United States v. Chesterton Co.

15 Ct. Cust. 175, 1927 WL 29541, 1927 CCPA LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 1927
DocketNo. 2784
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 15 Ct. Cust. 175 (United States v. Chesterton 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. Chesterton Co., 15 Ct. Cust. 175, 1927 WL 29541, 1927 CCPA LEXIS 93 (ccpa 1927).

Opinion

Graham, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellee imported six shipments of glass tubes at various dates on and after October 15, 1924. These tubes were of varying sizes, ranging from 10 to 60 inches in length, and from three-eighths inch to three-fourths inch in diameter, the glass of which they were composed being, as shown by the illustrative exhibits before us, about one-eighth inch in thickness. The merchandise in protest 85511-G, invoiced as “red striped gauge glasses,” has, covering about one-third of its outer surface, two parallel stripes of white with a narrower red stripe between and contiguous to said white stripes. These colors are vitrified upon the tubes after the tubes are made. The ends of each tube in all the shipments are fused and the merchandise is admittedly of blown glass.

The collector classified the merchandise, in each instance, as tubing, under paragraph 218 of the Tariff Act of 1922, which is as follows:

Par. 218. Biological, chemical, metallurgical, pharmaceutical, and surgical articles and utensils of all kinds, including all scientific articles, utensils, tubing and rods, whether used for experimental purposes in hospitals, laboratories, schools or universities, colleges, or otherwise, all of the foregoing, finished or unfinished, composed wholly or in chief value of glass or paste, or a combination of glass and paste, 65 per centum ad valorem; illuminating articles of every description, including chimneys, globes, shades, and prisms, for use in connection with artificial illumination, all of the foregoing, finished or unfinished, composed wholly or in chief value of glass or. paste, or a combination of glass and paste, 60 per centum ad valorem; all glassware commercially known as plated or cased glass, composed of two or more layers of clear, opaque, colored, or semitranslucent glass, or combinations of the same, 60 per centum ad valorem; table and kitchen articles and utensils, and all articles of every description not specially provided for, composed wholly or in chief value of glass or paste, or combinations of glass and paste, blown or partly blown in the mold or otherwise, or colored, cut, engraved, etched, frosted, gilded, groWnd (except such grinding as is necessary for fitting stoppers or for purposes other than ornamentation), painted, printed in any manner, sand-blasted, silvered, stained, or decorated or ornamented in any manner, whether filled or unfilled, or whether their contents be dutiable or free, 55 per centum ad valorem; table and kitchen articles and utensils, composed wholly or in chief value of glass or paste, or a com[177]*177bination of glass and paste, when pressed and unpolished, whether or not decorated or ornamented in any manner or ground (except such grinding as is necessary for fitting stoppers or for purposes other than ornamentation), whether filled or unfilled, or whether their contents be dutiable or free, 50 per centum ad valorem: Provided, That any of the articles specified in this paragraph, if containers of merchandise subject to an ad valorem rate of duty or to a rate of duty based in whole or in part upon the value thereof, shall be dutiable at the rate applicable to their contents, but not less than the rate provided for in this paragraph: Provided further, That for the purposes of this act, bottles with cutlass stoppers shall with their stoppers be deemed entireties.

The importer protested, claiming the goods were dutiable as articles composed of blown glass, not specially provided for, under said paragraph, or manufactures of glass, not specially provided for, under paragraph 230 of said act. Alternative claims were also made under paragraphs 226, 227, and 228 of said act, but as these alternative claims were pressed neither in the court below nor here, no attention will be given to them.

The Board of General Appraisers, afterwards the United States Customs Court, the several protests having been consolidated, after hearing several witnesses, sustained the protests under said paragraph 218, holding the merchandise to be articles of blown glass, not specially provided for. From that judgment, the Government has appealed, making two principal contentions, first, that the word “tubing” found in paragraph 218, means any kind of glass tubing, and is not limited or restricted by the words preceding it in the paragraph; second, that, if such tubing be held to be so limited to such as is scientific, then the Government has brought itself within such a construction by proving that the tubes imported here are used for such last-named purpose.

The first portion of paragraph 218 is obviously intended to embrace all sorts of glass articles used for scientific purposes. The paragraph has been carefully prepared, and groups, in succeeding provisions, the various classes of glassware to be provided for. Thus, it provides for scientific glassware, illuminating articles, plated glassware, table and kitchen ware, articles not specially provided for composed of blown glass, and table and kitchen ware, pressed and unpolished, giving a distinctive rate of duty to each.

It will be observed that the statute recites the words: “Biological, chemical, metallurgical, pharmaceutical, and surgical articles and utensils, including,” and follows with the disputed provision about tubes. This clearly evinces an intent to include only such articles as are of the general kind indicated by the preceding words. Again, the words “including all scientific articles, utensils, tubing, and rods,” must in order to carry out the plain intent, be read as if it recited “scientific articles, scientific utensils, scientific tubing, and scientific rods.” If this were not the construction, then any sort of glass tubing, glass [178]*178rods, or glass utensils might come within the language, for it will be observed that such articles come within the same, “whether used * * * in hospitals, * * * or otherwise,” which must be construed, under the authorities, to mean whether so used or not. United States v. Vandegrift, 4 Ct. Cust. Appls. 226; Gartner Sons & Co. v. United States, 154 Fed. 957. If the Government’s contention in this respect were correct, it would lead to the inclusion within this provision of all sorts of glass articles which plainly were not intended to be so included. We are therefore of the opinion that tubing, to be included within this provision in paragraph 218, must be scientific tubing.

What is or is not “scientific” tubing depends upon the common meaning to be attached to these words, unless altered by proof of commercial designation. We find no such proof of commercial designation in this record.

The words are thus defined in Webster’s New International Dictionary (1925):

Scientific, a. 1. Of, pert, to or used in, science; as scientific apparatus.
Tubing, n. 2. A series of tubes; tubes, collectively; a length or piece of a tube; material for tubes; as, leather tubing.

Therefore “scientific tubing,” as commonly understood, means a collective assembly of glass tubes, or material for glass tubes, which is of, or pertains to, or is used in, science. Whether the merchandise here imported is of such a character raises a question of fact, to be determined from the record.

Several witnesses were called and examined in the court below. It is shown by the testimony of Arthur W.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ct. Cust. 175, 1927 WL 29541, 1927 CCPA LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-chesterton-co-ccpa-1927.