United States v. Hoyt

16 Ct. Cust. 502, 1929 WL 28302, 1929 CCPA LEXIS 19
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 16, 1929
DocketNo. 3122
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 Ct. Cust. 502 (United States v. Hoyt) 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. Hoyt, 16 Ct. Cust. 502, 1929 WL 28302, 1929 CCPA LEXIS 19 (ccpa 1929).

Opinion

Geaham, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Sawed lumber, admitted to be Philippine lauan, exported from Shanghai, China, was imported at San Francisco under the Tariff [503]*503Act of 1922. It was classified by the collector as mahogany under paragraph 403 of said act, at 15 per centum ad valorem. The importer protested, claiming the merchandise to be free of duty under paragraph 1700, or, alternatively, dutiable as a not enumerated manufactured article under paragraph 1459 of said act. The United States Customs Court sustained the protest under said paragraph 1700 and the Government has appealed.

The relevant statutes are as follows:

Par. 403. Cedar commercially known as Spanish, cedar, lignum vitse, lance-wood, ebony, box, granadilla, mahogany, rosewood, satinwood, Japanese white oak, and Japanese maple, in the log, 10 per centum ad valorem; in the form of sawed boards, planks, deals, and all other forms not further manufactured than sawed, 15 per centum ad valorem; veneers of wood and wood unmanufactured, not specially provided for, 20 per centum ad valorem.
Par. 1700. Wood: * * * sawed boards, planks, deals, and other lumber, not further manufactured than sawed, planed, and tongued and grooved; * * *.

Two contentions are made by the Government here. It is first claimed that the common meaning of the word “mahogany” includes the Philippine lauan; that the word is general and includes a large number of different species of trees, of which the lauan is one, of different families and genera, but all of which, because of similarity of use, are commonly known as mahogany. Secondly, it is claimed that even if the common meaning of the word “mahogany” may not be said to inplude the lauan, it has been established by the evidence in the case at bar that the commercial designation of the word “mahogany” includes Philippine lauan. The appellee takes issue with both these propositions.

Our first inquiry is as to the common meaning of the statutory term. The word “mahogany” is of unknown origin. The carpenter of Sir Walter Raleigh’s ship, in one of that great explorer’s trips to the Americas, had his attention called to the great beauty, hardness, and durability of the wood of this tree in 1595. The word was written “mohogeney” in 1671. The English word was adopted into botan-nical Latin by the botanist Linnaeus in 1762 as “mahagoni,” thus originating the scientific designation by which the true mahogany has since been known, Swietenia mahagoni.

Various authorities give various definitions of the word “mahogany.”

Murray’s New English Dictionary defines the word as follows;

The wood of Swietenia Mahagoni' (N. O. Cedrelaceae), a tree indigenous to the tropical parts of America, esp. Mexico, Central America, and the West Indies. It varies in color from yellow to a rich red brown, is remarkably hard and fine grained, and takes a high polish. Also with qualification denoting the special variety or place of origin, as Baywood, Cuba, Honduras, Jamaica, Spanish mahogany.

[504]*504A secondary meaning is also given that the word is applied “chiefly with qualification” to various woods resembling mahogany, and thereupon the author gives a fist of many varieties of woods, each designated as mahogany with a prefix.' In this number, the lauan is not enumerated.

The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia (vol. 6, p. 3579) thus defines mahogany:

¡Swietenia Mahagoni, belonging to the family Meliaceie. It is native in the West Indies, Central America, Mexico, and the Florida Keys. Its importance lies in its timber.
2. The wood of the above tree. It combines a rich reddish-brown color, beauty of grain, and susceptibility of polish with unusual soundness, uniformity, freedom from warping, durability, and largeness of dimensions. On account of its costliness, its use is restricted mainly to furniture making, cabinet work, etc., often in the form of a veneer. The quality of the timber varies with the conditions of its growth, exposed situations and solid ground yielding the finest. Mahogany with figured grain is especially prized, and is obtained largely, but not exclusively, from the San Domingo and Cuba wood, called Spanish mahogany. The Honduras mahogany, or baywood, shipped from the Bay of Campeacliy, is more open-grained and plain, and of larger dimensions, yielding logs sometimes 40 feet in length. The Mexican mahogany has the largest growth of all, is similar to the last named, and supplements its diminishing supply.

This authority also gives an enumeration of a large number of so-called mahoganies, each specified by a prefix. The lauan is not here enumerated.

The Encyclopaedia Britannica (11th ed., Vol. XVII, p. 399) defines mahogany as a dark-colored wood largely used for household furniture, the product of a large tree indigenous to Central America and the West Indies, known botanically as Swietenia, Mahogani, and which is a member of the order Meliacex. The tree, according to this authority, bears compound leaves, resembling those of the ash, and clusters of small flowers, with 5 sepals and petals and 10 stamens which are united into a tube.

The New International Encyclopaedia (vol. 12, p. 705) defines mahogany as “the timber of a number of trees, the most highly esteemed being that of Swietenia mahogani, a large tree of the natural order Meliacess, native of the West Indies, Central and tropical South America.” This authority recites that two other species of Swietenia also occur in Central America, and that another tree of the same natural order as Swietenia occurs in India, and is called mahogany. It is further stated that various other trees, notably eucalyptus, are sometines called mahogany, with the prefixes according to the locality from which they come. The lauan is not mentioned as one of these.

[505]*505Funk & Wagnalls New Standard Dictionary (1925) thus defines the word “mahogany”:

1. A-large tropical American tree (Swietenia mdhogoni) of the bead-tree family (Meliacese).
2: Any one of various trees yielding a wood similar to the true mahogany

This authority then recites a list of trees which are called mahogany, with a prefix in each case. Among these appears the following: “Philippine m., the narra.” ' The narra is defined by the same authority as “a tall tree (Pterocarpus indicus).”

Webster’s New International Dictionary (1925) gives the following definition:

1. A tropical American moliaceous tree (Swietenia mahagoni). with pinnate leaves and panicles of small greenish flowers.
3. Any of many trees related to, or resembling, the mahogany; as, in Australia, species of eucalyptus; in India, various meliaceous trees of the genera Soymida, Chukrassia, and Tona; in Africa, Khaya senegalensis; in the United States, Rhus iniegrifolia, species of Oercocarpus, etc

The lauan is thus defined by Funk & Wagnalls New Standard Dictionary:

Lauan (P. I.). A valuable timber tree (Anisoptera thurifera) of the family Dipterocarpacese.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ct. Cust. 502, 1929 WL 28302, 1929 CCPA LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hoyt-ccpa-1929.