Tuska, Son & Co. v. United States

10 Ct. Cust. 65, 1920 WL 19891, 1920 CCPA LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 10, 1920
DocketNo. 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 10 Ct. Cust. 65 (Tuska, Son & 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
Tuska, Son & Co. v. United States, 10 Ct. Cust. 65, 1920 WL 19891, 1920 CCPA LEXIS 15 (ccpa 1920).

Opinion

Smith, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In this case duties on porcelains, wrapped in straw bundles and packed in wooden cases, were assessed on a dutiable value made up [66]*66of the appraised value of the goods, the market value of the cases, and the actual outlay incurred for iron, hoops, straw, and labor used in packing the goods for shipment to the United States. The actual cost to the exporter of the packing cases was 8 sen per cubic foot of space, but their market value in the principal markets of the country from which they were imported was found'by the collector to be 13 sen per cubic foot. The market value of the iron hoops, straw, and labor used in packing the goods for shipment was not determined by the collector, but their actual cost to the importer was admitted to be 10 sen per cubic foot of space. The packing cases, iron hoops, straw, and labor constituted no part of the market value of the goods per se, and their value was not included by the appraiser in his appraisement of the porcelains.

The importer claims that the dutiable value of the merchandise was the appraised value of the porcelains as found by the appraiser plus the actual outlay made by the importer for the packing cases, iron hoops, and straw utilized in preparing the goods for shipment to the United States.

The Government on its part contends in effect that to make dutiable value, the market value of the porcelains per se, as determined by the appraiser and the market value of the packing cases as found by the collector, must be added to the expense actually incurred for the hoops, straw, and labor necessary to pack the goods for shipment.

We can not agree with the Government’s contention that duty is assessable on the market value of packing cases used for the purpose of shipping goods to the United States and not used as containers thereof when offered for sale in the principal markets of the country from which the merchandise is imported.

A careful examination fails to disclose that any tariff or customs law from the first to the last has ever in terms authorized collectors of customs, as collectors, to determine the actual or market value of imported articles or goods. That fact, coupled with the further fact that collectors of customs are 'not necessarily appointed from the commercial world, and more often than not are men with but little if any trade or mercantile experience, leads inevitably to the conclusion that the right to appraise is not an attribute of the collector’s office.

The very first tariff act prescribed that certain goods, subject to an ad valorem fate, should be assessed for duty on their value at tho time and place of importation, and the customs administrative act provided that the collector should determine that value, not, however, be it noted, by appraising the goods, but by adding 10 per cent to the actual cost thereof unless the importation came from the Cape [67]*67of Good Hope or beyond, in which event 20 per cent was added. (Sec. 1, act of July 4, 1789; secs. 13 and 17, act of July 31, 1789.)

What was the market value of the goods or their actual cost, or even the dutiable charges or commissions thereon, the collector of customs could not know, and for prompt and efficient dispatch under those acts of the customs business, he was of necessity remanded to the entry and original invoices for the data required to determine the official or dutiable value of merchandise. Indeed, the invoices were so much a prerequisite to the ascertainment of duties that the importer was required to produce to the collector on entry of the goods the original invoices, together with the bills of lading, and if such invoices were not produced or if the collector suspected that the invoices submitted were fraudulent, the importation was held in customs custody until appraised, not by the collector, but by two merchants, one chosen by the collector and the other by the importer. (Secs. 13, 16, and 22, act of July 31, 1789.)

It was subsequently provided by the act of April 20, 1818, that in certain designated principal ports of the country appraisements ordered by the collector should be made by three appraisers qualified for the duty, two to bo appointed by the President, with the approval of the Senate, and one by the importer. In ports other than those designated the act required that goods should be appraised for customs purposes “by three respectable resident merchants,” two chosen by the collector and one by the party in interest. (Secs. 9 and 10, act of Apr. 20, 1818.)

The estimation of duties on the basis of invoice and entered values, with no appraisement save that which the collector might order under special circumstances, apparently did not afford to the revenues all the protection that was expected, and Congress in 1832 made it the duty of the collector, whether or not correct invoices were produced, to cause to be appraised the actual value of all'ad valorem goods. (Sec. 7, act of July 14, 1832). Section 16 of the act of August 30, 1842, required that that appraisement should be made not of the actual value, but of the actual market value or wholesale price of the goods at the time when purchased in the principal markets of the country from which the same were imported. Section 2609 of the Revised Statutes prescribed that in ports not provided with an appraiser appraisements of merchandise should be made by two respectable merchants appointed by the collector of the district.

The act of June 10, 1890, put an end to appraisements by merchant appraisers and definitely established a system of appraising merchandise for customs purposes which made the jurisdiction to appraise the exclusive function of a customs official known as the local appraiser, whose action was subject to review, not by the collector, but by a general appraiser and a board of three general appraisers exercising [68]*68appellate powers wholly independent of the customhouse and its officials. It is true that now and then collectors of customs sought to determine the actual market value or wholesale price of imported goods and to overrule the decision of the local appraiser’s, but it is equally true that the courts have uniformly held that the collector’s action in that behalf was wholly invalid and void. In the matter of the protest of H. B. Claflin (T. D. 26514); Wills et al. v. Russell (30 Fed. Cases, 70).

Congress having expressly given to officials other than the collector the right to appraise goods, it can hardly be said, in the absence of express authorization, that the collector wholly without authority to appraise the goods themselves, nevertheless had the implied power to appraise the containers required to pack the goods for shipment, especially as the reasons which made it inadvisable for the collector to appraise the goods themselves, were applicable with equal force to his appraisement of the containers thereof. Certainly, if the authority to appraise was expressly withheld in the one case, it would be going far indeed to say that it was impliedly conferred in the other. In short, Congress having expressly provided that goods should be appraised by experienced men with no other duty to perform, could scarcely have intended that the containers of goods should be appraised by an official burdened with a multitude of administrative duties and without the time and probably without the qualifications for the work.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Ct. Cust. 65, 1920 WL 19891, 1920 CCPA LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuska-son-co-v-united-states-ccpa-1920.