Roser Customs Service v. United States

64 Cust. Ct. 20, 1970 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 3218
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1970
DocketC.D. 3953
StatusPublished

This text of 64 Cust. Ct. 20 (Roser Customs Service 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
Roser Customs Service v. United States, 64 Cust. Ct. 20, 1970 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 3218 (cusc 1970).

Opinion

Landis, Judge:

These two protests, consolidated for trial at Brownsville, Texas, on February 28, 1968, were transferred to New [21]*21Orleans for further proceedings on completion of testimony taken at Brownsville. The protests come to us for a ruling on defendant’s objections to the breadth of a subpoena served on Mr. O. M. McCombs, a customs official of the United States Laboratory at New Orleans, to appear, testify, and produce at New Orleans all records “showing the actual assay” (R. 63) of various carloads of fluorspar, imported by rail from Mexico at Brownsville in January and February 1961.

The testimony which plaintiffs sought to elicit from Mr. McCombs is relevant to the classification of fluorspar under paragraph 207 of the Tariff Act of 1930. Fluorspar containing over 97 percent calcium fluoride is dutiable at the modified rate of $2.10 per ton. Fluorspar containing not over 97 percent calcium fluoride is dutiable at $8.40 per ton.

Protest 62/9155 relates to six carloads out of 23 carloads imported on various dates classified as fluorspar containing not over 97 percent calcium fluoride. Protest 62/3266 relates to two carloads out of 23 additional and different carloads imported on various dates classified as fluorspar containing not over 97 percent calcium fluoride. The remaining entry carloads (38), not in dispute, were classified as fluorspar containing over 97 percent calcium fluoride.

Plaintiffs’ avowed purpose for examining Mr. McCombs under subpoena was to establish a composite assay of the 23 carloads, by mathematical computation based on the customs 23 individual assays of each carload in the entry (R. 7, 62, 81). This theory of a composite assay, which we shall discuss infra, is plaintiffs’ sole basis for these protests.

At New Orleans, on March 27,1968, defendant objected that the subpoena served on Mr. McCombs was “unreasonable and oppressive” (R. 73) because it tended to cover carloads of fluorspar not identified in the protests and, therefore, outside the scope of the claim in the protests. The trial judge at New Orleans stated that he would “accept the subpoena, subject to the decision of the Division” having jurisdiction of the protests. (R. 89.) We are that Division. Mr. McCombs thereupon testified on direct and cross-examination. His testimony covers 86 pages of transcribed record. (R. 91 through 177.) At the close of the testimony at New Orleans, plaintiffs’ request that the protests be transferred back to Brownsville was granted.

On September 25, 1968, the trial judge assigned to preside at the further proceedings in Brownsville on October 1968 (a docket which was subsequently cancelled) wrote counsel for the parties and directed that they each file a memorandum on the objections to the subpoena at New Orleans in order to, as put by the trial judge, “clarify the direction for further proceedings in this litigation.” Plaintiffs’ memorandum, filed November 25, 1968, is supplemented by a memoran[22]*22dum filed November 27, 1968. Defendant’s memorandum was filed January 27, 1969. (Hereinafter these memoranda are called “trial memoranda”.)

On March 6, 1969, the date when order was about ready to enter on the several opinions of this Division with respect to defendant’s objections, plaintiffs filed an application asking this Division to hear oral argument on the following matters:

1. The legal effect of the special procedures authorized by Customs whereby fluorspar imported in separate carloads is permitted to be commingled in a common stockpile on the dock, under General Order (Customs custody), with duty payable, not at the time of importation of the individual carloads, but upon the filing of a single Consumption Entry covering the entire stockpile at the time of its removal from the designated area.
2. The scope of the protests at issue herein.
3. The request of plaintiffs to be relieved of their concession with respect to the correctness of the Customs assays, where subsequent testimony of the Customs chemist established that no assays were actually made.

Upon defendant’s objections, we denied plaintiffs’ application and on April 8,1969 entered an order directing plaintiffs to file a memorandum of law on the matters they had asked to orally argue and for defendant to reply with a memorandum of law. The parties hairing now filed their memoranda of law on June 10 and July 10, 1969, respectively, we are of the opinion that plaintiffs cannot prevail on their theory of a composite assay of the 23 carloads. When, at any stage of a proceeding, it comes to the attention of the court that the law will not sustain the facts necessary to plaintiffs’ theory of the case, it may assume the facts to be as claimed and sua sponte order the case submitted for decision. These protests are now, therefore, ordered consolidated and submitted for decision.

For the purpose of our decision, we take the following facts to be undisputed. We repeat that protest 62/9155 relates to six carloads, identified by car number in the protest, out of a total of 23 carloads imported at Brownsville on various dates in multiple cars of railroad trains. As the train crossed the customs border at Brownsville, a fluor-spar sample was taken from each of this group of 23 carloads containing fluorspar. The sample, properly identified to denote the car number from which taken, was then sent to the customs laboratory at New Orleans to be assayed or tested for calcium fluoride content incident to proper classification under paragarph 207 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as fluorspar containing over 97 percent calcium fluoride dutiable at the modified rate of $2.10 per ton, or fluorspar containing not over 97 percent dutiable at $8.40 per ton.

[23]*23After sample was drawn each carload was taken into possession by customs, pursuant to the importer’s request under section 490 (b) of the Tariff Act of 1930, and held in general order pending customs entry under section 484 of the Tariff Act of 1930. General order, in this instance, consisted of unloading the contents of this group of 23 general order carloads, as each arrived, into a commingled stockpile on the dock at Brownsville. A stockpile, we understand, consisted of 23 carloads segregated on the dock until large enough to fill a barge. On June 15, 1961, 23 general order carloads were incorporated in consumption entry 3019-B; the fluorspar was released, and loaded on a barge for New Orleans.

Protest 62/3266, involving substantially similar facts, relates, as mentioned earlier, to two identified carloads out of a total of 23 additional and different carloads, imported at Brownsville on various dates, sampled, stockpiled in general order, and released under consumption entry 1735-B on January 26, 1961.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 Cust. Ct. 20, 1970 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 3218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roser-customs-service-v-united-states-cusc-1970.