International Minerals & Metals Corp. v. United States

12 Ct. Cust. 245, 1924 WL 26700, 1924 CCPA LEXIS 56
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 9, 1924
DocketNo. 2223
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ct. Cust. 245 (International Minerals & Metals Corp. 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
International Minerals & Metals Corp. v. United States, 12 Ct. Cust. 245, 1924 WL 26700, 1924 CCPA LEXIS 56 (ccpa 1924).

Opinions

Martin, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case relates to an assessment of “additional duties” under paragraph I, Section III, tariff act of 1913, the relevant provisions of which read as follows:

* * * and if the appraised value of any article of imported merchandise subject to an ad valorem duty or to a duty based upon or regulated in any manner by the value thereof shall exceed the value declared in the entry, there shall be levied, collected, and paid, in addition to the duties imposed by law on such merchandise, an additional duty of 1 per centum of the total appraised value thereof for each 1 per centum that such appraised value exceeds the value declared in the entry * * *. '

[246]*246The collector held that the present merchandise was dutiable at an ad valorem rate of duty and that the appraised value thereof exceeded the entered value. He, therefore, assessed additional duties-upon the entry under the foregoing paragraph. It is conceded that this is ad valorem merchandise, and the only question in the case is whether its appraised value exceeded that declared by the importer in the entry. No testimony was introduced before the board, consequently this appeal must be decided upon the record and the original papers forwarded therewith.

The merchandise consisted of spelter, which was exported from Frankfort, Germany, and was imported into this country at the port of Boston. In the absence of a consular invoice the importer entered the merchandise upon a pro forma invoice and undertook and professed therein to declare its market value at Frankfort at the time of the exportation. This was done, however, in an indirect manner, by declaring the value to be 4| cents per pound in Boston “c. i. f.’ The use of this abbreviation (for “cost, insurance, and freight”) is analogous to the familiar one of f. o. b., and signified that the stated value included certain nondutiable charges which were to be deducted therefrom in order to work back to the foreign-market value-of the merchandise, which would be its dutiable value. In other words, the entry signified that the market value at Frankfort, which would be the dutiable value, was not 4J cents per pound, but was the remainder which would be left after deducting the nondutiable charges per pound therefrom. This was an indirect method of declaring the foreign-market value, but it was permitted in practice for the sake of convenience and uniformity. Moreover, this procedure would correctly disclose the foreign-market value of the imported merchandise if the entry would correctly state the amount of the nondutiable charges to be deducted from the Boston value. But it-is manifest that if the importer should overstate the amount of the deduction it would be equivalent to understating the foreign-market-value of the importation. And that is what the importer manifestly did in this case. The nondutiable items in question consisted of the cost of transporting the spelter from Frankfort to Hamburg, the charges incurred in Hamburg, the ocean freight from Hamburg to-Boston, the inland and marine insurance, and the consular fee. In the entry the importer stated these items in amounts which aggregated $2,137, and accordingly deducted that amount from the “ c. i. f.” Boston value, declaring the remainder to be the Frankfort value. It was afterwards conceded that the actual amount of the nondutiable items was only $1,866.20, or $270.80 less than that declared in the-entry. Consequently-in this indirect manner the 'importer understated the dutiable value of the merchandise in the sum of $270.80. [247]*247It is of course plain that such an indirect undervaluation is condemned by the act quite the same as a direct one.

The circumstance that the undervaluation was made in an entry upon a pro forma invoice is immaterial. Paragraph I, Section III, tariff act of 1913, reads in part as follows:

* * * That all additional duties, penalties, or forfeitures applicable to-merchandise entered by a duly certified invoice shall be alike applicable to merchandise entered by a pro forma invoice or statement in the form of an invoice * * *.

Accordingly the fact that the entry was niade upon a pro forma invoice in this case did not relieve the importer from the obligation of correctly stating whatever items he undertook to state in the entry. Furthermore, the'fact that the market value of the merchandise “c. i. f. ” Boston was stated in the entry by the pound, to wit, 4J cents per pound, instead of in gross is also immaterial, since the nondutiable items remained to be deducted therefrom in order to ascertain the value per pound of-the spelter at Frankfort. In other words a true and correct statement of the sum of the deductible charges was necessary before its true and correct Frankfort value per pound could be ascertained.

It is therefore unmistakable that there was an undervaluation of the imported merchandise made in the entry, and if a liquidation had followed consistently therewith duty would have been assessed upon an insufficient valuation. This seems to dispose of the question concerning the entered value, leaving us only to inquire whether the appraiser appraised the imported merchandise at an advanced value.

It appears from the record and the original papers in the case that the importer filed the entry with the collector on April 26, 1921. The collector thereupon attached to the pro forma invoice Customs Form 6417 on which he designated the packages to he examined and the place of examination, and transmitted the same to the appraiser pursuant to article 563, Customs Regulations, 1915. It then became the duty of the examiner under the supervision and direction of the appraiser; to examine the imported merchandise; and to ascertain and report the foreign-market value thereof together with such a description of the merchandise as to. disclose the rate of duty lawfully chargeable thereon. (Art. 1124, Customs Regulations, 1915.)

On May 6, 1921, which was 10 days after the day when the entry was filed with the collector, the examiner made the examination required of him as aforesaid. • The record states that, as the charges for freight shown on the pro forma invoice were very large, the importer was questioned regarding them, and he stated that they [248]*248were approximate only and the consular invoice would give all charges correctly. A notation- to that effect was made by the examiner on the face of the invoice. Subject to the amount of the nondutiable charges which would appear in the consular invoice, the merchandise was appraised at 4-3, cents per pound c. i. f. Boston. Afterwards the consular invoice disclosed that the correct amount of the nondutiable charges was less in the amount aforesaid than the amount stated in the entry, so' that the appraised value was advanced accordingly. Notice of this advance in value was duly sent to the importer, but no appeal to reappraisement was taken. Accordingly the advanced value became the final appraisement of the merchandise.

Upon the foregoing facts it seems clear that the importer undervalued the merchandise for duty in the entry made upon the pro forma invoice, and that the appraiser advanced the entered value to the higher figures given in the consular invoice. Accordingly the collector was bound to assess additional duties thereon since the appraised value in fact exceeded the entered value of the merchandise.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ct. Cust. 245, 1924 WL 26700, 1924 CCPA LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-minerals-metals-corp-v-united-states-ccpa-1924.