Rico Import Co. v. United States

469 F.2d 699, 60 C.C.P.A. 15, 1972 CCPA LEXIS 224
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 30, 1972
DocketNo. 5453, C.A.D. 1075
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 469 F.2d 699 (Rico Import 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
Rico Import Co. v. United States, 469 F.2d 699, 60 C.C.P.A. 15, 1972 CCPA LEXIS 224 (ccpa 1972).

Opinions

AlmoNd, Judge.

This appeal by Pico Import Co. involves the importation of tubular tubular sections of the arundo donax plant which are used in the manufacture of reeds for musical instruments. The goods were classified as articles of “unspun fibrous vegetable materials” under item 222.64 of •the Tariff Schedules of the United States (TSUS), dutiable atlO percent ad valorem. Appellant importer protested this classification and claimed that the merchandise should have been classified under item 200.40 as “wood sticks (except bamboo and rattan sticks) in the rough” or, alternatively, under item 222.05 as “bamboo or rattan sticks in the rough.” Merchandise in both of these categories is accorded entry duty free.

The Customs Court held1 that arwrtdo donax is neither wood nor bamboo but a species of water-loving grass and that the tubular sections, though in the rough, were properly classifiable under item 222.64* The issue to be resolved is whether the Customs Court was correct in so holding.

The statutes involved are:

Tariff Schedules of the United States — Schedule 2;
Part 1. Wood and Wood Products, Subpart A:
200.40 Wood sticks (except bamboo and rattan sticks), in the rough, or cut into lengths suitable for sticks for umbrellas, parasols, sunshades, whips, fishing rods, or walking canes_ Free
Part 2. Subpart B: Bamboo, Rattan, Willow and Chips;
BaslcetworJo, Wielcerworlc, and Related Products of Fibrous Vegetable Substances
222.05 Bamboo or rattan sticks, in the rough, or cut into lengths suitable for sticks for umbrellas, parasols, sunshades, whips, fishing rods or walking canes _ Free
Articles not specially provided for,' of unspun fibrous vegetable materials:
[17]*17222.60 ' Of one or more of the materials bamboo, rattan, ' willow or chip_ 26% ad val.
222.62 . Of raffia_ 8.6% ad val.
222.64- Other_-__— 10% ad val.
■ Headnote, Subpart B(2) (d) : the term “unspun fibrous vegetable' materials’’ means bamboo, rattan, willow, chip, straw, palm leaf, grass, seagrass, and similar fibrous vegetable substances which have not been spun.
Paragraph 1806, Title II, section 201, Tariff Act of 1930—
Woods: Sticks of partridge, hair wood, pimento, orange, myrtle, bamboo, rattan, india malacca joints, and other woods not specially provided for, in the rough, or not further advanced than cut into lengths suitable for sticks for umbrellas, parasols, sunshades, whips, fishing rods, or walking canes.

In the proceedings below, the parties agreed that the articles in question are cut from the European plant arundo donax and were “in the rough” as imported in that'they had not been subjected to any part of the manufacturing process that would convert them into reeds for musical instruments. It was stipulated that the tubular sections of arumdo donax here in issue are the same merchandise as that involved in two earlier cases, viz., Rico Products Co. et al. v. United States, 44 Cust. Ct. 100, C.D. 2159 (1960) and J. E. Bernard & Co. v. United States, 41 Cust. Ct. 1, C.D. 2011 (1958). The records of those cases were incorporated in the present record over appelle’s objection that those cases were inapposite since they had been decided under a different tariff law (Title II, section 201, paragraph 1806 of the Tariff Act of 1930) and involved the question of whether the tubular sections were “sticks in the rough” or had been partially subjected to the finishing process that would convert them into reeds for musical instruments.

It is pertinent to observe that appellant’s exhibit 1 in the instant case was the same one that had been used in the Rico Products Go. and the J. E. Bernard & Go. cases. Therefore, we agree with the Customs Court that portions of its opinions in those cases are germane to this case. That court adopted below its summary of the evidence pertaining to the nature of arundo donax and the processing steps done to it before importation set forth in the J. E. Bernard Go. case. The court observed, correctly we think, that the Rico Products and J. E. Bernard Go. decisions were not dispositive of the issue as to whether artmdo donax is wood, grass or bamboo. The court stated:

Clearly, therefore, whereas the prior cases raised and resolved the issue that -the particular state of advancement of the sticks did not remove them from the category classifiable as sticks “in the rough”, those cases did not deal with the nature of the sticks themselves.
In both those eases, the sticks were referred to generally as either “reed” or “cane”. In view of the then applicable provision of the Tariff Act of 1930, there was “no dispute between the parties that the merchandise [consisted] of wood, [18]*18or that it [was] in the form of sticks.” * * * The precise nature of the sticks was. neither pertinent nor examined because paragraph 1806 of the Tariff Act of 1930' specifically enumerated within its classification for “woods” a variety of sticks: including “bamboo” and “rattan”. The issue there was whether the sticks were-“sticks * * * in the rough”, and therefore entitled to free entry, or “wood, un-manufactured, not specially provided for”, and therefore dutiable at the rate of' 10 per centum ad valorem. * * * The entire thrust of the cases related to whether the sticks were “in the rough”.

Therefore, in the instant appeal we are confronted with a new and' different issue calling for a determination of whether the sticks are “bamboo or rattan sticks,” or “wood sticks,” or “articles not specially provided for, of unspun fibrous vegetable materials.”

Dr. Kobert Cockrell, a professor of forestry at the University of California at Berkeley, testified on behalf of the importer as to the nature of arundo donax. He stated that arundo donax is “wood” as; that term is defined in Van Nostrand’s Scientific Encyclopedia, Third Edition, 1958, to include “woody plants * * * in which the stem is predominantly composed of vascular tissue.” 2 He would classify bamboo, as a wood and noted that arundo donax and bamboo are so similar in their characteristics that without laboratory analysis one is almost impossible to distinguish from a similar section of the other. Pie also-stated that bamboo and arundo donax are both members of the grass: family, but that there are, nonetheless, botanical differences.

Dr. Cockrell characterized as a “straw” a stem of common grass— like the “grass you mow on Saturday,” which was offered in evidence-by the United States. Pie said, however, that it contained “some xylem3 * * * which is in the general sense, wood.” When asked to-delineate the transformation point at which a plant would cease to be-“grass” or “straw” and become “wood,” he observed: “Wood, as we think of it, has to have substance so that it can be worked with tools,, and these stems of arundo donax

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Bluebook (online)
469 F.2d 699, 60 C.C.P.A. 15, 1972 CCPA LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rico-import-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1972.