United States v. Fred Frankel & Sons

52 C.C.P.A. 81, 1965 CCPA LEXIS 414
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 6, 1965
DocketNo. 5157
StatusPublished

This text of 52 C.C.P.A. 81 (United States v. Fred Frankel & Sons) 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. Fred Frankel & Sons, 52 C.C.P.A. 81, 1965 CCPA LEXIS 414 (ccpa 1965).

Opinion

Rich, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal is from the judgment of the United States Customs Court, First Division (Abstract 67981), sustaining the importer’s protest to the classification of glass beads, known as “alabaster beads,” imported from Japan on strings.

The collector classified the merchandise as unfinished jewelry under paragraph 1527(a) (2) of the Tariff Act of 1930, as modified by T.D. 51802, and the claimed classification found correct below was under paragraph 1503 of said Act, as modified by T.D. 54108, as beads, not specially provided for. The statutes, in relevant part, read:

Bar. 1527(a) (2) :
Jewelry, commonly or commercially so known, finished or unfinished (including parts thereof) :
* * * #
All other, of whatever material composed, valued above 20 cents per dozen pieces . . . 55% ad val., but not less than 50% of the amount of duty that would have been payable on January 1, 1945, if the article were not dutiable under Par. 1527, Tariff Act of 1930.
Par. 1503:
Spangles and beads, including bugles, not specially provided for -15%% ad val.
* * * * * * *
Provided, That the rate on spangles and beads provided in this paragraph shall be applicable whether such spangles and beads are strung or loose, mounted or unmounted:
***** * *

[82]*82The importer took the testimony of two witnesses, Jack Frankel, president of the importer, Fred Frankel & Sons, Inc., associated with that corporation and its predecessor partnership for 20 years, and Joseph H. Meyer, president of Joseph H. Meyer Bros., a customer of the importer as to the imported merchandise. Mr. Meyer had been with his firm for 22 years and said he had been familiar with the imports all his life and with their use by his firm in making imitation pearls sold under the brand name “Bichelieu.” Several exhibits were introduced showing the imports and their subsequent use.

From the evidence a clear picture of the nature and use of the imported strung beads emerges, as well as the reasons for their particular form, all of which is briefly summarized as follows: The so-called alabaster beads are of a milk-white glass formed into beads by spinning gobs of melted glass rod on a wire from which they are stripped, leaving a hole in each bead. The beads are strung in graduated sizes on a strong double strand of rayon cord, each cord having the largest bead in the middle of the strand, the bead sizes tapering evenly to opposite ends. The lengths of strmig bead strands imported are listed on the invoices as 15,16,11 and 21 inches, the bead diameters ranging from 3 to 9 millimeters. Upon importation there is an excess of cord of about 60 inches in each string and the strings of beads are tied together in bundles of a dozen. In this form they are unsaleable to the retail trade and unsuited for ultimate consumer use. The importer resells the beads to jewelry manufacturers such as the Meyer firm who pearlize the beads, thus converting them into necklaces which are sold to the retail trade.

The pearlizing process is as follows. The imported strung beads are first cleaned. The beads on each strand are then divided into approximate halves by moving the beads, without changing their original order, to the ends of the long cords. This leaves a long center section of cord free which is strung up and kept clean during subsequent pearlizing. The cords are tied on dipping frames in such a way as to permit each half-strand group of heads to be arranged along the cord with substantial spaces between the beads and while so arranged they are dipped into quick-drying cement which fixes the beads in spaced positions which are maintained throughout pearliz-ing. The strings of beads are then dipped into a plurality of pearliz-ing baths and dried after each dip with rotation of the frames to distribute the solutions evenly on each bead. After the last dip, the beads are stripped from the sections of cord, to which they were adhered during coating, onto the clean central portions of the cords and the now empty coated sections of cord are cut off. At this point they are artificial pearl beads, strung, graduated, and in their ultimate selling condition, and on the same cords in the same order in which [83]*83they were imported. All that remains to produce the final pearl necklace sold to the retail trade is to tip the ends of the cords with fittings-called hooks by which clasps are attached, the hooks being bent over upon the clasp elements. Attachment of the clasps completes the artificial pearl necklace and there does not seem to be any argument about its being an article commonly and commercially known as “jewelry.”

Comparison of the competing statutory classifications, supra, shows that if the imported strings of beads are specially provided for elsewhere than in paragraph 1503, then that paragraph does not control. Thus the issue is whether the merchandise constitutes unfinished jewelry within the meaning of paragraph 1527(a) (2).

The Government’s position is that the imports were dedicated to. use in making artificial pearl necklaces at the time ,of importation and so should be classified as unfinished artificial pearl necklaces, i.e. as jewelry, unfinished, according to the decisions of this court in Hecht Pearl Co. v. United States, 18 CCPA 171, T.D. 44375, and United States v. Cartier (Inc.), 15 Ct. Cust. Appls. 334, T.D. 42493. The Government also claims support for its position in the statutory language and its legislative history.

The appellee, like the court below, seeks to distinguish the Heeht case, while to some extent relying on it, and admits this:

The actual test for determining classification as unfinished jewelry is whether or not the imported beads have been so far advanced toward their final form,, as articles of jewelry, so as to remove them from the category of beads.

Appellee argues that in the form imported the strung beads must be “commonly or commercially known as jewelry,” that as imported they “do not contain the physical attributes of pearls or imitations thereof,” that they “are no more than beads on strings,” and that they are “mere material for the making of jewelry.” It is contended that only after importation are the strung beads converted into unfinished jewelry and then finally into jewelry. Appellee says “as imported, [the beads are] wholly impractical for any commercial use” and that they “must undergo a form of restringing before they can be used to make an article of jewelry.” Further,

It is not until a determination is made as to whether a single, double or triple-strand necklace is to be created that the beads may be considered unfinished jewelry.
Appellee admits that the beads are graduated as imported, and this graduation is not disturbed; however, this fact is not at all determinative of the classification as unfinished jewelry when the merchandise is never used in the imported condition. See, United States v. Wanamaker, 14 Ct. Cust. Appls. 285, T.D. 41888.

In the Wanamaker

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Related

United States v. Emrich
13 Ct. Cust. 199 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1925)
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15 Ct. Cust. 334 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
52 C.C.P.A. 81, 1965 CCPA LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-fred-frankel-sons-ccpa-1965.