Oriental Mercantile Co. v. United States

36 Cust. Ct. 122
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1956
DocketC. D. 1762
StatusPublished

This text of 36 Cust. Ct. 122 (Oriental Mercantile 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
Oriental Mercantile Co. v. United States, 36 Cust. Ct. 122 (cusc 1956).

Opinion

Donlon, Judge:

By stipulation, dated October 22, 1955, counsel withdrew the previous submission of these cases and resubmitted the protests to the third division as now constituted.

On plaintiff’s motion, without objection by defendant, these protests were consolidated for purposes of trial.

[123]*123The merchandise, described as dried olera and imported from Syria in 1952, was classified by the collector as vegetables, prepared or preserved, not specially provided for, dutiable at 35 per centum ad valorem under paragraph 775 of the Tariff Act of 1930. Plaintiff’s protests claim, first, that the merchandise is dutiable at 17% per centum ad valorem under paragraph 775, as modified by the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, T. D. 51802, and the President’s proclamation of May 4, 1948, T. D. 51909; and, second, that the merchandise is dutiable at 25 per centum ad valorem under paragraph 774 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, supra, as vegetables in their natural state, not specially provided for.

Plaintiff’s first protest claim was not pressed at the trial. The reduced rate of 17% per centum, negotiated with the Republic of China, had been terminated by the President’s proclamation of October 12, 1950, T. D. 52587, effective prior to the date the merchandise was entered. Plaintiff, therefore, proceeded on trial solely on the claim that dried olera should be classified as a vegetable in the natural state.

There appears to be no dispute as to the facts. This merchandise is dried okra. The process which changed it from green okra to dried okra preserved it. As green olera, it would mold after a week. The stems are cut off the pods. Then the pods are strung. The method of stringing not only makes it possible for the okra to dry evenly and without deterioration, but is favorable also to shipping and merchandising the dried okra. The drying process is done under cover, in a shed, and not in the sun. This is in substance the testimony of plaintiff’s witness, duly qualified as experienced in the matters concerning which he testified.

Unless there is some provision to the contrary, it would seem that this dried okra is “preserved” and, not having been specially provided for, it would seem properly to be classifiable under paragraph 775, which is the classification assigned to the merchandise by the collector in liquidating the entries.

The gravamen of plaintiff’s argument is that this issue has been litigated over a considerable period of time, which is true; that an early decision of the Federal Circuit Court (Kraut v. United States, 139 Fed. Rep. 94, T. D. 26161, 1905) held that the drying of mushrooms did not change mushrooms from vegetables in the natural state into vegetables, prepared or preserved; that the Board of General Appraisers thereafter applied the reasoning of the Kraut case to various other dried vegetables; that Congress from time to time during this period enacted new tariff acts; that Congress is presumed to have adopted the construction of the Kraut decision; and that the drying of okra is not, therefore, to be construed as preserving the green okra, [124]*124within the meaning of paragraph 775, bnt rather as leaving the green okra in its natural state, within the meaning of paragraph 774.

The decision of the Federal Circuit Court in the Kraut case leans heavily on a much earlier Federal Circuit Court decision, Frazee et al. v. Moffitt, 18 Fed. Fep. 584 (1882). The issue in the Frasee case was not, however, construction of the expressions “in their natural state” and “preserved,” as in the instant case. The merchandise in the Frasee case was hay; the issue was whether hay was dutiable as a non-enumerated “raw or unmanufactured” article or as a nonenumerated “manufactured” article; the collector moved for a directed verdict, arguing that the undisputed evidence showed that hay was a “manufactured” article, and the court ruled unfavorably to the collector on this motion. Thus, the issue decided in the Frasee case was that the record did not show that hay was a “manufactured” article, within the meaning of the tariff act, as revised March 2, 1861, section 2516 Revised Statutes. The collector moved for a new trial on the ground of error in the ruling on his motion for a directed verdict, and this motion the court denied in the decision which is reported in 18 Fed. Rep., supra.

In order to bring into perspective the Kraut decision, which rested so largely on the Frasee case, it is worth while to quote the language of the court in the Frasee case, language which the Circuit Court thought, in the Kraut case, to be “very satisfactory reasoning” as to the process of evaporation, or drying vegetables.

* * * Many articles are properly called raw which have undergone some manipulation. Cotton is picked from the bolls, and cleaned by ginning, and baled. Yet it is raw cotton in the bale. Wheat is cut, and the grains are threshed out, and then subjected to a cleaning machine, and then bagged. Yet it is raw wheat in the bag. So with other grains. The cotton and the grains undergo such change and preparation as exposure to light, and natural or artificial heat, and air, and the manipulation they receive, produce or allow, be it more or less. Yet neither the cotton nor the grains would be said to be manufactured. Salt and sugar are new articles. Cotton and grains are the same articles they were when on the plant with its roots in the earth. So hay is the same article it was when it was stalks of grass with roots in the earth. It is dried, to be sure; but the drying and any conversion of starch into sugar are mere incidents of the necessary cutting to enable it to be stored for food in latitudes where grass cannot be found all the year round. Where it can be so found no hay is stored. Dried apples would not be called a manufactured article, though the apple is peeled and cored and sliced, and dried by exposure to the sun and manipulation. The substance of dried apples is still apples. The substance of dried grass or hay is still grass. Change of name and manipulation do not necessarily constitute manufacture, within the meaning of section 2516. Each case must be decided according to its own circumstances. The verdict of the jury in this case was a correct one, under the foregoing views, and the motion for a new trial is denied.

It may be noted that in 1882, the year of the Frasee decision, there was no such tariff provision as we are here called upon to construe. [125]*125While there was a provision for prepared vegetables, the provision for vegetables, prepared or preserved, was new in the Tariff Act of 1883.

The Board of General Appraisers, construing the 1883 provision and like provisions in later acts, had consistently held, until the Kraut decision came down, that dried vegetables were “prepared or preserved” vegetables, within the meaning of the tariff acts, and not vegetables in their natural state. Yee Wo Chan et al. v. United States, 6 Treas. Dec. 341, T. D. 24370, G. A. 5326 (1903) (dried vegetables); Kimura v. United States, 4 Treas. Dec. 897, T. D. 23363, G. A. 5025 (1901) (dried vegetables); L. Gandolfi & Co. v. United States, 7 Treas. Dec. 327, T. D. 25065, G. A. 5599 (dried mushrooms); reversed on appeal, Kraut v. United States, supra.

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36 Cust. Ct. 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oriental-mercantile-co-v-united-states-cusc-1956.