Stiner & Son v. United States

1 Ct. Cust. 545, 1911 WL 19837, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 100
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 24, 1911
DocketNo. 453
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 Ct. Cust. 545 (Stiner & Son 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
Stiner & Son v. United States, 1 Ct. Cust. 545, 1911 WL 19837, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 100 (ccpa 1911).

Opinion

Martin, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In the months of August and October, 1909, the appellants imported into this country a number of consignments of dressed and finished lambskins. The collector classified them as “glove leather.” and held them to be dutiable at 20 per cent ad valorem, under paragraph 451 of the act of 1909.

The appellants duly filed their protest to this ruling, and claimed that such of the importations as had entered before October 1 were dutiable at 15 per cent ad valorem as “lambskins dressed and finished” under paragraph 451, and that such as had entered after October 1 were dutiable at 7\ per cent ad valorem as “grain leather” under paragraph 450 of the same act.

The Board of General Appraisers heard the protest upon evidence, and held with the collector. The appellants now present the question to this court and pray for a reversal of the board’s decision.

The paragraphs which are above referred to read as follows:

450. Hides of cattle, raw or uncured, whether dry, salted, or pickled, shall be admitted free of duty: Provided, That on and after October first, nineteen hundred and nine, grain, buff, and split leather shall pay a duty of seven and one-half per centum ad valorem; that all boots and shoes, made wholly or in chief value of leather made from cattle hides and cattle skins of whatever weight, of cattle of the bovine species, including calfskins, shall pay a duty of ten per centum ad valorem; that harness, saddles and saddlery, in sets or in parts, finished or unfinished, composed wholly or in chief value of leather, shall pay a duty of twenty per centum ad valorem.
[546]*546451. Band, bend, or belting leather, rough leather, and sole leather, five per centum ad valorem; dressed upper and all other leather, calfskins tanned or tanned and dressed, kangaroo, sheep and goat skins (including lamb and kid skins) dressed and finished, other skins and bookbinders’ calfskins, all the foregoing not specially provided for in this section, fifteen per centum ad valorem; chamois skin, twenty per centum ad valorem; skins for morocco, tanned but unfinished, five per centum ad valorem; patent, japanned, varnished, or enameled leather weighing' not over ten pounds per dozen hides or skins, twenty-seven cents per pound and fifteen per centum ad valo-rem; if weighing over ten pounds ana not over twenty-five pounds per dozen, twenty-seven cents per pound and eight per centum ad valorem; if weighing over twenty-five pounds per dozen, twenty cents per pound and ten per centum ad valorem; pianoforte leather and pianoforte-action leather, and glove leather, twenty per centum ad valorem; leather shoe laces, finished or unfinished, fifty cents per gross pairs and ten per centum ad valorem; boots and shoes made of leather, fifteen per centum ad valo-rem: Provided, That leather cut into shoe uppers or vamps or other forms, suitable for conversion into manufactured articles, and guaffre leather, shall pay a duty of ten per centum ad valorem in addition to the duty imposed by this paragraph on leather of the same character as that from which they are cut.

It will be observed that the foregoing paragraphs make separate classes of “grain leather” dutiable at 7$ per cent ad valorem after October 1, 1909, and “lambskins dressed and finished” dutiable at 15 per cent ad valorem, and “glove leather” dutiable at 20 per cent ad valorem; and the only question upon the merits is, To which of these three classes do the importations belong? There is also a question of procedure made in the case by a ruling of the board excluding certain testimony proposed by appellants, to which ruling appellants excepted. That question will be considered later in this opinion.

There are certain relevant facts which may be stated as being either conceded by the parties or as being established by the proofs beyond serious controversy.

. The importations are all lambskins. The skins are all so dressed and finished as to be fit and suitable to be made into gloves. They are soft, elastic, and pliable, which are characteristics always present in glove leather. In the trade such skins were frequently called simply lambskins, although that name if used alone would hardly describe them with sufficient particularity to serve as an order or invoice. The name “glove leather” was also frequently used by the trade as applicable to the skins, but this, too, lacked definiteness and required further description to serve as an order or invoice. These names were not strictly trade names of a definite or exclusive character; the articles were called lambskins because they were the skins of lambs, and they were called glove leather because they had been tanned, finished, and dressed to be suitable for the making of gloves. Such names were therefore quite as apt to be used by laymen as by experts of the trade. There were also various subsidiary names applied to the skins, indicating different conditions produced by dressing and finishing, such as suede, nappa, glace, kid, and chamois. These were [547]*547real trade names and had definite and specific meanings which were well known to all engaged in the business.

More than half of all the lambskins used in manufacture are used in the making of shoes. Those so used are dressed and finished in a different manner from these at bar, the leather for shoes requiring a firm surface, while glove leather must be soft and flexible. The two kinds of leather are therefore clearly distinguishable from one another.

Of the lambskins finished for gloves a small fraction, perhaps 10 per cent, are in fact finally used in the making of other articles, such as jewelry bags, ladies’ belts, pocketbooks, and bookbindings. But this use is relatively so small that the skins so prepared are nevertheless all called glove leather, notwithstanding the fact that some might actually be used for other purposes.

On the other hand, leather gloves are not all made of lambskins. The skins of dogs, goats, sheep, deer, colts, and pigs are also used for this purpose. However, the proportion of such other skins used in glove manufacture is so small that probably more than 90 per cent of leather gloves are made from-lambskins and less than 10 per cent from all others combined.

. It appears from these statements that the skins in question might aptly be called by either of two of the designations contained in paragraph 451 — that is, “lambskins dressed and finished” or “glove, leather” — and that they were in a general way known to the trade by each of these titles. The third classification, namely, “ grain leather,” provided for by paragraph 450, will be considered later.

As between the two classifications above named that one must prevail which is the more specific and which seems upon the paragraph at large to carry more nearly into effect the legislative intent.

Which, then, is the more specific designation “lambskins dressed and finished” or “ glove leather” ?

The primary term denominative of the articles is lambskins, but this term alone does not describe either of the two classes as named in the paragraph. The one class requires that the skins shall be dressed and finished before they shall be included within it; the other class requires that they shall also be glove leather before they «hall be included within it.

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Related

Dodge v. United States
22 C.C.P.A. 18 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1934)
United States v. Stiner
7 Ct. Cust. 485 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ct. Cust. 545, 1911 WL 19837, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stiner-son-v-united-states-ccpa-1911.