Perry, Ryer & Co. v. United States

35 C.C.P.A. 28, 1947 CCPA LEXIS 549
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 20, 1947
DocketNo. 4565
StatusPublished

This text of 35 C.C.P.A. 28 (Perry, Ryer & 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
Perry, Ryer & Co. v. United States, 35 C.C.P.A. 28, 1947 CCPA LEXIS 549 (ccpa 1947).

Opinion

O’Connell, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the judgment of the United States Customs Court, First Division, C. D. 1028, sustaining the action of the Collector of Customs at the port of New York who classified four respective shipments of goatskins imported from the Argentine as wool on skins of common goat and hybrid goat commingled in the same bale under paragraph 1102 (b) of the Tariff Act of 1930 and assessed a duty thereon of 32 cents per pound of clean content, and overriding the protest of appellant claiming that the merchandise was nondutiable under paragraphs 1688 or 1765 of the same act.

The statutory provisions of the Tariff Act of 1930 here involved, so far as pertinent, read as follows:

Par. 1102. (b) Wools, not specially provided for, and hair of the Angora goat, * * * on the skin, 32 cents per pound of clean content * * *.
Par. 1688. Hair of horse, cattle, and other animals, cleaned or uncleaned, drawn or undrawn, but unmanufactured, not specially provided for.
Par. 1765. Skins of all kinds, raw, and hides not specially provided for.
Sec. 508. Commingling op Goods.
[30]*30Whenever dutiable merchandise and merchandise which is free of duty or merchandise subject to different rates of duty are so packed together or mingled that the quantity or value of each class of such merchandise can not be readily ascertained by the customs officers, the whole of such merchandise shall be subject to the highest rate of duty applicable to any part thereof, unless the importer or consignee shall segregate such merchandise at his own risk and expense under customs supervision within ten days after entry thereof, in order that the quantity and value of each part or class thereof may be ascertained.

Section 499 as amended by the Customs Administrative Act of 1938 (U. S. C., title 19, sec. 1499):

* * * The collector shall designate the packages or quantities covered by any invoice or entry which are to be opened and examined for the purpose of appraisement or otherwise and shall order such packages or quantities to be sent to the public stores or other places for such purpose. Not less than one package of every invoice and not less than one package of every ten packages of merchandise, shall be so designated unless the Secretary of the Treasury, from the character and description of the merchandise, is of the opinion that the examination of a less proportion of packages will amply protect the revenue and by special regulation or instruction, the application of which may be restricted to one or more individual ports or to one or more importations or one or more classes of merchandise, permit a less number of packages to be examined. All such special regulations or instructions shall be published in the weekly Treasury Decisions within fifteen days after issuance and before the liquidation of any entries affected thereby. The collector or the appraiser may require such additional packages or quantities as either of them may deem necessary. * * *

The court below held that section 508, supra, was applicable to the shipments here involved which holding is claimed by appellant to be erroneous on the ground that the quantity of each class of skins contained in the unexamined packages of the respective shipments could be readily ascertained, and that the collector having designated certain bales covered by the involved entries to be examined for the purpose of appraisement or otherwise, as provided for in section 499, supra, was bound not only as to the examined bales but also as to the unexamined bales by the description of the merchandise reported to him by the appraiser as the result of his examination of the designated bales.

There were four entries of the merchandise covered by appellant’s protest and there is no dispute that each entry included two kinds of “Pampa” goatskins: (1) that of the common goat of the Argentine, entitled to free entry under paragraph 1765, supra; and (2) that of the common goat cross-bred with the Angora, dutiable as hair of the Angora goat on the skin at 32 cents per pound of clean content under paragraph 1102 (b), supra.

The record discloses that the hah on the two kinds of goatskins hereinbefore described is removed, cleaned, and baled and then sold to a manufacturer for use in the production of wool carpets. The skins themselves are processed and sold for use as leather in the manufacture of shoes.

[31]*31In the first entry, 319263, imported on October 15, 1941, there were 30 bales, one of which was segregated and examined by customs officials. The examiner’s report showed that the bale contained 463 skins, 77 of which were taken from the hybrid goat and had a clean content of 25 per centum of hair of the Angora. The balance of the skins were taken from the common goat of the Argentine.

In the second entry, 320506, three bales were examined and it was found that each such bale contained'a different amount of dutiable skins; namely, 74, 65, and 75. In the third entry, 322964, one examined bale showed 72 Angora skins; and in the fourth, 72 Angora skins were disclosed in the one bale that was examined.

The estimated clean content of dutiable hair found upon examination of the six bales of the four entries, as shown by the tabulation of percentages of the court below, was, respectively, 4.5%, 4.8%, 5.06%, and 4.8% of the total weight of the bales.

Following his examination of the bale covered by the first entry, the examiner made a memorandum on the invoice of purchase in which he stated, among other things, that he believed that the bales covered by the entry “to be uniformly packed.” When the second entry came before him, however, the examiner after completing the examination of the three designated bales, made another memorandum in which he advised the collector, among other things, that he, the examiner, was unable to definitely state whether the bales covered by the second entry were uniformly packed since the three examined bales “contained different amounts of dutiable skins.”

The record discloses that in liquidating the entry covering the first of the four shipments, the collector accepted the appraiser’s report only as to the character and description of the merchandise and the advisory classification of the contents of the examined bale. The assessment, as pointed out by the court below, was applied on a clean content of 25 per centum of the number of pounds of dutiable hair of the Angora on the skins in the examined bale at the rate of 32 cents per pound under paragraph 1102 (b). The skins of the common goat contained in the examined bale were held by the collector to be entitled to free entry under paragraph 1765. The credit allowed to the importer for the quantity of skins of the common goat of the Argentine contained in the examined bale of the first shipment was not allowed, however, for the examined bales of the last three shipments.

Assuming that the unexamined bales contained the same two classes of merchandise as the examined bales, the collector assessed duty on the estimated clean content of 25 per centum of the total weight of all the skins in all the bales of the second, third, and fourth entries at the rate of 32 cents per pound applicable to the hair of the Angora goat. The collector likewise applied the same assessment of duty to the 29 unexamined bales of the first entry.

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Related

United States v. Washburn-Crosby Co.
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92 F. 343 (Second Circuit, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 C.C.P.A. 28, 1947 CCPA LEXIS 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-ryer-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1947.