Redden v. United States

5 Ct. Cust. 485, 1915 WL 20671, 1915 CCPA LEXIS 4
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1915
DocketNo. 1427
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 5 Ct. Cust. 485 (Redden 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
Redden v. United States, 5 Ct. Cust. 485, 1915 WL 20671, 1915 CCPA LEXIS 4 (ccpa 1915).

Opinion

MartiN, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The merchandise involved in this case was imported under the tariff act of 1909. The appraiser reported it to be “unpunched, unfinished scissors, sometimes called scissors forgings, intended to be ground down, punched, and manufactured into finished scissors.” Am advisory return of the merchandise for duty as “unfinished scissors” under paragraph 152 of the act was reported by the appraiser. In accordance therewith the collector assessed duty upon the importation as “unfinished scissors” at 15 cents per dozen and 15 per cent ad valorem when valued not over 50' cents per dozen, and 50 cents [486]*486per dozen and 15 per cent ad valorem when valued at more than 50 cents but not more than $1.75 per dozen, all under the terms of paragraph 152 of the act of 1909.

The importers protested against the assessment, denying that the merchandise was unfinished scissors, and claiming duty thereon at ■30 per cent ad valorem as forgings under paragraph 123 of the act, or, -alternatively, at 45 per cent ad valorem as manufactures of metal under paragraph 199 of the act.

The protest was submitted upon exhibits and other testimony to the Board of General Appraisers, and the same was overruled by the board. The importers now appeal from that decision.

The following is a copy of the competing provisions of the tariff act of 1909 thus called into question:

123. * * * Forgings of iron or steel, or of combined iron and steel, but not ¡machined, tooled, or otherwise advanced in condition by any process or operation subsequent to the forging process, not specially provided l'or in this section, thirty per centum ad valorem; * * *
152. * * * Scissors and shears, and blades for the same, finished or unfinished, valued at not more than fifty cents per dozen, fifteen cents per dozen and fifteen per centum ad valorem; valued at more than fifty cents and not more than one dollar and seventy-five cents per dozen, fifty cents per dozen and fifteen per centum ad valorem; valued at more than one dollar and seventy-five cents per dozen, seventy-five cents per dozen and twenty-five per centum ad valorem.
199. Articles or wares not specially provided for in this section, composed wholly or in part of iron, steel, lead, copper, nickel, pewter, zinc, gold, silver, platinum, aluminum, or other metal, and whether partly or wholly manufactured, forty-five per centum ad valorem.

The articles in question are made from tool steel by the process of stamping and forging, they being cleaned of the surplus metal left adhering to them after that operation. They are uniform in size and dimensions and bear in a crude way the form and appearance of unfinished scissors blades. They are not yet punched with the necessary pivot holes, nor are they true to one another, nor are they tempered, sharpened, nickel plated, colored, or polished. Nevertheless, they have been brought into a condition where their only practical commercial use or purpose is to be finished into perfect scissors blades, and this, of course, is the use for which they are designed. The complete finishing of the present articles into scissors blades requires many processes; these are said to number about 56 in all. In the course of this work the articles pass through the hands of many different workmen, adding greatly to the total cost of their manufacture. These processes, however, do not add any material ¡to the metal frames as they now exist, nor do they take any material tiherefrom, for the sole purpose of altering their present scissorslike ¡form. But by means of the additional processes just referred to the ¡present articles are tempered, straightened, punched, nickel plated, colored, ground, polished, and fitted to one another.

[487]*487It must be conceded that the crude articles now in controversy may aptly be classified either as “manufactures of metal” within the terms of paragraph 199 of the act, or as “forgings of iron and steel” . within the terms of paragraph 123. The articles, therefore, would be dutiable under one of those paragraphs unless they would also come within the more specific description of “scissors * * * and blades for the same, finished or unfinished,” contained in paragraph 152. In the latter event the more specific provision would of course prevail. The sole question in the case, therefore, is whether the imported articles in their present crude condition respond to the statutory designation of unfinished scissors blades. If the articles properly bear that title, then the present assessment should be affirmed.

At the trial before the board the importers submitted in evidence a number of scissors blades which are much further advanced in manufacture than the articles now in question, they having been straightened, drilled, tempered, and ground, but still requiring to be marked, scored, colored, nickel plated, edged, and otherwise treated before they are considered to be entirely finished articles. These articles were made part of the record as an illustrative exhibit in the case, and the importers undertook to prove that in the trade such articles only bear the designation of unfinished scissors blades. It need only be said, however, that the testimony contained in the record is plainly insufficient to establish any general, uniform, and definite trade usage of the term “unfinished scissors blades,” and therefore that term must be given its common signification in the present case.

The decisive factor in the present case is found in the circumstance that the article's in question were brought to their present condition as part of the process of manufacturing them into finished scissors blades, and that this process has so far advanced in their case that the articles possess the elementary form and substance of scissors blades and are unsuitable commercially for any other use. The tariff act distinguishes in terms between scissors and scissors blades and expressly provides that both shall bear the indicated duty whether they be finished or unfinished as such. There must therefore come a point in the manufacturing process where in the contemplation of the act the articles become scissors or scissors blades in name and character, even though they may not yet be finished and ready for Use as such. In the manufacture of the present articles that point has been reached. The numerous and important processes of manufacture through which they must yet pass are essentially finishing processes, such as do not forbid their present classification as unfinished scissors blades.

The following extract from the opinion of Judge Lacombe in the 'case of Oppenheimer v. United States (66 Fed., 52), relating to an [488]*488analogous provision for “articles of wearing apparel, manufactured in whole or in part,” is in line with .the foregoing conclusion:

The merchandise imported in this case is clearly within the italicized portion of this paragraph. It is made up “in part,” the operation of making up having progressed so far that it is easy to identify the particular article of wearing apparel it is to be, and-the materials out of which it is made being rendered, so far as the evidence shows, practically useless for any other purpose. -

In the case of United States v. Lyon & Healy (4 Ct. Cust. Appls., 438; T. D.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ct. Cust. 485, 1915 WL 20671, 1915 CCPA LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redden-v-united-states-ccpa-1915.