P. L. Thomas Paper Co. v. United States

28 Ct. Int'l Trade 503, 2004 CIT 35
CourtUnited States Court of International Trade
DecidedApril 15, 2004
DocketCourt 99-00671
StatusPublished

This text of 28 Ct. Int'l Trade 503 (P. L. Thomas Paper Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of International Trade primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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P. L. Thomas Paper Co. v. United States, 28 Ct. Int'l Trade 503, 2004 CIT 35 (cit 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

Restani, Chief Judge:

This matter is before the court following trial. At issue is the proper classification of certain entries of paper intended for conversion into reinforced gummed tape for sealing cartons. The classification of the United States Bureau of Customs and Border Protection (“Customs”), then known as the United States Customs Service, was properly protested and suit was timely filed after denial of the relevant protests. The court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1581(a) (2000) (denial of protest).

The following facts are not in dispute:

1. Plaintiff, P. L. Thomas Paper. Company, Inc., is the owner and importer of record of the merchandise at issue.

2. The entries at issue are:

No. 204-0648151-3, made on February 15, 1996;
No. 030-0132020-3, made on October 22,1997;
No. 030-0132148-2, made on October 29, 1997;
No. 204-1756657-5, made on May 7, 1997; and
No. 204-1757045-2, made on May 22,1997. 1

3. The importer described the paper imported under cover of these entries as follows:

[T]he paper [is] MG pure Swedish natural brown unbleached plain sulphate kraft paper. The paper is made from 100% virgin unbleached Swedish kraft pulp and is uncoated. . . . The paper is supplied on rolls maximum of 40" in diameter with varying widths from 49 to 97", each roll weights about 1,000 kilos. The *504 paper has a minimum basis weight of 38 grs/ms (23#-24x36/ 500); a caliper reading of .002" +/-; and a high porosity measurement of 40/50 seconds lOcc gurley.

Pretrial Order Sch. C ¶8.

4. The paper is imported in bulk and is intended for use and actually used in conversion to reinforced carton sealing tape.

5. At all times relevant to this action, the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (“HTSUS”) provided the following statutory provisions:

Chapter 48 Note 5

In this chapter “kraft paper and paperboard” means paper and paperboard of which not less than 80 percent by weight of the total fiber content consists of fibers obtained by the chemical sulfate or soda processes.

Heading 4804

Uncoated kraft paper and paperboard, in rolls or sheets, other than that of heading 4802 or 4803:

* * * *

Other kraft paper and paperboard weighing 150 g/m2 or less:

Subheading

4804.31 Unbleached:

# ‡ # &

4804.31.40 Wrapping paper. Free

4804.31.60 Other. 2.8% ad valorem

4804.39 Other:

* * *

Other:

4803.39.60 Other. 2.8% ad valorem

6. The paper at issue is “kraft paper” and is classifiable under Heading 4804, HTSUS.

7. Customs liquidated the imported kraft paper under subheading 4804.39.60, HTSUS, pursuant to Customs Headquarters Ruling Letter 961068 (dated June 3, 1999), as “Uncoated kraft paper and paperboard, in rolls or sheets, other than that of heading 4802 or 4803: Other kraft paper and paperboard weighing 150 g/m2 or less: Other: Other” at a duty rate of 2.8% ad valorem.

8. Plaintiff, P. L. Thomas, claims that the imported merchandise *505 is properly classified under subheading 4804.31.40, as “Other kraft paper and paperboard weighing 150 g/m2 or less: Unbleached: Wrapping paper,” a duty-free provision.

9. The tariff term “wrapping paper” is not statutorily defined. It is also not defined in the Explanatory Notes to the HTSUS.

10. “Wrapping paper” is a class or kind of kraft paper which is manufactured, sold, and principally used for wrapping purposes.

At trial, plaintiff’s witness, its president Richard Greene, testified. He has more than three decades of experience in the paper business. It was Mr. Greene’s testimony that wrapping paper is a broad category of unbleached kraft paper falling within an 18-70 pound range, which is known for its strength, and that is principally used in the United States to make paper bags. Tr. at 18-19, 21. He testified further that, as imported, the paper at issue fits within this definition of wrapping paper. Tr. at 41. Mr. Greene’s testimony also revealed: The imported paper is made with a shiny, smooth machine glaze finish on one side and an unsmooth machine finish on the other side. Tr. at 12. It has a porosity measurement of 40 to 60 seconds, 100 cc. gurley, which indicates that it is a tight sheet suitable for coating with another substance. Tr. at 14-15. The imported paper has a minimum weight of 38 g/m 2 , which is 23 pounds. Tr. at 13. The imported merchandise is a specialty paper known commercially as “gumming paper.” Tr. at 46, 48. Subsequent to importation, the imported paper was laminated and coated with glue stain to make gummed sealing tape. Tr. at 17, 24, 59-60.

The government’s witness, Robert Sexton, has an equally long acquaintance with the paper industry, as well as formal academic training in the pulp and paper industry. He testified as follows: The imported paper does not move in the same channels of trade as “wrapping paper.” Tr. at 91-92. Typically, wrapping paper was sold to manufacturers of counter rolls. 2 Tr. at 91; see also Tr. at 25 (Greene). Presently, the primary paper industry is one of the largest users of wrapping papers for protecting large paper rolls and cut-sized sheets of photocopy paper. Tr. at 105; see also Tr. at 25 (Greene). Gumming paper, on the other hand, “would go to a gum-mer.” Tr. at 91-92. The imported paper is not used in the same manner as “wrapping paper.” Tr. at 107. Wrapping paper is coarse, unfinished paper used to wrap products. Tr. at 84, 93. Gumming paper is the raw material used to manufacture reinforced gummed tape and is not economically practical for wrapping purposes. Tr. at 92, 114.

The witnesses agreed that gumming papers and wrapping papers are both unbleached kraft paper with a base weight between 18.5 and 79 pounds, but that the other specifications for each type of pa *506 per differ. Tr. at 16, 18 (Greene), 100-01 (Sexton). Bulk paper destined to be gummed for use as reinforced tape is made to tight specifications that make it suitable for its intended end use. Tr. at 12-14, 17, 42 (Greene), 85-86, 116-17 (Sexton); see supra Uncontested Facts ¶3 (describing specifications of imported paper). Strength, porosity, and surface smoothness are important physical characteristics of gumming paper. Tr. at 17 (Greene), 90 (Sexton).

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