Standard Synthetics Co. v. United States

16 Cust. Ct. 104, 1946 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 22
CourtUnited States Customs Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1946
DocketC. D. 993
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Cust. Ct. 104 (Standard Synthetics Co. 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
Standard Synthetics Co. v. United States, 16 Cust. Ct. 104, 1946 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 22 (cusc 1946).

Opinion

MollisoN, Judge:

These suits were filed by the plaintiff seeking to recover certain sums of money alleged to have been illegally exacted as customs duties upon two importations of merchandise which were classified by the collector of customs under the following provision in paragraph 60 of the Tariff Act of 1930 as modified by the French Trade Agreement, T. D. 48316:

Perfume materials: All mixtures or combinations containing essential or distilled oils, or natural or synthetic odoriferous or aromatic substances, not containing more than 10 per centum of alcohol.

with consequent assessment of duty at the compound rate of 40 cents per pound and 30 per centum ad valorem. The contention of the plaintiff is that the shipments consist of essential or distilled oil of cassia in one case and of lavender in the other; and that they are entitled to free entry under the eo nomine provision therefor in paragraph 1731 of the free list of the said act, which reads as follows:

Pae. 1731. Oils, distilled or essential: Anise, bergamot, bitter almond, camphor, caraway, cassia, cinnamon, citronella, geranium, lavender, lemon-grass, lime, lignaloe or bois de rose, neroli or orange flower, origanum, palmarosa, pettigrain, rose or otto of roses, rosemary, spike lavender, thyme, and ylang ylang or cananga: Provided, That no article mixed or compounded with or containing alcohol shall be exempted from duty under this paragraph.

Other claims were made by timely amendment of the protests, and while none was specifically waived or abandoned, they were not pressed and do not seem to be applicable in the light of the record as made. They are therefore overruled.

It was agreed by and between counsel at the trial that the merchandise was not mixed or compounded with, and did not contain alcohol.

In view of the fact that the evidentiary situation with respect to the alleged oil of cassia differs from that with respect to the alleged oil of lavender, we will consider them separately, taking the oil of cassia first.

The evidence offered on behalf of the plaintiff consists of the testimony of John Leslie Hindel, its vice president. Mr. Hindel had had some 21 years’ experience in the distillation, buying, and selling of [106]*106essential oils, and bad had training and experience as a chemist. He defined the term “essential oil” as' — ■

* * * an oil derived from a plant or an herb or a fruit either by distillation or by pressure. It is used as a flavor or a perfume.

Generally speaking, he said, “essential oils” and “distilled oils” mean the same thing, although “ an essential oil can be obtained from a plant or a fruit without distillation, but usually it is obtained by distillation.”

He stated that in the purchase of essential or distilled oil he relied upon four factors, viz, odor, flavor, pedigree, and independent chemical analysis, to determine whether it was a pure essential or distilled oil.

The so-called oil of cassia was purchased by him in London in the original lead containers in which it came from China. He personally tested it by the odor test and was satisfied as to its pedigree by his knowledge of the shipper as being reputable, but finding that it contained small traces of impurity, such as lead and heavy metals (presumably from the containers in which it was shipped), he redistilled it to purify it. He then sent a sample of the rectified oil to a public analyst in London, and concluded from the report submitted and from his own examination based upon his experience that it was pure essential oil of cassia. It was then shipped to the United States and sold to a firm of confectioners in Chicago as cassia oil.

Harold B. Mead, a Government chemist, in charge of the organic laboratory of the United States Customs Service, who had some 38 years’ experience in the examination of essential oils, testified for the defendant that he received a sample of the alleged oil of cassia here involved and made an analysis and report thereon.

Mr. Mead stated that cassia oil is composed chiefly of and derives its character from cinnamic aldehyde, and since this aldehyde is made artificially, synthetically, from coal tar in such pure state that it cannot be distinguished from the natural cinnamic aldehyde in cassia oil, no deduction can be made by examination of the aldehyde portion of a compound containing it as to whether the said compound was natural, synthetic, or a mixture of the two.

The cinnamic aldehyde was therefore removed from the sample and the nonaldehyde portion examined. He found that this had a saponification value of 50 as compared with a saponification of 150 to 180 found in analysis of “hundreds of samples of cassia oil from China,” and that it had an odor strongly suggestive of eugenol, a constituent “we have never found in cassia through our experience nor in the literature stated to be a constituent of cassia.”

Other tests were performed by removing the phenols, forming á solution, and testing with ferric chloride, resulting in a “beautiful bluish green” color, such as is obtained with eugenol. A similar test with ferric chloride upon the original sample gave a yellowish-green color, whereas the color is brown in the case of oil of cassia.

[107]*107The significance of the presence of eugenol in a substance such as that at bar is explained by Mr. Mead’s testimony at page 33 of the stenographic transcript as follows:

* * * When artificial cinnamic aldehyde is used to synthesize a cassia oil it must be adjusted by other-chemicals in order to conform to the ordinary standards, the ordinary tests given in the pharmacopoeia and other authorities. Various things are used to make this adjustment. In this case something apparently was used containing eugenol to make it appear like cassia oil.

A test involving the formation of crystals in fractions of distillation showed no crystals formed in the fractions obtained from the sample, while they were always formed in the fractions of the pure oil. Mr. Mead also related experience with oils which had been found to be mixtures, “and every time we examined one of those oils and distilled them we got no crystals.”

In its brief filed herein counsel for the plaintiff contends that the record shows that the involved merchandise was commercially known and bought and sold as essential or distilled cassia oil and that the case is therefore controlled by the decision of this court in Fritzsche Bros. v. United States, 7 Treas. Dec. 49, T. D. 24905 (G. A. 5535), wherein it was held that the provision for oil of cassia in the Tariff Act of 1897 covered all merchandise commercially known by that name, whether natural or artificial.

We have carefully examined the record and do not think that it supports the plaintiff’s contention. As we view it, the record establishes that the particular shipment of merchandise in question parsed into and through commerce in this country as oil of cassia. It is clear that Mr. Hindel, for the plaintiff, at least, and quite probably the person from whom he bought it and the person to whom he sold it, believed that it was natural oil of cassia. This is so, for Mr. Hindel was emphatic in pointing out that he satisfied himself as to the pedigree of the oil before he purchased it, and there would be no point in such inquiry were it not for the purpose of securing the natural oil.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Cust. Ct. 104, 1946 Cust. Ct. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-synthetics-co-v-united-states-cusc-1946.