United States v. Peabody

3 Ct. Cust. 130, 1912 CCPA LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 1, 1912
DocketNo. 725
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 Ct. Cust. 130 (United States v. Peabody) 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. Peabody, 3 Ct. Cust. 130, 1912 CCPA LEXIS 74 (ccpa 1912).

Opinion

Martin, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal is brought by the Government to establish the status, under the tariff act of 1897, of certain containers which were brought into this country filled with ad valorem contents of a liquid or semiliquid character.

Under that act the appellees imported various consignments of pineapples, Scotch kippered herrings, Yarmouth bloaters, oil geranium reunion, oil patchoule, and oil pennyroyal, all in hermetically sealed tins; chowchow and anchovy paste, in stone jars; alizarin green S. W. paste, in barrels; and rosewater, in a metal drum.

[131]*131The imported goods were severally dutiable at ad valorem rates, and in eacb instance the collector added the value of the container to the value of its contents in order to find the dutiable valuation upon which the respective rates of duty should be assessed.

The importers protested against that action of the collector, claiming that the value of the containers should not be added to the value of their contents for the purpose of fixing their dutiable valuation, but that the appropriate duty should be assessed upon the value of the contents alone, without regard to the value of the containers.

The protest was heard by the Board of General Appraisers, and was sustained. The Government now applies for a reversal of that decision.

The issue thus presented requires an interpretation of section 19 of the customs administrative act of June 10, 1890. That section is here copied in full:

Sec. 19. That whenever imported merchandise is subject to an ad valorem rate of duty, or to a duty based upon or regulated in any manner by the value thereof, the duty shall be assessed upon the actual market value or wholesale price of such merchandise as bought and sold in usual wholesale quantities, at the time of exportation to the United States, in the principal markets of the country from whence imported, and in the condition in which such merchandise is there bought and sold for exportation to the United States, or consigned to the United States for sale, including the value of all cartons, cases, crates, boxes, sacks, and coverings of any kind, and all other costs, charges, and expenses incident to placing the merchandise in condition, packed ready for shipment to the United States, and if there be used for covering or holding imported merchandise, whether dutiable or free, any unusual article or form designed for use otherwise than in the bona fide transportation of such merchandise to the United States, additional duty shall be levied and collected upon such material or article at the rate to which the same would be subject if separately imported. That the words “value,” or “actual market value” whenever used in this act or in any law relating to the appraisement of imported merchandise shall be construed to mean the actual market value or wholesale price as defined in this section.

The foregoing section provides that whenever imported merchandise is subject to an ad valorem rate of duty the duty shall be assessed upon the actual market value thereof, at the time of exportation, in the principal markets of the country from whence imported, including the value of all cartons, cases, crates, boxes, sacks, and coverings of any kind, and all other costs, charges, and expenses incident to placing the merchandise in condition, packed ready for shipment to the United States.

The Government contends that the foregoing section required the collector, in assessing ad valorem duties upon the importations at bar, to add the value of the containers, namely, the hermetically sealed tins, the wooden barrels, the stone jars, and the iron drum, to the value of their respective contents, in order to find the dutiable value upon which the ad valorem rates were to be assessed; and .that the action of the collector to that effect should have been sustained by the board.

[132]*132The importers take issue with the foregoing claim. They contend that the ad valorem duties should have been assessed upon the value of the contents only, and that the decision of the board o that effect should be affirmed.

In the case of United States v. Nichols (186 U. S., 298), section 19, above copied, received an interpretation by the Supreme Court of the United States. The case came to that court from the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, which being in doubt with regard to the question of law arising therein, desired the instruction of the Supreme Court for its proper decision. The importation was made under the tariff act of 1894, and consisted of ad valorem goods contained in glass bottles holding not more than 1 pint, and upon those facts the following question was certified to the Supreme Court:

Should the value of the bottles filled with ad valorem goods be added to the dutiable value of their contents, under section 19 of the customs administrative act of 1890, to make up the dutiable value of the imported merchandise?

The court upon consideration answered this question in the negative, basing that answer upon two reasons, which may be briefly summarized as follows: In the first place, that section 19 did not include the glass bottles in question because such bottles were made dutiable by eo nomine provisions of the tariff act of 1894, as they had been by the tariff act of 1883, and those specific provisions should govern the articles in question rather than the merely regulative provisions of the administrative act; and in the second place, that the provisions of section 19 did not include the glass bottles in question, because those provisions related only to coverings of dry or solid contents, and not to bottles nor any other containers of liquid contents.

Each of these two separate reasons was complete within itself; each one was directly determinative of the issue before the court; and because of them, and of each of them, the Supreme Court held that the glass bottles in question were not governed by section 19, and that their value should not be added to the value of their contents to make up the dutiable valuation for ad valorem assessment.

The foregoing statements are sustained by the following extract from the opinion of the Supreme Court in the case above mentioned:

Though the tariff act of 1883 is not directly in issue in this case, it is pertinent to inquire whether the sections above cited respecting duties upon glass'bottles were repealed by section 19 of the customs administrative act. We are of opinion that they were not. The customs administrative act was not a tariff act, but, as its title indicates, was intended “to simplify the laws in connection with the collection of the revenues” and to provide certain rules and regulations with respect to the assessment and collection of duties and the remedies of importers and not to interfere with any duties theretofore specifically imposed or thereafter to he imposed upon merchandise imported. Section 19 was intended to provide a general method for the assessment [133]*133of ad valorem duties and to require the value of all cartons, cases, crates, boxes, sacks, and coverings of any kind to be included in such valuation. We think the rule ejusdem generis

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ct. Cust. 130, 1912 CCPA LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-peabody-ccpa-1912.