United States v. Otis McAllister & Co.

31 C.C.P.A. 8, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 114
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 18, 1943
DocketNo. 4427
StatusPublished

This text of 31 C.C.P.A. 8 (United States v. Otis McAllister & 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. Otis McAllister & Co., 31 C.C.P.A. 8, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 114 (ccpa 1943).

Opinion

Jackson, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Appellee entered on April 14,1937, an importation designated in the invoice as “stucco netting galvanized after weaving” from Hamburg, Germany. The Collector of Customs of the port of San Francisco assessed duty on the imported merchandise at 60 per ’centum ad valorem under paragraph 397 of the Tariff Act of 1930 as amended by a presidential proclamation, T. D. 44605, 59 Treas. Dec. 288. Paragraph 397 as far as pertinent here reads as follows:

Par. 397. Articles or wares not specially provided for, * * * ; if composed wholly or in chief value of iron, steel, lead, copper, brass, nickel, pewter, zinc, aluminum, or other metal, but not plated with platinum, gold, or silver, or colored with gold lacquer, whether partly or wholly manufactured, 45 per centum ad valorem.

and the proclamation as far as pertinent reads as .follows:

And an increase in the rate of duty expressly fixed in paragraph 397 of Title I of said act on woven-wire fencing and woven-wire netting, all the foregoing composed of wire smaller than eight one-hundredths and not smaller than three one-hundredths of an inch in diameter, coated with zinc or other metal after weaving, from 45 per centum ad valorem to 60 per centum ad valorem.

The involved merchandise has the appearance of ordinary chicken wire or poultry netting, and was galvanized after it was formed. It was conceded by appellee to be wire netting, and the issue below was whether or not the merchandise was woven-wire netting within the meaning of the paragraph 397 amended as aforesaid.

The case was tried in the cities of Seattle, Wash., and San Francisco, Calif. The appellee presented the testimony of three witnesses. [10]*10The testimony of one of the witnesses pertained to a kind of wire netting identified as “lock twist” which is a different kind of netting than the involved merchandise. On motion the testimony of this witness was stricken, but was later restored for the purpose of illustrating a type of netting which in some of the testimony was said to be not woven. Another of appellee’s witnesses was a clerk in the office of the appraiser of merchandise at the port of San Francisco and he merely identified a sample of domestic wire netting as being representative of the imported merchandise. That sample was received in evidence as Exhibit 1. The third witness was associated with appellee and testified that the imported merchandise “must have been made by the .same process” as Exhibit 1 and that he had observed the process by which such merchandise was made in the plant of the California Wire Cloth Corporation in Oakland, Calif. The witness described the process in the following language:

The process consists of the assembly of a number of parallel wires in a machine, and every alternate wire being in the form of a long coil in a tube, and as the wires progress through the machine these alternating coils in the tubes revolve around stationary wire that is going alongside of it, thus forming the loops on the stationary wires and the interlacing.

The witness testified the process to be the “interweaving of these parallel wires as they run through the machine.” He was unable to say that the wires present in the exhibit were known by any names except as to the wire, along one edge of the exhibit, which he thought was called the selvedge. The foregoing constituted appellee’s entire case.

The Government called five witnesses, all of whom were associated with various domestic steel fabricating companies. The testimonial record on behalf of appellant may be briefly summarized as follows: That the imported merchandise comprising steel wires, woven into articles of hexagonal pattern and galvanized after weaving, was made on a loom by a process wherein every alternate wire was twisted around the adjoining wires.

. The Government introduced exhibits consisting of a trade catalog, price lists, bills of sale, photographs of the machine used by the California Wire Cloth Corporation to make netting similar to the imported merchandise, and a Federal Standard Stock Catalog giving the Federal specifications for “FENCING; WIRE (BARBED, NETTING AND WOVEN), BLACK AND GALVANIZED.” In the latter catalog under the heading of “Workmanship” we find that “On all Type C hexagon wire netting the zinc coating shall be done after weaving.” The trade catalog illustrates hexagonal netting similar in appearance to the involved merchandise and described as “STEEL WIRE NETTING-GALVANIZED BEFORE OR AFTER WEAVING.” The photographs show a rather complicated [11]*11machine in which there are spools upon which wires are wound. Those wires, designated as warp wires, are unwound from the spools and enter the machine at its base, running to nearly the top thereof between tubes filled in spiral formation with what .appellant’s witnesses termed weft or filling wires.

It was testified in the following language that in making wire netting on said machine, the weft wires are caused to interlace with the alternate warp wires:

Approximately 50 percent of the wires are fed in either from spools or from a coil of wire, the coil being in a bundle. These wires are fed underneath the roller at the base of the machine and are stationary. They cannot be twisted without becoming untwisted, inasmuch as they are fastened both at the top and bottom. They are fastened by going through at the bottom and going into the cloth at the top. Approximately 50 percent of the wires are formed on a bobbin coiling machine. Long coils are inserted in the top. They are loose, and can be moved. Those are the filling wires, and they can be moved back and forth between what we call the warp wires, and as they are moved from one wire to the other they twist as they cross each wire. That makes a twist motion. After that twist has been made it is pulled up over a peg roller and wound into the package and taken off the machine.

Several Government exhibits consist of specifications for hexagonal wire netting made on said machine using the letters W, F, and S as abbreviations for warp, filler, and selvedge wires. It was also shown that hexagonal netting similar to that here involved was sold by the California Wire Cloth Corporation bearing a tag on which the expression “galvanized after weaving” appears.

Upon that record the United States Customs Court, Second Division, sustained the claim made in the protest and gave judgment for appellee citing as authority its own decision in Wilbur Ellis Co. v. United States, 6 Cust. Ct. 57, C. D. 426, and the decision of this court in the case of Cron & Dehn Hardware Corp. et al. v. United States, 18 C. C. P. A. (Customs) 445, T. D. 44699. From the judgment this appeal wasj taken.

The brief of appellee in support of its contention that the involved merchandise is not within the common meaning of the term “woven-wire netting” relies upon the decision of the trial court and the decisions therein cited. ■

Much of the briefs of both parties is devoted to a discussion of' the record in the Cron & Dehn case, supra. The record in that case is not in evidence here and will not be considered. Neither will we consider the arguments based upon that record. Smith & Co. v. United States, 11 Ct. Cust. Appls. 121, T. D. 38899.

In its decision in the instant case the trial court, in citing the Wilbur Ellis Co. case, supra,

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Related

Smith & Co. v. United States
11 Ct. Cust. 121 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1921)
Wilbur Ellis Co. v. United States
6 Cust. Ct. 57 (U.S. Customs Court, 1941)

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31 C.C.P.A. 8, 1943 CCPA LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-otis-mcallister-co-ccpa-1943.