Kolmar, Inc. v. United States

13 Cust. Ct. 134, 1944 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 546
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1944
DocketC. D. 884
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 Cust. Ct. 134 (Kolmar, Inc. v. United 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
Kolmar, Inc. v. United States, 13 Cust. Ct. 134, 1944 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 546 (cusc 1944).

Opinions

Keefe, Judge:

This case involves the quantity of whisky upon which duty is properly assessable. The importation consists of bourbon and rye whiskies, each imported in 15 barrels. The importer makes various claims in the protest, none of them being waived, although the claim mainly relied upon is that “it is not right nor legal to assess duty upon merchandise which never arrived in this country and which never was imported.” The collector assessed duty in accordance with article 817 of the Customs Regulations of 1931, at $5 per proof gallon, prescribed in paragraph 802 of the Tariff Act of 1930, upon the basis of the capacity of the casks, less 2}i per- centum for normal outage, rather than upon the basis of the net quantity as invoiced, or entered, or as ascertained by the Government gauger. That is to say, the collector assessed duty upon the basis of 1,879.41 proof gallons, as determined from the capacity of the casks, less 2}i per centum, rather than upon the basis of 1,494.48 proof gallons, as returned by the gauger, or 1,420.17 proof gallons, as invoiced and entered.

From the invoice, the entry papers, and the record, we find that the whisky was exported by the Consolidated Distilleries, Ltd. It was invoiced at Montreal, Canada, on December 19,1933, and shipped from Belleville, Canada, December 27, 1933. The whisky was entered by Kolmar, Inc., at Cincinnati, Ohio, January 4, 1934, and. the testimony fully establishes that, both at the time the barrels were shipped and at the time of their receipt in Cincinnati, they were sound and in perfect condition and none of them showed any indication of breakage, leakage, or damage. Hearings were held at Buffalo and Cincinnati.

At the hearing in Buffalo, one George Drummond, a foreman blender and gauger for the Consolidated Distilleries, Ltd., testified for the plaintiff that he had charge of the gauging and weighing of the 30 barrels of whisky at issue, and he produced a packing list showing the results of Ids gauging and weighing operations, having attached thereto [136]*136two weight sheets in his own handwriting, from which the packing list had been compiled. The witness certified under oath that this packing list was correct and accurate and showed the results of what he personally did. Upon said packing list is written “Certified true copy of Record. W. H. Dillnutt Excise Officer.” The witness testified that Mr. Dillnutt was an officer of the Canadian Government who was present and supervised the gauging and weighing of the 30 barrels of whisky and that he was able to recognize the signature upon the packing list as the signature of said excise officer. The documents were admitted in evidence as collective exhibit 5.

The witness further testified that the whisky was placed in bonded warehouse to age in April and May 1928; that he withdrew it from warehouse on December 12, 1933; that he determined the actual quantities of whisky contained in the barrels by means of the might method in manner following: The whisky was emptied from the barrels into a round tank raised on Fairbank scales which were tested every morning and before every weighing; that after emptying the barrels they wore tared by weighing each barrel on a Toledo platform scale 4 feet square, which also was tested every morning and before each operation; that after weighing the whisky it was tested for strength; that the gross weight as reported by him shows the weight of the container, plus the whisky, which was siphoned out of the tank into the barrel; that the tare weight is the weight of the empty barrel and the net weight is the weight of the whisky in the barrel; that after determining the gross, the tare, and the net weights, the barrels were examined by a cooper and then a piece of steel was used to seal the liquor in each barrel and the same was so sealed under the supervision of the excise officer; that the barrels were placed four barrels in a row on end in a freight car and. braced by a carpenter in such a way that they would not move when the cars were shunted; that, after loading, the excise officer took his weighing sheet, chocked the package number, the gross, the tare weight, and the net gallons and strength, marked on every barrel, to see that it corresponded with his weight sheet, and then, finally, the car doors were closed and sealed by the.excise officer and the witness.

The witness testified further that in his experience the weight method of determining the quantity of liquor was more accurate than the rod method and that the weight method was used by his company and by the Canadian Government; that by the rod method there is a possibility of there being a mistake; that is, “when the man puts the rod in you have to allow for a wet dip and a dry dip, and the thickness of the stuff where the bung comes” (record page 40), whereas in the weight method you have the actual weight of the liquor.

Concerning the wantage in the barrels, the witness testified that the purpose of putting whisky in barrels is to age it, and in the course [137]*137of time there is a natural shrinkage; that it may shrink as much as: 8 per centum the first year; 6 per centum the second year; 4 per centum the third year; 3 per centum the fourth year, and another 2: per centum up to 15 years; that the Canadian Government makes allowances to his company for evaporation of whisky after it has. been barreled; that as these particular barrels had been in storage more than 5 years there was a natural shrinkage in the contents,; that, at the time of weighing, the barrels were about two-thirds full and after weighing he put back the liquor he had taken out and did not fill the barrels to capacity because the customer asked that they be shipped that way on account of desiring the cooperage.

In collective exhibit 5, the weight sheet of the shipper indicates the gross, tare, and net weights of each barrel, also the imperial gallons and Sikes proof gallons, as well as the American wine gallons and American proof gallons. The total of the American rye whisky shipped is shown as 600 American wine gallons, equal to 706.50 American proof gallons. The total of the American bourbon whisky is shown as 618.6 American wine gallons, equal to 713.67 American proof gallons. The proof gallons shown upon the weight sheet agree with the unit of quantity upon the consular invoice.

The merchandise appears on the invoice as follows: “15 barrels Bourbon Whiskey 1928 Manufacture”; marks and numbers, “Kolmar Inc. Nos. 326-340 Inc.”; manufacturer’s numbers, “Bond Nos. 245-5-28”; quantities “618.6 Wine Gallons 713.67 American Proof Gallons @ 4.38 per American Proof Gallon” (Canadian currency); and as “15 Barrels American Rye Whisky 1928 Manufacture”; marks and numbers, “Kolmar Inc. Nos. 319-333 Inc.”; manufacturer’s numbers, “Bond Nos. 107-4-28”; quantities — “600 American Wine Gallon 706.50 American Proof Gallon @ 4.38 per American Proof Gallon” (Canadian currency).

At the hearing in Cincinnati the United States customs gauger testified for the plaintiff that his gauging of the whisky was performed in the bonded section of the Cincinnati terminal warehouse on January 5, 1934, by means of the rod method of gauging; and that on the basis of his figures shown in his dock book, prepared and completed on January 12, 1934, admitted in evidence as exhibit 1, he found in barrels B 326 to 340, 750.90 proof gallons and in barrels D 319 to 333, 743.56 proof gallons, ora total for the 30 barrels of 1,494.48 American proof gallons.

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13 Cust. Ct. 134, 1944 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kolmar-inc-v-united-states-cusc-1944.