Sandoz Chemical Works, Inc. v. United States

25 Cust. Ct. 115, 1950 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 21
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 1950
DocketC. D. 1273
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 25 Cust. Ct. 115 (Sandoz Chemical Works, Inc. 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
Sandoz Chemical Works, Inc. v. United States, 25 Cust. Ct. 115, 1950 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 21 (cusc 1950).

Opinion

Cole, Judge:

Plaintiff, whose business includes the manufacture of pharmaceuticals, imported from Switzerland, a digitalis glucoside, known as cedilanid substance. The merchandise, plaintiff’s exhibit 1, consists of a hermetically sealed glass container with a capacity of approximately 340 cubic centimeters, holding 100 grams of the cedilanid substance, being a white powder possessing therapeutic properties.

The collector classified the shipment as a digitalis glucoside in ampoules under the provisions of paragraphs 5 and 23, as amended by the trade agreement with Switzerland, 69 Treas. Dec. 74, T. D. 48093, and assessed duty at 15 per centum ad valorem. Plaintiff claims that the commodity is a drug of vegetable origin, advanced in value or condition, and therefore classifiable under paragraph 34 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended by the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, 82 Treas. Dec. 305, T. D. 51802, carrying a duty assessment of 5 per centum ad valorem.

Pertinent paragraphs of the statutes are quoted in the margin.1

[117]*117The issue has been narrowed by virtue of a stipulation, in which the parties agree that the cedilanid substance is, in fact, a drug of the class provided for in paragraph 34, as amended, sufra. Thus, the sole question for determination concerns the glass container, i. e., whether it is an ampoule, as contemplated by paragraph 23 of the Tariff Act of 1930. If it is, the collector’s classification must be sustained; if it is not, plaintiff’s claim is good.

Both sides introduced oral testimony and illustrative exhibits. Plaintiff’s evidence presents a comprehensive picture, showing the preparation, nature, and use of the digitalis glucoside (cedilanid substance), and the type of container in which imported. A summary of the evidence follows.

Cedilanid substance is highly toxic and therefore is incapable of use fer se as a medicine, but is employed only with other ingredients in preparations, as tablets, suppositories, or in solution, used as remedies for heart ailments, principally congestive heart failure and disorders of heart rhythm.

All of the imported drug was used in the manufacture of cedilanid tablets, plaintiff’s illustrative exhibit A, prepared by mixing the cedilanid substance with milk sugar, powdered sugar, and starch. The mixing is done in a boring mill and continues for 4 hours. After the mixture is removed from the mill, lubricants are added and the use of alcohol and water brings the material to proper consistency as a semisolid mass which is granulated, then dried, and compressed into [118]*118tablets of definite shape and weight. After coating, the tablets are finally wrapped and packed.

The contents — 100 grams — of the glass container, plaintiff's exhibit 1, supra, are sufficient for the preparation of 200,000 tablets, each containing 0.5 milligrams of the medicinal substance. Dosages consist of one or two tablets, depending on the advice of a physician. When the cedilanid substance is reduced to solution — another form in which it is administered — the drug is packed in ampoules, holding 2 to 4 cubic centimeters.

Hermetically sealing the glass container does not sterilize the drug, which is not sterile when packed. Manipulation, in the process of hermetically sealing, consists of saturating the glass container in inert gas for removal of air, and, after inserting the weighed contents, the neck of the container is constricted and sealed with a flame. The purpose of the process is to protect the medicinal from the influence of air and moisture and prevent general decomposition.

To remove the cedilanid substance, the neck of the container is filed off. All of the 10 containers, comprising the shipment in question, were thrown away after being emptied. There is some testimony that articles, substantially the same as the receptacle under consideration, have been used as boiling flasks or for storing liquids in chemical and laboratory operations after the contents have been consumed. To what extent such use is made of the discarded containers, the record is not clear.

The imported cedilanid substance is not a drug in any of the forms named in paragraph 23, supra, as represented by the following exhibits: A capsule, plaintiff’s illustrative exhibit B; a pill, plaintiff’s illustrative exhibit C; a tablet, plaintiff’s illustrative exhibit D; a lozenge, plaintiff’s illustrative exhibit E; a troche, plaintiff’s illustrative exhibit F; an ampoule, plaintiff’s illustrative exhibit G; a jube, plaintiff’s illustrative exhibit H; powders in medicinal doses, plaintiff’s collective illustrative exhibit I. Each of the specified forms denotes a definite dosage for a drug to be administered per se. The medicinal under consideration is wholly dissimilar because, as imported in the quantity of its container, it is raw material to be manufactured into effective dosages, as hereinabove set forth.

An ampoule is a hermetically sealed glass container, usually oblong in shape, with a capacity of from 1 to 20 cubic centimeters. Ordinarily, noncorrosive glass of special class or quality is used to suit the peculiar use of an ampoule, i. e., to maintain the sterility of a sterile preparation. The contents of an ampoule are sufficient for a single or an individual use only.

The container in question is not an ampoule. Neither its contents nor its purpose is that of an ampoule. The cedilanid substance is not sterile and the hermetically sealed glass container does not change or [119]*119improve the condition, of the drug hut only protects it from outside elements. The powdered medicinal substance is not ready for its recognized use as a remedy for heart ailments. On the contrary, it must be further manufactured into proper dosage form for its therapeutic property to function successfully. Furthermore, tests of the glass reveal it is ordinary chemical glassware and not of a quality suitable for holding a sterile preparation, as required of an ampoule.

Although the testimony of defendant’s four witnesses is consistent in reaching the same conclusion, their views are highly divergent from those stated by plaintiff. Each regarded an ampoule as any hermetically sealed glass container, somewhat cylindrical or bulbous in shape, and having a narrow neck that can be readily fused. Neither the size of the article, nor the nature or quantity of its contents is of any consequence. Illustrative of the testimony are three glass containers with bulbous bodies and elongated necks, i. e., defendant’s illustrative exhibit K, containing 1 pound of the chemical element, bromine; defendant’s illustrative exhibit L, used for holding 500 grams of Vitamin E; defendant’s illustrative exhibit M, bearing no label, but with a capacity comparable to said defendant’s illustrative exhibit L.

Counsel for defendant, in the course of the trial, conceded that no attempt was made to establish commercial designation, so the witnesses’ expressions are personal opinions. As the common meaning, therefore, becomes controlling, definitions are quoted from recognized dictionaries and authoritative publications.

Funk & Wagnalls New Standard Dictionary, 1941 edition, defines the word “ampoule” as “A vial containing one dose of a hypodermic solution.”

Webster’s New International Dictionary contains this definition— “ampoule, * * * A small bulbous glass vessel, hermetically sealed, for holding a solution for hypodermic injection, usually one dose.”

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Bluebook (online)
25 Cust. Ct. 115, 1950 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandoz-chemical-works-inc-v-united-states-cusc-1950.