Tanross Supply Co., Inc. v. The United States

433 F.2d 1332, 58 C.C.P.A. 26, 1970 CCPA LEXIS 250
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 3, 1970
DocketCustoms Appeal 5380
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 433 F.2d 1332 (Tanross Supply Co., Inc. v. The 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
Tanross Supply Co., Inc. v. The United States, 433 F.2d 1332, 58 C.C.P.A. 26, 1970 CCPA LEXIS 250 (ccpa 1970).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the judgment of the United States Customs Court, Second Division, C.D. 3870, insofar as it overruled two protests by appellant to the classification of merchandise described as “#1000 Educational Kits” and “#1553 Microscope Dissecting Kits” as “sets” under Item 651.75 of the Tariff Schedules of the United States (TSUS). We affirm the judgment as to the #1000 kits and reverse as to the #1553 kits. Although the classifications were both under the same TSUS item, they present different questions and will therefore be discussed separately.

I. # 1000 Educational Kits

The #1000 Educational Kits contain laboratory beakers, test tubes, chemicals, a plastic-handled knife, a needle probe, a dissecting board, an instruction book, and other items used in connection with preparation of specimens for viewing under a microscope, but do not contain a microscope. They were classified under TSUS Item 651.75, which reads:

Sets (except sets specially provided for) which include two or more of the tools, knives, forks, spoons, or other articles provided for in different rate provisions of this subpart........
The rate of duty applicable to that article in the set subject to the highest rate of duty.

The articles which the Collector found brought the kits under this item were the plastic-handled knife and the needle probe, and the entire kits were dutied at the rate of duty applicable to the plastic-handled knife individually. 1

*1334 There are two questions in this portion of the appeal. First, are the entire kits “sets” within the meaning of TSUS Item 651.75, as the Government contends, or are the plastic-handled knife and the needle probe, considered by themselves, such “sets,” as Tanross contends ? 2 Second, should imported goods be classified as “sets” under this item when the unit in which the goods are imported and sold, both at wholesale and at retail, contains two or more of the “articles provided for in different rate provisions of * * * [the subpart in which Item 651.75 is found],” but also contains many other articles not provided for in that sub-part? 3 The Government contends that if there are at least two such articles in a “set,” no matter how many other objects there are in the “set,” the entire unit imported falls under Item 651.75. Tanross seems to be contending — although its position is not entirely clear —that such a “set” is dutiable under Item 651.75 only if substantially the entire “set” consists of “articles provided for in different rate provisions of * * [the subpart in which Item 651.75 is found],” that any object in the “set” not provided for in that subpart must be very closely related to the articles in the “set” so provided for (apparently, more closely related than simply being in the same set with them), and that there are no such objects in the kits with the plastic-handled knife and the needle probe. 4 We shall discuss these two questions separately.

A. The Meaning of the Word “Sets”

The first question in this portion of the appeal was not explicitly considered by the court below in the sense of specifically focusing on the word “sets,” but it is implicit in its opinion that it held the entire #1000 Educational Kits to be “sets” within the meaning of TSUS Item 651.75. In so holding, it was undoubtedly influenced, as we are, by the untenability of Tanross’s position that the knife and the needle probe together constitute a “set” in the statutory sense, apparently solely because they were imported together and both of them are among the “articles provided for in different rate provisions of * * * [the subpart in which Item 651.75 is found].” With this position we cannot agree. These two articles, although they are set off conceptually by being the only objects in the #1000 Educational Kits which are “provided for in a different *1335 rate provision of * * * [the subpart in which Item 651.75 is found],” are just two components of the forty-four making up each kit. They are in no way segregated or set off within each kit as a distinct subunit thereof. To classify these two components of the kits as together constituting a “set” within the meaning of TSUS Item 651.75 would be directly contrary to the common meaning of the word, which at the least implies some kind of relationship among the constituent parts beyond that of having been imported together.

As the court below noted, “Item 651.75 of the Tariff Schedules of the United States with which we are here concerned projects a new concept in the assessment of import duties.” The word “sets” as used therein certainly is not, as Tanross would have us hold, simply a synonym for “entireties,” 5 but it is not easy to say just what Congress did mean when it used the word. There is very little legislative history to guide us in interpreting this new provision, but what there is 6 in no way suggests that the word “set” should be given, in this context, any meaning other than its usual meaning of “A number of things of the same kind ordinarily used together; a collection of articles which naturally complement each other, and usually go together; an assortment; a suit; as, a set of chairs, of china, of books, of teeth, etc.” Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d ed. 1956). Since the #1000 Educational Kits are “a collection of articles which naturally complement each other, and usually go together,” all being items used in connection with the preparation of specimens for viéwing únder a microscope and not being simply an aggregation of disparate articles imported together for shipping convenience, we agree with the court below that they are “sets” within the meaning of TSUS Item 651.75.

B. The Meaning of the Words “Which Include”

The second question in this portion of the appeal was expressly decided by the court below, and we are in general agreement with its disposition of the question. Basically it relied on the nonrestrictive nature of the words “which include,” 7 and we agree that their use brings under TSUS Item 651.75 any “set” containing two or more of the “articles provided for in different rate provisions of * * * [the subpart including Item *1336 651.75]” regardless of how many objects not so provided for may be in the “set.” 8 There is no requirement in TSUS Item 651.75 that a “set” not be classified thereunder unless it is made up “substantially entirely,” or even “predominantly” of “articles provided for in different rate provisions of * * * [the subpart in which Item 651.75 is found],” and we are not disposed to read such a requirement into it.

C. Tanross’s Policy Arguments

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433 F.2d 1332, 58 C.C.P.A. 26, 1970 CCPA LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tanross-supply-co-inc-v-the-united-states-ccpa-1970.