Harris v. United States

3 Ct. Cust. 5, 1912 WL 19266, 1912 CCPA LEXIS 45
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 1912
DocketNo. 526
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 Ct. Cust. 5 (Harris 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
Harris v. United States, 3 Ct. Cust. 5, 1912 WL 19266, 1912 CCPA LEXIS 45 (ccpa 1912).

Opinion

Martin, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In the year 1905 the appellant imported into this country at the port of Boston various shipments of wool which came from the Province of Georgia in Russia and were exported at Tiflis. The wool is referred to in the testimony and briefs as Georgian raw autumn wool.

The importation was third-class wool as defined by paragraph 351 of the act of 1897, and it was therefore dutiable, under paragraphs 358 and 359 of that act, at 4 cents per pound if valued at 12 cents per pound or less, and at 7 cents per pound if valued at more than 12 cents per pound.

The importation contained both colored and white wools, and these were separately packed and also separately- valued upon the invoice. The dutiable .value of the importation as thus stated in the invoice was throughout less than 12 cents per pound, and therefore was entered under a claim for the lower duty.

The appraiser of the port, however, reported that the white wool ■ of the importation was of greater value than 12 cents per pound, and accordingly subject to the higher duty. The colors were appraised within low-duty valuation.

The importer objected to the increased valuation of the white wool, and contended that the whites and colors together comprised but a single article, and should accordingly be appraised at a single [6]*6round price. He claimed that in the country of exportation all Georgian raw autumn, wool, although comprising both whites and colors, was treated in the market as a single kind and bought and .sold at a round price-; ■ and furthermore,' that- he.had not-caused: the wool to be separately stated and valued in the invoice, but that this ■method had been pursued without authority from him by foreign factors who understood that course to be required by the consul at Batum. The importer insisted that the value of the importation taken as a whole and appraised at a round price, according to the custom of the market of exportation, was within low-duty limit.

The importer thereupon appealed for reappraisement to a single general appraiser under favor of section 13 of the administrative act. The importations having been entered at different times this litigation actually comprised two such appeals, each going in due course to a single general appraiser.

In the one instance the general appraiser sustained the local appraiser; in the other instance the general appraiser reversed the action of the local appraiser and sustained the invoice -valuation. These two separate decisions were severally appealed-to three general appraisers sitting as a board of reappraisement, and in each case the appeal was decided adversely to the claim of the importer. The wool was therefore finally appraised at separate values, whereby the whites were subject to high duty and the colors to low duty. ,

Thereupon the collector liquidated the entries in accordance with the reappraisement, to which the importer objected and protested. '

. -As has been stated, the litigation actually proceeded in two parts; there were therefore two protests filed by the importer and these were duly forwarded to the Board of General Appraisers.

The board heard the protests upon evidence and overruled the • same. From these decisions the importer appealed to the United States Circuit Court, District of Massachusetts, where additional testimony was incorporated in the record. The cases, however, never came to trial in that court,, but were finally consolidated and transferred to this court under the present act.

The ultimate issue between .the parties therefore--relates to the value of the importation. This value was first found by the local appraiser, then reviewed by the single general appraiser, and found upon appeal by the reappraisement board of three general appraisers, and protests thereto were heard upoii appeal by the Board of General Appraisers. This court is now asked by appellant to reverse the decision made by the reappraisement board and to order a reliquidation in accordance with the invoice valuation.

The three general appraisers, acting as a board of reappraisement, have their duties and authority, defined by section 13 of the customs administrative act. It is provided therein that the board upon such [7]*7an appeal to reappraisement of merchandise "shall examine and decide the case thus submitted, and their decision or that of a majority of them shall be final and conclusive as to the dutiable value of such merchandise against all parties interested therein.”

It becomes important in view of the foregoing provision to ascertain what questions may properly be raised upon an appeal like this, since it is really an appeal directed against such a reappraisement. ' An answer to this inquiry is found in the recent case of Oelrichs & Co. v. United States, decided by this court at its last term (2.Ct. Oust'. Appls., 355; T.D.32091), wherein'Montgomery, Presiding Judge, says: • •

On such an appeal the questions presented are narrow, as have been frequently adjudicated. All that is open for review is the question of whether the board acted within its jurisdiction. If it did, its decision is final and conclusive, and all other tribunals are bound to respect it.

In the petition filed by the appellant in the circuit court, 16 several .specifications or assignments of alleged errors are presented. Upon inspection, however, it appears that these assignments and the arguments made in their behalf are almost entirely in the nature of a review of the testimony for thé purpose of demonstrating that the reappraisement board’s decision was against the weight of the evidence. This reference includes all those parts of the record which relate to the mariner in which the wool was bought in Russia, the price there paid for it, the custom of the country in'respect to that market, the relations of the appellant with purchasing merchants •there, the conditions of the trade, and all those elements of fact which went to make up the actual transaction. Such questions of fact were necessary subjects of consideration in the reappraisement hearing, but they raise no such issue as can now properly come before the court in the present case. The record in the case is voluminous, but -most of the questions, made in, it really relate to the admission or effect of testimony in relation to the subjects above mentioned; these questions, without specific mention, are held to be within the rule just referred to.

It does not appear that all of the testimony which was submitted to the reappraisement board has been brought upon the present record by a tender to the classification board or to the circuit court. Such partial testimony, however, as was so tendered, was rejected, upon the ground that it was immaterial to the issue upon appeal. That ruling agrees with the view of this court, for even if the record exhibited all of the testimony which was before the reappraisement board, this court nevertheless can not -inquire whether the board misapprehended or misapplied it, or reached a mistaken conclusion upon ithe facts disclosed by it. It is sufficient in that behalf to say that at the hearing before the board testimony was introduced by the respective [8]*8parties tending to sustain their several contentions; the testimony was heard by the board, and the board’s decision upon it can not now be reviewed upon any question relating only to the weight or effect of the evidence.

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3 Ct. Cust. 5, 1912 WL 19266, 1912 CCPA LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-united-states-ccpa-1912.