United States v. Border Brokerage Co.

54 C.C.P.A. 56, 1967 CCPA LEXIS 373
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 16, 1967
DocketNo. 5191
StatusPublished

This text of 54 C.C.P.A. 56 (United States v. Border Brokerage 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. Border Brokerage Co., 54 C.C.P.A. 56, 1967 CCPA LEXIS 373 (ccpa 1967).

Opinions

Smith, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The issue here is whether the Customs Court erred in sustaining appellee’s protest that certain unoleaned tree seeds were dutiable as [57]*57■“garden and field seeds,” par. 764, Tariff Act of 1930 as modified, and Certain commingled material, a “woody residue,” was dutiable as a crude vegetable substance, n.s.p.f., par. 1722, Tariff Act of 1930 (Free Fist). 53 Oust. Ct. 53, C.D. 2472. The appellant claims here that segregation of the commingled material for customs purposes should not have been allowed under section 508, Tariff Act of 1930, as amended, and that duty should be assessed on the total weight of the import at the rate provided for garden and field seeds. Appellant argues that the commingled materials amount to “impurities in seed” for which no “allowance” can be made, par. 763, Tariff Act of 1930, and the court below has erred, as a matter of law, in permitting an allowance allegedly contrary to par. 763.1

Resolution of the issue requires a more detailed consideration of the nature of the imported goods. The importer, Manning Seed Co., acquires “hemlock, spruce, cedar, and balsam cones” in Canada. According to the undisputed facts of record, the cones are crushed in certain machinery in Canada in order to free the seeds from the cones. The imported material consists of uncleaned seeds, cone particles, and the stem end of the cones. After importation the uncleaned seeds are separated from the other materials. The seed then goes through a “de-winging” process to remove the wings from the seed. Appellee sells a seed product which is at least “97 per-cent pure.” The difference of 3 percent apparently consists of non-seed materials which escape the various screening and separating processes.

The dispute here concerns the uncleaned tree seeds and cone particles and stem ends at the time of importation, prior to any treatment in the United States. The court below found, and appellant here agrees, that the “tree seed constitutes 40 percent of the gross weight and * * * the woody residue 60 percent thereof,” and these respective proportions are readily ascertainable, par. 508. The “woody residue,” consisting of cone particles and cone stem ends, is burned by the importer upon separation. According to the court below, the “woody residue” has no “commercial value.” Appellant does not dispute that the woody residue is a “vegetable substance,” rather, it is argued that for customs purposes this residue must be considered as “impurities” in the seed for which no allowance can be made, par. 763, rendering pars. 508, 1722, inapplicable.

Thus the narrow question presented is whether the court below erred in finding, as a matter of law, that the “woody residue” was not an “impurity” in the seed. The court’s opinion points out that “Merchandise closely resembling that at bar was involved in United States v. Amendola, 5 Ct. Cust. App. 516, T.D. 35156.”

[58]*58Before considering the reasoning and holding of the Amendola case, the existing precedents at that time will be considered. In Otto G. Mayer & Co. v. United States, 2 Syn. Treas. Dec. 534, T.D. 20038 (1898), “ordinary pine cones” were assessed for duty as “nuts shelled or unshelled.” The claim that it was exempt from duty as “a crude vegetable substance not otherwise specially provided for” was sustained.

In Van Dyk & Catreva v. United States, 20 Treas. Dec. 1043, T.D. 31616 (1911), “cones from a pine tree” having “seeds or nuts * * * between the layers of the cones” were imported. The collector “separated the seeds or nuts from the cones, placing no duty upon the cones.” The board stated in its opinion, “The question whether the cone itself should be assessed for duty we do not deem it advisable to pass upon in this case; that question is really not before us * * *.”

P. Garguilo & Bro. v. United States, 21 Treas. Dec. 43, T.D. 31157 (1911), involved “pine-tree cones” and “kernels.” Duty was assessed on the weight of the kernels alone, i.e., 20 percent of the gross weight.

Shortly after the Van Dyk and Garguilo cases, Treasury Department Directive, T.D. 31854, issued which directed that duty be assessed on “pine cones,” having “seeds or kernels,” “upon the total weight of the cones.” 21 Treas. Dec. 209 (1911).

Returning now to Amendola, the importations consisted of “pine cones with their nutlike seeds still attached to them.” The opinion states, 5 Ct. Cust. App. at 517:

* * * Duty was assessed at that rate [by the Customs Collector] upon the aggregate weight of the cones and nuts, in accordance with the departmental instructions contained in T.D. 31854 [21 Treas. Dec. 209].

The importer claimed that the imported pine cones were entitled to duty-free entry under par. 630, as “vegetable substances, crude or un-manufactured, not otherwise specially provided for.”

In the proceedings below in Amendola, the Board of General Appraisers, 27 Treas. Dec. 116, T.D. 34698 (1914), sustained a protest that “duty should have been assessed on the weight of the nuts alone rather than on the combined weight of the cone and nuts,” citing P. Garguilo, supra, with no mention of the Treasury Directive.

The pine cones were more fully described in Amendola, 5 Ct. Cust. App. at 517, as follows:

It appears from the testimony that the cones in question are imported from Italy in the condition in which they are when first taken from the tree, with the nuts attached under the imbricated leaves or scales of the cone. The cones with the nuts attached are bought and sold in the markets by the hundred. The cones are shattered into pieces as the best means of recovering the nuts, the broken pieces are burned up or thrown away as valueless, and the nuts are eaten “like peanuts.” As stated above, it appears from the testimony that in the case of the present importation the nuts themselves constituted 20 per cent of the gross weight of the importation.

[59]*59The court continued in its opinion:

It seems clear from the foregoing statement that the joint importation of nuts and cones would not he entitled to free entry as crude vegetable substances, although the cones would be free if imported alone. * * *

The “nutlike seeds” in Amendola were determined to be “nuts of all kinds, shelled or unshelled, not specially provided for” under par. 283, Tariff Act of 1909, which additionally provides that “no allowance shall be made for dirt or other impurities in nuts of any kind.” The opinion then states, 5 Ct. Cust. App. at 518-19 :

The question next arises whether the appropriate duty should be assessed upon the gross weight of the cones and nuts taken together or only upon the weight of the nuts alone.
Paragraph 283, supra, imposes a duty by the pound upon nuts shelled or un-shelled, and provides that no allowance shall be made for dirt or other impurities in nuts of any kind. The first question, therefore, is whether the cones should be weighed for duty upon the theory that they are the shells of the pine nuts. If this question be answered in the negative the question next arises whether the cones should be regarded as “dirt or other impurities in” the nuts, for which the paragraph prohibits any allowance.

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54 C.C.P.A. 56, 1967 CCPA LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-border-brokerage-co-ccpa-1967.