United States v. Geo. Wm. Rueff, Inc.

41 C.C.P.A. 95
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 1953
DocketNo. 4735
StatusPublished

This text of 41 C.C.P.A. 95 (United States v. Geo. Wm. Rueff, Inc.) 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. Geo. Wm. Rueff, Inc., 41 C.C.P.A. 95 (ccpa 1953).

Opinion

Woelby, Judge,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court:

Here tbe Government appeals from tbe judgment rendered by tbe .’Second Division of tbe United States Customs Court, pursuant to its •decision, C. D. 1392.

Involved in tbe controversy is merchandise consisting of 1,680 bales •of sisal twine, imported from Mexico and entered at tbe port of New -Orleans, Louisiana, on or about July 13, 1947. It was classified as “twine, single or plied, wholly or in chief value of sisal,” and was assessed with duty at tbe rate of 20 per centum ad valorem pursuant •to tbe provision of paragraph 1005 (b) of tbe Tariff Act of 1930, as :modified by tbe Trade Agreement with tbe Netherlands, T. D. 48075, •and tbe Trade Agreement with Mexico, T. D. 50797.

Tbe importer, appellee here, protested that classification and assessment and claimed that tbe merchandise was entitled to free entry under tbe provisions of paragraph 1622 of the above act as “binding twine,” and alternately claimed that tbe twine was free of duty as •“agricultural implements, or parts thereof” within tbe provisions of -paragraph 1604 of tbe Tariff Act of 1930.

Inasmuch as tbe Customs Court denied tbe applicability of tbe last mentioned paragraph, and since no appeal was taken from that action, :it is not before us for consideration.

Tbe paragraphs in question read as follows, paragraph 1005 (b) --under both trade agreements being identical:

[97]*971005 (b) Cords and twines (whether or not composed of three or more strands, each strand composed of two or more yarns), tarred or untarred, single or plied, wholly or in chief value of manila (abaca), sisal, henequen, or other hard fiber. 20% ad vaL
Par. 1622. All binding twine manufactured from New Zealand hemp, henequen, manila, sisal, or Tampico fiber, sisal grass, or sunn, or a mixture of any two or more of them, of single ply and measuring not exceeding seven hundred and fifty feet to the pound.

It was the contention of the importer that paragraph 1622, supra, in providing for all binding twine manufactured from the fibers or grasses therein specified, of single ply, and not exceeding 750 feet to the pound, should be literally construed, and that any twine used for binding in harvesting operations which met the limitations of the paragraph was included therein; and that since the merchandise at. bar is a single-ply twine, manufactured wholly from Mexican sisal,, running less than 750 feet to the pound and chiefly used to bind hay into bales, it is “binding twine” within the meaning of paragraph 1622 and thus entitled to free entry.

On the other hand, the Government and amicus curiae based their arguments primarily upon the theory that “binding twine” and “binder twine” are synonymous terms and that since the record shows-the involved merchandise is not “binder twine” then it is not “binding twine,” as provided for in paragraph 1622, supra. The Government also urged that the importer failed to establish that the chief use of' the imported merchandise, at or about the time of. importation, was-in the binding of small grains.

In support of the respective arguments of the parties, seventeen, witnesses were called and numerous exhibits were introduced in. evidence.

From the record it appears that the merchandise at bar is a twine-manufactured from sisal grown in the state of Yucatan, Mexico.. Its manufacturer describes the product substantially as follows:

* * * The sisal fibers are fed into hackling machines, during which time am emulsion of mineral oil, animal greases, and insect repellent is poured over them. The fibers are then put through machines called breakers, spreaders, draw frames, and finishers from which they emerge in the form of a non-ending sliver. The-sliver is then spun into one-ply twine which is wound into cylinders, balls, or-tubes, weighing approximately 20 pounds each. Each tube is approximately 10 inches in diameter and 13)i inches in height. At the time of importation, the twine-was packed four balls to the bale. Presently, it is packed two balls to the bale.

Tbe record also discloses that tbis type of twine was not in existenee-at or prior to June 1930, tbe date of enactment of tbe present tariff act, and was not introduced into trade and commerce until tbe early 1940’s.

Tbe twine seems to bave been designed to meet tbe requirements of' a new type of automatic bay-baler machine, wbicb came into general. [98]*98use during 1945. It also appears that the twine used in those machines runs about 200 feet to the pound, has an average tensile strength of approximately 240 pounds, and contains from 12 to 15 per centum oil by weight. It is usually treated with an insect repellent which also ■serves to repel rodents. Grease is used on the twine to soften it, while the oil lubricates and serves to expedite its passage through the hay-baler machine and also functions as a protector against humidity, mildew, and rot.

The manner in which the subject twine is employed in the hay-haling machines is described by one of the witnesses as follows:

* * * The twine is accommodated in sort of a can dispenser, inside of the machine, .and feeds through the mechanism, tying mechanism. The machine operates with a plunging device that compresses this hay in the bale or in this compartment in the machine. The twine is mechanically put around lengthwise on the bale, -two strands. There are, incidentally, two tubes operating; one makes one strand .and one the other, and at the time the bale reaches its capacity the mechanism trips and these two strands make it a bound bale.

The bale as thus bound is generally a rectangular cube approximately 18 x 18 x 36 inches, and weighs from fifty to seventy-five pounds.

With reference to binder twine, the trial court had the following to •say:

* * * binder twine is ordinarily employed in binder machines for wrapping or tying sheaves of small grains. Binder machines cut the grain before conveying it into the machine for binding. Automatic hay-baler machines do not cut the "hay. They come into operation after the hay has been cut and left in the fields in the form of windrows or swaths. Binder twine for use in binder machines is manufactured substantially the same way as is baler twine. The same machines .are used and the same general treatment is accorded them, except that binder twine does not usually have the specific rodent repellent. Binder twine is packaged normally in either six 8-pound balls or 10 balls weighing slightly under 5 pounds each. It usually is either 500 feet to the pound, 550 feet to the pound, •600 feet to the pound, or 650 feet to the pound, with the variety in most prevalent use in the United States being 500 feet to the pound. It has an average tensile ■strength of approximately 85 to 90 pounds. It contains as a rule not less than 10 per centum of oil. In the operation of the binder machine, the general mechanism for binding the sheaf is similar to the mechanism of the baler machine for ■tying the hay. * * * The tensile strength of baler twine is necessarily much greater than that of binder twine because the bale of hay is subjected to considerable pressure to compress it, and expansion in the fields after the bale has been made would cause a lighter twine to break. Bales of hay are normally kept from 1 to 3 years before consumption.

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