J. G. Philen, Jr., Co. v. Unites States

24 Cust. Ct. 168
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1950
DocketC. D. 1227
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Cust. Ct. 168 (J. G. Philen, Jr., Co. v. Unites States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Customs Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. G. Philen, Jr., Co. v. Unites States, 24 Cust. Ct. 168 (cusc 1950).

Opinion

Cline, Judge:

These are protests against the collector’s assessment of duty on raw cotton imported from Mexico through the port of Brownsville, Tex., a subport of Laredo. The protests were consolidated at the trial. It appears from the consular invoices that the shipments consisted of 1,981 bales in entry No. 0136B (protest 124716-K) and 1,374 bales in entry No. 0137B (protest 124717-K). It also appears from the- record that samples of the merchandise were originally taken at Brownsville and forwarded to the appraiser at [169]*169New York; that the appraiser at New York received 47 sacks containing 2,298 samples; that he reported that 1,722 of these were found to be cotton of one and one-eighth inches or more in staple length; that classification was made on the basis of that report. However, the collector, instead of assessing duty upon the weight of the specific bales found to contain long staple cotton, assessed duty at the rate of 3/ cents per pound under paragraph 783, Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, on 81 per centum of the total weight of the cotton imported.

The importer claims that the staple length of the imported raw cotton is less than one and one-eighth inches and is therefore entitled to free entry under paragraph 1662 of the Tariff Act of 1930 and further that the collector erred in assessing duty upon 81 per centum of the entire shipment instead of upon the actual weight of the bales found to be long. In its brief the Government conceded that the assessment of duty should have been upon the actual weight of the bales reported to contain long staple cotton and not upon a percentage basis.

The pertinent provisions of the tariff act are as follows:

Pab. 783 [as amended by the trade agreement with Peru, T. D. 50670]. Cotton having a staple of one and one-eighth inches or more in length_3)4$ per lb.
Par. 1662. Cotton, not specially provided for, and cotton waste. [Free]

The issue is confined to the question: Does the cotton contained in the 1,722 bales reported by the appraiser to be long staple have a staple of one and one-eighth inches or more in length?

The record in this case is voluminous, but a large part of it is concerned with certain preliminary motions which it is unnecessary to discuss here. As a result of these motions, plaintiff introduced into evidence the 47 sacks containing the samples of the merchandise which had been examined and manipulated by the appraiser at New York (plaintiff’s collective exhibit 1) and said samples were examined and manipulated, first, by plaintiff’s witnesses in a room of the United States Customs Laboratory in New York and, second, by defendant’s witnesses in a room of the New York Cotton Exchange.

At the trial Harold Fielding, textile analyst for the United States Customs Laboratory, called as a witness for the plaintiff, testified that he had been a customs analyst for 28 years; that the work of a customs analyst is to test all types of fibers and fabrics, to identify the fiber and its diameter, length, quality, and composition; that the work includes determining the staple length of raw cotton; that he worked for about 6 years with the Pacific Mills in Lawrence, Mass.,, before coming to the Customs Laboratory; that in the last 6 years he has done practically nothing but cotton stapling; that during said period he stapled 10,000 samples representing 10,000 bales of cotton; that long staple cotton is cotton having a staple of one and one-eighth inches or more in length; that cotton having a staple of less than one [170]*170and one-eighth inches in length is considered short staple; that he did not buy or sell cotton commercially, but was just a technical analyst; that he stapled cotton for various customs ports including New York; that he had pursued a course of study in stapling cotton at the Department of Agriculture in Washington in 1945; that he stapled the cotton involved in the entries herein in the conditioning room of the Customs Laboratory about the 20th of September 1947; that that room is kept at a temperature of 70 degrees Fahrenheit and at 65 degrees relative humidity; that he stapled 2,245 samples; that he found 43 samples had a staple of one and one-eighth inches or more and the balance had a staple of less than one and one-eighth inches. Mr. Fielding’s report was received in evidence as plaintiff’s exhibit 6.

Mr. Fielding also testified that he was present when Mr. Neal and Mr. Neville worked in the laboratory; that during that time the room was kept in its standard condition; that the cotton came directly to him from the clerk of this court and was always kept under his jurisdiction; that he stapled the cotton after Mr.- Neal and Mr. Neville, except possibly the first day.

Mr. Fielding described the method of stapling he used as follows:

* * * I take about quarter of an ounce of cotton in my two hands, break it in half, discard one half, draw the fibers through the thumb and forefinger, into the other hand, discard the rest of the fibers, redraw them into the right hand, straighten off the ends, pull out the short, waste fibers, do the same on the other end, lay it on a piece of velvet, block it with the ends of the rule, or fingers, and measure it.
Q. All right. Now, when you did that what did you do, block off the fibers?— A. Yes.
Q. And then you measured? — A. That is right.
Q. Now, what do you call that tuft of cotton that you measure? — A. That is the stapled cotton.
Q. Yes, but what do you call that, a pull? — A. Yes, that is a pull.
Q. That is what you call a pull? — A. Yes.
Q. And then you measure that? — A. Yes.
Q. And you measured it with a rule? — A. Yes.
Q. Then you followed that procedure in each one of them? — A. Yes.
Q. And the results you gave were obtained in the manner you now just described? — A. Yes.

Joseph Hugh Neville, Jr., called as a witness by the plaintiff, testified that he was employed by Manget Brothers, a firm of cotton shippers; that he had been in the cotton business since 1933; that he had worked in the sample room to learn the business, had bought and sold cotton from 1934 to 1940, had graded and stapled cotton for the Clark Thread Co. from 1941 through July 1942; that in 1940, Manget Brothers received a contract from the Department of Agriculture to grade and staple stocks of cotton held by the United States Government amounting to a little over 7 million bales; that he had classed a [171]*171little oyer 100,000 bales of that cotton between January and June of 1940.

Mr. Neville stated that he had stapled the cotton involved herein in the conditioning room of the Customs Laboratory in August 1947 with Mr. W. C. Neal; that Mr. Fielding was also present; that Mr. Fielding and his assistants gave him the cotton to staple; that it was returned to them; that after checking the conditions of the room with Mr.

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