Lador, Inc. v. United States

48 C.C.P.A. 6, 1960 CCPA LEXIS 207
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 3, 1960
DocketNo. 5036
StatusPublished

This text of 48 C.C.P.A. 6 (Lador, Inc. 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
Lador, Inc. v. United States, 48 C.C.P.A. 6, 1960 CCPA LEXIS 207 (ccpa 1960).

Opinion

Rich, Judge,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court:

Tbe issue is whether the imported merchandise was correctly classified by the collector as “parts of music boxes” under paragraph 1541(a) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended by T.D. 48093, with duty at 20% ad val.

The Customs Court dismissed the importer’s protest that the merchandise should be classified as “machines * * * not specially provided for” under paragraph 372, as modified by the Sixth Protocol of Supplementary Concessions to GATT, T.D. 54108, with duty at 13% ad val.

The importations, invoiced as “musical movements,” are perhaps most succinctly described in lay, as distinguished from legal, terminology as small Swiss music box works of the familiar kind wherein rotation of a spring-driven cylinder studded with pins makes music by plucking the fingers of a tuned steel comb. The invoices included the designation “%8” which appears to mean that the movement plays one tune and has a comb with 18 teeth providing 18 notes.

Appellant’s argument against the classification proceeds thus: (1) unless the imported movements or works are dedicated to use as parts of music boxes and are useful for no other purpose they cannot be “parts” of music boxes under the tariff law, for which proposition it cites National Carloading Corp. v. United States, 44 CCPA 77, C.A.D. 640; (2) appellant has proved that it has used the imported works in “musical novelties” which are not music boxes under the decision in Thorens, Inc. v. United States, 31 CCPA 125, C.A.D. 261; wherefore, the works are not “parts of music boxes.”

The Thorens case was not concerned with the classification of parts of any kind. The merchandise was a wooden toilet paper roll holder containing a musical movement of the general type here involved which played music when paper was withdrawn from the holder. It was classified as manufactures in chief value of wood and claimed to be dutiable either as a music box or as a machine. The overruling of the protest was affirmed by this court on the ground that the articles were “clearly more tham, music boxes.” [Our [8]*8emphasis.] Being more than music boxes, it was held that they could not be classified for duty as music boxes. This is very clear from the citation in the opinion of other cases wherein articles combined with other things were not classified as the uncombined article because they were more than that article. But it must be noted that in the Thorens case this court said that the toilet roll holders were “toilet roll holders in combination with musió boxes” [Our emphasis.] Moreover, the court expressed agreement with the Customs Court holding that “the music box feature” of the holder was incidental to the main purpose of the article and that “it would be somewhat anomalous to permit the mechanism in the incidental [i.e. the music box] feature to govern the classification of the article taken as a whole.” It thus clearly appears that, far from saying no music box was involved, the court was of the view that the roll holder included a “music box.” The case is, therefore, scarcely a precedent for holding that if parts of that music box had been imported they would be excluded from classification as such because the music box was added to or incorporated in another article. Quite the opposite, in the absence of compelling reasons to the contrary, that which is in fact a part of a music box should remain such, in the interest of stability and uniformity in classification, even when the music box is incorporated in other things not dutiable as music boxes.

Two witnesses were called by the importer, its president and its secretary and factory manager. A number of exhibits were introduced. Exhibits 1, 2 and 3 are musical movements or works exemplary of the importations and do not differ from each other in any respect material here. They are unmounted metal works, operable to produce recognizable tunes but have no sounding boards or enclosures.

The evidence shows that these works, which are of small size, obviously inexpensive, and with a limited number of notes, are installed by appellant in and become parts of beer steins,

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48 C.C.P.A. 6, 1960 CCPA LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lador-inc-v-united-states-ccpa-1960.