United States v. Hurst & Co.

14 Ct. Cust. 85, 1926 WL 27928, 1926 CCPA LEXIS 282
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 1926
DocketNo. 2664
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 Ct. Cust. 85 (United States v. Hurst & 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. Hurst & Co., 14 Ct. Cust. 85, 1926 WL 27928, 1926 CCPA LEXIS 282 (ccpa 1926).

Opinion

Barber, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court;

This appeal involves several protests.

[86]*86In the appraiser’s answers thereto the merchandise is sometimes referred to as lac, bleached, in rolls or in powder, and sometimes as shellac in similar conditions. It was classified and assessed for duty as an unenumerated manufactured article under paragraph 1459 of the Tariff Act of 1922.

Importers protested, claiming free entry under paragraph 1604 of the act which provides for "Lac, crude, seed, button, stick, or shell.”

The Board of General Appraisers sustained the protests. The-Government appealed.

In this court an amicus curise appears in aid of the Government’s appeal.

Precisely the same kind of merchandise was under consideration in Hurst & Co. v. United States, 12 Ct. Cust. Appls. 81, T. D. 40021. The record of the evidence in that case is incorporated in this and it is agreed that this case is, in effect, a retrial of the issues involved in that upon additional testimony introduced on behalf of the Government, none having been offered by it in the earlier case.

In that case we held the merchandise was entitled to free entry under paragraph 1604. Therein it was found, as. appears by the opinion of Martin, Presiding Judge, that the merchandise was definitely, uniformly, and generally known in the trade and commerce of this country as one of the grades of shellac; that it was not the crudest form of the commodity; that after it was bleached it retained the name and uses of shellac and never acquired a new name, character, or use; that all kinds of shellac are in some manner cleaned of the dye which inheres in the lac from which they are produced; and that the bleached shellac was no more than lac from which the original dye or coloring-matter has been removed by bleaching processes.

Upon those facts it was held as matter of law that, inasmuch as the provisions for shellac in paragraph 1604 contained no limitation or qualification of any kind, it included the merchandise in the case, and for that reason the importer’s protest was sustained.

It will promote a better understanding of the issues here and of the evidence if we take cognizance of information on the subject of lac which may be found in the New International Encyclopedia and the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Therefrom it appears that lac is a resinous incrustation formed on the twigs and young branches of various trees by insects which infest them. The minute larval insects fasten on the young shoots, insert their long proboscides into the bark, and draw their nutriment from the sap of the tree. The insects exude a resinous secretion which envelopes their bodies and adheres to and incrusts the twigs or branches of the trees. This exudation is impregnated with a color secreted by the insects whose bodies remain in the incrustation. The exudation is gathered by breaking off the portions of the [87]*87tree thus incrusted. It then is known as stick lac and is the crudest, form of lac. In this condition it contains two commercial entities— the coloring matter and the resin — as well as wood and dirt which, must be eliminated to produce the commercial articles. This is-accomplished by repeated heating, kneading, washing, drying, and straining, or by the use of machinery in conjunction with some of the preceding processes. At some stage in the operations the color or dye is segregated,’ cut into small cakes, and packed for sale as lac dye. The lac itself is processed until it becomes the shellac of commerce. Depending upon the thoroughness with which the dye-has been removed, it may be either ruby, blond, or white shellac,, the latter resulting from bleaching the same with chemicals.

During the various processes to which the crude material is subjected it becomes in turn seed lac, button lac, and shell lac. The-more completely the dye has been removed from the lac the more-desirable and more valuable the latter becomes. It is devoted to a. great number of uses, especially in the manufacture of varnishes.

In the instant cáse the Government'called two witnesses in connection with whose testimony illustrative Exhibits A, B, C, D, E,. and F were introduced in evidence. The word “illustrative” will generally be omitted in hereafter referring thereto.

Exhibit A represents stick lac. Exhibit B is seed lac, which is the-same substance as Exhibit A but in granular form and from which the wood has been removed. Exhibit C is in the form of solid, dark-colored pieces of lac known as “garnet lac” and is further processed then Exhibit B. Exhibit D is thin, flaky, broken-up pieces of lac further processed than Exhibit C and of lighter color. It was-introduced as representative of orange shellac, sometimes called T. N. shellac, T. N. being understood to mean “truly native.” Exhibit E is in very small, granular forms or in powder. It is. lighter in color than Exhibit D and is known as kiln-dried bleached shellac. Exhibit F is about the color of Exhibit E and is in a solid form called a hank or -roll. It contains some 25 per centum of moisture. The last two exhibits represent the imported merchandise.

The Government’s witnesses in substance agree that these last two ■ exhibits are bleached lac or bleached shellac, and that they represent, lac with the impurities, including the color, removed without changing its nature. In their imported condition they are ready for use as material in the many diverse uses to which shellac is applied.

The witnesses for the Government gave no evidence as to the various processes applied in reducing the lac to the form of Exhibits B, C, and D, but testified fully as to those employed in producing Exhibits E and F which, in substance, are bleaching processes.

Both the Government and amicus curiae contend that paragraph 1604 was designed to admit to free entry crude lac only.

[88]*88The Government’s brief proceeds upon the theory that Congress had in mind in enacting paragraph 1604 that the lacs represented by Exhibits A and B only are crude, and that those represented by Exhibits E and F are not crude. What may be the status in that respect of the lacs represented by Exhibits C and D the Government does not state, appai'ently leaving the door open to the claim that they are dutiable because not crude.

Amicus curiae contends that the lacs represented by Exhibits A, B, C, and D are crude and that those represented by E and F are not crude and, therefore, dutiable as assessed.

The witnesses introduced by the Government testified that, in their •opinion, the merchandise represented by Exhibits A, B, O, and D were all crude lacs. Just why Exhibits C and D, which it is quite evident have been subjected to considerable processing, represent crude lacs, and those represented by Exhibits E and F, which have been further processed for the purpose only of removing the color, •do not, the witnesses did not explain, nor do counsel.

If we were to hold that crude lacs only were covered by paragraph 1604, the case of United States v. Sheldon, 2 Ct. Cust. Appls. 485, T. D. 32245, would strongly support the view that the bleached lac or shellac here was crude. In that case purified resin, known in •commerce as rosin, and being one of the highest grades of that article was, by a majority of this court, held to be crude resin on the ground that nothing had been done thereto except "to get the resin by itself.”

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14 Ct. Cust. 85, 1926 WL 27928, 1926 CCPA LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hurst-co-ccpa-1926.