United States v. Edward M. Poons Co. of Kobe

18 C.C.P.A. 283, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 98
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1930
DocketNo. 3328
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 18 C.C.P.A. 283 (United States v. Edward M. Poons Co. of Kobe) 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. Edward M. Poons Co. of Kobe, 18 C.C.P.A. 283, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 98 (ccpa 1930).

Opinion

GaRrett, Judge,

delivered the opinion of tbe court:

The issue in this case, in the final analysis, relates to the timeliness of appellee’s protest, which was sustained by the Customs Court, the-Government appealing.

The record in the case not being very full nor clear as to certain procedure had in the Customs Court, and by the collector, upon some-phases of the controversy that seemed to bear upon the issue, and no brief having been filed in behalf of appellee, this court, when the matter was argued before us, suggested to counsel for the respective parties-the propriety of filing a summary of the facts, upon which they were in agreement, that would clarify the question or questions to be determined. This was consented to by counsel and we have the summary before us, and herewith quote same, except the introductory remarks-.which are not material:

summary of facts as agreed upon between counsel at the oral ARGUMENT
1. The importer-appellee imported several cases of merchandise, the contents-of which were correctly described upon a regular consular; invoice.
2. At the time of making entry, the customhouse brokers were instructed to make a “split entry”- — that is to say, two entries were to be made, (1) certain designated cases were to be entered for immediate consumption, and (2) other designated cases were to be entered to be put in bonded warehouse.
3. The making of the so-called split entry necessitated the making (by the-customhouse brokers) of an “extract invoice, that is to say, the consular invoice was to be used for making the consumption entry, and the extract invoice (a transcription of that portion of the consular invoice covering merchandise to be entered for bonded warehouse) was to be used for making the warehouse entry.
4. In making the extract invoice, the items of merchandise which were contained in cases numbered 7281 to 7285, inclusive, and which in fact consisted of straw hats and which were so designated upon the consular invoice, were erro[285]*285neously described upon the extract invoice as consisting of paper hats. This would seem to have been purely a clerical error in making the transcription.
5. The extract invoice also described the contents of certain other cases enumerated thereon as consisting of straw hats, which in fact they did.
6. The present appeal covers only the warehouse entry which was made with the use of the extract invoice.
7. The merchandise contained in cases 7281 to 7285, inclusive (erroneously described on the’ extract invoice as being paper hats), was entered as paper hats and the correct amount of duty for paper hats was tendered to the collector and accepted by him; the appraiser in his return to the collector assented to the erroneous invoice description; and in the liquidation of the entry the collector classified that merchandise as paper hats under the provisions of paragraph 1313, Tariff Act of 1922.
8. In the liquidation of the entry, the collector classified the hats appearing upon the extract invoice as straw hats at a rate of duty higher than that thought proper by the importer-appellee, against which classification and assessment was filed a protest, the terms of which were broad enough to cover any item upon the invoice which might have been shown at the trial of the protest to consist, in fact, of straw hats.
9. Said protest was duly docketed for trial by the United States Customs Court.
10. Said protest was submitted upon a stipulation between counsel which constituted an agreed statement of facts, the substance of which was that the items recited upon the extract invoice, which had been returned and assessed for duty under the provisions of paragraph 1406, Tariff Act of 1922, were the same as merchandise which had been the subject of a prior decision of the United States Customs Court. No reference in the stipulation was made to the merchandise which had been classified and assessed for duty under the provisions of paragraph 1313, Tariff Act of 1922.
11. The United States Customs Court sustained the protest. Its decision, judgment order, and mandate were to the effect that the protest was sustained (Abstract 7871) as to the items classified under the provisions of paragraph 1406, Tariff Act of 1922, and ordered a reliquidation as to such items, and specifically overruled the protest as to all other items.
12. The collector, in his reliquidation of the entry, to comply with the judgment order and mandate of the United States Customs Court, reclassified all of the items enumerated upon the extract invoice which had been classified and assessed under the provisions of paragraph 1406, Tariff Act of 1922. In other words, his reliquidation correctly satisfied the judgment order.
13. Against that reliquidation, the importer-appellee filed another protest which complained that said reliquidation was improper in that it did not reclassify the items of merchandise contained in cases 7281 to 7285, inclusive, which in fact consisted of hats of the same character as those reclassified by the reliquidation in pursuance to the mandate and judgment order of the United States Customs Court, notwithstanding the fact that they were not so described upon the invoice.
14. In transmitting the second protest to the United States Customs Court, the collector stated that his reliquidation was a correct compliance _ with the judgment order and mandate of the United States Customs Court issued upon the first protest, and that his reliquidation was not his voluntary act, but was made pursuant to the decision and judgment order of the United States Customs Court in the first protest, and that it only purported to comply with the terms of that judgment order.
[286]*28615. The collector further stated that the facts alleged by the importer-appellee-in the second protest, to wit, that the items upon the extract invoice enumerated' as being contained in cases 7281 to 7285, inclusive, and described thereon as-paper hats, were, in fact, Yeddo straw hats.
16. The second protest was duly docketed for trial by the United States. Customs Court, and at the trial thereof, the collector’s letter was offered and received in evidence.
17. The decision of the United States Customs Court, on the second protest, sustained it and held the protest to be valid for the reason that “A reliquidation,, for any reason, vacates and is substituted for the original liquidation,” and cited-the case of United States v. Parkhurst & Co. et al., 12 Ct. Cust. Appls. 370.
18. From the decision on the second protest, the Government filed the present, appeal.

From the above stipulation it appears that the only items of merchandise which are here in issue are those which were originally contained in cases numbered 7281 to 7285, inclusive.

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Bluebook (online)
18 C.C.P.A. 283, 1930 CCPA LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-edward-m-poons-co-of-kobe-ccpa-1930.