Textile Design Co. v. United States

30 C.C.P.A. 191, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 8
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 1, 1943
DocketNo. 4415
StatusPublished

This text of 30 C.C.P.A. 191 (Textile Design Co. 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
Textile Design Co. v. United States, 30 C.C.P.A. 191, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 8 (ccpa 1943).

Opinion

Lenkoot, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal involves the dutiable classification of certain merchandise imported at the port of New York and invoiced as “Old Woolen Samples.” The merchandise was imported from Canada. It was assessed with duty at the rate of 50 per centum ad valorem under paragraph 1120 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as “manufactures, wholly or-in chief value of wool, not specially provided for.”

Appellant protested the liquidation of the entry, claiming the merchandise to be dutiable either at 18 cents per pound under paragraph 1105 (a) as wool rags or at 10 per centum ad valorem under paragraph 1555 as waste not specially provided for.

[193]*193Both parties introduced evidence, and the trial court held that the protest should be overruled without affirming the classification of the collector.

Judgment was entered accordingly, from which this appeal was taken.

The merchandise consists of samples of woolen fabrics which had been used in Canada by agents representing foreign mills to show their trade, and from which they procured orders. When the samples ceased to be of value for such purpose, before selling them as rags, the agents waited for appellant’s agent and other buyers who would go through them, for the purpose of selecting therefrom such items as might be salable in the United States as designs or patterns for textile manufacturers.

Benjamin Solomon, a vice president of appellant, testified that the business of his company was supplying woolen and worsted manufacturers with designs of textiles; that he visited Canada two or three times a year for the purpose of purchasing used samples; that these samples are not bought or sold in Canada as rags nor by the pound; that while woolen rags, at the time of the instant importation, were selling in the United States at about 18 cents per pound, the imported articles were purchased at prices ranging up to the equivalent of $4 per pound and averaging about $1 per pound.

The witness further testified, in part, as follows:

Q. After you have selected an assortment to be purchased by you what do you do then? — -A. I send it to our place in New York, and there we assort them, and I should say 90% we throw out immediately.
Q. Why? — A. I would pick out anything that 1 think would be of any interest to me, being as I am not paying for them by the pound. I have to pay as much if I pick out 20 as I would if I pick out 50 pounds. Anything that is not a staple style I ship.
Q. What do you do with the 90% or thereabouts that you can’t use in your business? — A. We sell them to the rag men.
Q. What did you do with the remaining 10% or thereabouts? — A. Well, we cut them, and trim them, and fix them up, so that will look presentable. We have show cards which we show to the trade. In most cases we put them on cards, and I should say that out of the 10% we originally keep we throw 90% of that out at the end of the season, because we don’t know what is going to sell.
Q. When you say you throw them out what do you mean? — A. We throw them in our rags.
Q. And sell them to the rag men? — Yes, sir.
Q. What do you do with the remaining portion which you do not throw out?— A. Well, a small percentage of it is sold, 1 should say a fraction of one per cent we sell to our trade.
,Q. Who is your trade? — A. Woolen and worsted mills principally.
Q. What is their interest in these samples? — A. They use them to get ideas fqr color, or construction, or weave, and design.
Q. Do their representatives come to your place of business to examine these?— A. They come to my place, or I would go to their office and show them.
[194]*194Q. What do they do? — A. They would go to these clips and they would pick out whatever would be of interest to them and pay me so much for them.
Q. What have you personally observed them do with these samples? Do they do anything with them after looking at them? — A. After they select them they would cut a piece off and keep this, and the other they would send down to the mill, and eventually they would throw them away.
*******
Q. After the importation of these pieces of cloth do you eventually put some of them on cards? — A. Yes, sir.
Q. And what is the purpose of that? — A. Well, to show them. I would not very well show them in that form. I trim them and cut them around, make them look neat, and paste them up on the cards.
Q. I show you some cards with pieces of cloth attached thereto and ask you if they illustrate the cards which you display to your trade?' — A. Yes, sir, they do

The witness identified samples of the involved merchandise, which were received in evidence as Illustrative Exhibit 1.

There was also introduced in evidence as Illustrative Exhibit 2 certain cards with pieces of cloth attached thereto, which the witness testified illustrate the cards which he displays to his trade in selling such used samples.

Upon cross-examination, the witness, Solomon, testified, in part as follows:

X Q. Mr. Solomon, you said the main business of your concern was selling textile designs? — A. Yes, sir.
X Q. You afe not interested primarily in the sale of the goods as rags? — A. No, sir.
* Hi H« * ^ Hi
X Q. When you buy a piece of goods to be used as a sample again, it must have certain characteristics to be salable as a sample; isn't that so? — A. Yes, sir.
X Q. What are those characteristics?- — A. That it is not a plain blue or a plain black, and if there is something in there that represents any sort of color, or weave, or pattern, or construction of cloth. In other words, if it is not absolutely a staple stock it has more value as a pattern.
Hi Hi * Hi Hi Hi H<
X Q. None of the samples which you bought was purchased for the rag value alone? — A. No; not for the rag value alone.
X Q. The rag value was of secondary interest to you?- — -A. That is right.
X Q. What price did you pay for these samples? — A. It varies. There is no set price. I never buy them by the pound.
X Q. You never buy them by the pound? — A. Very rarely; in every one out of a hundred cases.
X Q. In this particular case you invoiced them at the pound, did you not? — A. In this case I was supposed to invoice them that way. I didn’t place the value on that.
X Q. In other words, in this particular case 14 pounds was worth $60.00? — A. To me they were.
X Q. Isn’t that a fairly high price for rags? — -A. It is, yes..
X Q. As you stated before you are not interested in the rag value? — A. No.
Hs Hi * * * * *
X Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 C.C.P.A. 191, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/textile-design-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1943.