National Welding Equipment Co. v. United States
This text of 62 Cust. Ct. 650 (National Welding Equipment 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.
Opinion
The question in this case concerns the dutiable status of flexible rubber face pieces which were imported from England in 1965. The face pieces were described on the invoices as “Rubbers only for Everseal A/S facemasks.” They were assessed with duty at 19 percent ad valorem under item 709.06 of the Tariff Schedules of the United States (19 U.S.C. § 1202), which item provides for anesthetic apparatus and instruments and parts thereof.1
[651]*651Plaintiffs claim that the imported articles are dutiable under item 709.45 as parts of “oxygen therapy * * * or similar apparatus,” at the rate of 10 percent ad valorem.2
At trial the record in W. J. Byrnes & Co., Inc., et al. v. United States, 56 Cust. Ct. 72, C.D. 2613 (1966), was admitted in evidence on plaintiffs’ motion pursuant to our rule 20: Plaintiffs then rested. Defendant presented no evidence and the case was thus submitted.
The merchandise in the present case was conceded by defendant at the trial to be identical to the merchandise involved in the incorporated case. In the incorporated case, it was held that the “Everseal” face masks were not parts of surgical equipment under paragraph 359 of the 1930 Act, 'as classified by the collector of customs, but were more properly classifiable as manufactures of india rubber or gutta-percha under paragraph 1537 (b). The court in the prior case noted (56 Cust. Ct. at 77) that the testimony showed that:
The anesthetic “Everseal” facemasks, of which the imported articles are parts, may be used either with anesthetic 'apparatus, with respirators, or with portable or hand resuscitators. By a ratio of 10 to 1, such facemasks 'are used chiefly throughout the United States with pulmonary equipment as compared to anesthetic apparatus.
Against this background, defendant in the present case requested that it be relieved from filing a brief. “This request,” defendant stated, “is being made in view of the record made herein and the plaintiffs’ claim that the imported merchandise is dutiable under item 709.45 of the Tariff Schedules of the United States ¡as breathing appliances and parts thereof, which claim we agree is correct.”
Upon the record presented and the concession thus made by defendant, we hold that the importations before us are properly classifiable under item 709.45, and thus dutiable at the rate of 10 percent ad valorem.
The protest is sustained and judgment will issue accordingly.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
62 Cust. Ct. 650, 1969 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 3447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-welding-equipment-co-v-united-states-cusc-1969.