United States v. American Viscose Corp.

30 C.C.P.A. 240, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1943
DocketNo. 4390
StatusPublished

This text of 30 C.C.P.A. 240 (United States v. American Viscose Corp.) 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
United States v. American Viscose Corp., 30 C.C.P.A. 240, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 15 (ccpa 1943).

Opinion

Garrett, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the judgment of the United States Customs Court, Second Division, awarding the importer recovery of the duties assessed upon certain cotton cloth by the Collector of Customs at the port of Philadelphia, Pa., under paragraph 924 of the Tariff Act of 1930.

The merchandise was classified basically under paragraph 904 (a) of the act. This basic classification is'agreed to have been correct and the duties levied in conformity with that paragraph are not in-[242]*242dispute. The collector, however, seems to have been advised by the appraiser that the warp threads of the cloth were manufactured from cotton having a staple of more than 1% inches in length and that such warp threads (after allowing 2.1 per centum in weight for sizing) constituted 35.2 per centum in weight of the cloth. So, there was assessed and collected an additional duty of 10 cents per pound (the collector invoking the provision of paragraph 924) upon such 35.2 per centum. No additional duty'was assessed upon the weight (64.8 per centum) represented by the weft threads, apparently because the collector found that such threads had been manufactured from raw cotton having a staple length of less than 1 % inches.

As we understand it, the warp threads in a woven article such as the cloth here involved are those which, in the weaving process, are extended lengthwise in the loom to form the basis of the article, and the weft threads are those which (carried by a shuttle or other means) are woven across the warp threads by inserting them over and under the warp threads. The weft threads are frequently referred to in the record before us as filling threads.

The brief on behalf of appellee states:

We have not challenged the correctness of the weight of the warp threads (35.2%) or the weft threads (64.8%) as found by the Government, nor have we challenged the correctness of the weight of the sizing as found in the warp threads (2.1 %); the weight of the sizing being properly deducted.

Schedule 7 of the Tariff Act of 1930 provides duties for agricultural products, etc., and paragraph 783 of the act appearing in said schedule reads:

Pab. 783. Cotton having a staple of one and one-eighth inches or more in length, 7 cents per pound.

The act makes no provision for duty on cotton having a staple-length of less than 1 % inches.

Schedule 9 of the act makes provision for cotton manufactures, and embraces, among others, the following paragraphs:

Pab. 903. * * *. (b) In the ascertainment of the condition of the cloth or yarn upon which the duties imposed upon cotton cloth are made to depend, the-entire fabric and all parts thereof shall be included.
Pab. 904. (a) Cotton cloth, not bleached, printed, dyed, or colored, containing yarns the average number of which does not exceed number 90, 10 per centum ad valorem and, in addition thereto, for each number, thirty-five one-hundredths-of l’per centum ad valorem; exceeding number 90, 41K per centum ad valorem: Provided, That none of the foregoing shall be subject to a less duty than fifty-five one-hundredths of 1 cent per average number per pound;
Pab. 924. All the articles enumerated or described in this schedule (except in-paragraph 922) shall be subject to an additional duty of 10 cents per pound on the cotton contained therein having a staple of one and one-eighth inches or more in length.

[243]*243Examination of the legislative history discloses that the duty fixed in paragraph 924 was provided as a compensatory duty for that levied upon the raw long-staple cotton defined in paragraph 783, supra.

During the trial of the case the importer introduced the testimony of six witnesses, and the Government that of two. Numerous exhibits were also placed in evidence.

In the brief on behalf of the Government before us it is said that determination of whether the duty of 10 cents per pound under paragraph 924 was properly assessed involves:

* * * (1) whether such duty is based upon the staple length of the cotton from which the article is made; (2) whether the collector considered the entire article and all parts thereof; (3) whether the procedure of ascertaining the staple of the cotton was correct.

The first ruling of the trial court related to the second of the above-quoted questions. Upon this the court said, in part:

It is conceded that the cotton cloth here involved consists of a warp and weft or filling yarn. Therefore the “entire fabric and all parts thereof” includes both the warp and the weft or filling yarn, and does not include only the warp yarn. In order for the collector tó comply with the clear mandate contained in paragraph 903 (b), in classifying the present cotton cloth, he was required to include “the entire fabric and all parts thereof,” and not having followed the congressional mandate his action was clearly erroneous. On the admission and concession that the collector in classifying the instant merchandise did not include “the entire fabric and all parts thereof,” as a matter of law his classification was wrong, and all presumption in favor of his classification is overcome and disappears.

If we understand the foregoing ruling aright it must have been the view of the trial court that in determining whether paragraph 924 is applicable to cotton cloth it is necessary to consider all the yarns or threads, both warp and weft, which enter into- the composition of the cloth, and that unless there be a preponderance of threads having a staple length of more than 1% inches the paragraph is not applicable to any portion of the cloth.

We agree that there must be a determination of the staple length of all the threads in the cloth (this, of course, to be done by an examination of representative samples thereof), but we do not agree that paragraph 903 (b) should be construed to mean that in order to render paragraph 924 applicable there must be in the manufactured article a preponderance of threads in which the staple length is 1% inches or more.

If that should be adopted as a'rule it would appear that where there is a preponderance of threads in the whole cloth in which the staple length is less than 1% inches, although there may be a large proportion of threads composed of the longer staple, no duty would be levied, and, on the other hand, should the threads containing a staple length of 1% inches or more predominate, a duty would be levied upon the whole. [244]*244although, the cloth might contain a large proportion of threads made from short-staple cotton. It seems to us that a practice'of this character would not conform to the obvious purpose of the act.

No duty was levied in the Tariff Act of 1930 upon raw cotton having a staple length of less than 1% inches and there was no occasion to levy a compensatory duty upon articles made from cotton having a staple shorter than 1% inches.

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30 C.C.P.A. 240, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-american-viscose-corp-ccpa-1943.