Premier Graining Co. v. United States

57 Cust. Ct. 32, 1966 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1862
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedJune 27, 1966
DocketC.D. 2721
StatusPublished

This text of 57 Cust. Ct. 32 (Premier Graining 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
Premier Graining Co. v. United States, 57 Cust. Ct. 32, 1966 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1862 (cusc 1966).

Opinion

BiohaRdsoN, Judge:

The merchandise of these consolidated protests is described on the invoices as “Zinc-Sheets in la lithographic quality for Offset Printing, raw, unfinished,” which is shipped in rectangular flat shapes of various sizes and dimensions including the size 26% by 31 inches by ^ooo of an inch. This merchandise, of West German origin, was entered at Chicago and New York, and classified in liquidation as manufactures of zinc, not specially provided for, under 19 U.S.C.A., section 1001, paragraph 391 (paragraph '397, Tariff Act of 1930), as modified in T.D. 54108, and assessed with duty at the rates of 21, 20, or 19 per centum ad valorem, depending upon the date of entry. It is claimed that the instant merchandise is properly dutiable at the rate of 1 cent per pound as zinc hi sheets under 19 U.S.C.A., section 1001, paragraph 394 (paragraph 394, Tariff Act of 1930), as modified in T.D. 51802.

The case involves the construction of the words “zinc in sheets” as they are used in paragraph 394. The issue here is whether these words have a restricted meaning as a commercial designation of merchandise manufactured in a particular manner, or a broad meaning relating to shape and dimensions of merchandise irrespective of the method employed in its manufacture. It is established in the evidence that the subject merchandise is identical to that which was the subject of decision in the case of Dorf International, Inc. v. United States, 49 Cust. Ct. 141, C.D. 2375, wherein it was found that the merchandise is produced by a process which is known as strip rolling. In the Dorf International case this division held that such merchandise came within the ordinary meaning of the words “zinc in sheets.” The court [34]*34there pointed out that the commercial designation “zinc sheets” was not shown to be the same as the term “zinc in sheets,” citing the case of Seligmann et al. v. United States, 6 Ct. Cust. Appls. 85, T.D. 35336, wherein our appeals court held that a commercial designation of merchandise as sheet aluminum was not proof that such commercial designation applied to the tariff term aluminum in sheets.

The instant case is in effect a retrial of the issue as presented in the Dorf International, Inc., case, the record in which case has been incorporated into the case at bar. The Government now claims to be in a position to establish that the tariff term “zinc in sheets” is a commercial designation different in meaning from the common meaning of the term and not embracing the merchandise at bar. Toward such end, the Government has adduced additional evidence in the instant record in the form of testimony of four witnesses drawn from various segments of the zinc industry, namely, Messrs. Herman B. Carus, executive president of Mathiessen & Hegeler Zinc Co., Ernest H. Klein, manager of the metal division, sales department, of New Jersey Zinc Co., Joseph E. Smith, president of Smith & McCrorken, Inc., and Orton P. Camp, president of Platt Bros., Inc. In addition, the Government has placed in evidence 1929 price lists issued by the Illinois Zinc Co. The varying experiences of the Government’s witnesses as smelterers, mill rollers, and warehousers of raw zinc products all predate the use of the statutory words “zinc in sheets” in the 1930 act. On the matter of trade nomenclature, a fair summary of the pertinent testimony of these witnesses is to the effect that the term “zinc in sheets” is used in the trade interchangeably with the term “zinc sheets” or “sheet zinc” to describe the zinc metal product produced by means of the cross rolling or pack rolling method, that the term does not have reference to the form of the finished product or its dimensions, that the merchandise before the court is not produced by the cross rolling or pack rolling method but is rolled in one direction only by means of the strip rolling method from which method the merchandise derives the trade name “strip zinc,” and that “strip zinc” is never referred to in the trade as “zinc sheet,” “sheet zinc,” or “zinc in sheets.”

As to the documentary evidence, defendant’s exhibit A constitutes price lists of “sheet zinc” and “strip and xúbbon zinc,” respectively. On the “sheet zinc” price list the Illinois Zinc Co. describes by name the products which it made at that time (April 4, 1929) using the generic term “rolled sheets” in the place of the terms “sheet zinc” and “strip zinc.” In plaintiff’s exhibit 3, which is the General Services Administration Zinc Specification Q,Q,-Z-301b of July 24, 1957, the terms “sheets” and “strips” are used with reference to form and dimension and not with reference to manufacturing methods. One of the Government’s witnesses admitted that the Government constitutes a [35]*35portion, of the trade in its purchases of rolled zinc. This same witness testified that he participated in the formulation of these specifications and, further, that he could not recall ever having seen an order for “zinc in sheets.” And, according to the testimony of all of the government witnesses, the bills of lading and purchase orders issued by their respective firms describe zinc rolled by the cross rolling method as “sheet zinc.”

The record as now constituted does not furnish the court with clear and convincing evidence of commercial designation for the tariff term “zinc in sheets,” precluding its judicially determined common meaning. Apart from a consideration of the competency of the Government witnesses to discuss trade usage of the term in question on any level other than a local usage (a point pursued by plaintiff’s counsel), there is this nagging doubt as to the all-embracing nature of commercial designation brought about by the total absence of use of the term “zinc in sheets” in any of the commercial paper handled by the firms from which the Government’s witnesses come. We can imagine no more convincing demonstration of commercial usage than that emanating from the language of billings, price lists, purchase orders, invoices, bills of lading, and the like. Such commercial paper, like the people who use them, also speaks the language of commerce. From what use we have seen of the usage of the term “sheets” in evidence introduced by defendant, it has a generic use in the zinc industry which covers more than the product commercially designated 'as “sheet zinc” or “zinc sheet.” At least, the evidence before the court does not dispel such other use.

In the enactment of tariff legislation, Congress is deemed to be conversant with and to speak in the language of commerce, which language is presumed to be the same as that in common usage unless the contrary is clearly shown by the party contending otherwise. Acker v. United States, 1 Ct. Cust. Appls. 328, T.D. 31431. The logical place to start with in considering and determining the impact of commercial designation, if any, upon the language of tariff provisions is, of course, in the beginning. In the instant case, the beginning is not with the Tariff Act of 1930 where, as regards the zinc metal and metal products paragraph, nothing more disquieting appears to have occurred in the interlude between legislative consideration of the paragraph and passage of the act than the addition of dross and skimmings to the paragraph by way of transfer of these items from the free list of the 1922 act.

A dutiable provision for “zinc in sheets” has been in every one of our tariff acts since the act of August 30,1842.

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Related

Acker v. United States
1 Ct. Cust. 328 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1911)
Stengel v. United States
2 Ct. Cust. 137 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1911)
Seligmann v. United States
6 Ct. Cust. 85 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1915)
Lunham & Reeve, Inc. v. United States
3 Cust. Ct. 293 (U.S. Customs Court, 1939)
Burgess Battery Co. v. United States
19 Cust. Ct. 28 (U.S. Customs Court, 1947)
Dorf International, Inc. v. United States
49 Cust. Ct. 141 (U.S. Customs Court, 1962)
Langerman & Petty v. United States
75 F. 1 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 Cust. Ct. 32, 1966 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 1862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/premier-graining-co-v-united-states-cusc-1966.