United States v. Fred Whitaker Co.

40 C.C.P.A. 19, 1952 CCPA LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 1952
DocketNo. 4717
StatusPublished

This text of 40 C.C.P.A. 19 (United States v. Fred Whitaker 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. Fred Whitaker Co., 40 C.C.P.A. 19, 1952 CCPA LEXIS 99 (ccpa 1952).

Opinion

JacKSOn, Judge,

delivered tbe opinion of the court:

The Government has appealed from a judgment of the United States Customs Court, First Division, pursuant to its decision, [21]*21C. D. 1365, sustaining a protest of appellee against tbe action of tbe Collector of Customs at tbe port of Philadelphia in assessing for duty tbe clean content of an importation of 1,748 bales of raw wool, commonly known as “wool in tbe grease” or “greasy wool,” imported from Australia and entered October 17, 1947, weighing 552,312 pounds net, as reported by tbe Government weigher.

Paragraph 1102 (b) of the Tariff Act of 1930 under which the assessment was made reads as follows:

Par. 1102. * * * (b) Wools, not specially provided for, and hair of the Angora goat, Cashmere goat, alpaca, and other like animals, in the grease or washed, 34 cents per pound of clean content; scoured, 37 cents per pound of clean content; on the skin, 32 cents per pound of clean content; sorted, or match-ings, if not scoured, 35 cents per pound of clean content.

With respect to carrying out the provisions of the wool schedule of the Act, the Secretary of the Treasury was authorized to prescribe methods and regulations for carrying out the provisions thereof under paragraph 1104, which reads as follows:

Par. 1104. The Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized and directed to prescribe methods and regulations for carrying out the provisions of this schedule relating to the duties on wool and hair. The Secretary of the Treasury is further authorized and directed to procure from the Secretary of Agriculture, and deposit in such customhouses and other places in the United States or elsewhere as he may designate, sets of the Official Standards of the United States for grades of wool. He is further authorized to display, in the customhouses of the United States, or elsewhere, numbered, but not otherwise identifiable, samples of imported wool and háir, to which are attached data as to clean content and other pertinent facts, for the information of the trade and of customs officers.

Duty was assessed on the importation at the rate of 34 cents per pound on the “clean content” of 51.6 per cent of the total net weight of the importation. Appellee does not challenge the accuracy of the weight of the wool in the grease, nor the rate of duty assessed thereon, but claims that in assessing duty on the percentage of the net weight, i. e., 284,933 pounds of “clean content” there was included an estimated percentage of wool fibers not present in the “clean content” and not wool, either in a commercial or a tariff sense. Counsel for appellee contended that the duty should have been levied upon “clean content” of 46 per cent of the net weight of the wool in the grease, i. e., 254,063.52 pounds.

The case was tried at Boston, New York, and Philadelphia during which eleven witnesses testified on behalf of appellee and seven for appellant, and many exhibits were received in evidence.

The difference between the clean content found by the collector and that claimed by appellee is due to the difference in method used by them in arriving at the percentage of net weight of the clean content of the merchandise.

[22]*22It appears that it is the uniform practice in the buying and selling of raw wool to have the price thereof based upon an agreed figure per pound of “clean yield.” The wool buyer is experienced in the purchase of raw wool by reason of his knowledge of the characteristics of raw wools from the various localities wherein he operates. He makes what is known as a “visual examination” of the raw wool in order to estimate the “clean yield.” Then, by agreement, the price is fixed between the seller and the buyer. For instance, if agreement is reached that the wool possesses a 50 per cent clean yield, the purchase is made by paying the full weight of the wool per pound in the grease at the price of the “clean content.” In the “visual method of testing” a quantity of wool representative of a lot is looked at, examined by feeling, and in the light of the hereinbefore mentioned knowledge possessed by the buyer its “clean content” is estimated. That method of estimating the “clean content” of raw wool was employed by the customs officials at least from 1922 until the year. 1941.

The quantities submitted to the examiners were known as hand-drawn samples selected from bales by the wool examiner in an amount and variety which in the sampler’s judgment would represent the entire lot.

All of the wool here involved is raw as it comes from the sheep and it contains much extraneous material, such as animal grease, dirt, and vegetable matter including burrs which have become entangled in the fleece.

In order to be placed in condition for its use in spinning and weaving it is necessary that the raw wool be cleansed. In the process of cleansing the wool of foreign materials, which process appears to be commercially universal, the wool bale is first opened, some dirt removed and the wool fluffed up before it enters the scouring machinery. By means of a washing process, the grease and most of the loose dirt are removed and the wool is then known as “scoured wool.” If the wool contains much vegetable matter, in order to be usable it must be carbonized. Carbonization consists in submitting the scoured wool to a bath of sulphuric or, in some instances, muriatic acid and then drying and baking the wool in order to carbonize the vegetable materials. The wool is thereafter crushed between rollers and dusted so as to remove the carbon to which the vegetable matter has been reduced. Thereafter, the wool is passed through bowls in which it is neutralized, the acid washed out and soap added in order to clean it. It emerges from this process as a clean wool and is then dried and ready for commerce.

It appears that in order to more accurately secure representative samples of imported wool so that clean content can be more accurately ascertained, the Bureau of Customs, through the chief chemist of the United States Customs Laboratory in Boston, devised a method [23]*23to that end which is known as “boring” or “coring.” A tube of two inches in diameter and 20 inches long is employed with a cutting blade on one end thereof and a mechanism for attaching it to an electric drill on the other end. In operating the cutting tube it is pressed against the wool while in the bale and a trigger causing the tube to rotate is then pulled. As it rotates, it is pushed in and cuts a core or cylinder of wool about 10 to 15 inches long. The cylinder of wool, which is retained within the tube, is then pushed out into a moisture-proof sample container. It is said that at least one core is withdrawn from each of the bales to be sampled, and sometimes more than one core is taken from each bale. The purpose of coring is to yield a highly representative sample of the wool.

The chief chemist thereafter devised a laboratory test to arrive at the average percentage of “clean content” in greasy wool. He stated that it was designed to establish “clean content” without loss and that all the wool which was lost, damaged, destroyed, or rendered shorter in fiber length during the test is carefully gathered and the quantity thereof determined. That quantity is added to the scoured yield.

In the laboratory processing made by the chemist the sample of wool is first scoured and dried. No vegetable matter is removed in that part of the process. In determining such content in the dry scoured wool, three methods are stated.

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1 Ct. Cust. 272 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1911)
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14 Ct. Cust. 38 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1926)
A. C. Lawrence Leather Co. v. United States
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66 F. 299 (Second Circuit, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
40 C.C.P.A. 19, 1952 CCPA LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-fred-whitaker-co-ccpa-1952.