Leather's Best, Inc. v. The United States

708 F.2d 715, 4 I.T.R.D. (BNA) 2164, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 13609
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJune 10, 1983
DocketAppeal 83-594
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 708 F.2d 715 (Leather's Best, Inc. v. The United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leather's Best, Inc. v. The United States, 708 F.2d 715, 4 I.T.R.D. (BNA) 2164, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 13609 (Fed. Cir. 1983).

Opinion

NICHOLS, Circuit Judge.

This appeal by the government requires us to review a decision of the Court of International Trade (CIT) holding that certain protested entries of finished leather described in the testimony and illustrated in the exhibits as “embossed” or “smooth plated,” were “fancy.” Leather’s Best, Inc. v. United States,-C.I.T.-, 555 F.Supp. 1064 (1982). We affirm.

Competing Tariff Provisions
Classified:
Leather, in the rough, partly finished, or finished.
Other * * *
Other * * *
Not fancy
121.57 (1976 entries) Other * * * 5% ad val.
or 121.58 (1977 entries)
Claimed:
Fancy * * *
Other * * * free

“Fancy” leather would normally be dutiable at a higher rate, but if the product of certain listed “developing” countries, by General Headnote 3(c) it is entitled to free entry under the' General System of Preferences (GSP). It is not denied, that if “fancy,” the instant leather obtains free entry. The government in this appeal maintains a position that often would be to its disadvantage.

The word “fancy” is defined in Subpart A, headnotes—

1. For the purpose of this subpart * * * (b) the term “fancy” as applied to leather means leather which has been embossed, printed, or otherwise decorated in any manner or to any extent (including leather finished in aluminum, gold, silver, or like effects and leather on which the original grain has been accentuated by any process).
* * * * * *

The Merchandise Involved

The testimony agreed, and the trial court found, that the leather had been “embossed” by one or the other of two processes. Some was “hair cell embossed.” Some was “smooth plated.” Government witnesses opined it was not “decorated.” All was “bovine” leather fully tanned before the embossing process, dehaired and defleshed before the tanning. The tanning solutions impart characteristics to the hide. In the embossing process, a plate utilizes heat and pressure to imprint the design or smooth print upon the leather. The purpose of utilizing hair cell embossing is to imprint a more uniform and permanent grain design which improves the “cut-ability,” i.e., eliminates some of the useless scrap otherwise generated in manufacture of finished articles. It hides tick bite marks and other defects and blemishes. Smooth plating increases the glossiness and smooths the leather.

By the appellee’s testimony which the trial court adopted, leather processed on an embossing machine is embossed. Also, by appellee’s testimony, the smooth plating, as well as the hair cell embossing, is done on such an embossing machine though with different plates. We therefore call both types embossed, though there may be some semantic confusion as to the point. As we show later, it does not affect the result.

*717 To our untutored eyes, the difference between the imports, and a similar tanned leather before going on the embossing machine, is not very marked. However, the experts had no difficulty confirming by inspection of the leather that it had in fact been through the machine, and it hardly could be pretended that this determination would present any difficulty to the officers of the customs, whose expertise is well known. (None of the experts who actually testified were themselves customs officers.)

Opinion

Since the fact findings of the trial court have ample support in the record, the issue here is wholly and simply how to interpret the headnote. Appellant contended and contends here that the definition of “fancy” requires that the leather be “embossed” and “decorated,” i.e., that something be added in the embossing process that visibly ornaments or beautifies the leather. The trial court read the words “otherwise decorated in any manner or to any extent” as meaning that the enhanced appeal of the leather resulting from embossing need be but minimal. A definition of “fancy” by the ASTM was in evidence, but the trial court rejected it as too narrow because of the legislative history.

The history actually consists of comments by the then Tariff Commission (now ITC), in its Tariff Classification Study (1960) Schedule 1. This document was revised, and enacted by Congress as revised, to be the Tariff Schedules of the United States (TSUS), but the revisions do not affect the headnote we must construe. The Commission pointed out that the tariff provision for fancy leather then in effect was 11530(d) of the Tariff Act of 1930, which provided for—

Leather * * * grained, printed, embossed, ornamented, or decorated * * * or by any other process (in addition to tanning) made into fancy leather.

It said it had received complaints by customs officers that the mechanical effects by which the tanned leather had subsequently been made “fancy,” as known in 1930, were now (1960) achieved sometimes by “newly developed chemical reactions in the tanning process.” It was extremely difficult for a customs officer to tell whether the leather he saw, if it looked “fancy” had been made so “in addition to,” i.e., subsequent to, the tanning itself. The Commission initially had proposed to eliminate this difficulty by eliminating the category of “fancy” leather altogether. This generated protests against the duty reduction that would result for the “fancy” category. So the Commission decided to restore the separate and higher rate for “fancy” leather, and to provide a new headnote defining the term. That purpose was effectuated and nothing in the present definition makes it necessary to determine when the improvements to make the leather “fancy” have been applied, or how.

The controversy here does not turn on when the embossing was applied. There is no question it was applied after the tanning. Nor does it turn on how. There is no question it was by a mechanical process, not by chemistry in the tanning itself. Thus the problems the definition changes were made to cope with do not exist in this case. We have a situation as to which the 1930 definition created no difficulty, and the inference can readily be drawn that the Commission had no intent to change the prior law. The new language does not support, by its plain language, any contrary conclusion. The Commission did not intend to withdraw from the scope of the “fancy” classification any leather that previously had come within it. The trial court’s conclusion that the changes were to assist customs officers is true but irrelevant. Any conclusion, based on the changes, that a leather previously “fancy” ceased to be so under TSUS, founders in view of the history showing that if the changes did anything, it was to make it easier to conclude that leather was “fancy,” but even this change was respecting an issue irrelevant to the case we have at bar.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Frontier Insurance v. United States
276 F. Supp. 2d 1334 (Court of International Trade, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
708 F.2d 715, 4 I.T.R.D. (BNA) 2164, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 13609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leathers-best-inc-v-the-united-states-cafc-1983.