Kraemer v. United States

23 Cust. Ct. 43, 1949 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 619
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1949
DocketC. D. 1188
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Cust. Ct. 43 (Kraemer 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
Kraemer v. United States, 23 Cust. Ct. 43, 1949 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 619 (cusc 1949).

Opinion

Colb, Judge:

This case concerns 51 bales of merchandise described on the invoice as “woolen rags, new coloured golfers.” The collector, acting under valid regulations, Customs Regulations of 1943, section 14.1, ordered 1 bale for official examination, which revealed a content of 334 pounds of wool rags and 46 pounds of wool thread or yarn waste. Classification of the two classes of merchandise, found in said bale, was made under the respective provisions therefor in paragraph 1105 (a) of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U. S. C. §1001, par. 1105 (a)), as amended by the trade agreement with the United Kingdom, 74 Treas. Dec. 253, T. D. 49753, the wool rags being assessed at 9 cents per pound and the wool thread or yarn waste at 15 cents per pound. The remaining 50 bales were assessed at the 15 cents per pound rate for wool thread or yarn waste in said paragraph 1105 (a), as amended. In applying such assessment to the contents of the 50 bales, the collector invoked the provisions of paragraph 1103 of the Tariff Act of 1930 (19 U. S. C. §1001, par. 1103), which read as follows:

Par. 1103. If any bale or package contains wools, hairs, wool wastes, or wool waste material, subject to different rates of duty, the highest rate applicable to any part shall apply to the entire contents of such bale or package, except as provided in paragraphs 1101 and 1102.

Plaintiff does not dispute the action of the collector as he classified the two kinds of merchandise found in the bale that was the subject of official examination. The protest is directed against the classification of the contents of the remaining 50 bales, the contention being that all [45]*45of tbe merchandise therein consisted of wool rags, dutiable as such under paragraph 1105 (a), as amended, supra.

Plaintiff's sole witness was the comptroller of the Atlas Waste Manufacturing Co., the importing corporation, manufacturers of reprocessed wool fibers. During his 20 years’ experience, the witness purchased, sold, examined, and segregated wool rags and wool wastes.

The shipment in question was entered for consumption on July 2, 1946, and received at the importer’s warehouse 6 days later, when the witness saw it. Bale No. 28 was ordered to the appraiser’s stores for examination, and the remaining 50 bales were held at the importer’s warehouse. The contents of said bale No. 28 were segregated by the witness under customs supervision and found to contain 334 pounds of wool rags and 46 pounds of wool thread or yarn waste.

The 50 bales that remained in the warehouse were there only 2 or 3 days. The witness inspected their contents and found them to be wool rags, recognized as “sweater stock,” with some rayon and cotton fibers. He saw no wool thread or yarn waste. Immediately after this inspection, the contents of the entire 50 bales were carbonized for removal of vegetable content, i. e., cotton and rayon fibers. The process resulted in shrinkage of 34.8 per centum, and because the importation did not agree with the original sample, which showed “no cotton, or rayon, or any vegetable content,” the foreign shipper granted an allowance of 17 per centum to the importer.

Following the official examination of bale No. 28, and on July 19, 1946, request was received from the customs officials for further examination of 5 bales, Nos. 9, 19, 39, 49, and 51. Compliance with such request was impossible because at that time the merchandise, having been carbonized, was not in its original packages. Any wool threads or yarn that might be present would appear before carbonization. Thereafter, such material would have disintegrated.

Wool rags and wool thread or yarn waste are two entirely different classes of merchandise, easily distinguishable and readily segregable. Physical examination of the present importation to determine the quantities of each would take approximately 2 hours. In making such determination, which is largely the result of visual observation, the top of the bale would be ripped open, exposing the contents, and by loosening the material through handling “you can fairly readily tell the content of wool rags and wool thread waste in the bale within one or two per cent.” Inspection of the 50 bales in question by the witness was made solely for the presence of vegetable content. He did not look for wool threads or yarn. His exact language is: “No, I didn’t look for threads or yarn. I was merely interested in the vegetable content.”

[46]*46It is not unusual for the contents of 1 bale to be different from all others in a particular shipment, “quite often due to the carelessness in the baling.”

Defendant’s witness was the customs examiner who advisorily classified the present merchandise. Upon examination of bale No. 28, he found wool thread or yarn, waste throughout various parts thereof. In order to get a better knowledge of the entire importation, redelivery was requested of five more bales, the numbers of which were selected at random, and when the importer did not honor the requisition, the conclusion was drawn that the remaining 50 bales contained wool rags and wool thread or yarn waste, commingled.

Counsel for plaintiff, urging the sufficiency of plaintiff’s testimony to establish the alleged claim, argues in his reply brief, that “It becomes clear from a consideration of the witness’ qualifications and experience, coupled with the dissimilarity in appearance of wool rags waste and wool thread or yarn waste, that even without looking for it he would have seen any thread waste within the bales examined by him bad such class of waste been in fact present.”

We are not willing to so construe the proof before us. On the contrary, it is fair to expect that the witness’ broad experience, coupled with knowledge that the shipment in question was inferior to the representative sample, would dictate a very careful and thorough examination of the bales iu warehouse for a full and complete ascertainment of their contents. The witness’ admission that he did not look for wool thread or yarn waste cannot be ignored. It contributes strongly to our conclusion that plaintiff’s proof is insufficient to establish as matter of fact that the 50 bales under consideration contained only wool rags, without any wool thread or yarn waste commingled therewith.

Downing Co. v. United States, 12 Ct. Cust. Appls. 391, T. D. 40582, concerned a mixture of two or more wool wastes, and held the provisions of paragraph 1103 of the Tariff Act of 1922 (prototype of paragraph 1103 of the Tariff Act of 1930) to be controlling. In referring thereto, the court said that “the statute mandatorily provides that the importer of mixed wools or wool wastes must enter his goods at the particular rate applicable to each portion thereof. If he does this, the spirit of the law has been complied with. If he does not, he has impliedly committed a fraud upon the Government and must pay the highest rate which may be imposed upon any portion of his importation.”

The construction announced in the Downing Co. case, supra, was followed in United States v. James G. Kitchen & Co., 17 C. C. P. A. 265, T. D. 43688. There, the importation consisted of a mixture, of wools, each bale containing between 3 to 10 per centum of pure Eng[47]*47lish wool and from 90 to 97 per centum of Scotch black-faced wool.

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Related

Downing Co. v. United States
12 Ct. Cust. 391 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1924)
United States v. Swift
14 Ct. Cust. 222 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1926)
United States v. Lobsitz
16 Ct. Cust. 475 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Cust. Ct. 43, 1949 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kraemer-v-united-states-cusc-1949.