Hawley v. United States

6 Ct. Cust. 45, 1915 WL 20672, 1915 CCPA LEXIS 37
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 1915
DocketNo. 1224
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 6 Ct. Cust. 45 (Hawley 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
Hawley v. United States, 6 Ct. Cust. 45, 1915 WL 20672, 1915 CCPA LEXIS 37 (ccpa 1915).

Opinion

Smith, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In this case, bagging for cotton, classified by the collector of customs at the port of Galveston, Tex., as manufactures in chief value of flax, jute, and other vegetable fibers, was assessed for duty at 45 per cent ad valorem under the provisions of paragraph 358 of the tariff act of 1909, which paragraph is as follows:

358. All woven articles, finished or unfinished, and all manufactures of flax, hemp, ramie, or other.vegetable fiber, or of which these substances, or any of them, is the component mateiial of chief value, not specially provided for in this section, forty-five per centum ad valorem.

The importers claimed, in effect, that the bagging for cotton was composed of single yarns made of jute, jute butts, or hemp, and that as the merchandise was within the description of paragraph 355 it was dutiable at six-tenths of 1 cent per square yard as therein provided. Paragraph 355 reads as follows:

355. Bagging for cotton, gunny cloth, and similar fabrics, suitable for covering cotton, composed of single yarns made of jute, jute butts, or hemp, not bleached, [46]*46dyed, colored, stained, painted, or printed, not exceeding sixteen threads to the square inch, counting the warp and filling, and weighing not less than fifteen ou nces per squ are yard, six-tenths of one cent per square yard.

The board found that the goods were composed of jute, flax, and other vegetable fibers, and that the component material of chief value was not jute, but the vegetable fibers other than jute named in paragraph 358. The assessment of the collector was accordingly sustained by the board, and the importers appealed. This court reversed the board, but on application of the Government granted a rehearing, which was had on December 15, 1914. At the rehearing the Government argued that the court had expressly found that the component material in chief value of the bagging was fibers other than jute and that therefore the goods were dutiable under paragraph 358 as assessed by the collector and as held by the board. We think that a careful reading of the decision of the court will disclose that no such finding of fact was made.

That the bagging was composed of jute fiber, flax, and Russian seg was conceded by both parties to the controversy, but in what proportions those materials were found in the goods was the subject of considerable dispute.

James Cleghorn, one of the manufacturers, testified positively that the several fibers used in making the yarns woven into the bagging were weighed at stated intervals each day and that they were mixed in the proportion of from 70 to 80 per cent of jute, 10 to 15 per cent of flax, and 10 to 15 per cent of seg. He further stated that of 'the jute fiber two-fifths was jute butts and three-fifths jute waste. ’ According to Cleghorn, jute constituted about 85 per cent and flax and seg taken together about 15 per cent of the value of the bagging. Robert Andrews, a practical jute and flax spinner, said that conservatively speaking there was not less than 75 per cent of jute in the bagging. James Logie, a jute manufacturer, testified that the fibers other than jute found by him in the goods did not exceed 15 or 20 per cent at the outside and that as flax was a light fiber jute would probably constitute more than 85 per cent of the entire weight of the fabric. The testimony of Cleghorn as to the relative proportions of jute, flax, and .seg was further supported by Joseph A. Deghuee, an expert in identifying fibers by their structural and chemical differences, and by Henry A. Gassman, a Government examiner charged with the duty of analyzing textile fabrics.

To offset the testimony in favor of the importers the Government introduced analyses made by William Fleming, a fiber expert, and by Walter S. Lewis and R. E. Lofton, physicists in the textile division of the Bureau of Standards. These witnesses did not agree as to the quantities of jute, flax, and seg found by them in the bagging, and analyses made by the same person of different parts of the same sample did not achieve the same result. The witness Lewis found fiber [47]*47of jute butts as well as fiber of jute waste in the bagging, and at least to that extent corroborated the positive testimony of importers’ witnesses Cleghorn, Andrews, and Logie. He utterly failed, however, to determine or estimate the quantity of jute butts, although jute butts had a much higher value than jute waste.

On this state of the evidence in the case we expressly found that confidence could not safely be given to the analyses made by the Government witnesses and certainly not such confidence as would permit the analyses to outweigh the sworn declarations of the manufacturer who caused the weights to be taken daily of the several materials used in making the goods. We expressly found that jute butts as a component material of the bagging had been established by a clear preponderance of the evidence, and that, as the Government witnesses took no account of the quantity of jute butts present in the fabric, their analyses could not be satisfactorily utilized for the determination of the component of chief value.

Referring to the failure of the Government to show the quantity of jute butts in the bagging, we made use of the following language:

In addition to all this, the analyses of Lewis, Lofton, and Fleming failed to deter, mine the quantity of jute butts which entered into the make-up of the bagging. That jute butts were a constituent part of the goods was affirmatively shown by the testimony of Cleghorn, Andrews, Logie, and Lewis, and as that testimony was denied by no witness except Fleming, we must hold that the presence of jute butts as a component element of the merchandise was established by a clear preponderance of the evidence. Inasmuch as the evidence discloses that jute butts have a much higher value than jute waste, it is apparent that no satisfactory calculation as to the component of chief value can be made from the reports of Lewis, Lofton, or Fleming, failing as they do to give the proportion of jute butts employed in the manufacture of the merchandise.

That statement, we think, can not fairly be taken as a finding that jute butts were not a component of the merchandise or that the value of the flax and seg taken together exceeded the value of the jute waste and jute butts taken together. It did indicate, however, that the court was of the opinion that the values of flax and seg could not be combined in this case for the purpose of ascertaining chief value, and that the jute fiber of the bagging, if it had a greater value than that of any one of the other fibers, was the component material of chief value. That “component material of chief value” means that component material which shall exceed in value any other single component material of the article is the signification prescribed for that phrase by paragraph 481, but whether that construction can, be put upon it when paragraph 358 comes into competition with paragraph 355 is a debatable question which we think it unnecessary to decide at this time.

Considering that jute butts were proved to be a component of the bagging, that two-fifths of the jute fiber found in the goods was jute [48]

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ct. Cust. 45, 1915 WL 20672, 1915 CCPA LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawley-v-united-states-ccpa-1915.