United States v. Harper

2 Ct. Cust. 101, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 132
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 29, 1911
DocketNo. 482
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2 Ct. Cust. 101 (United States v. Harper) 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. Harper, 2 Ct. Cust. 101, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 132 (ccpa 1911).

Opinion

Barber, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court :

The issue here is whether fans composed of. wood and silk, and embroidered with silk, are dutiable at the rate of 50 per cent ad valorem under paragraph 427 of the tariff act of July 24, 1897, which reads as follows:

427. Fans of all kinds, except common palm leaf fans, fifty per centum ad valorem.

or at the rate of 60 per cent ad valorem under the provisions of paragraphs 390 and 339 of the same act, the pertinent parts of which are as follows:

390. Laces, * * * embroideries and articles embroidered by hand or machinery, * * * all of the above-named articles made of silk, or. of which silk is the component material of chief value, not specially provided for in this Act, * * * sixty per centum ad valorem:. * * *
[102]*102339. Laces, lace window curtains, tidies, pillow shams, bed sets, insertings, flounc-ings, and other lace articles; handkerchiefs, napkins, wearing apparel, and other articles, made wholly or in part of lace, or in imitation of lace; nets or nettings, veils and veilings, etamines, vitrages, neck rufflings, ruchings, tuckings, flutings, and quilling's; embroideries and all trimmings, including braids, edgings, insertings, flouncings, galloons, gorings, and bands; wearing apparel,' handkerchiefs, and other articles or fabrics embroidered in any manner by hand or machinery, whether with a letter, monogram, or otherwise; tamboured or appliquéed articles, fabrics or wearing apparel; hemstitched or tucked flouncings or skirtings, and articles made wholly or in part of rufflings, tuckings, or ruchings; all the foregoing, composed wholly or in chief value of flax, cotton, or other vegetable fiber, and not elsewhere specially provided for in this Act, whether composed in part of india rubber or otherwise, sixty per centum ad valorem: Provided, That no wearing apparel or other article or textile fabric, when embroidered by hand or machinery, shall pay duty at a less rate than that imposed in any schedule of this Act upon any embroideries of the materials of which such embroidery is composed.

The collector assessed tlie fans as embroideries of silk at 60 per cent ad valorem. The Board of General Appraisers, upon hearing the importers’ protest, and the Circuit Court for the Northern District of California, upon hearing the appeal by the United States, both sustained the importers’ claim that duty should have been taken at the lower rate, under the provisions of the paragraph first above quoted.

No sample of the importation is before us and no issue of fact is raised.

In substance, the main contention of the United States is that these embroidered fans are articles, and that the embroidery thereon being of silk, they are clearly subject to the rate of duty specified in the silk paragraph by virtue of the proviso in paragraph 339, unless the meaning of the word “article” in said proviso can be restricted by some principle of law so as to exclude it therefrom. It is said that the rule of ejusdem generis can not accomplish this result, and various decided cases are cited tending to support that claim. It is also further urged that the question of whether or not paragraph 427 is more specific than paragraph 339 does not enter into this case; that the blanket proviso of “wearing apparel or other article or textile fabric” found in the said proviso was expressly designed to apply to every embroidered article which might anywhere be mentioned in the statute; that therefore the ordinary rule as to the superiority of “specific” provisions over “general” provisions can have no application; that if otherwise, although it may be conceded that the words “fans of all lcinds” in paragraph 427 are specific, yet they lack such a degree of specificness as to prevail over the all-comprehending terms of the proviso in that regard; and that to give them such an effect will nullify the plain purpose of Congress as expressed in the proviso.

On the other hand, it is contended by the appellees that the lan- ’ guage of paragraph 427 indicates that all fans except palm-leaf fans [103]*103shall be assessed at 50 per cent ad valorem; that the words “of all kinds,” which follow the word “fans,” and which in turn are followed by the exception relating to common palm-leaf fans, are such a clear expression of the legislative intent that, although it may have been held in other cases that the blanket provisions of the proviso should prevail over certain more or less specific terms in other paragraphs there under consideration, nevertheless, in this case, as applied to this merchandise, the question of whether the proviso or paragraph 427 is the more specific does arise, and that giving legitimate force to the recognized doctrine that the more specific of two paragraphs shall prevail, duty must be taken at the lower rate. In this connection the appellees further urge that Congress having specially exempted common palm-leaf fans from the operation of the paragraph, the familiar principle of exfressio unius est exclusio alterius clearly indicatés a Congressional intent that no fans except common palm-leaf fans should be exempted from the provisions of paragraph 427.

The United States argues that the decision of this court in the-case of Lai Ming v. United States (1 Ct. Cust. Appls., 5; T. D. 30770) is decisive of the issue here, and we consider first this claim. It appears from the opinion of the court, by Hunt, judge, that the question presented was whether certain Chinese shoes or slippers composed of leather in chief value and embroidered with silk should be dutiable at the rate of 60 per cent ad valorem under the same paragraphs as are here invoked to support the Government's claim, or at 25 per cent ad valorem under paragraph 438 of the same act, the material part of which was “* * * boots and shoes made of leather twenty-five per centum ad valorem.” In that case we said:

It is our opinion that the words “wearing apparel,” as used in the proviso of paragraph 339, include shoes, and that if such shoes are embroidered by hand or machinery, as are the exhibits submitted with this record, they must be held to be dutiable as provided by the terms of the proviso.

It will be observed that this language implies that it was considered of importance that the shoes or slippers involved in that case were wearing apparel, thus clearly, bringing them within the proviso, and that although the learned judge writing the opinion referred to other decisions wherein. the' effect of this proviso had been construed, occasion was taken to say that:

We cite these opinions to illustrate the views of the several courts, though we do not mean to go any further than the particular case before us warrants. As to it we hold the proviso applies.

It is obvious that our decision in that case was designed to be expressly limited to the facts there appearing, and we think that the facts here and the different phraseology of paragraph 427, as compared with that of paragraph 438, which we then contrasted with the proviso of paragraph 339, clearly distinguishes that case from the one at bar.

[104]*104In this case, as in the Lai Ming case, we expressly decline to go outside the precise issue involved.

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2 Ct. Cust. 101, 1911 CCPA LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-harper-ccpa-1911.