Seeberger v. Schlesinger

152 U.S. 581, 14 S. Ct. 729, 38 L. Ed. 560, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2148
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 9, 1894
Docket274
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 152 U.S. 581 (Seeberger v. Schlesinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seeberger v. Schlesinger, 152 U.S. 581, 14 S. Ct. 729, 38 L. Ed. 560, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2148 (1894).

Opinion

Mr- Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case involves the proper classification for duties under the act of March 3, 1883, c. 121, 22 Stat. 488, of Chinese goat skins and pearl opera glasses.

1. In reference to the goat skins, the court found that the plaintiffs imported and entered at the custom-house in the port and district of Chicago certain Chinese goat skins, dressed and finished, upon which the plaintiffs paid a duty of 40 per cent ad valorem, as “ rugs ” not otherwise provided for, classified and, assessed by the defendant collector, under Schedule K, act of March 3,1883, namely: “ Carpets and carpetings of wool, flax, or cotton . . . not otherwise herein specified, forty per centum ad valorem ; and mats, rugs . . . shall be subjected to the rate of duty herein imposed on carpets.” Plaintiffs paid these duties under protest, and appealed to the Secretary of the Treasury, claiming that such merchandise should be assessed at a duty of 20 per cent ad valorem under Schedule N, “ Sundries,” as skins dressed and finished, of all kinds, not specially enumerated.” The court further found that the goods in question were’described in the invoice as ‘ Chinese goat skins; ’ that they are tanned with the hair on so that the skin is soft and pliant; that none of the skins are whole or entire, but that the articles imported are made of pieces of skins tanned as aforesaid, loosely sewed together so as to make large parallelogram-shaped pieces about 18 inches wide by 36 to 48 inches long; that they are advertised and sold to some extent for floor rugs, and are sometimes lined and trimmed for sleigh and carriage robes; that they are not always used in the shape imported, but are sometimes cut apart at the seams, or cut into strips and dyed, and used for trimming lap robes, overcoats,” etc.

*583 We agree with the court below in holding that the skins in question were improperly classified as “ rugs.” Schedule K of the act of March 3,1883, (22 Stat. page 508,) is entitled Wool and Woollens,” and, until the clause in question is reached, provides for duties upon various classes of wools, woollen goods, clothing, carpets, including, as an analogous material, the hair of the alpaca, goat, and other like animals, with fabrics made of such hair, or mixtures of the same with wool. The schedule then imposes a duty of six cents per yard upon “ hemp-or jute carpeting,” and then provides that “ carpets and carpetings of wool, flax, or cotton, or parts of either or other material, not otherwise herein specified, forty per centum ad valorem ; and mats, rugs, screens, covers, hassocks, -bedsides, and other portions of carpets or carpetings, shall be subjected to the rate of duty herein imposed on carpets or carpetings of like character or description ; and the duty on all other mats not exclusively of vegetable material, screens, hassocks, and rugs, shall be forty per centum ad valorem.” There is no mention here of skins, or of hair attached to the skin ; and while, if the articles in question were used exclusively or principally as rugs, they might be included within that designation, the fact that they were of the size of small rugs, and were advertised and sold to some extent for that purpose, would not be sufficient, if a more specific designation could be found. It not only appears that they were sometimes lined and trimmed for sleigh and carriage robes, but that they were not always used in the shapes imported, and were sometimes cut apart at the seams, and cut into strips and dyed and used for trimming garments. In fact, their uses were so various that they afford a very unsatisfactory criterion for their classification.

The plaintiffs took the ground in their protest, and in this they were sustained by the court below, that they should be classified under Schedule N, “Sundries.;—Skins dressed and finished.” The clause relied upon is one providing-for the assessment of leathers, and reads as follows (page 513):

“ Leather, bend or belting leather, and Spanish or other sole leather, and leather not specially enumerated or provided for in this act, fifteen per centum ad valorem.

*584 “Calfskins, tanned, or tanned' and dressed, and dressed upper leather of all other kinds, and skins dressed and finished, of all kinds, not specially enumerated or provided for in this act, and skins of morocco, finished, twenty per centum ad valorem.

“ Skins for morocco, tanned, but unfinished, ten per centum ad valorem.

“ All manufactures and articles of leather, or of which leather shall be a component part, not specially enumerated or provided for in this act, thirty per centum ad valorem.”

It is insisted, however, that the item of “ skins dressed and finished,” read in connection with the residue of the clause, and particularly with “ skins for morocco, tanned, but unfinished,” indicates that, by “ skins dressed and finished ” were meant skins dressed and finished in the similitude of leather; that is, by having the hair removed; and that a reference to the corresponding clause of the Revised Statutes, section 2504, page 477, shows still more clearly that the clause in question was not intended to include skins with the hair on:

“ Leather. — Bend or belting-leather, and Spanish or other sole leather : fifteen per centum ad valorem; calfskins, tanned, or tanned and dressed: twenty-five per centum ad valorem; upper leather of all other kinds, and skins dressed and finished of all kinds, not otherwise provided for: twenty per centum ad valorem; skins for morocco, tanned, but unfinished: ten per centum ad valorem; manufactures and articles of leather, or of which leather shall be a component part, not otherwise provided for, thirty-five per centum ad valorem.

“Leather and skins japanned, patent, or enameled: thirty-five per centum ad valorem.

“ All leather and skins, tanned, not otherwise provided for: twenty-five per centum ad valorem.”

In this court, it is further claimed by the collector that while none of the clauses referred to include skins of animals with the hair on eo nomine, the goat skins in question fall either directly or under the similitude clause within the description of “dressed furs on the skin,” page 513, and were dutiable at twenty per centum ad valorem ; that although goat skins are *585 not ordinarily classified as furs — a term usually reserved for the short, fine hair of certain animals, whose skins are largely used for clothing; yet in a commercial sense furs have been regarded as including other skins, perhaps more properly designated by the term “peltry; ” and that within their commercial designation is included the covering of all animals whose skin is used either for warmth or ornament, with the hair on. In this connection we are cited to the case of Astor v. Union Insurance Co., 7 Cowen, 202, in which an “ Invoice of furs ” was described as consisting of bear and raccoon skins, opossum, deer, fine fisher, cross fox, marten, white raccoon, wild cat, wolf, wolverine, panther, and cub skins. In this case evidence was held to be properly admitted showing that, by the usage of the trade, skins.valuable chiefly on account of the fur were called fur, while skins

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Bluebook (online)
152 U.S. 581, 14 S. Ct. 729, 38 L. Ed. 560, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seeberger-v-schlesinger-scotus-1894.