United States v. Lobsitz

35 C.C.P.A. 146, 1948 CCPA LEXIS 331
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 1948
DocketNo. 4570
StatusPublished

This text of 35 C.C.P.A. 146 (United States v. Lobsitz) 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. Lobsitz, 35 C.C.P.A. 146, 1948 CCPA LEXIS 331 (ccpa 1948).

Opinion

O’Connell, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the judgment of the United States Customs Court, First Division, rendered in conformity with its decision (Abstract 51341) 17 C. D. 191, sustaining two protests (the cases being consolidated for trial) of the importer against the collector’s classification of certain merchandise, hereinafter more particularly described, as wool rags, duty being assessed at 9 cents per pound under paragraph 1105 (a) of the Tariff Act of 1930 as modified by the reciprocal trade agreement with the United Kingdom, T. D. 49753, 74 Treas. Dec. 253, proclaimed by the President of the United States November 25, 1938.

We reproduce the text of paragraph 1105 (a), as originally enacted, in full. (Some of the rates of duty have been altered by the trade agreement noted).

Par. 1105. (a) Top waste, stubbing waste, roving waste, and ring waste, 37 cents per pound; garnetted waste, 26 cents per pound; noils, carbonized, 30 cents per pound; noils, not carbonized, 23 cents per pound; thread or yarn waste, 25 cents per pound; card or burr waste, carbonized, 23 cents per pound; not carbonized, 16 cents per pound; all other wool wastes not specially provided for, 24 cents per pound; shoddy, and wool extract, 24 cents per pound; mungo, 10 cents per pound; wool rags, 18 cents per pound; flocks, 8 cents per pound.

In its protests appellant made alternative claims, the one relied upon before the trial court and by it sustained being that the merchandise is properly classifiable as “Waste, not specially provided for,” with duty assessment at 7½ per centum ad valorem under paragraph 1555 of the 1930 act, as modified by the trade agreement, T. D. 49753, supra.

In its decision the trial court cited the case of P. Silverman & Son v. United States, 27 C. C. P. A. (Customs) 324, C. A. D. 107, and that of P. Silverman & Son v. United States, 32 C. C. P. A. (Customs) 99, C. A. D. 292, it being the trial court’s view that the legal principle which is applicable in the instant case was announced in our decisions in those cases, and that the only question to be determined here is one of fact; that is “whether or not the instant merchandise comes in competition with wool.”

In both of the cases so cited numerous decisions were reviewed, and the legislative history of paragraph 1105, supra, received careful study and was of great potency in construing paragraph 1105, supra.

In the first of the two Silverman cases, supra, the merchandise involved was described as follows:

The merchandise consists of so-called Palmer or sanforizing blankets which are in a worn-out condition and no longer serviceable for their original purpose. [148]*148When new, they are chiefly used in textile finishing operations, and “discarded when they have become so worn and burnt by heat and friction as to render them unsuitable for their original purpose.” They are then sold for waste for whatever they will bring. When so dealt in, they are commonly known as dryer felts. They are imported in sizes varying from 3 feet to 40 feet in width and from 5 feet to 50 feet in length. Some of the merchandise is imported in rolls which have to be unrolled and cut into pieces.

The collector classified the merchandise as woolen rags under paragraph 1105, supra, and it was claimed by the importer to be properly classifiable under paragraph 1555, supra, as “Waste, not specially provided for.” The Customs Court held that the collector’s classification was erroneous and also that the claim of the importer under paragraph 1555 was erroneous. Its holding as to classification was that it fell within the provision for “all other wool wastes not specially provided for” in paragraph 1105, supra. It was conceded before us that the collector’s classification was erroneous and we gave no consideration “to the woolen rag question,” but as between “wool wastes,” n. s. p. f. in paragraph 1105, supra, and “Waste,” n. s. p. f. in paragraph 1555, supra,, we held the latter paragraph applicable.

In so holding we stated, after having reviewed the legislative history at length:

From the foregoing it seems reasonable to conclude that Congress, in preparing the wool waste provision, was only concerned about wastes of wool which would influence and affect the sale and use of wool, and we think that a waste which happens to be composed of wool but which cannot, under any circumstances, replace or be competitive with wool, was not intended to be subjected to the high rate of duty of 24 cents per pound.

In the second of the Silverman cases, supra, the merchandise consisted of discarded paper-mill felts ranging from 15 to 18 feet in width and 50 to 75 feet in length. We quoted the following from the decision of the Customs Court:

Old paper-mill felts are a discarded article of the paper-making industry. They represent felts which have outlived their usefulness in the manufacture of paper, and have no further commercial value except for the recovery of their component wool fibers by being processed to a fibrous condition known as wool shoddy. Their chief use, after being discarded by paper mills, is in the manufacture of wool shoddy. These felts are shredded to reduce them to fiber form and then carded or gametted so as to produce a mass of wool fibers suitable for use in the spinning of yarn to be made into cloth. [Italics quoted.]

The collector, following “a directive of the Commissioner of Customs” (supposed to have been prompted by our decision in the first Silverman case, supra), classified the merchandise as “wool wastes not specially provided for” under paragraph 1105, supra. Alternative claims were made in the protest of the importer, one being for classification as “Waste,” n. s. p. f. under paragraph 1555, supra. Our [149]*149decision discloses that that claim “was expressly waived in this court, and appellant made no assignment of error against the trial court’s action in failing to hold the instant merchandise to be dutiable under that provision.”

The claim of the protest actually relied upon before us was that the merchandise was classifiable as “wool rags,” either directly or by similitude, and dutiable at 9 cents per pound, under paragraph 1105, supra. This claim had been overruled by the Customs Court notwithstanding the testimony of a number of witnesses whose evidence we found had been fully analyzed and weighed by that court and we affirmed the court’s holding in that regard.

We did this, however, without approving the collector’s classification. We in fact expressly disapproved his classification, but there was no formal reversal of the judgment appealed from nor any remand of the case because the importer had failed to present any claim which could be sustained.

In the decision of the second Silverman case, supra, we held that the decision in the first case was not necessarily controlling of the second because of the difference in the goods involved in the respective cases, but we adhered to the principle announced in the first case and applied it in the second.

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