United States v. Richard & Co.

8 Ct. Cust. 231, 1917 CCPA LEXIS 89
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 12, 1917
DocketNo. 1797
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 8 Ct. Cust. 231 (United States v. Richard & 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. Richard & Co., 8 Ct. Cust. 231, 1917 CCPA LEXIS 89 (ccpa 1917).

Opinion

Barber, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The importation here consists of what is known as spare or repair parts, in duplicate, of two 120-horsepower Diesel engines, one installed on the Moreno and the other on the Rivadavia, battleships built in this country for the Argentine Republic. These engines were built abroad and imported and entered separately from the parts in question. Each is designed and used to operate a dynamo to supply the vessel with electric light and power. They can not be used for propelling the ship, but the switchboard connected with each is so arranged that the power thereof can be used for operating the blower employed to produce steam in the boilers which furnish the ship’s propelling power. Their principal function, however, is to furnish electric light for the ship whenever its main power plant is not in operation, which ordinarily happens when in harbor, but may of course occur on the high seas.

These spare parts were imported in June, 1913, and it is agreed that whether or not they are dutiable depends upon the construction to be given to section- 5 of the Panama Canal act of August 24, 1912 (37 Stats., 562), the material part of which we quote:

That all materials of foreign production which may be necessary for the construction or repair of vessels built in the United States and all such materials necessary for the building or repair of their machinery and all articles necessary for their outfit and equipment may be imported into the United States ñ-ee of duty under such regulations as the Secretary of. the Treasury may prescribe.

The collector assessed the merchandise under paragraph 199 of the tariff act of 1909. The board sustained the protest claiming free entry under the statute above quoted, and the Government brings the case here on appeal. ' ■

It is agreed that tq prevail here the importers must establish that the merchandise is materials necessary for (a) the repair of vessels, (6) the repair of their machinery, or (c) is articles necessary for their outfit and equipment.

Each of these points has been fully briefed and discussed by counsel. There is no question that these spare parts are duplicates of the smaller wearing parts of the respective engines and not of their larger and more substantial parts. Such smaller parts are, however, indispensable to the operation of the engines. The contract with the Argentine Government required these duplicate parts to be furnished. The Government of the United States requires duplicate parts of certain mechanism to be furnished. on vessels' built for it. No question is made that modern battleships are electrically lighted. The evidence is that this is equally true of commercial ships of [233]*233importance. These duplicate spare parts were put aboard the war vessels prior to their delivery to the Argentine Republic.

We consider first the question of whether these duplicate parts are “outfit and equipment” for vessels within the meaning of the statute and agree with the Government that “outfit” and “equipment” are practically synonymous.

It was in substance said by this court in Otte v. United States (7 Ct. Cust. Appls., 166, T. D. 36489), referring to subsection 5 of paragraph J of section 4 of the tariff act of 1913, the immediate successor to, and, so far as the issue here is concerned, not different in legal effect from, the statute now before us, that while Congress had manifested its intention to distinguish between the equipment for a vessel and the vessel itself, nevertheless the'true fine of such distinction was somewhat difficult of ascertainment.

In United States v. Outerbridge & Co. (7 Ct. Cust. Appls., 223, T. D. 36511) it was pointed out that' the said statute was designed to encourage shipbuilding in the United States. It was held in that case, however, that the statute must not be so construed as to make this country a place for the assembling only of parts of a ship or parts of its machinery manufactured abroad and that a 'complete triple-expansion marine engine imported in a knocked-down condition was not within the free entry provision of the statute.

That vessels have from the foundation of our Government been treated as sui generis and subject to an entirely different set of laws and regulations than those applied to imported articles as claimed by the Government, is not only conceded but established. We do not think, however, that such different treatment supports the further contention of the Government that Congress in the statute before us has used the term “ outfit and equipment” in a sense that excludes the importations here therefrom; neither do we think that a review of the authorities cited by the Government' justifies the conclusion that these words in the past have been by the courts or by administrative officials so construed or applied as to justify the Government’s contention here that these spare parts may not be outfit or equipment of vessels within the meaning of section 5, first herein quoted.

It is unnecessary to enter upon an extended review of all the authorities cited by either party. As was pointed out in the case of Otte v. United States, supra, the Board of Naval Construction was at one time asked to define the word “equipment,” and complying with the request it said in substance that equipment in a general sense might be defined as any portable thing that is used for or provided in preparing a vessel whose hull was already finished, for service; that the term “hull and fittings” was commonly used in contradistinction to‘ ‘ equipment ”; that the ‘ ‘ fittings of the hull ’ ’ were understood to be any permanent tiling attached to the hull which would [234]*234remain on board were the vessel to be laid up for a long period; and that “equipment” in relation to a ship includes furnishing the ship with tackle, apparel, and other things used in or about a ship for the purpose of fitting or adapting her for the sea or for .naval service.

While there undoubtedly has been and is a distinction to be kept in mind between the hull of a vessel and its indispensable machinery, to the extent at least of saying that such machinery is not a part of its outfit or equipment, yet we find nothing in principle or authority that ’enables us to say that when the hull has been completed and the machinery installed therein, such entirety may not be regarded as a completed vessel, assuming always that the machinery is necessary to constitute it a finished ship ready and able to perform its functions in navigation. ■

Attorney General Wickersham, in volume 27 of the Opinions of the Attorneys General (p. 228), responding to an inquiry of the Secretary of the Treasury whether a steam evaporator and pump used in the construction of a dredge were entitled to a certain drawback, discussed at considerable length the question of equipment of vessels and cited the opinion of the Board of Naval Construction referred to in the Otte case-, supra. In the course of his'opinion, he used the following language:

It appears, therefore, that 'those appliances which are permanently attached to the vessel, and which would remain on board were the vessel to be laid up for a long-period, are parts of the vessel itself. And, inasmuch as the pump and evaporator in question are so attached to this vessel and are essential and permanent parts of it, they are not a part of the equipment, but are material used in the construction of the vessel within the meaning of the statute.

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8 Ct. Cust. 231, 1917 CCPA LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-richard-co-ccpa-1917.