Rice & Co. v. United States

10 Ct. Cust. 165, 1920 WL 19895, 1920 CCPA LEXIS 35
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 1920
DocketNo. 2017
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 10 Ct. Cust. 165 (Rice & 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
Rice & Co. v. United States, 10 Ct. Cust. 165, 1920 WL 19895, 1920 CCPA LEXIS 35 (ccpa 1920).

Opinion

Martin, Judge,

delivered the- opinion of the court:

The merchandise in this case consists of certain dried and dyed immortelles. They were assessed with duty at the rate of 60 per cent ad valorem as artificial and ornamental flowers, under paragraph 347 of the tariff act of 1913.

The importers protested against the assessment, claiming the merchandise to be dutiable at the rate of 25 per cent ad valorem, "under the first clause of paragraph 210, as palms or cut flowers, preserved or fresh.” The protests, it should be noted, contained no specific reference to the similitude provisions of the act as a basis for this claim.

It is now conceded that the merchandise was erroneously assessed, and that it was dutiable at the rate of 25 per c.ent ad valorem by similitude with “cut flowers, preserved or fresh,” as enumerated in the first clause of paragraph 210, being the clause cited in. the protest.—Bayersdorfer & Co. v. United States (7 Ct. Cust. Appls., 66; T. D. 36390). The sole question in the present case, therefore, is whether the importers’ failure to specify in the protests that they were claiming assessment under the first clause of paragraph 210 aforesaid, by similitude under paragraph 386 of the act as well as by direct enumeration, forbids a decision sustaining the protests under • that clause by similitude. In other words, is it necessary that protestants shall specifically plead the similitude provisions in their protest in order to secure relief thereunder?

This question was submitted to the Board of General Appraisers, and in a majority decision the board answered it in the affirmative. [167]*167The protests accordingly were held to be insufficient as a basis for relief by similitude, and were overruled. The importers now appeal.

It must be conceded that each side of the present controversy admits of very persuasive arguments in its behalf, and doubtless because of this fact the decisions of the board and the -courts upon the question have been far from uniform. Upon a consideration, however, of the arguments advanced and the authorities cited in the case, we hold that the protests in question, notwithstanding their failure to refer specifically to the similitude provisions or paragraph, were sufficient as a demand for the assessment of the merchandise under paragraph 210 as “cut flowers, preserved or fresh,” as well by similitude as by direct enumeration thereunder; and that they should have been sustained. That is to say, it was not absolutely necessary to make express claim of the similitude provisions in the protests.

This conclusion is justified in the first place by the general prim ciples which have been recognized by the board and the courts when dealing with the subject of protests. The paragraphs of the present tariff act, as well as former ones, which relate to the filing of protests, are so familiar that it is unnecessary to copy them here, or even to refer to them by letter or number. They provide that a protest shall set forth distinctly and specifically the reasons for the protestante objection to the decision of the collector as to the rate and amount of duties chargeable upon the imported merchandise. It must be filed within a limited time after liquidation or after payment of the duties upon an importation; no form is prescribed for it in the act.

It is manifest that in the ordinary course of trade such instruments are often likely to be filed by laymen without technical education in the law, and under circumstances -which make it difficult if not impossible to secure the aid of counsel. It is reasonable to assume that this fact was within legislative view, and therefore to conclude that a protest should be tested by the rules relating to commercial instruments rather than by the strict rules of legal pleadings. It may be noted also in this behalf that no provision in practice is made for a demurrer or motion addressed to the form or sufficiency of a protest, nor for an answer or plea thereto, nor for an amendment thereof. Consequently, when the act requires that a protestant shall set forth in his protest “distinctly and specifically the reasons for his objections” to an assessment, it requires only such a measure of distinctness and particularity as is fairly and • reasonably necessary to inform the collector concerning the nature and extent of the protest'ant’s claim. And in applying this rule it should be remembered that the collector is charged with a knowledge of the law, in the present instance with a knowledge of the similitude provisions and [168]*168their coordination with each of the enumerating paragraphs of the act. When the collector and his advisory assistants first pass upon an importation, they must necessarily consider the similitude provisions as well as the enumerating paragraphs of the act in order to classify the merchandise for duty. Conversely, the importers also are legally charged with a knowledge of the similitude provisions of the act, and accordingly the collector is under no duty to mention these when they form the basis in part of the assessment.

This is an important rule in practice in behalf of the Government, and so far as we are informed it has never been questioned. That is to say, it happens not infrequently that merchandise is assessed with duty by the collector as answering directly to a specific duty-levying enumeration of the act. In such a case of course no mention is made of the similitude provisions in the assessment. However, it may be found upon protest that the merchandise thus assessed does not answer directly to the specific enumeration in question, but that it is nevertheless dutiable thereunder by force of the similitude provisions. Such an assessment certainly should not fail because the collector omitted reference to these provisions in the assessment, and neither should an importer’s objection to an assessment fail because of a similar brevity in drafting the protest. It is true, strictly speaking, that the similitude paragraph is itself in a sense an assessing paragraph, but it may fairly be said that in the general language and common understanding of those dealing with the subject, and indeed in the language of many court decisions as well, merchandise which becomes dutiable at a given rate by similitude with enumerated articles is regarded as being brought thereby within the enumerating paragraph for assessment, and it is no stretch of construction to require that the language of a protest should be interpreted with this common form of expression in view.

When it is borne in mind that the similitude clause is in effect a part of and must be read in conjunction with every duty-levying provision of the act and that, as such, its single enactment makes for economy and simplicity of expression, so known to all, and that it levies no other rate or rates of duty than that expressed in the particular provisions of which it is in effect a constituent part, in this respect it differs not at all in principle from the one general levy of the rate or rates of duties prescribed in each paragraph of the act by the defining and limiting language of the enacting clause of the act, to wit:

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ct. Cust. 165, 1920 WL 19895, 1920 CCPA LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1920.