignment of errors and in their brief and argument filed herein, the appellants rely upon the alleged error in not finding the goods free of duty under paragraph 1660 aforesaid and abandon their alternative claims. These alternative claims, therefore, need not be examined.

On the'hearing before the Board of General Appraisers, the appellants withdrew their claim as to the asbestos sheets covered by entry No. 3659 (transcript pp. 22-23). There is, therefore, no contention as to the classification upon said entry.

As to such of the goods as are invoiced in entries Nos. 3185 and 4221 as "starters” and "ridges,” the testimony offered by the appellants below shows conclusively that these articles are commonly known as "starters” and "ridges,” and are used as accessories in building asbestos shingle or slate roofs. No attempt is made to show that they are ever known, commonly or commercially, as "shingles.” They can not be classed as shingles under paragraph 1460, the similitude clause, as that paragraph does not apply to the free list. It is apparent that the classification as to the so-called "starters” and "ridges” should be sustained.

This brings us to the remaining and important question in the case r Are these articles “shingles,” within the meaning of the free-list provision? The paragraphs of the tariff act of 1922 involved are as follows:

1401. Asbestos, manufactures of: Yarn and woven fabrics composed wholly or in chief value of asbestos, 30 per centum ad valorem; all other manufactures composed wholly or in chief value of asbestos, 25 per centum ad valorem.
Free list. — .1660. Shingles.

The samples of goods in question, invoiced as shingles, show them to be hard, rigid, slatelike sheets about one-eighth of an inch in thickness and of various shapes and colors. One type is about 12 inches square, and is finished in red or gray colors. Another tjqie is approximately 16 inches square, finished in gray,' slate, and red colors. These are called the French type. The remaining samples are called the American type, and are approximately 8 by 16 inches, and are finished in slate, red, and gray colors. Each of these have holes punched at convenient places for nails and in the French type [493]*493three corners of each sheet have been removed. The testimony shows they are used for making roof coverings in the same manner, and for like purposes, as wooden shingles.

The record is quite voluminous. The importers called several witnesses, who were interrogated about the ordinary designation of the articles of importation in question here. The appellants concede (p. 37, brief and argument), that they have not attempted to show commercial designation of the article of importation differing from its common and ordinary meaning. The evidence before the court below, on the part of the importers, shows, we think it can be fairly stated, that the merchandise is known commonly among those who deal in and with it as “asbestos shingles.” Proof of commercial designation was only competent in case there was a commercial meaning to the name of the article of importation different from its common meaning. — -Maddockv. Magone (152 U. S. 368). Therefore, the evidence offered must be considered as offered to show that the' goods in question were ordinarily known as “asbestos shingles.” We are unable to see the relevancy of such testimony. The question involved was whether the articles of importation were, or were not, shingles, as commonly so known. To prove that an article is commonly known as an asbestos shingle does not at all prove that it is commonly known as a shingle.

In order to have their goods admitted' free, the appellants must establish that they are “shingles.” — Two hundred Chests of Tea (9 Wheat. 428 [437]). Or importer might establish that the word “shingles” had a well-known, uniform, and general trade meaning, and that it included the merchandise in question.—Knauth v. United States (1 Ct. Cust. Appls. 422; T. D. 31499).

When attempting to interpret terms used by Congress in tariff laws, the court may call to its aid, as helps to interpretation, definitions given by lexicographers of the words in question. This is the well-established rule. When we look to the works of modern lexicographers, the word “shingle” is defined as follows:

Webster’s, 19%4- — A piece of wood sawed or rived thin and small, with one end thinner than the other, for covering roofs, etc., the thick ends of one row overlapping the thin ends of the next.
Funk & Wagnall’s, 19SS. — A thin piece of wood, usually 18 inches long and 4 or-more wide, half an inch thick at one end, and tapering to less than an eighth of an inch at the other end, used like a tile or slate in covering roofs and sometimes the sides of buildings, the thick ends of one course lapping over the thin ends of the rows next below. In computation, a width of 4 inches is considered one shingle.
Century, 1911. — A thin piece of wood having parallel, sides and being thicker at one end than the other, used like a tile or a slate in covering the sides and, roofs of houses; a wooden tile. In the United States shingles are usually about 6 inches in width and 18 inches long, and are laid with one-third of their length to the weather — that is, with 12 inches of cover and 6 inches of lap.
[494]*494Murray’s, 1912. — A thin piece of wood having parallel sides and one end thicker than the other, used as a house-tile.
Worcester’s, 1908. — An oblong piece of wood, thinner at one end than at the other, used instead of slates or tiles for covering roofs.
Webster’s Imperial, 1924.

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