Louis Wolf & Co. v. United States

15 Cust. Ct. 156, 1945 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 502
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1945
DocketC. D. 963
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 15 Cust. Ct. 156 (Louis Wolf & Co. 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
Louis Wolf & Co. v. United States, 15 Cust. Ct. 156, 1945 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 502 (cusc 1945).

Opinion

Oliver, Presiding Judge:

The merchandise involved in this suit (represented bj exhibits 1, 2, and 3) is described on the invoice as “World Fair Dolls.” Two of these articles are hollow celluloid figures. Exhibit 1 is approximately 4}( inches in height; exhibit 2 about 6 inches. Exhibit 3 is a floppy cotton article about 12 inches in length, with a celluloid head. All these figures are colored and are manufactured so as to simulate a military uniform, with the World's Fair insignia of the “Perisphere” and “Trylon” on the hat.

The dolls were assessed under the respective provisions therefor in paragraph 1513 of the Tariff Act of 1930, reading:

Par. 1513. * * * dolls and toys, composed wholly or in chief value of any product provided for in paragraph 31, * * * not having any movable member or part, 1 cent each and 50 per centum ad valorem, * * * all other dolls, * * * of whatever materials composed, * * * 70 per centum ad valorem.

Counsel stipulated that the cotton figure represented by exhibit 3 (and also by illustrative exhibit A) is in chief value of cotton velveteens or cotton velvets (it. 121).

Plaintiff claims that the celluloid figures are properly dutiable at 60 per centum ad valorem under paragraph 31 as articles composed in chief value of one of the cellulose compounds provided for therein, and that the cotton velvet articles are dutiable as manufactures of cotton at 40 per centum under paragraph 923, or as articles in chief [157]*157value of cotton velveteens or velvets at 62% per centum under paragraph 909. Plaintiff further contends that these figures are not the kind of dolls contemplated by paragraph 1513, in that they are not used by children as toys at play and that they do not fall within the dictionary definitions of “doll.”

Defendant, however, in support of the collector’s classification, contends that the imported articles are dolls; that they are bought, sold, and invoiced as dolls and are included in, and covered by, the doll provisions of paragraph 1513, whether or not they are toys. The Government further claims that the dictionary definitions do not go far enough and that in the trade and commerce of the United States a doll may be something more than a puppet -for the use of children at play.

The brief of amici curiae outlines the development of legislation and judicial interpretation prior to the act of 1930, and agrees with the contention of the Government that these articles have been properly classified under paragraph 1513 as dolls.

Plaintiff’s four witnesses, all but one of whom were or formerly had been connected with the plaintiff corporation, testified that while these figures were bought, invoiced, and sold as dolls, and they personally referred to them in their testimony as dolls, they were not dolls since they were not sold in toy stores or in toy departments and had no play value for children. Three of the witnesses testified that the celluloid figures (exhibits 1 and 2) and the cotton figure (exhibit 3) were used by concessionaires at fairs and carnivals where they were given away or sold to adults. This use was supported by the testimony of plaintiff’s witness Kaplan, a carnival concessionaire. These witnesses agreed with the dictionary definitions of a doll as being used by children as a plaything and were of opinion that the articles here before us did not come within these definitions which are given below:

A toy puppet representing a person, and used as a plaything by children, especially by girls. [Funk & Wagnalls New Standard Dictionary of English Language, 1939.]
A puppet representing a child, usually a little girl (but also sometimes a boy or a man, as a soldier, etc.), used as a toy by children, especially by girls. [Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia.]
A child’s puppet; esp., a toy baby for a child; any similar figure for play or ornament. [Webster’s New International Dictionary, 2d Ed., 1936.]

Defendant’s six witnesses, all duly qualified, five of whom were experienced manufacturers of dolls, toys, and novelties, were in complete agreement that the imported articles were dolls. They testified 'that the dictionary definitions above referred to were not broad enough to cover all dolls and that this term was not confined to toys or playthings for children but included dolls used by adults, such as boudoir dolls, and also dolls for display and commercial and other uses. They also agreed that the use to which it is put is not con[158]*158trolling in determining whether or not an article is a doll. In disagreeing with the dictionary definitions, one of these witnesses gave his definition of a doll as follows (R. 114):

A doll is really a commercial reproduction of either an artist’s conception of a figure, or the artist’s conception of a child, or the artist’s conception of what might be on the printed page, or a reproduction of some character either from fiction or from fact, or, at the present time the trend is towards military dolls, soldier dolls, WACS and WAVES, in which the artist, or designer, reproduces in miniature, as compared to the size of the original model, a soldier, or sailor; or sometimes dolls are the result of fads. We had a Teddy Bear fad in the country and right after that they took and put the head from the little Billiken on it and called it the Billiken doll, which was the forerunner of our domestic production. From then on no matter what the material that it is made out of, its general form, which is grotesque and out of proportion, as long as it has a human characteristic it is a doll. In the eyes of the trade and those seeking to purchase that type of merchandise — they come to the doll trade to buy it.

It is evident from this record that there are many kinds of dolls, probably the most popular and numerous being those designed especially as playthings for children. Other dolls are designed for purposes of ornamentation, such as boudoir dolls used by adults, and others such as those now before us being used as souvenirs or prizes at carnivals or fairs. There are also dolls for display and advertising purposes which are not used by children and were never designed for such use.

The tariff history on the subject of dolls and many of the decisions up to and including those under the Tariff Act of 1922 were reviewed by our appellate court in United States v. Schmidt (13 Ct. Cust. Appls. 252, T. D. 41200), wherein articles made of plaster of paris representing the head and bust of a woman, for use in connection with telephone covers and utilitarian purposes and not for the amusement of children, were hold to be dutiable as manufactures of plaster of paris under paragraph 1440, Tariff Act of 1922, and not as doll heads under paragraph 1414 of that act. In that case, decided in 1925, the court said (p. 255):

Throughout all these decisions of the Board of General Appraisers the controlling issue was whether the article in question was intended and used for the amusement of children or whether it was intended and used for ornamental, practical, or some other purposes. In the first instance it was properly classified under the doll or toy paragraph; in the second, under some other appropriate paragraph, usually according to its component material of chief value.
This was the well-established rule for the classification of such articles when the Tariff Act of 1922 was prepared and enacted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Cust. Ct. 156, 1945 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louis-wolf-co-v-united-states-cusc-1945.