United States v. Kanthal Corp.

554 F.2d 456, 64 C.C.P.A. 89, 1977 CCPA LEXIS 158
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 21, 1977
DocketC.A.D. 1188; No. 76-27
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 554 F.2d 456 (United States v. Kanthal Corp.) 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. Kanthal Corp., 554 F.2d 456, 64 C.C.P.A. 89, 1977 CCPA LEXIS 158 (ccpa 1977).

Opinion

Marrey, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal by the Government from a judgment of the United States Customs Court, 76 Cust. Ct. 124, C.D. 4644, 414 F. Supp. 616 (1976), sustaining Kanthal’s protest of the classification of imported steel alloy products under item 609.45, Tariff Schedules of the United States (TSUS), as “Round wire: * * * Alloy iron or steel.” The Customs Court held classification to be proper under item 608.78, TSUS, as “Wire rods * * *; * * * Alloy iron or steel: Tempered * * *.” We reverse.

Issue

The issue in this case is whether the imported steel alloy products are properly classifiable as “Wire rods” or as “Round wire.”

Statute

The TSUS and pertinent headnote provisions are:

Wire rods of iron or steel:-
# * # * Hi
Alloy iron or steel:
Ht * H Hi % Hi H:
608. 78 Tempered, treated, or partly manufactured_
Hi Hi
Wire of iron or steel:
Hi H* Hi H* Hi Hi *
[91]*91Round wire:
****** *
609.45 Alloy iron or steel_ * * *
Subpart B headnotes:
$ g: $ ‡ ‡ $
3. Forms and Condition of Iron or Steel. — For the purpose of this subpart, the following terms ihave the meanings hereby assigned to them:
*
(f) Wire rods: A coiled, semifinished, hot-rolled product of solid cross section, approximately round in cross section, not under 0.20 inch nor over 0.74 inch in diameter.
sfc ifc ife :{: # *
(i) Wire: A finished, drawn, non-tubular product, of any cross-sectional configuration, in coils or cut to length, and not over .703 inch in maximum cross-sectional dimension. The term also includes a product of solid rectangular cross section, in coils or cut to length, with a cold-rolled finish, and not over 0.25 inch thick and not over 0.50 inch wide.

Description of the Imports

The imported steel alloy products were manufactured in Sweden by Kanthal’s parent company, Aktiebolaget Kanthal. Manufacture of the imported steel alloy products began with steel alloy cast into ingots. Those ingots were hot-rolled into billets which were, sequentially, cold-inspected, annealed, and hot-rolled into wire rods approximately 7 millimeters (.275 inch) in diameter. The wire rods were inspected, pickled (cleaned), annealed, and cold drawn 1 down to 5.18 millimeters (.204 inch). The resulting steel alloy product (.204 product) was annealed, pickled, inspected and shipped to Kanthal.

Upon arrival in the United States, the .204 product was separated by Kanthal into two categories. One category, a finished product,2 was held for sale to customers. The other category was held for further processing (drawing) to fulfill specific customer specifications. Testimony indicated that, on rare occasions, the .204 product being held for further processing was sold to customers without that further processing.

[92]*92The Arguments

The Government contends that the .204 products are properly classifiable as “Round wire” under item 609.45, TSUS. That contention is premised on three arguments.

First, the Government points out that the .204 products exceed industry roundness tolerances for “wire rods” and, in fact, exceed industry roundness tolerances for “wire.” 3 That “excess roundness,” the Government contends, results from the drawing process because hot-rolling per se is not sufficient to achieve that degree of roundness. The Government argues that Congress, by using “Round wire” (emphasis added) in the TSUS and “approximately round” in the headnote 3(f) definition of “Wire rod,” intended the degree of roundness to have a bearing upon classification. Therefore, the Government concludes, the .204 products, being more “round” than “approximately round,” should be classified as “Round wire” under item 609.45, TSUS.

Secondly, the Government notes that testimony clearly established an industry-recognized demarcation point at which “wire rod” becomes “wire.” That demarcation point is the step of drawing. The .204 product having been drawn, the Government argues, makes the product a “wire” rather than a “wire rod” for tariff purposes.

Finally, the Government urges that the .204 products meet the headnote 3(i) definition of “Wire” as a “finished” product. “[Finished,” according to the Government, merely means that a particular point in the manufacturing process has been reached; not necessarily that the product is in a condition ready for sale to a customer. The Government contends that industry recognizes that point to occur at the drawing stage.

Kanthal, on the other hand, supported by British Steel Corporation and British Steel Corporation, Inc. as amicus curiae, contends that “round” and “approximately round” are not mutually exclusive. In fact, it is argued, the closer an object is to being “round,” the more accurately it is described as “approximately round.” Furthermore, Kanthal and amicus contend, if Congress had intended to use degree of roundness as a criterion for classification, Congress would have used more precise terms than “round” and “approximately round.”

Secondly, Kanthal and amicus argue that the tariff acts and the trade do not regard drawing as an operation which transforms “wire rod” into “wire.” Kanthal and amicus cite C. J. Tower & Sons (Buffalo) v. United States, 48 Treas. Dec. 636, Abs. 49897 (Bd. Gen. [93]*93Appr. 1925), Peterson Steels, Inc. v. United States, 35 Cust. Ct. 315, Abs. 58864 (1955), and E. Dillingham, Inc. v. United States, 49 Cust. Ct. 34, C.D. 2357 (1962) in support of that position.

Lastly, Kanthal and amicus argue that the imported .204 product is not “finished” as that term is used in industry and in the headnote 3(i) definition of “Wire.” Therefore, it is argued, the imported .204 product is “semifinished” and falls under the headnote 3(f) definition of “Wire rod” rather than the headnote 3(i) definition of “Wire.”

Customs Court

With respect to the degree of roundness argument, the Customs Court noted testimony indicating that it was impossible to achieve perfect roundness. Therefore, the court concluded, the imported .024 products fulfilled the headnote 3(f) “approximately round” language.

The court relied upon C. J. Tower, supra, as refuting the Government’s argument that industry considered drawing as transforming wire rod into wire.

Regarding the “finished” versus “semifinished” argument, the court held that the “record preponderantly establishes that the imported products are not finished drawn because they are held in the importer’s inventory for further processing by drawing in the United States.” 76 Cust. Ct. at 129, 414 F. Supp. at 616.

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Related

Superior Wire, a Div. of Superior Products Co. v. United States
669 F. Supp. 472 (Court of International Trade, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
554 F.2d 456, 64 C.C.P.A. 89, 1977 CCPA LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-kanthal-corp-ccpa-1977.