Katzenstein & Keene v. United States

14 Ct. Cust. 143, 1926 WL 27876, 1926 CCPA LEXIS 299
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 22, 1926
DocketNo. 2678
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 14 Ct. Cust. 143 (Katzenstein & Keene 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
Katzenstein & Keene v. United States, 14 Ct. Cust. 143, 1926 WL 27876, 1926 CCPA LEXIS 299 (ccpa 1926).

Opinion

Smith, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Cotton rags imported at the port of New York were classified by the collector of customs as waste not specially provided for and assessed for duty at 10 per centum ad valorem under paragraph 1457 of the Tariff Act of 1922, which paragraph reads as follows:

Pab. 1457. Waste, not specially provided for, 10 per centum ad valorem.

The importers protested that the importation was rags for making paper and therefore exempt from duty under that part of the free list which reads as follows:

FREE LIST
Sec. 201. That on and after the day following the passage of this act, * * * the articles mentioned in the following paragraphs, when imported into the United States * * * shall be exempt from duty.
Par. 1651. Rag pulp; paper stock, crude, of every description, including * * * rags, waste, including jute, hemp, and flax waste * * * and all other waste not specially provided for, including old gunny cloth, and old gunny bags, used chiefly for paper making, and no longer suitable for bags.

The Board of General Appraisers held that the evidence did not establish that the importation was chiefly used for making paper and that the use of the particular importation and the chief use throughout the United States of like material hadnot been proven. 'The Board of General Appraisers therefore overruled the protest and the importer appealed.

On the hearing before the board, Harry A. Brody testified that his firm dealt in paper stock and paper-mill supplies and that he had been engaged in that business for 8 years, during which period he had [144]*144handled several thousand tons of paper stock rags; that in 1912 his firm had handled about 3,000 tons of merchandise of the class imported; that he purchased the importation from Katzenstein & Keene, and that, when it arrived on the pier, he out open 10 or 15 bales of the 62 bales imported; that he then pulled out 5 or 6 pieces from the center of the sides of each bale to see whether it was the merchandise that he had purchased, and found that the stock was No. 2 large white rags; that he rejected the merchandise because all of it was of a grade different from that which he had purchased; that the examination made by him of the bales examined was the examination customarily made in his line of business in the buying and selling of rags; that he personally made such examinations every week and sometimes two or three times a week; that the examination made by him was the examination made by paper mills and paper makers in buying rags; that the material which he examined was used generally in the trade and chiefly for paper making; that the rags were known to the wholesale trade and were sold to paper makers as No. 2 large white rags; that the rags had buttons on them and that some of them had stripes and were not strictly white, but that “it was not anything but a paper-stock proposition;" that he did not know what was the proportion of the paper-stock business done by his firm, but that he did not know of any firm which dealt in larger quantities in the United States than did his firm; that 100 per centum of the particular type of rags handled by his firm was used for paper making; that the kind of rags in issue was chiefly used in the paper-making trade to make paper; that 100 per centum of the shipments of the type of rags handled by his firm were used for paper making; that his firm, Egress & Co., of Hartford, Conn.; William A. Baker, Chelsea, Mass.; and Rosenberg & Co., located, he believed, in Chelsea, were the largest sellers of material of the class imported; that he did not know of any firm dealing in such rags in Chicago, St. Louis, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Cleveland, but that he did know by the shipments that came in that they got practically all of the stock through his firm; that he did not follow the importation into the paper factory, and that he did not know to whom it was sold. On cross-examination Brody made the following answers to the following questions propounded by General Appraiser Adamson:

Q. Do you mean you swear that you know that the chief use of rags of this character throughout the United States is by paper mills in the manufacture of paper chief use? — A. I should say.
Q. Do you know that? — A. No; I do not know.
Q. Then you need not say it. — A. The chief use of this particular thing goes to paper makers. That is what I was testifying to.
Q. I am asking you if you know. What use was made chiefly of this merchandise throughout the country, not what you bring in, but the general use of it by paper mills, not by a man selling it, but to make paper out of it — do you know that? — A. Yes, sir.
[145]*145Q. How do you know that? — A. By being in paper mills when they were using it; seeing them use it.
By Mr. Higginbotham:
Q. What paper mills were you in? — A. I was in the Parsons Paper Co., Hol-yoke, Mass., and the C. & W. S. Crane, at’Dalton, Mass.; the Whiting Paper Co., Holyoke, Mass., and quite a few other large paper mills in New England. I had been in several American writing paper company mills and see them use it.
Q. Mention one in Connecticut that you have been in? — A. The Oakland Paper Co., Manchester, Conn.
Q. Anywhere else besides Connecticut and Massachusetts that you have been in? — A. Paper mills, you mean?
Q. Yes. — A. Yes.
Q. Where? — A. Middletown, Ohio; that was the W. B. Ogelsby Paper Co.
Q. In all of these- A. I have been in several others.
Q. In other States? — A. Other States.
Q. What others? — A. The John A. Manning Paper Co., Grand Island, N. Y.

Brody then stated that the John A. Manning Paper Co. and the Ogelsby Co. did not nse rags of the class imported, but that the other companies mentioned by him did use them; that in the mills he saw cotton rags used for wiping machinery, but that the rags used as wipers were not similar to the rags of the importation; that the mills mentioned by him were the principal ones in the United States, and had the bulk of the’ paper manufacture in the United States, and that he based his statement on the size of the concern, on the stock used, and the quantity used. On redirect examination the witness stated that rags of the kind imported were used to make good bristol board and.stock paper, but were not used for making newspaper or writing paper; that the buttons, hooks, and eyes were taken off the rags by the paper mill.

Herbert P. Brock, general manager of the Waste Material Trading Corporation, testified for the importers that his firm dealt in rags at wholesale and imported rags; that he had handled rags for 25 years, and that cotton rags were classified in the trade as cottons, white, blue, blue cotton, white and red, under separate numbers; that the different kinds of white rags were Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 4, and white wipers; that No. 2 large white rags meant a large white muslin garment, heavy in texture and clean; that such rags are derived from undergarments of muslin and have buttons and things like that on them; that 98 per centum of No.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ct. Cust. 143, 1926 WL 27876, 1926 CCPA LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katzenstein-keene-v-united-states-ccpa-1926.