United States v. Arkell Safety Bag Co.

22 C.C.P.A. 258, 1934 CCPA LEXIS 170
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 31, 1934
Docket3695; 3696
StatusPublished

This text of 22 C.C.P.A. 258 (United States v. Arkell Safety Bag Co.) 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. Arkell Safety Bag Co., 22 C.C.P.A. 258, 1934 CCPA LEXIS 170 (ccpa 1934).

Opinions

Garrett, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

These are appeals by the Government in reappraisement proceedings, arising under the Tariff Act of 1930, the cases being consolidated. Suit 3695 involves only one appeal. Suit 3696 is, in substance, an amendment to suit 3695 and embraces not only the appeal in suit 3695, but three others. So, in all, there are four appeals to which the judgment of the trial court relates.

The merchandise involved is Kraft wrapping paper used, we understand, for the wrapping of parcels and packages. It was imported from Sweden, in rolls, which rolls, according to the brief of appellee—

* * * are from 26 to 28 inches in diameter and weigh from 150 to 200 kilos (330 to 440 pounds) and sometimes as high as 500 kilos (1.100 pounds).

[259]*259It will be observed that the foregoing description says no tiling of the size or weight of the paper, but refers only to the diameter and weight of the rolls.

It is claimed by appellee that the merchandise has no foreign value, as that term is defined by paragraph (c) of section 402, Tariff Act of 1930, and it was accordingly entered at what is claimed to have been its export value, as that term is defined by section 402 (d) of said act.

The local appraiser, however, took the view that there was a foreign value (as defined by section 402 (c) of said act) which he found to be higher than the export value at which it was entered, and appraised accordingly.

The importer thereupon appealed to reappraisement, and a single judge of the United States Customs Court, sitting in reappraisement, sustained the entered export value. Upon appeal by the Government, the Third Division of the United States Customs Court affirmed the decision of the single judge. The instant appeal to this court followed.

The case is rather complicated, and the record is meager and unsatisfactory, particularly in view of the importance of the issues involved.

The legal theory advanced by counsel for appellee was and is that the merchandise must be considered for appraisement purposes, not as paper merely, but as rolls of paper. It is conceded that paper of the same quality is sold in the markets of Sweden for consumption there-, but the insistence is that such paper, in the process of preparing it to meet the home-market demand, is made into rolls of much smaller diameter than the diameter of the rolls of paper exported; that this is the regular and usual course of business; that these smaller rolls cost much more to produce and place in packed condition than do the involved rolls because of the differences in the processes of manufacturing and packing, and that the rolls for consumption in Sweden do not constitute merchandise “such or similar” as, or to, the rolls exported from Sweden to the United States.

At the trial of the case appellee introduced in evidence an affidavit (with certain exhibits thereto) of one Torsten S. Rádberg, who identified himself as the sales manager of the company which manufactured and exported the involved merchandise. This affidavit, after stating that machine-glazed Kraft paper is sold both for domestic consumption in Sweden and for export to the United States and other countries, says:

* * * So far as the paper itself is concerned, the machine-glazed Kraft paper sold for domestic consumption is practically the same as that sold for exportation to the United States and other countries.
There is, however, a distinction between the method of producing and packing the paper for ordinary domestic use and that for export.
[260]*260The principal domestic use in Sweden for this paper is by retail shopkeepers to wrap up parcels. The domestic retail shops are equipped with standard counter stands, and the rolls of paper must be constructed to fit these stands. The rolls constructed for this purpose are generally from 3 to 6 inches in diameter and the .paper ranges in width from 8 inches (20 centimeters) to 59 inches (150 centimeters). These rolls or reels weigh from 3 to 10 kilos per reel. The sales in the domestic market vary in quantity between 100 to 200 kilos up to carload lots of 10 tons, comprising a variety of sizes and substances. For instance, as sold in the domestic market the paper is sold in the following centimeter widths: 20, 40, 57, 75, 90, 100, 120, and 150. One consignment may include a variety of these sizes. * * * * *
The method of packing the small rolls for the Swedish market is also different than the method of packing emp'oyed in the large export rolls. From the small reeling machines the domestic reels go directly to the packing department, where they are bundled, wrapped in paper, marked, labeled, and tied with strings. These bundles contain from 3 to 6 reels and -weigh from 15 to 30 kilos as distinguished from the export paper which is made up in bales or rolls of about 150 to 200 kilos and eVen up to 500 kilos each. The item of packing alone is about two and one-half times greater for the domestic than the export rolls.
* * * * % J}: %
The rolls of Kraft paper for export to the United States and other countries present a yery different manufacturing condition. They run in widths which make it possible to better utilize the machine widths than is the case with the domestic rolls. Owing to the larger diameter of the export rolls (as a rule from 26 to 28 inches as compared to 3 to 6 inches for the domestic) the extra rewinding is not necessary and the extra machinery and operations used for the latter is dispensed with. The question- of waste, the extra costs and time incident to the constant stopping of machinery, new felts, etc., and the employment of extra machinery in the production of the domestic rolls present different manufacturing problems than are presented in the production of the export rolls.

'The affidavit also states that the price of the paper in the domestic market is based upon the manufacturing, packing, and distribution •costs incident to the production and sale as ordinarily required for domestic use; that the small rolls require extra rewinding operations ,and slitting to required widths, not applied in the production of the large export rolls, and that there is a greater waste in the, manufacture of the smaller rolls.

The Government introduced a report (with exhibits thereto) of a special agent who, upon instructions of the Treasury Department, visited and interviewed the manufacturer, making an investigation such as is usual in such cases. We do not deem it essential to quote at length from this report. It does not contradict, but rather verifies such parts of the manufacturer’s affidavit as have been quoted, supra.

It is obvious that both the single judge, sitting in reappraisement, and the Third Division of the Customs Court took the legal view contended for on behalf of appellee, and treated the merchandise, for appraisement purposes, not as paper per se, but as rolls of paper. The opinion of the latter tribunal, among other things, says:

The weight of the evidence establishes that this paper is manufactured in various size rolls; that only the smaller size “counter rolls” are sold in wholesale [261]

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Bluebook (online)
22 C.C.P.A. 258, 1934 CCPA LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-arkell-safety-bag-co-ccpa-1934.