United States v. Precise Imports Corp.

458 F.2d 1376, 59 C.C.P.A. 113
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 11, 1972
DocketNo. 5421, C.A.D. 1050
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 458 F.2d 1376 (United States v. Precise Imports 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. Precise Imports Corp., 458 F.2d 1376, 59 C.C.P.A. 113 (ccpa 1972).

Opinions

Nioi-i, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision and judgment of the United States Customs Court, First Division,1 sustaining importer’s protest and Folding blank-cartridge-firing band guns, described on tbe invoice as “starter pistols,” to be classifiable in item 730.81 of the Tariff Schedules of the United States (TSUS) as devices, other than pistols, designed to fire only blank cartridges or blank ammunition with duty at 9% ad valorem.

The imported merchandise had been classified under item 730.80, TSUS, as pistols designed to fire only blank cartridges or blank ammunition, with duty at 42% ad valorem, on the theory that the term “pistols” as used in item 730.80 includes revolvers. The Customs Court disagreed and sustained the protest on the ground that revolvers are distinctly different from pistols and not encompassed by item 730.80.

The provisions of the Tariff Schedules of the United States involved are:

Schedule 7, Part 5, Subpart A:
Other firearms (including captive-bolt pistols, harpoon guns, and similar devices) ; line-throwing guns. Very light pistols and other devices designed to project only signal flares, pistols and other devices designed to fire only blank cartridges or blank ammunition, all the foregoing, and any devices similar thereto, which expend, or operate by means of, an explosive charge; and parts of the foregoing:
730.80 Pistols designed to fire only blank cartridges or blank ammunition, and parts thereof_ 42% ad val.
730.81 Other _ 9% ad val.

The record comprises the testimony of two witnesses for each side and two models of the importation introduced as exhibits, another model introduced for comparison, some blank cartridges, and certain pages of appellee’s 1965 catalog and of the 1967 edition of S'hooter’s Bible. As the exhibits show, the imports are revolvers in that they have revolving cylinders in which blank cartridges are positioned for successive firing.

[115]*115Appellee’s first rvitness, Thomas Palmer, was national sales manager for appellee. He testified in substance that the importations, as represented by exhibits 1 and 2, are bought and sold throughout this country as starter revolvers and are designed to fire only blank ammunition of .22 caliber. He further tesified that appellee also imports blank guns (exhibits 4) which are pistols and not revolvers and are bought and sold as pistols. The witness stated that a revolver is a type of handgun having a revolving cylinder containing chambers for cartridges. The gun is fired by squeezing the trigger or cocking the hammer, whereupon the cylinder rotates clockwise and aligns a chamber with the barrel. When the trigger reaches its rearmost position, the hammer strikes forward and explodes the cartridge. An “automatic,” or more accurately semi-automatic, pistol is a different type of handgun which does not have a revolving cylinder. The cartridges of the later are contained in a clop or magazine. Palmer stated that the term “revolver” is widely known and used in the trade and refers to a special type of handgun — one having a revolving cylinder — and that a handgun which does not have a revolving cylinder is not a revolver. Mr. Palmer admitted, however, that one type of pistol sold by his company has a revolving cylinder, which would classify it as a revolver, yet he testified that it is a “particular type of pistol.” The catalog of his company so states.

Appellee’s other witness, Frank Ercolino, president of Centaur Firearms Inc., had been associated with firearms most of his life and from 1944 to 1945 was a Marine Corps instructor (private first class) in small arms at the Officers’ Candidate School at Quantieo, Virginia. He testified that a pistol “is a weapon that operates semi-automatic” which is operated by squeezing the trigger to its maximum position releasing the firing pin which strikes the cartridge in the 'barrel chamber, igniting the powder and projecting the bullet. Gas expansion drives the slide back, which ejects the spent cartridge, and a new round from the magazine is injected into the barrel chamber. A revolver, he said, has a rotating cylinder with chambers into which cartridges are loaded. As the trigger is squeezed, the cylinder rotates placing the cartridge in firing position aligned with the barrel. When the trigger reaches maximum position, the hammer is released and strikes the cartridge in the chamber. The witness stated that the terms “pistol” and “revolver” would be used interchangeably only by a novice or an uninitiated person not familiar with the distinction between pistols and revolvers. When read a dictionary definition defining “revolver” as a type of pistol having a revolving cylinder and asked if he agreed with it, he answered “No” without further explanation.

Appellant’s first witness, Rudolph Kales, was Regional Firearms Coordinator, Alcohol and Tax Division, Internal Revenue Service, [116]*116Treasury Department, a position be had held for 20 years. He testified that his work involved a study of handguns in general which was his “main preoccupation.” He said he would call the imported guns blank cartridge pistols, that a revolver is “a form of pistol.” Head two dictionary definitions to that effect, he said he agreed with them. As to blank-firing guns of both the revolver and automatic types, in evidence as exhibits, he said he would refer to all of them as pistols, and as to a gun of the revolver type for firing .38 caliber ammunition he would “refer to it as a revolver” and consider it “a form of pistol.”

Apellant’s second witness was Francis J. McGee, a lieutenant with the New York City Police Department, supervising firearms instructor of the Firearms unit of its Police Academy for two years. He had been teaching the use of firearms for ten years. He knew the imports as “starting pistols.” He considered the expression “pistols and revolvers” to be technically redundant and considered revolvers to be a type of pistol. He said the term “pistol” is a generic term encompassing “the whole lot of instruments that are fired from the hand,” that there are many different types of pistols, that a “revolver is a pistol, but a pistol does not necessarily have to be a revolver.” The two of the three judges below who conducted the trial made frequent and favorable comments about the expertise of this witness and questioned him frequently.

Numerous dictionary definitions of the terms “pistol” and “revolver” have been relied on in the briefs and appear in opinions which have been cited. The linguistic facts which appear therefrom with such clarity as to be beyond dispute are that the term “pistol” encompasses revolvers as one of the commonest types of pistols and that the term “revolver” refers to a kind of pistol having a revolving cylinder to contain cartridges. We cannot, therefore, escape the conclusion that the term “pistols” in TSUS item 730.80, in the absence of some very special circumstance, includes revolvers.

The Customs Courts concluded that “the term ‘pistols’ as used in item 730.80 does not include revolvers.” Its first stated reason for doing so was this :

In sum, the testimony establishes to our satisfaction that there is a meaningful distinction between a pistol and a revolver.

We find this singularly unpersuasive, and to a degree it begs the question in treating “a pistol” as a definite object and “a revolver” as another and different object.

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Bluebook (online)
458 F.2d 1376, 59 C.C.P.A. 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-precise-imports-corp-ccpa-1972.