L. A. Salomon & Bro. v. United States

26 C.C.P.A. 302, 1939 CCPA LEXIS 226
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 23, 1939
DocketNo. 4172
StatusPublished

This text of 26 C.C.P.A. 302 (L. A. Salomon & Bro. 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
L. A. Salomon & Bro. v. United States, 26 C.C.P.A. 302, 1939 CCPA LEXIS 226 (ccpa 1939).

Opinion

BlaNd, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:2

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Third Division of the United States Customs Court which overruled an amended protest filed by the appellant against the action of the collector at the port ■of New York in levying duty on certain merchandise invoiced as ■“Fullers Earth” at the rate of % of 1 cent per pound and 30 per centum ad valorem under paragraph 207, Tariff Act of 1930. The protest, claimed the merchandise to be dutiable under the provisions ■of said paragraph 207 at only $1.50 per ton or $3.25 per ton as fuller’s [304]*304earth, wrought or manufactured, and by an amendment to the protest it was alternatively claimed that said merchandise was dutiable under the provisions of paragraph 214 of said act at 30 per centum ad valorem as an earthy or mineral substance.

Paragraph 207 reads as follows:

Par. 207. Clays or earths, unwrought and unmanufactured, including common blue clay and Gross-Almerode glass pot clay, not specially provided for, $1 per ton; wrought or manufactured, not specially provided for, $2 per ton; bentonite, unwrought and unmanufactured, $1.50 per ton; wrought or manufactured, $3.25-per ton; china clay or kaolin, $2.50 per ton; crude feldspar, $1 per ton; bauxite,, crude, not refined or otherwise 'advanced in condition in any manner, $1 per ton; fuller’s earth, unwrought and unmanufactured, $1.50 per ton; wrought or manufactured, $3.25 per ton; clays or earths artificially activated with acid or other material, one-fourth of 1 cent per pound and 30 per centum ad valorem; silica, crude, not specially provided for, $3.50 per ton; fluorspar, containing more than 97 per centum of calcium fluoride, $5.60 per ton; containing not more than 97 per centum of calcium fluoride, $8.40 per ton; sand containing 95 per centum or more of silica and not more than six-tenths of 1 per centum of oxide of iron and suitable for use in the manufacture of glass, $2 per ton. [Italics ours.]

The identical issue involved in this case was decided by this court in United States v. L. A. Salomon & Bro., 22 C. C. P. A. (Customs) 490, T. D. 47483. In the instant case, the parties stipulated that the imported material was similar in all material respects to the material which was before the court in the Salomon case, supra. The testimony, in the former case, of Friedrich Mauch and Dr. Hans Staelin, taken in Germany by deposition upon interrogatories and cross interrogatories, was stipulated into the record as a part of the instant, record. Appellant in addition introduced the testimony of six witnesses and the Government that of seven witnesses.

The imported material is made from raw fuller’s earth or clay which is found in the district of Landshut and Mainburg in Neiderbayern, Germany. The earth is taken from the surface of -the ground and placed in a cleaning apparatus, mixed and beaten up with water. It is then combined with a mineral acid, usually hydrochloric acid. The acid and certain oxides in the earth which are undesirable are removed. After the undesirable impurities have been removed, the clay is dried and ground. The process through which the raw earth is taken, according to the contentions of appellant (and there is an abundance of testimony to support the contentions) is for the purpose of removing certain oxides and impurities in the fuller’s earth which will not absorb, to any great extent, objectionable color elements in oils. In order to remove objectionable coloring matter from oils, both mineral and vegetable, it is necessary to treat the same with fuller’s earth or certain kinds of treated clays or earths, and it is the usual commercial practice to employ the contact system which involves mixing directly with the oil a very substantial quantity of [305]*305such clay. If tbe pebbles, sand, certain oxides, and other impurities have not been removed, the active absorbing elements in the clay or earth are so limited that the result is only about one-fourth as good and effective as when the material has been treated as has the importation at bar by the above process. The imported material is sold under the trade-name “Tonsil.’'

In the former case the Government made very' little contention that the original material from which the imported “Tonsil” was made was not fuller’s earth. This court, upon the record, definitely held that the imported material before it had been processed was fuller’s earth. The Government in the instant case has introduced the testimony of several witnesses in an attempt to show that the basic material, a sample of which (Exhibit 3) is in evidence, was not fuller’s earth but was a bentonitic clay. It is the position of the Government that the basic material was not fuller’s earth chiefly for the reason, stated by some, of the witnesses, that the bleaching efficiency of fuller’s earth cannot be increased by acid treatment. These witnesses compared the German basic material with certain basic material in this country which they took as their standard and which they stated was fuller’s earth. Importer’s witnesses were equally emphatic that the German basic material was fuller’s earth, and was so regarded and styled in Germany and here.

We see no reason for a lengthy discussion of this issue because in view of our conclusion it makes little, if any, difference which contention in this particular is supported by the record. In passing it may be said that merchandise like that at bar was, in 1931, by the Third Division of the trial court in the case of L. A. Salomon & Bro. v. United States, T. D. 45360, 60 Treas. Dec. 1170, definitely held to be fuller’s earth, wrought or manufactured (under the Tariff Act of 1922) and the same division took the same view in its decision in the first Salomon & Bro. case which was appealed here. In the instant case we find nothing in the decision of the trial court which indicates that it was impressed in the least with the Government’s contention that the basic material from which “Tonsil” was made was not fuller’s earth. The Government urges here that the record discloses that the basic material is not fuller’s earth but that it is a clay which has been artificially activated and is that particular character of clay which Congress had in mind in the enactment of the provision “clays or earths artificially activated with acid or other material.” With the exception of the-particulars above stated the Government’s contentions in this case are-the same as those which were urged before this court in the argument of the issue involved in our prior decision.

The contentions of the importer in the instant case are a repetition of the contentions of the same importer, though represented by different counsel, in the argument of the previous case. It is the posi[306]*306tion of the importer that it has here furnished a fuller record which justifies and requires a reexamination and reconsideration of the identical issue decided in our prior decision and it contends here, as the same importer contended in the previous case, that the imported earthy substance is clearly shown to be a fuller’s earth which has been wrought and manufactured and that it is not the character of clay or earth that Congress had in mind when it enacted the activated clay and earth provision in controversy. Importer contends that the instant merchandise has not been activated; that it has merely been purified; and that clays which are naturally active are not activated by the acid treatment.

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26 C.C.P.A. 302, 1939 CCPA LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-a-salomon-bro-v-united-states-ccpa-1939.