Heads and Threads, Div. Of Msl Industries, Inc. v. The United States

417 F.2d 637, 56 C.C.P.A. 95, 1969 CCPA LEXIS 333
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 15, 1969
DocketCustoms Appeal 5323
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 417 F.2d 637 (Heads and Threads, Div. Of Msl Industries, Inc. v. The 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
Heads and Threads, Div. Of Msl Industries, Inc. v. The United States, 417 F.2d 637, 56 C.C.P.A. 95, 1969 CCPA LEXIS 333 (ccpa 1969).

Opinion

ALMOND, Judge.

Heads and Threads, Div. of MSL Industries, Inc. appeals from the judgment of the United States Customs Court, Second Division, 1 overruling its protest against the classification of the imported merchandise, described on the invoice as “Hexagon Socket Head Bolts Less Nuts,” as “other screws” having shanks or threads over 0.24 inch in diameter under item 646.63 of the Tariff Schedules of the United States, and assessed with duty at the rate of 19 per centum ad valorem.

It is undisputed that the merchandise involved consists of fastening devices composed of a steel alloy metal, cylindrical in shape, threaded on one end and capped on the other end with a hexagonal configuration cut into the capped end or head. The fastener is torqued by means of a hexagonal-shaped key wrench which is inserted into the hexagonal configuration cut into the head and turned. The subject articles, used to join various metal components together either through the medium of a hole tapped in one of the components to be joined together or with the use of a nut screwed upon the threaded shank after engagement of the components, are admittedly generally known in the trade and commerce of the United States as “socket head cap screws.”

Appellant, while not disputing that the articles in question have shanks or threads over 0.24 inch in diameter, contends that they are “bolts” within the common meaning, and within the meaning and intent of the Tariff Schedules of the United States, and therefore dutiable *638 under item 646.54 of said schedules as “bolts” at 0.5 cents per lb.

The pertinent tariff provisions read as follows:

Schedule 6, Part 3, Subpart D:

Bolts, nuts, studs and studding, screws, and washers (including bolts and their nuts imported in the same shipment, and -assembled bolts or screws and washers, with or without nuts); screw eyes, screw hooks and screw rings; turnbuckles, all the foregoing not described in the foregoing provisions of this subpart, of base metal:

Of iron or steel:

646.54 Bolts and bolts and their nuts imported in the same shipment ...................... 0.50 per lb.

646.56 Nuts ................................... 0.30 per lb.

646.57 Studs and studding ......................14.5% ad val.

646.58 Screws:

Machine screws 0.375 inch or more i'n length and 0.125 inch or more in diameter (not including cap screws) ...... 0.50 per lb.

Other:

646.60 Having shanks or threads not over 0.24 inch in diameter.........................22.5% ad val.

646.63 Having shanks or threads over 0.24 inch in diameter ............................... 19% ad val.

The complete record herein, constituting an incorporated record 2 as well as the record in the case at bar, consists of the testimony of one witness for appellant, five witnesses for the United States as well as various exhibits.

Appellant’s witness, Robert Dwyer, testified that he was associated with the importer herein and that he had been involved in all phases of the screw, nut and bolt industry for approximately ten years. He identified appellant’s exhibit 1 as samples of the merchandise involved and stated that they are sold here as socket head cap screws, and that prior to his present employment, when he was in his own business, he did not recall using any words other than socket head cap screws in a purchase order.

Five United States’ witnesses with extensive experience in the domestic fastener industry testified to the effect that articles such as those in question had always been sold domestically as socket head cap screws and so referred to in manufacturers’ sales catalogs identified by the witnesses.

Considerable testimony in the record is devoted to the question of whether the articles involved possess a “washer face or its equivalent” since, apparently, the presence or absence of this feature is utilized by customs officers to distinguish cap screws from bolts. Mr. Dwyer testified that a washer face is “an embossed circle underneath the head of the bolt which would be approximately %4th inch in thickness” and that the articles *639 in question did not have a washer face or its equivalent. The witness then identified appellant’s exhibit 4, which he said did have a washer face, as a hexagon head cap screw. While he seldom heard any reference to the term “equivalent” of a washer face, he said he would consider that chamfered corners are as close to a washer face as possible and that such are not present on the bearing surface, the surface underneath the head, of the socket head cap screws represented by exhibit 1. The witness further stated that the socket head cap screws have a bearing surface which performs the same function as the bearing surface of the hexagon head cap screw.

Appellee’s witnesses testified to the effect that the socket head cap screws in question possessed a smooth bearing surface beneath the head which performed the same function as a washer face of the hexagon head cap screw, namely to keep the edge of the head from gouging the work, and that this finished bearing surface is a washer type surface and is equivalent to a washer face. Two witnesses stated in effect that an embossed or raised surface, while a necessity in a hexagon head cap screw to prevent scratching by the points on the head, was not required in a socket head cap screw due to the fact that the head is round and without points, hence there is no possibility of marring an abutting surface.

In holding that the instant importation was properly classified under item 646.60, the Customs Court observed that the articles in question were a form of article referred to as “cap screw” and that the majority of contemporary lexicons define the term “cap screw” so as to place it in the bolt family of fasteners. However, the court noted, properly we believe, that the common meaning of tariff terms as expressed in lexicographical authorities must yield to contrary legislative intent. It then proceeded to find that:

* * * subpart D of part 3 of schedule 6 of the tariff schedules does not refer to the word “capscrew” in positive context. The schedule makes use of the word only in excluding articles so designated from the duty rate treatment accorded machine screws of certain dimensions. And this exclusionary use of the term “capscrew” takes place under the heading of “screws” in the statute. This would seem to indicate a legislative intent to treat the articles designated as “cap-screws” as screws.

The court then held that the following references leave “little to the imagination and no room for doubt as to the intentions of the framers of the tariff schedules to treat capscrews in varying forms as screws and not as bolts”:

The Explanatory Note to the Tariff Schedules dated November 15, 1960, stating, in pertinent part:
Item 646.58 conforms with the existing customs practice of classifying machine screws of the dimensions specified as-“bolts” under paragraph 330.

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417 F.2d 637, 56 C.C.P.A. 95, 1969 CCPA LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heads-and-threads-div-of-msl-industries-inc-v-the-united-states-ccpa-1969.