Pacific Iron & Metal Co. v. United States

15 Ct. Cust. 433, 1928 WL 27999, 1928 CCPA LEXIS 21
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 23, 1928
DocketNo. 2937
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 15 Ct. Cust. 433 (Pacific Iron & Metal Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Iron & Metal Co. v. United States, 15 Ct. Cust. 433, 1928 WL 27999, 1928 CCPA LEXIS 21 (ccpa 1928).

Opinion

Hatfield, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Merchandise, described in the invoices and consumption entries as “wiping rags,” and bought and sold and known in the trade and commerce of the United States as “wiping rags,” or as “wipers” (such trade terms being used interchangeably), was assessed for duty by the collector at the port of Seattle at 10 per centum ad valorem under paragraph 1457 of the Tariff Act of 1922, which reads;

Par. 1457. Waste, not specially provided for, 10 per centum ad valorem.

The importer claimed in its protest that the merchandise was free of duty under paragraph 1651, 1516, 1601, or 1560, or dutiable at 10 per centum or, alternatively, at 20 per centum ad valorem under paragraph 1459. These paragraphs read respectively as follows:

Par. 1651. Rag pulp; paper stock, crude, of every description, including all grasses, fibers, rags, waste, including jute, hemp and flax waste, shavings, clippings, old paper, rope ends, waste rope, and waste bagging, and all other waste not specially provided for, including old gunny cloth, and old gunny bags, used chiefly for -payer making, and no longer suitable for bags. (Italics not quoted.)
Par. 1516. Waste bagging, and waste sugar sack cloth.
Par. 1601. Junk, old.
Par. 1560. Cotton and cotton waste.
Par. 1459. That there shall be levied, collected, and paid on the importation of all raw or unmanufactured articles not enumerated or provided for, a duty of 10 per centum ad valorem, and on all articles manufactured, in whole or in part, not specially provided for, a duty of 20 per centum ad valorem.

[435]*435The collector described the merchandise as follows:

DESCRIPTION OS' MERCHANDISE AND ASSESSMENT
Rags: These rags were selected and laundered with all foreign matter removed. Their use was for machinery wipers, and they are known in the trade as wiping rags. Classified at 10%, paragraph 1457 of the tariff act of 1922.

On the trial in the court below the importer called as a witness Julius Giant, who testified in substance: That he was the owner of the Pacific Iron & Metal Co., the importer of the merchandise; that his company was engaged in the junk business; and that the involved merchandise consisted of white and colored “-wiping rags” or “wipers,” bought and sold and known in the trade as “wiping rags ” or “wipers” (those terms being used interchangeably). With reference to their use, he said: “They are used for wiping machinery or automobiles, or anywhere where there is machinery, where there is oil, they are used for wiping purposes.” (Italics not quoted.) They do not require further processing after importation to put them into condition for their intended use. In this connection he said:

A. The shipments as they come in are not proper for the retail trade or consumer.
Q. Why not? — A. In the first place, the packages that they come in; very few consumers buy that quantity at one time. They come in unprepared, in the way that they are not put up in the proper packages. When they are retailed they are burlaped; also, on account of the smaller pieces, in that they are not suitable for wiping rags.
% * tfc % *
Q. Now, you spoke of the smaller pieces being used for a different purpose than the larger pieces; is that your understanding of it? — A. What I said was, that the smaller pieces of rags are used for roofing rag purposes. A piece that is too small to be used as a wiping rag becomes a roofing rag, or it might be that it would go into some paper-making stock, depending on what kind of rag it is.
Q. Well, speaking of the smaller rags, which are included in a separate exhibit, do you say those are not suitable for certain wiping purposes? — A. True, for they are too small.
. Q. Well, when you refer to “too small,” what do you mean? — A. People who buy wipers wouldn’t take it.
Q. And will you take up any definite merchantable sizes, what you call too small or too large? — A. It is a matter of judgment a good deal; I don’t know that there is any particular size that governs. It must be a reasonably large piece, a large enough piece so that it may become a wiping rag.
Q. Well, that is just the difficulty that I have from your answer, as to what is a reasonably large piece. — A. Well, produce some of the samples.
Q. You have included in one package those that you call small sizes. You mean to say they are not used as wiping rags?- — A. Well, on some of them, the colors might not be good enough, because they are too dirty; also, they would have to be re-treated.
Q. Well, do you re-treat them and put them in a different condition before you import them? — A. No, I do not. I do retail a very small quantity, and those I do go over and throw out some of the pieces that we consider are too small for that purpose.
[436]*436Q. Well, when you speak oí the dirty ones, what do you have reference to— the white or colored? — A. Well, the colored.
Q. Would you say that none of the smaller sizes would be usable as wipers in the whites? — A. No I wouldn’t say none of them. If a man wants to úse them,, he can use a ■piece three inches square as a wiping rag, hut to be reasonably large as. a wiping rag, it wouldn’t. (Italics not quoted.)

He also testified that, while he had not examined the rags in the shipments in question, he had examined others substantially like them, and that from 10 to 20 per centum of such rags were too small for wiping rags; and that he sold 90 to 95 per centum of those imported to jobbers in the packages or bales in which they were imported as "wiping rags” without reference to, or deduction in price for, the small rags contained therein. With regard to the processing of the rags prior to their importation, he said:

Q. Now, speaking of those white ones; speaking of all .the merchandise here as represented by these exhibits, they have all been gone over by the shipper to. you, to remove any metal or buckles or anything of that kind? — A. Yes, apparently; because they are free of those things.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ct. Cust. 433, 1928 WL 27999, 1928 CCPA LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-iron-metal-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1928.